Intimidation
PITBULLS:
Fred Gittleman
in his series of articles on Salt Lake brought up a valid point . He said that
the team he was on were all Bridge experts . Maybe not as “fine tuned” as experts as the Poles & Italians but
experts nevertheless . His team consisted of players that have played Bridge
for decades and have the judgment required to beat any team at any given time .
Bridge is still a sport and the results are not out before you play the event .
If your judgment is on and your team gets on a roll , you may become
unstoppable .One thing can stop you though and that is if you are intimidated
by the caliber of the opponents . As Gittleman says the difference between
experts is very small . The top experts are still human and are not even close
to god status . You can respect them for their abilities but do not give
them an edge that might hamper your game .
Have you ever
played match points with somebody who when they reach a “seeded” pair all of a
sudden starts making strange plays or bids. This person is intimidated
and insecurities and doubts start to creep in. It effects their play as
they feel they have to “do something”
as they are playing against maybe “world class” experts . All of sudden
very ordinary boards turn into tops for the experts for no other reason
that you are intimidated .
Your partner can
also intimidate you. If she is a much better player than you are you may become
too aware of your own Bridge shortcomings. You may try to keep up with your
expert partner and get nervous or frustrated if you miss subtle inferences. As
one Pitbull told me “you make me feel stupid” . No it is not partner that is
the problem it is your own insecurities. Ignore expert opponents and expert
partner for that matter and just relax and play your game. Stress is life’s
greatest killer. It is also has a detrimental effect on your own
performance.
Intimidation
happens in all sports. The Edmonton Oilers lost to Detroit because the coach
said they give them too much respect and it threw them off their game . The
sports cliché is that you are just supposed to play your own game and trust
your partner and team mates. Stress from intimidation just hands them
imps on a silver platter . They do not deserve these gifts!
The effects of
intimidation I have seen over the years are “underbidding” and not competing
enough . Afraid to make penalty doubles because they are “so good” .
Making fancy opening leads to impress them or have a story to tell .
Over pre-empting with the wrong types of hands is another result of
intimidation . Forgetting systemic bids due to nervousness or just plain
“out to lunch” in judgment situations.
Playing against
experts just means being disciplined and do the things you would normally do
. Forget the highlight reels . Do not bid dicey slams or games you would not
normally bid because you are “afraid they will be in it” . I actually find
playing against experts easier than playing against Mr. & Mrs. weak player
. I can draw inferences from their play , defense and bidding. You do not have
that luxury against weak players who do not know what they are doing themselves
. The only advice I give when playing against strong opponents is to be
disciplined . This is so that if partner has to trust somebody in an
auction , it is you and not them . Experts are very capable of getting into
trouble also so have your bid when partner doubles . Psychic responses or
opening hands that would not normally be opened is falling prey to intimidation
. Partner is relying on you to do the same things the partnership has done
in the past .
Another
mainstay in sports is that good teams do not “beat themselves” , they get beat
by the other team . If you are intimidated by the other team you are beat
before you start. Relax and enjoy the level of competition but do not give
them an edge . That guarantees that you will not beat yourselves due to intimidation
related stress..
Another thing,
we have all played bridge for a long time . What we have built up from this experience
is judgment. Trust this judgment and do what you feel is right. If a hand is
too difficult to bid scientifically then trot out the Gandolfo method and just
bid it ! Do not think because you are playing against experts you must have
some torturous auction that puts maximum pressure on partner to figure things
out . Take control yourself and bid it if you think it can make . Do not
retreat into a shell and just try not to lose imps. This is bad also . Just
play your game and forget who you are playing against or with . Try it , you
will like it !