My feeling is that even the very top players do not track the exact spots reliably enough to have picked up this opportunity at the table. Maybe there are one or two exceptions -- Martin Hoffman perhaps? and it used to be said that Charles Goren could write down the exact hands after a session. What do others think? And do you think it possible and/or worthwhile to cultivate the ability?
Who watches spots? any standout stars?
#1
Posted 2011-January-23, 12:21
My feeling is that even the very top players do not track the exact spots reliably enough to have picked up this opportunity at the table. Maybe there are one or two exceptions -- Martin Hoffman perhaps? and it used to be said that Charles Goren could write down the exact hands after a session. What do others think? And do you think it possible and/or worthwhile to cultivate the ability?
#2
Posted 2011-January-23, 12:29
FWIW I am not a very top player but I doubt there are many times in real life that I could not tell you the exact spots of a suit, and never of a suit that seems to matter at all.
#3
Posted 2011-January-23, 13:02
JLOGIC, on 2011-January-23, 12:29, said:
FWIW I am not a very top player but I doubt there are many times in real life that I could not tell you the exact spots of a suit, and never of a suit that seems to matter at all.
you mean never not I presume in your last sentence
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"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
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#4
Posted 2011-January-23, 13:43
#5
Posted 2011-January-23, 15:18
JLOGIC, on 2011-January-23, 12:29, said:
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#6
Posted 2011-January-24, 08:12
ceeb, on 2011-January-23, 15:18, said:
I think this is very relevant. Any strong player will find they are keeping track of intermediate cards when there is a chance of a trick being promoted - if in the OP example declarer had started with, say, 8432 opposite AKJ, then I think everyone would expect to notice if Q109 had all fallen. With 6542 it seems inconceivable that a trick can be promoted unless the suit breaks 3-3. Yes, a good player will normally still notice the spots in order to interpret signalling, but I find it much more plausible that even a world class player will sometimes fail to appreciate the scope for promoting a trick when he knows RHO still has two clubs - it is just not something you will normally spend mental energy on when there are more important things to focus on.
#7
Posted 2011-January-24, 08:24
#8
Posted 2011-January-24, 09:55
When I saw the title of the thread I was hoping there would be a discussion about in what circumstances the top players signal and whether or not their opponents watch or even believe their carding.
@Ceeb - you realize Goren usually wasn't nearly as good as his partners, right?
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#9
Posted 2011-January-24, 10:27
#10
Posted 2011-January-24, 11:13
Phil, on 2011-January-24, 09:55, said:
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#11
Posted 2011-January-29, 09:45
I support what JLOGIC says. Any good player ("good" in the sense of winning national teams competitions, not necessarily good enough to win the Bermuda Bowl) will as a matter of course follow every pip played in every suit. I occasionally forget which pips were in my hand and which in dummy (assuming no blockages) but that's usually it.
Of course people make mistakes. It's quite possible Hamman misplayed a hand in a high stakes rubber bridge game (rubber is also generally played much faster than duplicate). You only have to read accounts of big tournaments to find hands where people have made what look like (and often are!) elementary mistakes. Losing track of the pips in a suit is certainly something that happens to all good players at some time. One way to be a great player is to make mistakes very very seldom, then you don't need the brilliancies to make up for the mistakes.
Also as has already been said many games on BBO are not taken at all seriously.
#12
Posted 2011-January-30, 14:36
FrancesHinden, on 2011-January-29, 09:45, said:
If you mean literally every pip in every suit then I disagree. I think I fit your definition of "good" as above, but I don't try to remember every pip. There are some that are uninteresting. Say I have xxx in trumps and dummy has AKQJ in a 4-4 fit. When declarer rolls three rounds of trumps, I will likely remember only one thing from the trump suit later: If partner played low-high or high-low. Which trump declarer has left or even my own trump pips from start are likely to be forgotten soon. Stuff like that. Pips that potentially could be of any importance must be noticed though. To remember everything important becomes a subconscious thing, but so is filtering out indifferent information.
I would be surprised if "very top players" do these thing much different than what I do.
#13
Posted 2011-January-31, 11:47
Half joking but in those games watching literally every spot is mandatory to play well (though I suck at barbu now) that maybe it carries over into bridge.
#15
Posted 2011-January-31, 16:43
#16
Posted 2011-January-31, 16:46
FrancesHinden, on 2011-January-31, 16:43, said:
I'm just lazy sometimes when I type
I don't have much experience playing Barbu though... Only occasionally after the evening session. Nobody in my family plays
#17
Posted 2011-January-31, 16:47
mfa1010, on 2011-January-30, 14:36, said:
I would be surprised if "very top players" do these thing much different than what I do.
If you play a lot of suit preference you start to watch the pips more carefully. We have agreed different meanings for top - middle/bottom, bottom-middle/top, middle-up-down and middle-down-up (although obviously in many cases it will become redundant/irrelevant).