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Poker and Bridge


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Lately, I have been playing a great deal of poker and, as a result, much less bridge.

 

I find that when I return to bridge, I do much better. Since I have to think about a different game, I find my thinking is much clearer and less on autopilot than it might be if I were playing bridge exclusively.

 

And when I return to poker I find the same thing is true - I have to apply myself to thinking about the odds differently, so I am less automatic about my plays and more analytical.

 

Does anyone have any similar experiences? Or is this a bridge-only crowd?

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I got one boost out of playing poker, and that is that I do not stare at my 13 cards as much as I used to and nowadays I am more alert to what happens at the table. This does not include unethical stuff like looking for clues from partner or looking endlessly at an opponent to make them uncomfortable, but realising that there are 52 cards out there so to speak. Phil made a post about this a year or two ago, playing with your head raised and not sunk in my cards.

 

After that helping boost, I found that poker didn't help my bridge at all. Instead it made me more of a gambler and less of a thinker.

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Art I think this shows you don't generally have good focus.

That may be true, but that also comes from doing well at bridge without having to think about things too hard.

 

The time spent playing poker results in a readjustment period when returning to playing bridge. Playing bridge is no longer automatic, requiring that I concentrate more than I typically do.

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I found my bridge skills to drop when I played a lot of chess. I wasn't completelly sure it was related, but I quited chess just in case.

 

I play a lot of web games (strategy, card, team management...), appart form the fact that I don't sleep enough because I play them untill laet they don't seem to affect me on bridge.

 

About poker.... well you had to see my 2nd position preempts before I learnt the difference on position and what they are now lol.

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I should have taken up Poker instead of bridge because there's a lot more money in it. Having said that, I'm probably well up in terms of prize money versus entry fees over the last year or two. :D
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  • 6 months later...

I found this quote interesting from Barry Greenstein

The biggest egos: bridge players or poker players?

 

Bridge players. It's not even close. Bridge is a much more ego-involved game than poker. You can see it in how the players view each other's games. Poker players don't think they can be good at bridge, but bridge players think they can be good at poker. They assume that because they've learned the ultimate card game, they'll be able to play any other card game at an expert level. During the NABCs, I used to play after-hours poker with some big-name bridge champions, and I have to tell you, they were pretty awful.

Do you think he's right?

 

the link is: http://home.comcast.net/~kwbridge/barryg.htm

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It makes sense that the game which is much harder to initially learn and has much lower variance (although still very high) would have players with bigger egos. Although I would think a ton of money flying around would also have the same effect, so who knows.

 

It's probably not particular to bridge players that people think they are way better at poker than they are though.

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I found my bridge skills to drop when I played a lot of chess. I wasn't completelly sure it was related, but I quited chess just in case.

 

I play a lot of web games (strategy, card, team management...), appart form the fact that I don't sleep enough because I play them untill laet they don't seem to affect me on bridge.

 

About poker.... well you had to see my 2nd position preempts before I learnt the difference on position and what they are now lol.

I found I could play bridge and chess at about the same standard at university. To do that I could play bridge once every 3 weeks, but needed several hours a night at chess. Guess which one I gave up.

 

That said, I don't find other games make any difference to my bridge.

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The reason is fairly simple.

 

Having a big big ego in poker = losing money.

-- Either because you stay in the hands too long (im going to outplay him later),

-- because you play at limit too high for yours skills and bankroll.

-- You want to play against every players to prove yourself nstead of always looking for the worse players or the best ROI.

-- Its also a part of the deception that your skill level is unrecognized. Forget poker tournament, forget poker tv show & online poker with known names. The biggest cash is mostly made into real high stakes private tables (everywhere in the world where there is oil and finances). Big winners dont want to be known like big winners and same thing for the big losers.

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In my experience, bridge players have bigger egos at the table, but poker players have bigger egos away from the table.

 

Easy to see how a bridge player could think he could rule a poker game but how a poker player would feel completely over his head at the bridge table.

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It's a strange but true feature of poker that people think they are better than they are. This is also the reason that poker is played much more for money - people who lose are willing to keep playing and losing again because they don't accept that other players are better and will beat them again.

 

Bridge is not like that. Weaker players learn fairly quickly that they are inevitably going to going to lose. I wish they didn't because it would make playing bridge for money a much more practical option.

 

I think the observation says more about the nature of bridge vs poker than necessarily the people who play them.

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I have been suking at poker latelly, but last night I finally stayed for a long tourney to the last 30/600

 

I was running in the top10 all the time, but then I losed 40% my chips to a maniac with J8 who went all in preflop against my AQ. Losing by getting an 8 on the river made it even worse.

 

I tried to remain focused, but 5 hands later I was giving away the rest of my average stack on a hopeless bluff against a set O_o

 

This also happens to me at bridge. I get on tilt after "badbeats" like opponents passing a reverse and scoring +110. And I cannot help it.

 

Anyone knows of techniques to control yourself on this circumstances?

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This also happens to me at bridge. I get on tilt after "badbeats" like opponents passing a reverse and scoring +110. And I cannot help it.

 

Anyone knows of techniques to control yourself on this circumstances?

Not so much a technique, but a mindset - that bad actions sometimes work, you will have bad boards due to bad luck or mistakes on your part, and that all you can do is keep doing what you know is right and keep taking percentage actions.

 

I play a fair few tables of online poker at once, so I can see a lot of hands in a short space of time, and I can tell you that I'd rather get my money in good and lose than get it in bad and suck out. The amount of money from one hand is less relevant than the indication that I'm playing well and hope to do well in future. This may be in part due to it being fairly early days for me in terms of playing NLHE cashgames (I've played 165k hands or so) and I'm still working out just how good I am at it.

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All games are about "Concentration" "Stamina" and being relaxed,

natural ability is a valuable asset,i know of wooden tops,that pay vast sums of money,to have the "Ego" trip,and never make the grade,

you either have these attributes naturally,you inherit the certain genes.

regards

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I have been suking at poker latelly, but last night I finally stayed for a long tourney to the last 30/600

 

I was running in the top10 all the time, but then I losed 40% my chips to a maniac with J8 who went all in preflop against my AQ. Losing by getting an 8 on the river made it even worse.

 

I tried to remain focused, but 5 hands later I was giving away the rest of my average stack on a hopeless bluff against a set O_o

 

This also happens to me at bridge. I get on tilt after "badbeats" like opponents passing a reverse and scoring +110. And I cannot help it.

 

Anyone knows of techniques to control yourself on this circumstances?

Experience.

 

If you play more, you see more, and you also learn to know the truth,

that one can trust the probability, but that even a high winning propapility

does not mean you actually win.

 

In your head you know the truth, but you need to know this truth also in

your heart, and this takes time.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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