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No more kibitzing at tournaments


PaulSK

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"Incidentally this will be an highly unpopular opinion, but I would not worry about cheaters on BBO at all. If someone is so pathetic a human being that they resort to cheating in order to bolster their ego, then let them. After all as Nick points out, there are no sheep stations at stake here."

 

I agree with this 100%.

 

Peter

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I applaud BBO in not only directly stating that cheating is a problem in the ACBL games, but more importantly, that they wish to reduce it markedly.

 

The major reason why I wrote my article in concern of online bridge in May 2006's edition of the Bulletin, was my fear that cheating was a significant problem in need of a creative solution. I have privately been disquieted over the fact that I felt that I as a halfway decent player could not consistently compete in the ACBL simple due to this overwhelming anxiety I held about whether or not I was going to have an equal playing ground - this is why I have not played with any regularity for almost 18 months now.

 

Hearing this development might bring me back to the table, and I think everyone wins when players come back to the tables knowing things are being addressed as constructively and carefully as Fred has stated. I sincerely hope that the ACBL crowd realizes the shame that would befell them if they were found and convicted of collusion/cheating, etc. et al - these things being public knowledge is quite damning, but an unfortunate part of bridge (anything disciplinary is embarassing). My hopes are admittedly raised that this is a first step in jettisoning the negative stigma and perception about tournament online bridge.

 

I agree with Richard (been a theme lately, interesting) about the concept of a delay; I vote for a 1 round delay.

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I have privately been disquieted over the fact that I felt that I as a halfway decent player could not consistently compete in the ACBL simple due to this overwhelming anxiety I held about whether or not I was going to have an equal playing ground - this is why I have not played with any regularity for almost 18 months now.

I would not place cheating/collusion high on my list of things that I would worry about if regarding where I placed in an ACBL tourny. Why?

 

12 board tournies are crapshoots. With each board totalling to a little more than 8% of your total score, it only takes three or four excellent boards and average on the rest will "usually" create a decent result. Knowing this, I have found it is not unusual to find pairs with the "play for top" mentality on every board. By this, I dont mean making the best plays, necessarily. It is the mentality of doubling contracts that have no reason to be doubled, or bidding slams that shouldnt be bid just in case it makes. They are "shooting" for tops on every board, and especially in later rounds. While these types of tactics can (and do) work in shorter tourneys, over time it is much less successful. I would like to see longer tournies to balance this randomness out, but I realize it is unlikely for this to occur. I also dont consider this to be "bridge", and you probably dont either, which makes it difficult to do well in this type of tourny.

 

I haven't played in many of the ACBL tournies on BBO. I do not know if they are run as four 3-board rounds, or six 2-board rounds. If it's the former, and you draw (much) weaker opponents the first round, you are better placed than the pairs that draw compentent opponents in the first round. In most cases, you can easily gain almost a full board (or more) on the field, just via this stroke of luck alone.

 

OTOH, if you draw competent opponents who manage to bid their games/slams the first round, or defend properly, you can be headed for just another average game (or even worse), though you did absolutely nothing wrong.

 

The randomness of an unlevel playing field can be quite frustrating. Personally, I played in a 9 board IMP tourny the other day scoring 36.62 imps in the 9 bds. Thats an average of slightly over 4 imps per board. Did it win? No. In 9 bds, this was good enough for 4th. First place had 76 imps in the 9 bds. My first thought? Impossible!! They must be "cheating". However, a quick review of the boards found the pair had done nothing unusual, only that they had been extremely lucky. Their opponents would double them in part-scores that make (and shouldnt even be doubled), or their opps would take extremely unprofitable sacrifices, etc.

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I have privately been disquieted over the fact that I felt that I as a halfway decent player could not consistently compete in the ACBL simple due to this overwhelming anxiety I held about whether or not I was going to have an equal playing ground - this is why I have not played with any regularity for almost 18 months now.

I would not place cheating/collusion high on my list of things that I would worry about if regarding where I placed in an ACBL tourny. Why?

 

12 board tournies are crapshooots. With each board totalling to a little more than 8% of your total score, it only takes three or four excellent boards and average on the rest will "usually" create a decent result. Knowing this, I have found it is not unusual to find pairs with the "play for top" mentality on every board. By this, I dont mean making the best plays, necessarily. It is the mentality of doubling contracts that have no reason to be doubled, or bidding slams that shouldnt be bid just in case it makes. They are "shooting" for tops on every board, and especially in later rounds. While these types of tactics can (and do) work in shorter tourneys, over time it is much less successful. I would like to see longer tournies to balance this randomness out, but I realize it is unlikely for this to occur. I also dont consider this to be "bridge", and you probably dont either, which makes it difficult to do well in this type of tourny.

 

I haven't played in many of the ACBL tournies on BBO. I do not know if they are run as four 3-board rounds, or six 2-board rounds. If it's the former, and you draw (much) weaker opponents the first round, you are better placed than the pairs that draw compentent opponents in the first round. In most cases, you can easily gain almost a full board (or more) on the field, just via this stroke of luck alone.

 

OTOH, if you draw competent opponents who manage to bid their games/slams the first round, or defend properly, you can be headed for just another average game (or even worse), though you did absolutely nothing wrong.

 

The randomness of an unlevel playing field can be quite frustrating. Personally, I played in a 9 board IMP tourny the other day scoring 36.62 imps in the 9 bds. Thats an average of slightly over 4 imps per board. Did it win? No. In 9 bds, this was good enough for 4th. First place had 76 imps in the 9 bds. My first thought? Impossible!! They must be "cheating". However, a quick review of the boards found the pair had done nothing unusual, only that they had been extremely lucky. Their opponents would double them in part-scores that make (and shouldnt even be doubled), or their opps would take extremely unprofitable sacrifices, etc.

what i like to do is cull out boards from tourneys using bridgebrowser and see all the bids made on a board and what the results are for such boards....alot easier to do with bridgebrowser than to open each hand with myhands from bbo.

 

Its alot easier to see what affects bidding has on the final contract and defense. Yes I agree with you that the shortness of the matches tends to bring into effect very aggressive bidding like using DONT over NT opening on 4-4 hands, not good bridge but effective in these short matches.

 

so to me the shortness of the matches begs for the question do you want to win the event or just play real bridge??? Your choice! ;)

 

along time ago I asked Gweny; How about there being a full 26 board game?

the people who play in the ACBL games play almost in all of them so its a matter of them wanting to play in a real game or just going for the points...being that you can win twice as much in 2 short 12 board events as opposed to one 26board event :(

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6x2 board tourneys do seem be the standard online tourney. From what I understand this is where the demand is. 90 minutes seems to fit many online players schedule.

 

Keep in mind I would bet those that pay and play online ACBL games play much more online bridge than face to face bridge. In fact I would bet many play almost zero face to face bridge.

 

I am not sure why people think those of us who pay would not mine rampant cheaters or the perception of such.

 

I am sure as technology accelerates at an ever increasing pace more types of tourneys will come online. As I mentioned before I expect to be playing holograph bridge in my family room before 2020 on bbo. ;)

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Chuck,

 

That is the secondary reason why my ACBL games have been few and far between - the 12 board format where you can earn 1.20 mps is not only disadvantageous to live players, but it is exactly as you espouse - a crapshoot.

 

The best I ever did at ACBL game at IMPs...if memory serves, I had one or two 80+ imp games in the 2AM ET game.

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I really appreciate hearing back from bridge players, esp f2f bridge players, on their experience in the ACBL online games. I hope more will post.

 

While I also dislike playing in the imp pairs games I do when that is all that is offered. As for the MP games I find my poor results are very much the result of my poor bridge not the opp jerking me around.

 

Any other comments?

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My experience with ACBL games has been very uneven; I've had some of the worse rulings I've ever dealt with offered, yet I have had at times very good success.

 

I think the IMP pairs at times becomes a lot like Swiss Teams, and MPs a lot like BAM, in terms of perspective...

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6x2 board tourneys do seem be the standard online tourney. From what I understand this is where the demand is. 90 minutes seems to fit many online players schedule.

Once upon a time OKBridge's tourneys were all 26 boards, but they were not very well attended. Then they added 12-board "mini" tourneys to the schedule. For a while they ran both full and minis, but the minis got far more participation.

 

Eventually they did away with the long tourneys. In their place they paired up the minis. All pairs that played in both minis of a "combo" had their scores combined, and they are all then ranked in a secondary contest (this is kind of analogous to the "continuous pairs" events at ACBL regional and national tournaments).

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eBridge ran 26 board tournies for a long time as well. They were usually poorly attended, for a few different reasons. The times they were scheduled were not in the best interests of those type games (they were scheduled for 10 am on Sat. and Sunday.), and also because, people for whatever reasons, just dont want to commit three hours to sit and play.

 

This has to do with both external (real life) commitments, and the fact that many online partners are not regular partnerships. How many people want to commit to 3 hours with someone they have never played with before? At least, if its only 12 boards, they are done in an hour and half.

 

Myself, I would prefer longer tournaments as well, but popularity wins in this case.

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I've played a lot of f2f bridge. I like online ACBL tourneys much better. It's now been about 3 years since I've really played in a f2f tourney. I finally figured out, that for me, tourneys were stressful and exhausting. I well understand that's not the case for everyone, but, for me, that was the case. I like having the online ACBL tourneys as an alternative. I can relax at home, and play. I don't care much about the masterpoints one way or the other, but the partners I play with like to win points if we do well, so that's why I end up in those tourneys. I have played quite a number of them, and I have not noticed people cheating against me, or at least it's not something that enters my head too often. I'm sure it happens. Just as I know it was happening in f2f bridge. I guess, I feel like it's sort of just something that does go on, and I've always felt that if one must cheat to win, it's something that makes me pity them. I play to learn, worry about my own plays and bids, and don't judge anybody else. It works for me. I know not everyone agrees. Just my two cents!
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If only you knew what? I hope this is not an intimation that Reese Shapiro were cheating. This perrenial emerges regularly on rgb.

First:

1. His name was Schapiro.

2. That's 'perennial'.

3. No 'intimation' is necessary for anyone who has read both books -- by Reese and by Truscott. The evidence was devastating.

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You are correct. Truscott's book was so poorly written and the evidence so flimsy that it is devastating that anyone with even half a brain could accept the cheating allegations.

 

By the way, from a grammatical point of view, that should be "Firstly", and not "First".

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eBridge ran 26 board tournies for a long time as well. They were usually poorly attended, for a few different reasons. The times they were scheduled were not in the best interests of those type games (they were scheduled for 10 am on Sat. and Sunday.), and also because, people for whatever reasons, just dont want to commit three hours to sit and play.

 

This has to do with both external (real life) commitments, and the fact that many online partners are not regular partnerships. How many people want to commit to 3 hours with someone they have never played with before? At least, if its only 12 boards, they are done in an hour and half.

 

Myself, I would prefer longer tournaments as well, but popularity wins in this case.

I assume they ran them on weekends because work and family obligations made it hard for people to commit 3 hours on a weekday evening. Also, time zone differences made it difficult for a 3-hour block to be a reasonable time on both the east and west coasts of the US (a 7-10PM PT game is 10PM-1AM ET).

 

As for committing 3 hours with a pickup partner, isn't that what you do when you go to the partnership desk at a f2f tourney? In fact, often you're entering a two-session event, so you're committing to 6 hours. Yet at large tournaments, the partnership desk is usually very busy. One difference, though, is that when you meet someone in person it's often possible to size them up by talking to them for a few minutes, before agreeing to play with them -- online pickups are almost a total crapshoot.

 

This all comes back to a point I've made a number of times: many people don't think of online bridge as serious bridge. It's a casual, spare-time activity, not an appointment like a f2f club game or tourney. It's also why there's less compunction against cheating -- the cheaters don't feel as bad because it's not "real bridge" to them (also, the fact that it's so easy -- this is similar to the attitude towards online music/video sharing, I think). I think there may be a psychological effect that permeates much online activity: when you can't see the other players, it's less personal -- there's less sympathy and empathy for the faceless people at the other end of the Internet connection.

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eBridge ran 26 board tournies for a long time as well. They were usually poorly attended, for a few different reasons. The times they were scheduled were not in the best interests of those type games (they were scheduled for 10 am on Sat. and Sunday.), and also because, people for whatever reasons, just dont want to commit three hours to sit and play.

 

As for committing 3 hours with a pickup partner, isn't that what you do when you go to the partnership desk at a f2f tourney?  In fact, often you're entering a two-session event, so you're committing to 6 hours.  .

You must have me confused with someone else.

 

I don't go to partnership desks, if it can be helped. I'd rather go back home and enjoy my day playing on BBO, than to sit thru two miserable sessions. ;)

 

And as you stated, it is much easier to weed thru compatible partners f2f, than it is to look at profiles and randomly pick someone to play with.

 

Actually, eBridge ran the games at those times because those were the only time slots available in their tournament schedules where they could work the games in and find a director. Or, at least, this is what I was told by their management at the time.

 

And believe it or not, the time zone really didnt have a lot of bearing on games scheduling. Just like BBO, it was a multi-national site, and they had games that ran pretty much 24 hours a day. (First morning 12 bd tournament was at 5 am EST, last 12 bd tournament of 'day' was 2 am EST). There were many foreign players in all of these games, so the East coast/West coast was really a non-issue. It was mainly the lack of players willing to commit to a three hour game.

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In my experience the people playing f2f bridge can be every bit as rude and judmental as anybody online. I've heard outrageous statements made at the bridge table, in f2f games. I have heard comments occasionally online, but have seen and heard much more f2f.

 

I do agree online bridge is a different experience. It's different for many reasons. Some people are better able to concentrate, some less so, but being that there are no 'real' cards, it's just a totally different experience.

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  • 2 weeks later...
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How about a couple of 18 board tournaments?

 

And, I applaud BBO's decision to disallow kibitzing at ACBL tournies. I hope this ban continues unless the 10 minute delay idea can be implemented.

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Interested by the claims that cheating occurs at the money bridge tables. I recall when the money bridge tables were first introduced by BBO that they were advertised as being "cheat proof". I am not familiar with that side of BBO, but just thought it interesting that we now apparently see cheating in a supposedly cheat-proof environment.
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