fred, on Dec 9 2008, 10:39 AM, said:
1) People recognize that it exists. Your suggestion to the contrary suggests that at least some of you are in a state of denial.
2) People at least be willing to consider explanations other than geography, lack of professional opportunities, etc. This is all a load of crap in my view, especially considering Australia was recently blessed with a $1 million donation to fund the development of that country's international teams.
Stop trying to find excuses and take a long, hard, and honest look in the mirror. Perhaps you won't find anything wrong, but if you refuse to look and if there is something wrong, then there is no hope at all.
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
Well I really must get on to our top players and tell them that they are doing it all wrong.
How insulting to suggest that the bridge community in NZ has not spent thousands of sleepless nights and reams of paper doing exactly what you suggest.
Success at bridge is primarily a function of A: talent and B: experience.
A- Talent is entirely a matter of luck.
B- To make the observation that players in NZ have less experience than pairs in the bridge hot-beds of the world is to not make an excuse but rather to recognise one of the factors we have to try hard to rectify.
BTW The butlers from Beijing...
http://www.worldbridge.org/tourn/Beijing.0...ButlerRR-O.html
Newell/Reid from good old NZ 25th of 250. The pairs above them form a very illustrious list indeed. As Wayne has pointed out before this pair can only get together to play 3-4 times a year, but they spend plenty of time working on those elements of the game that can be worked on away from the table and have proved once again that they are a genuinely world class pair. Many of the rest of us actively seek out the events they will be playing in to 'have a crack at them' as it were.
The fact that they and others like to tinker with systems is entirely irrelevant.