playing bridge by gut feeling/instinct.
#2
Posted 2017-July-20, 04:30
Different people have different learning styles. I never went to a single lesson, but I did read a lot. Others find reading books boring, preferring to pick up their bridge knowledge through formal lessons, or through informal interaction with experienced players. There is no right or wrong. Good luck with acquiring your bridge knowledge.
#3
Posted 2017-July-20, 04:46
polarmatt, on 2017-July-20, 03:36, said:
I'm planning on doing this.
you need to reflect on your actions.
Instinct needs to be trained. How you do this is ..., your choice, but by instinct means, you
need to have seen a certain thing or something similar before.
Another point: Bridge is a partnership game, and you need to learn the language of your partners,
if you try to play from scratch, chances are high that you end up playing with peoble who know as
much as you, i.e. learning from them is useless.
If you have prior knowledge in other card games, you may survive card play, but even
here, knowing, what the opponents told you / each other in the auction phase will be
relevant at some point, and you will only be able to understand it, if you learned
the language.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#4
Posted 2017-July-20, 05:00
polarmatt, on 2017-July-20, 03:36, said:
I'm planning on doing this.
You probably can, but what you would need to do is to play with a better partner who will analyse stuff with you after.
You would get more value from slightly less playing and more analysis afterwards even if you don't do it with partner.
#5
Posted 2017-July-20, 05:05
How will know if a bidding sequence was right, a lead was correct, a defence was sound, or a declarer play was accurate without expert/tutorial/bridge literature knowledge? The number of times I have seen players self-congratulate themselves on their wonderful bids and plays without actually realising that what they have done is actually incorrect, and they have got lucky due to some error by their opponents, etc.
Being a chess player, too, the one thing I learnt very quickly early on was that the games that you lost are more valuable than the games you win.
I have been personally tutoring a prizewinning poker player, a friend of mine on here for a couple of years, and while she plays regularly - five times a week or more - and she has good card sense (something I noticed very early on) and is willing to learn new conventions every so often to improve her bidding skills, her overall skill level is still no better than intermediate, in my and her opinion.
Good luck with your bridge, and enjoy the game because, for me, that's the most important aspect.
#6
Posted 2017-July-20, 05:21
polarmatt, on 2017-July-20, 03:36, said:
I'm planning on doing this.
It's one way way to learn, but you're only going to become a good player if you're playing against good opponents. Playing random opponents on BBO will do little more than make you competent.
#7
Posted 2017-July-20, 05:43
Bidding and defence is a different story - the partnership dimension means you can't just learn by osmosis here. Just bidding with your gut would yield little progress, and be a giant waste of time if you're talking about sinking serious hours into it.
#10
Posted 2017-July-20, 07:55
polarmatt, on 2017-July-20, 03:36, said:
I'm planning on doing this.
My opinion is that you can become a mediocre to OK player that way, but that is the upper limit. And it will take you much longer to reach that level of play than if you sought to learn prior knowledge via books and instruction. Essentially, you are undertaking an unstructured approach to learning the game and thus will spend a lot of time reinventing the wheel and spending hours/days learning things that could have otherwise been learned in minutes.
#11
Posted 2017-July-20, 08:03
#12
Posted 2017-July-20, 08:27
bravejason, on 2017-July-20, 07:55, said:
I'm reminded of Terence Reese's reply to a player who proudly told him they had never read a bridge book - "Yes, I can tell."
London UK
#13
Posted 2017-July-20, 08:33
But the system we used was very simple; today's methods are much more complicated. Partners will expect you to play eg Jacoby transfers. You will not be able to do this without either reading about the continuations or discussing them with your partner. This will be true for a lot of areas of bidding.
For defence, you have to agree leads and signals with partner. The rest you can learn by experience, but much more quickly if followed by analysis as mentioned above.
For declarer play it is important that you learn to use clues from the opponents' bidding or lack thereof, and also from their defence. The former will be aided by their telling you their methods, but ether inferences you can make frump this, and the clues from their defence can be learned by experience. Techniques like endplays and squeezes will take hugely more time without reading and becoming familiar with them.
You can, of course, benefit from analysing the hand records by yourself to discover what worked or didn't work and why,, but with no experience you will not know what to look for, or which outcomes were due to skill and which to luck.
#14
Posted 2017-July-20, 13:12
polarmatt, on 2017-July-20, 03:36, said:
I'm planning on doing this.
In case you have noticed, bridge is a partnership game. Unless you are playing with robots, your partner has to be on the same page about bidding and defensive carding. You won't be successful unless you can be a good partner. Even playing with robots, you need to pick the right bids based on the robot bidding system.
If you can analyze your bidding and play mistakes, and recognize whether you or partner is at fault for bad results, then maybe. Good players who haven't read many (or any) bridge books generally improve by playing with better players who can mentor them.
#15
Posted 2017-July-20, 17:15
ahydra
#16
Posted 2017-July-20, 17:47
#17
Posted 2017-July-21, 00:55
polarmatt, on 2017-July-20, 03:36, said:
We all know successful Bridge-players who seem to have a natural card-sense and say that they've never read a Bridge-book.
But it's hard to become a top-expert who can recognize the opportunities for complex squeezes, coups, and endplays, without reading appropriate material. Also it's much easier to develop bidding and defensive rapport with partner, if you base your understandings on mutually accessible literature.
Nowadays. however, I think you could just rely on web-content (rather than hard-copy). For exam[le, discussion groups like this.
#18
Posted 2017-July-21, 02:18
nige1, on 2017-July-21, 00:55, said:
But it's hard to become a top-expert who can recognize the opportunities for complex squeezes, coups, and endplays, without reading appropriate material. Also it's much easier to develop bidding and defensive rapport with partner, if you base your understandings on mutually accessible literature.
Nowadays. however, I think you could just rely on web-content (rather than hard-copy). For example, discussion groups like this.
Nige1's right. There is enough stuff online now that it's possible to become a competent player by using that, but the problem is sifting it to decide what's what, and what's relevant for you.
Bridge has a conventional language all of its own. For example (taken from an actual advanced player's profile)
5533,invmin,nt15-17/20-22alltrnfs,gerb
w2's,Wjs,2clstr.neg&suppX,dont,unnt
lav.sign,RKC14-03
It's similar to learning a foreign language in a way, I suppose. You can get by with parts of it, but being competent enough to be fluent in it probably needs to be learnt in bite-sized chunks, and plenty of bite-sized chunks too. Though many, many players can have a good enough bridge game without being fluent in it and by getting by with parts of it.
#19
Posted 2017-July-21, 03:42
1/ Keep things simple until you have mastered the basics. Looks S of complex conventions will not make you a good player.
2/ If you are playing on BBO look at your hand records after each session, including your good scores as well as the bad. You may find that you were lucky with some good scores, or maybe the oppo just misplayed. Check that you took the best line and look for any clues that you may have missed (this is easier to do against good players).
3/ Read, read and read again. But again, don't concentrate on conventions, concentrate on hand evaluation, play and defence.
4/ When you have reached a reasonable standard read "Practical bidding and practical play" by Terence Reece. Some of the bidding may not follow modern methods but it is a classic in showing you how to think. It goes into areas that few other books cover, such as what you can deduce from opponents discards.
Good luck.