2013 Vanderbilt
#22
Posted 2013-March-21, 17:06
#23
Posted 2013-March-22, 01:12
#24
Posted 2013-March-22, 02:48
#25
Posted 2013-March-22, 03:45
Aberlour10, on 2013-March-22, 02:48, said:
Ahem. 33 losses, 1 win.
#27
Posted 2013-March-22, 06:13
- billw55
#28
Posted 2013-March-22, 06:32
#30
Posted 2013-March-22, 07:44
#31
Posted 2013-March-23, 13:50
#32
Posted 2013-March-23, 20:23
On one board, declarer had A987x opposite xx in a side-suit, with the ability to take one ruff in the dummy. Declarer led one to the nine, and holding KJx Dennis won the jack and played the king back, giving declarer a losing option out of nowhere. Ever since, I've been following his progress closely, expecting great things.
#34
Posted 2013-March-26, 08:41
Looks as if the New York Times beat me to this insight: http://www.newyorker...iness/ncaa.html
#35
Posted 2013-March-26, 09:33
hrothgar, on 2013-March-26, 08:41, said:
Looks as if the New York Times beat me to this insight: http://www.newyorker...iness/ncaa.html
And do you think someone (anyone) could quantify that? Would they even have access to all the fluctuating travel and expense costs? What would be the seed of a team with (perish the thought) no deep-pocket sponser that decided to win together ---with one or two of the pros paying one or two of the others just because they can?
#36
Posted 2013-March-26, 09:55
aguahombre, on 2013-March-26, 09:33, said:
Sure, there are some practical obstacles. But it's not a bad idea in principle.
Also wondering, how many teams actually had paid pros? Or would it be easier to count the ones that didn't (or probably didn't)?
-gwnn
#37
Posted 2013-March-26, 10:07
hrothgar, on 2013-March-26, 08:41, said:
So a sponsor could obtain a higher seed by voluntarily paying his team more money? There would also be opportunities for a husband-and-wife partnership to improve their seeding by means of a notional transaction.
#38
Posted 2013-March-26, 10:05
#40
Posted 2013-March-26, 10:34
The NYT article is an interesting piece, but no one is suggesting that the idea should be taken seriously. Richard made a very interesting extension of the idea to professionalism in bridge. I don't think that he was suggesting that the idea be adopted.
Having said that, I am sure that we can require all of the paperwork (player contracts, travel vouchers, hotel vouchers, etc.) submitted to the ACBL Committee on Seeding and Professional Oversight prior to the commencement of the event. The committee can take it from there.
As for non-monetary compensation, that brings to mind a story from Jerry Machlin's book on his life as a tournament director. One time (many years ago) he and another director seeded the field in a pair event based on, for lack of a better term, the hotness of the female players. After it became apparent how the seeding was done, some of the women thanked him for their seed. Others complained that they should have been seeded higher or that another woman should have been seeded lower.