I am grateful to receive another article from Todd Flowerday, a recent transplant to Minnesota - and - a young man who - like most of us - is fascinated by bridge! Todd takes us from his plans to play with partner and good friend Bob, to his first foray into IMP pairs and his highs and lows. For those of you who are not "old timers" at the table, though, I hope that Todd and all the others realize this. No matter how hard you study, learn and battle at the table - no one gets 'em all right! That is part of the challenge and the fun of bridge...
I look forward to more of Todd's years of learning, of more young people becoming entranced by our game as so many Minnesotans have for decades - and for expressing it all for all of us! Thanks, Todd!
P.S. For Todd and all the others who haven't been competing for years and years - even THE BEST have incredible disasters now and then.... just not anywhere as often as the rest of us!
Letters
So, my Washington partner and good friend Bob recommended we do the NAOBC. He’s determined—maybe more than I am—to get me those last two-point-something gold so I can drop the “N” from LM. He’s also pressing me to go to Austin for a few days this Fall. Given that I still work for a living and don’t have the means of travelling to those North American events that lack the “O,” this might be my only chance to compete on the continental level.
Open IMP pairs?
Why not, I replied.
I wasn’t free for any event that touched on a weekend, so it was the Wednesday/Thursday session. He said IMP wasn’t his favorite format. I’ve never played one but rumor had it you treat it mostly like you play a team event. Bid your vulnerable games. A little less aggressive on NV games and small slams. And this rule seemed like a refugee from party bridge: don’t double anybody into game. So I’d have to pocket my favorite card in the bidding box. Boo.
The only time I felt as outclassed in a competition was a flight A NAP in Seattle. (My work schedule didn’t permit a B or C effort.) Bob and I didn’t finish bottom, but darn near it. I looked at the final masterpoint awards and the top pair had earned 24 gold. 24?! I joked to my friend that if I knew the payout was so generous maybe I should’ve tried harder.
I knew I was in the soup at this “O” when we drew a world champion in round 3. Then another. Then a Bridge Bulletin columnist. That wasn’t counting the profiles that listed DLM, ELM, etc.. We actually got a marginally good board against a famous author my daughter likes. Louis Sachar is a GLM, but his BBO profile didn’t mention the G. My dad was a jeweler, but this event had more gems and gold than I ever saw in his showcases.
What’s my assessment of an IMP event? Glad/not glad you asked. My friend and I had three bad boards in session one and four in the nightcap. That was about 75% of our losses, over 60 IMPs. Otherwise, it was like Chinese water torture, a point here and a point there over the other 41 boards. If we had played well—no big errors, that is—I think we would have placed around the top of the bottom third.
One thing I noticed being an “N” competing against P’s and E’s and D’s is that a good effort might still be a minus. Some genius bid a rare 6NT against us, and though we got him to think right up to the time limit, he was still one of a few who made it. Minus-12 on the third hand of the day.
World Champions never fumble the basics. I was most displeased with getting in the wrong contract and dropping a trick because I lost my concentration. Minus-200 instead of a hundred. Another 3 down the drain. My highlight was endplaying a weak jump overcaller for something like plus 2. Oh, and near the end of the event, I did double a 2NT for plus 300 and maybe 6 IMPS. It felt good to break the rule and not get punished.
I ask myself, did I learn anything? At this point in my bridge competing, the few gold points will come—that’s just a matter of time. I want to keep learning things so I can become a better player. I want to get good enough so that the LM really means something, and that it’s not just a participation award.
I’m going to keep playing up. Next time I find myself in the alphabet soup, I’ll be a little bit better prepared.
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