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How did you become an expert


Rossoneri

How did you do it?  

31 members have voted

  1. 1. How did you do it?

    • Working intensively under a coach
      1
    • Received some guidance under a coach
      3
    • A bit of coaching here and there, but mainly self-learning
      12
    • Self-learn from books, etc.
      15


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Who does not remember the scene where Han's namesake's pal Luke meets Yoda, the ultimate coach?

 

I often think I could cut the time it'll take me to improve from intermediate to competent (not shooting for expert) in half if I could find a good bridge coach. Not because I'm lazy and undisciplined (which I am) but for all the reasons codo gives and more, esp. constant redirection of energy into what matters most now -- for me. Am getting a lot of this kind of direction from my new partner, from a very sensible local pro, from a bridge friend and from thoughtful posts from experts on this forum, including many of the posts on this thread.

 

Still, I wish Bob Rotella and Pia Nilsson (golf gurus) would also write about bridge. :)

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There's no substitute for playing a lot of hands. Often the division between advanced and expert (or expert and world-class) is more about consistency and avoiding mistakes that are obvious to any good player after the hand is over. If advanced players did as well at the table as they typically do on hands they are given as problems, they would be experts! The issue is that "problem hands" are usually considered much more carefully, fatigue is less of an issue, and so forth.

 

I suspect that many people underrate the value of the following: playing with a strong partner, having at least one partnership where you discuss a lot of bidding sequences, solving "moderate" single dummy problems under a time constraint, discussing the right bid on a hand with good players.

 

I agree that the following can be valuable, but I think they are not the best way to improve and that a lot of people overrate them: solving double-dummy problems, playing frequently with pickup partners, solving "hard" single-dummy problems that take a long time, reading books that are mostly "telling stories" about great plays or players.

 

The following can actually be detrimental to playing good bridge: spending a lot of time "making up" an interesting bidding system, trying to find a way to blame partner for any bad results, spending a lot of time playing with very weak partners.

 

In principle it should be possible to use tools like GIB and Bridge Browser to "solve" some of the points upon which experts frequently disagree. Perhaps this will help the bridge players of the future, but so far it seems that we don't really know how to use these tools effectively (for example, I don't think that using bridge browser data where most people are pickup partnerships playing some bastardized version of "standard" or "2/1" is the right way to evaluate the effectiveness of non-standard systems or conventions).

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I don't think there is any bridge-related activity that is detrimental to your bridge skills.* If you play completely drunk from 2am-5am with random pickups in MBC, and spend the time after you wake up until you start getting drunk again by finding a new improved meaning for 2N 4H 4S 5C 6C, then you are using your time extremely inefficiently towards your goal of improving at bridge, but it won't hurt your bridge either.

 

 

 

*(Working too hard on math is.)

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I don't think there is any bridge-related activity that is detrimental to your bridge skills

I found one exception. Playing a bridge computer game that allows you to easily sneak a look at the opponents' hands is bad for my bridge, it always made a noticeable difference even for a short period of time.

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I don't think there is any bridge-related activity that is detrimental to your bridge skills

I found one exception. Playing a bridge computer game that allows you to easily sneak a look at the opponents' hands is bad for my bridge, it always made a noticeable difference even for a short period of time.

And there is another: Many people become worse if they play too much with very weak opponents. You will win even being lazy and without visulizing the opps hand.

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I know of 2 players whose skill went down after playing a lot of goulash, your criterium gets affected when you end up used of bad breaks.

 

There are some brain proccess that are 'analogic' (This looks better) and some others that are 'digital' (This is better because in the case of....) your digital skills won't go down, but the others, who are based on experience, will.

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#1: Books, books and more books (along with play with *good* players to back it up course). My wife keeps trying to purge my 100+ library from time to time, but with little success :D (the number may be an hyberbole, but you get the idea).

 

#2: By annointing myself as such on BBO

 

I will let you decided which of the two methods works better :D...

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