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USA Team Trials-2013

#61 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2013-June-09, 08:53

What? Diamond concedes with 30 to play and 78 IMPs down? I admit I would have instantly bet 20:1 against this, and wondered what kind of fool would hand me free money like this.
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#62 User is offline   dustinst22 

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Posted 2013-June-09, 09:25

View PostFrancesHinden, on 2013-June-09, 06:55, said:

I found this mildly interesting. I know they are professionals and are generally paid to play, but in other sports the top players are usually not only happy but keen to play for their country in representative events (e.g. the Davis Cup & the Ryder Cup which are generally highly-paid professionals playing for their country/continent. Or the Olympics.). Why is bridge different? (Do the ACBL pay expenses for the BB? If not, I can see that would make a difference)



Haha, the obv difference is that in those professional sports the players are already making millions and don't need the money as much. I'm sure if Bridge was as lucrative it would be the same.
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#63 User is offline   GreenMan 

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Posted 2013-June-09, 11:59

View Postcherdano, on 2013-June-09, 07:06, said:

2. Roger Federer makes more money from endorsement deals than from playing fees/prize money, and winning in the Davis Cup increases his market value. So it's not accurate to say that he has nothing to gain financially from playing there.


This is an excellent point, and AAMOF it bears on this year's USA trials; from what I gather, Kranyak were playing without a sponsor in part with an eye on improving their professional prospects down the road, which is sort of the same thing as playing the Davis Cup for the market boost.

Also, the Davis Cup isn't really equivalent; everyone there is getting paid the same, I presume, but the pros on sponsor teams in the BB are getting paid, so it makes less sense to play for free when you don't really have to.
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#64 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2013-June-09, 14:42

I would at least ask meckwell and give them the option to say no, should they lose in the finals of usa2. I would also allow the team to auction off the final pair to a sponsor if they so wish.

They might not mind playing just for the glory for two weeks. I assume Nickell would not object.
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#65 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2013-June-10, 08:04

View Postdustinst22, on 2013-June-09, 09:25, said:

Haha, the obv difference is that in those professional sports the players are already making millions and don't need the money as much. I'm sure if Bridge was as lucrative it would be the same.


Chess is lucrative. Garry Kasparov and Magnus Carlsen have been able to make a good living from their game. The problem is bridge is virtually unwatchable. Aside from a few thousand diehards the general public just doesn't care.
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#66 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2013-June-10, 08:29

You do realise the crowds that Culbertson drew in his day, right? Bridge is no less watchable than chess or poker. It would be interesting to know how BBO vugraph numbers for major tournaments compare with similar chess services being offered elsewhere. My guess would be that BBO numbers were generally higher outside of the World Championship matches.
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#67 User is offline   P_Marlowe 

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Posted 2013-June-10, 08:50

View Postjogs, on 2013-June-10, 08:04, said:

Chess is lucrative. Garry Kasparov and Magnus Carlsen have been able to make a good living from their game. The problem is bridge is virtually unwatchable. Aside from a few thousand diehards the general public just doesn't care.

you hopefully also know, that lots of Chess Pros have real trouble making a good living just by playing?
And we are not speaking about players below position number 1000 in the world rang list.
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#68 User is offline   jjbrr 

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Posted 2013-June-10, 09:13

View PostZelandakh, on 2013-June-10, 08:29, said:

Bridge is no less watchable than chess or poker.


This is so wrong I assume we're being trolled.
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#69 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2013-June-10, 18:09

View PostP_Marlowe, on 2013-June-10, 08:50, said:

you hopefully also know, that lots of Chess Pros have real trouble making a good living just by playing?
And we are not speaking about players below position number 1000 in the world rang list.


Kasparov and Carlsen are the two best known chess players among the general public. Warren Buffett and Bill Gates are the two best known bridge players among the general public. Do you see anything wrong with this picture?
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#70 User is offline   GreenMan 

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Posted 2013-June-10, 18:33

View Postjjbrr, on 2013-June-10, 09:13, said:

This is so wrong I assume we're being trolled.


You haven't been watching the team trials on ESPN?
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#71 User is offline   MickyB 

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Posted 2013-June-10, 18:36

View Postjjbrr, on 2013-June-10, 09:13, said:

This is so wrong I assume we're being trolled.


I agree with Zel, bridge is no less watchable than [precisely one of] chess or poker.
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#72 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2013-June-11, 01:47

View PostMickyB, on 2013-June-10, 18:36, said:

I agree with Zel, bridge is no less watchable than [precisely one of] chess or poker.

I disagree, usually even complete strangers to chess roughly know the rules of the game and can usually appreciate who is winning by looking at the board (sometimes wrongly so but they will still have a strong feeling!). In bridge, things are much more complicated, there are a lot of rules for an outsider to learn and then they need to understand (to name one) why the guy who just 12 tricks out of 13 is not really winning. The learning curve for bridge watching is steeper than chess watching just as the one of playing bridge is steeper than the one of playing chess. This is not to say that chess is oh-so-watchable, after all BBC did cancel the Master Game and the last televised world championship match was Anand-Kasparov 1995 (might be wrong about that).
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#73 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2013-June-11, 02:04

View Postjjbrr, on 2013-June-10, 09:13, said:

This is so wrong I assume we're being trolled.

Then you miss the point. When Culbertson was around, he drew more kibitzers than any poker match does. What all three of these games have in common is that the general public only watch them for the personalities involved. Others watch them because they can play the game and are interested in watching good players. So the "watchability" of all of them is defined by the personalities of the top competitors and the general popularity. But if you were to take those factors away, none of them is any more interesting to watch per se.

What sets poker aside is that the competitors have somewhat more freedom to show their personalities - but to my mind the interest in the hands themselves is less. What sets chess apart is that it is pure, a game of complete information, and therefore can be seen as a pure battle of minds, wills and theory. On the other hand, it is not uncommon for chess games to be repeated 100% to a quick draw, which is not so interesting. What sets bridge apart is the language of bidding, the ability to communicate a hand of 13 cards in great (but not perfect) detail through a "secret code". This code needs to be understandable by the viewers, which leads to two possibilties - either you keep systems simple enough that they can be followed or you ask the competitors to provide details of their methods. Neither of these is done at present, although the prevalence of 2/1 helps. My view is that the second approach (allow more complexity but force the compeitors to provide details publicly) is the right one. No doubt those who want to make systems simpler would disagree, as well as those who have spent years developing their complex systems. Whatever - what matters is that neither poker nor chess is so different at the core of the game itself, only in the accessibility; and that is something that can be changed.
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#74 User is offline   P_Marlowe 

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Posted 2013-June-11, 03:30

View Postjogs, on 2013-June-10, 18:09, said:

Kasparov and Carlsen are the two best known chess players among the general public. Warren Buffett and Bill Gates are the two best known bridge players among the general public. Do you see anything wrong with this picture?

well for starters, Buffet / Gates are not known, because they happen to play Bridge, they are known for other reasons, and the public my
or may not know in addition, that both play Bridge, but this is besides the point:

The discussion was, if Bridge / Chess sport is a lucrative bussiness, and my comment was, that the pool of money available to
pure Chess players is limited.
To make a decent living, you have to do additional things besides just playing tournaments.
With kind regards
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
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#75 User is offline   billw55 

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Posted 2013-June-11, 06:23

View PostZelandakh, on 2013-June-11, 02:04, said:

What all three of these games have in common is that the general public only watch them for the personalities involved. Others watch them because they can play the game and are interested in watching good players. So the "watchability" of all of them is defined by the personalities of the top competitors and the general popularity.

+1
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#76 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2013-June-11, 07:30

View PostP_Marlowe, on 2013-June-11, 03:30, said:


The discussion was, if Bridge / Chess sport is a lucrative bussiness, and my comment was, that the pool of money available to
pure Chess players is limited.
To make a decent living, you have to do additional things besides just playing tournaments.


Top chess players have opportunities to make money in endeavors due to his chess notoriety. For the most part bridge players do not.
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#77 User is offline   jjbrr 

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Posted 2013-June-11, 08:52

View PostZelandakh, on 2013-June-11, 02:04, said:

Then you miss the point. When Culbertson was around, he drew more kibitzers than any poker match does.

[citation needed]

"The numbers for Live-minus-30 coverage of the WSOP on ESPN are in. About a half million viewers on ESPN 2, 23 million minutes of click-friendly eyeball time on ESPN 3, and a “cute” little 646,00 viewers for two hours during prime time on ESPN 1."

Zel, it's 2013. Culbertson died nearly 60 years ago, and bridge is much less a household hobby now. Just because you say that bridge is just as entertaining or marketable as chess or poker does not make it so, especially now.


Quote

What all three of these games have in common is that the general public only watch them for the personalities involved. Others watch them because they can play the game and are interested in watching good players. So the "watchability" of all of them is defined by the personalities of the top competitors and the general popularity. But if you were to take those factors away, none of them is any more interesting to watch per se.


Close but still wrong! Poker is popular because it's watchable in a completely mindless format while hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars can swing on any given hand, even one seemingly mundane. Poker on TV is also great because the producers can edit the content into a pretty exciting 30-minute broadcast with very little lull in the action by cutting out what I assume is hundreds of hours of mind-numbingly boring folding. The exciting stuff in poker is a tiny percentage of the game, but it can still be pretty exciting even if the casual fan only understands bet, raise, fold as the only actions in any given situation.

I would argue even chess is viable on TV for what gwnn said. Experts can analyze and post mortem positions for hours, explaining variations, discussing pawn structure and the value of connected rooks and strong diagonals and win equity etc etc. It might not be the most appealing entertainment, but it can be engaging to the right audience. It's certainly not exciting and it's difficult to really get passionate about, but it would certainly be informative and full of content.

Contrast this with bridge where you have to be a pretty serious fan AND you have to follow the whole play of the hand to really grasp what's going on. On top of that, the analysis is often pretty anemic. "Well he has to guess the queen of clubs now. He'll probably tank for 8 minutes before he makes the play. He knows xyz about the hand, so he should get it right. The guy at the other table also got it right, so it'll be another push." Yeah, not watching that.

As far as personalities go, I guess you're right that watching the cast of Jersey Shore play a high stakes money bridge match would be some amazing TV, but I assume that's not what you meant. Was Ely Culbertson or some other expert a great TV personality when bridge was popular? Well, that has nothing to do with bridge being good for television and everything to do with Culbertson being good for television.

And for the record, personality isn't really as important in poker as I think you make it out to be. Yeah, it helps the ratings that they have some interesting heroes and villains, but even online poker games are well railed when the players are often anonymous and the railers can't see the hands. Watching so much money change hands so fluidly is interesting; it's really that simple.


Quote

What sets poker aside is that the competitors have somewhat more freedom to show their personalities - but to my mind the interest in the hands themselves is less. What sets chess apart is that it is pure, a game of complete information, and therefore can be seen as a pure battle of minds, wills and theory. On the other hand, it is not uncommon for chess games to be repeated 100% to a quick draw, which is not so interesting. What sets bridge apart is the language of bidding, the ability to communicate a hand of 13 cards in great (but not perfect) detail through a "secret code". This code needs to be understandable by the viewers, which leads to two possibilties - either you keep systems simple enough that they can be followed or you ask the competitors to provide details of their methods. Neither of these is done at present, although the prevalence of 2/1 helps. My view is that the second approach (allow more complexity but force the compeitors to provide details publicly) is the right one. No doubt those who want to make systems simpler would disagree, as well as those who have spent years developing their complex systems. Whatever - what matters is that neither poker nor chess is so different at the core of the game itself, only in the accessibility; and that is something that can be changed.


This is why I assume you're trolling, but it's so many words I guess you're serious. Poker, chess, and bridge are COMPLETELY different at the core of the games themselves. To steal a phrase from jdonn, comparing the three games isn't even apples to oranges, it's like apples to tubas.

Of course the interest in poker hands themselves is less. The hands themselves are almost entirely meaningless. Poker is enjoyable for an audience even if you never see the hands! You could play poker with dice or a deck of Uno cards or colorfully painted rocks and it would still be viable for television.

You're right about chess, at least, except the part about "quick draws repeated 100%". [citation needed] again.

Your conclusion seems to be that all three are watchable despite your own concession that bridge needs to change before it's watchable and in the face of evidence that poker is and has been successful for television for nearly a decade.
OK
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#78 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2013-June-11, 11:45

I don't think the "watchability" has anything to do with the inherent nature of the games. It has to do with whether the general public is familiar with the game. 50 years ago bridge was a popular card game among much of the middle and upper classes of society, and I suspect also reasonably well known by the working class. Bridge champions were household names, and Omar Sharif was almost as well known as a bridge player as a film actor. And there were a few TV shows about bridge.

For various cultural reasons, I think mostly because of changes in family lifestyles and media like TV and Internet, children no longer learn bridge routinely from their parents as they did in previous generations. They're still likely to learn chess, either from parents or in school, and poker has managed never to fall out of the public consciousness. Poker can be learned in minutes -- if we simplified bridge enough to make this possible, I don't think it would be nearly as interesting to the rest of us. You'd get a game comparable to Hearts or Spades -- I used to play them, but now they seem as much fun as Go Fish.

#79 User is offline   GreenMan 

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Posted 2013-June-11, 12:50

Anyone who says Culbertson proved it can be done: We've had a similarly outsize personality in Zia in the game for decades, and we are where we are. When the Blue Team toured the U.S. in the '70s they drew some enthusiasts but nothing you would call cheering throngs of spectators. And so on. Bridge drew a lot of attention when it was new and developing, but now it's matured, and it's less interesting to the casual observer. No getting around that.
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#80 User is offline   Wwchang 

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Posted 2013-June-11, 14:00

Poker is inherently easy to watch. The player has a very limited number of options at each stage, and the cameras showing the hole cards add to the drama. Chess is virtually unwatchable in a meaningful way, except to experts. Most of the likely spectators are not going to be appreciate why Radjabov's positional "blunder" changed his evaluation from +0.21 to - 0.35 and see the continuation that will lead, 20 moves later to a lost endgame. More likely, they will just count pieces and think he's still up because he has one more pawn in material. At the Super-GM level, one move blunders are very, very rare. So the best that 99%, probably 99.9%,of the audience will really be able to do is to watch the engine evaluations. That is somewhat interesting, but hardly compelling. Even Maurice Ashleys "exciting" commentary doesn't change that. Blitz is even worse to watch, from a substantive point of view. But a 7-hour classical game is also not compelling.

Bridge is in between, but much closer to poker - anyone who knows the rules and is an intermediate level player and is watching double dummy can see and understand when a play is about to fail. They can also usually appreciate a difficult play in a way that they are not able to grasp why Kg6 is the only drawing move but Kg7 leads to a loss. (They won't appreciate a defensive return that breaks up a squeeze, but overall I think it's much more comprehensible to amateurs than chess is.)

As far as compensation, I read an article at some point that indicated earnings probably drops to about $200k if that for the 10th ranked player in the world. Pretty sure it drops very rapidly beyond that. The big money is in the WC matches; super tournaments pay reasonable appearance fees and prize money, but they all invite the same (generally top 10 players plus a few locals), and everyone else struggles to do well in open Swiss events that they themselves pay to attend, and for which prize money is not that lucrative.
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