Showing newest posts with label travelers. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label travelers. Show older posts

Saturday, January 2, 2010

A New Bridge Tournament Resource

Most of you know that I blog for a living. I've been writing, among others, a travel blog called The Perpetual Tourist, for over two years now. I've just recently launched this blog on my very own website, Jianantonic.com. If you click over to that site, you'll notice a little link on the side that says "Bridge."

DoubleSqueeze.com will continue to feature interesting deals, play problems, analysis, and other commentary from the bridge table, but the Bridge page at Jianantonic will be a tournament resource. This is where I'll post information about tournament schedules, travel and lodging logistics, restaurant recommendations, and editorial comments. McKenzie and I travel to so many regionals and sectionals, as well as all the NABCs, that this page will soon cover most of the major tournaments in the ACBL.

My hope is that this website will become a valuable resource for players planning to attend a tournament for the first time, or who want to find an easier way to attend tournaments they've done before.

This page is still in its infancy, but I am constantly updating it, and soon it will include dozens of tournaments as well as a search feature to find information about particular tournaments. You can also comment on these pages to chime in with your own advice or ask questions about details I may have left out. Please check it out, tell your friends, and keep coming back. You can also follow me on Twitter -- @jianantonic.

Enjoy!

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

A Plea to Eliminate Travelers at Club Games

Travelers are those little score sheets that you stick in each board at a club game where every table writes their score on one sheet of paper. As the boards get played, you can see how others before you have done, and get a general sense of how your game is going. Our club in Charlottesville now uses Bridgemates for scoring, which have an electronic traveler that even calculates your percentage.

Most people love being able to look at travelers. They want to see how they've done and what others are doing. I, however, am not a fan. After all, I can tell when the dummy comes down if I've reached the proper contract, and paying attention during the play or defense of the hand is enough to tell me if our side has taken all our tricks. So without looking at a traveler, I already know how well I've done compared to the optimal result -- and isn't that what matters more? Would you rather play bad bridge, but get lucky and score well, or play good bridge on a day where everyone else at the club is going bonkers and settle for a 50% game?

Some folks prefer masterpoints. I prefer to play well. On most days, the masterpoints will come when you play well, after all.

So that's why travelers aren't necessary. Here's why they're just plain bad:
  • Someone always reads off the results. "Some people made 3N, but 4S goes down every time!" The people at the next table thank you for this hint.
  • Club games are slow enough already without everyone taking extra time to analyze "what the others did." You'll know what the others did when the final scores come out. Take all the time you need at the end of the game to go over the hands.
  • It's impossible for you to say "We got a top board, pard," without it sounding like gloating. If you're going to discuss the results of a hand, whether there are travelers or not, you should always do it quietly and out of the earshot of your opponents.
  • Travelers tell an incomplete story and therefore give you an inaccurate idea of how your game is going. After a hand has been played 3 times, you may have a 100%, but by the time it gets all the way around the room, that 100% could be only a 40%. You can't know how your score is going to change as the board gets played more and more, so what's the point in looking now?
  • If you're playing against us, we don't want to hear the scores so far. But you're going to read them anyway, aren't you?
Most of these things could fall under the category of pet peeves, and then you'd have the right to tell me to lighten up, I guess, but the first thing on the list there is a big one. Certainly you wouldn't take advantage of anything you overhear about boards you have yet to play, but not everyone in the club is as ethical as you are.

Furthermore, if you are being ethical, let's just say you've heard from the guy with the loud voice at the table behind you that your side makes 6S on board 12. But even after going through your normal sequence, you have a 50-50 guess as to whether or not to bid the slam (except that you know from UI that you should). Maybe in normal circumstances, you almost always bid your 50% slams, and without the UI, you would've bid this one. But you have information that you're not entitled to, and it tells you to bid, while pass is undeniably a logical alternative. I don't know about you, but I'd have a hard time sleeping at night if I didn't pass. (What you should have done is called the director before you played the hand, actually, but even this will likely result in an average plus for you at best, which may be less than the score you would've earned otherwise.)

Sure it's neat to see how your score measures up as soon as you're done with a hand, but unless you're playing a barometer movement, you're not seeing your real score anyway. It may seem like a long wait to the end of the game to see how you did, but the end of the game will come a lot faster if we stop wasting so much time on travelers.