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Starting bridge at a late age - how good could one get?

#1 User is offline   EricK 

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Posted 2012-March-23, 15:42

Can someone who takes up the game of bridge late in life (as many players seem to do) reach the very top of the game?

eg Bob Hamman is 73 (according to Wikipedia), and Bob Hamman is a World Class player (according to pretty much everybody), and I expect he got to be World Class within a dozen or so years of starting to play seriously. But suppose he had never heard of bridge until he reached, say, 60. If he had played it for the first time then, and dedicated the next 13 years to it, would he still have been able to reach a World Class level?
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#2 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2012-March-23, 15:52

Imo, no.

I think Fred G wrote on this forum that he thought that bridge players stopped getting better by their mid-forties, and I can't imagine that, if that is true, anyone much older than that has any hope of becoming good.

My limited experience with intelligent but older newbies is that they never become very good. I suspect that part of it is that all the truly good players I know wasted a LOT of their high energy youth learning the game with an intensity and passion that few older people can muster for anything, let alone a card game :P Edit: I am such an older guy, btw

Add to that the general truism that we lose a lot of mental flexibility and learning ability as we age, and I think it is impossible for a middle-aged or older person to become expert.
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#3 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2012-March-23, 15:57

A top player recently told me that people who start in their 20's never become good. This was after I told him that I started when I was 23. :(
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#4 User is offline   ggwhiz 

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Posted 2012-March-23, 16:42

It's probably like taking up golf in your early 40's. You might still do Fred Couples but Tiger is way out of reach.
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#5 User is offline   phil_20686 

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Posted 2012-March-23, 17:34

How late? And how much are you willing to play?


I'm sure there is one big name american player who only started in his forties? Remember reading about it in his profile.

But generally think you need to have at least one stage when you are playing basically all the time for a year or so to become an expert. Most experts get that in when at uni, and its hard after that.
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#6 User is offline   JLOGIC 

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Posted 2012-March-23, 18:22

No chance, I think almost anyone can reach a very very good level, but not the top level if they start older. However, I think starting at 20 is fine, disagree with han about 20s. FWIW Mr. Hamman himself told me you have to start under 25. Many top players started in their young 20s. I think ~25 is a good number.
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#7 User is offline   jdeegan 

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Posted 2012-March-23, 18:36

:P I don't think the age you start is that big a deal. What is a big deal is whether you have any talent for the game and the time and willingness to develop whatever talent you have. I started at 17 and became good enough to at least get a tryout for the Dallas Aces (which I flunked). I quit playing for 20 years. At 50 something I started back sporadically and have enjoyed the game ever since.

To support my case, I have a story. I picked up a guy named Scott at the partnership desk at the 2006 Atlanta nationals for a regionally rated seniors (55+) pairs event (I happened to be in town unexpectedly on business). He had 400 masterpoints. Turned out he could play. We won the first event and placed in another event the next day.

So, we made plans for the upcoming nationals in Dallas. After a few frustrating days playing teams with my friend's peers, we jumped into the Silver Ribbon Pairs and ended up 17th. I think my friend has talent and could develop into at least an above average expert player if he wanted to.
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#8 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2012-March-23, 19:48

 EricK, on 2012-March-23, 15:42, said:

Can someone who takes up the game of bridge late in life (as many players seem to do) reach the very top of the game?


Well, let's put this in context -- the vast majority of us will never "reach the very top of the game". I started at 11. :(
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#9 User is offline   antonylee 

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Posted 2012-March-23, 19:56

 han, on 2012-March-23, 15:57, said:

A top player recently told me that people who start in their 20's never become good. This was after I told him that I started when I was 23. :(

yay, started at 19 :)
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#10 User is offline   Statto 

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Posted 2012-March-23, 21:37

There's a theory that the amount of time and effort you need to put into learning something is directly proportional to your age. So, all other things equal, someone who starts at 40 will by the age of 80 be as good as someone who starts at 20 is at 40. But other things aren't all equal. Retired folk may have a lot more time on their hands to study. I would never rule out someone who takes up bridge in retirement eventually becoming part of a Bermuda Bowl winning team, but I don't think it's ever happened...
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#11 User is offline   32519 

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Posted 2012-March-24, 02:03

We need to differentiate here between “Open” and “Seniors” (with seniors now 60+).

I am asking the Aussies to come in on this post (shoot it down or provide more info).

I read an article once about an Aussie senior woman who took up bridge at a late age. She became a very good player and was invited to a selection tournament (I believe it was in the mid-1980’s) to represent Australia in the Seniors. She didn’t qualify in the end but that fact that she was invited proves that you can still become very competitive. How old was she when invited? Can’t remember.
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#12 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2012-March-24, 02:28

There are always exceptions to rules like this -- there are very few absolutes in psychology.

#13 User is offline   EricK 

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Posted 2012-March-24, 03:59

Let me expand a bit on my OP.

In other activities, even people who reach the top at a young age, can't seem maintain that level into middle-age, let alone old age. This is not just true of overtly physical activities (like football) or even "semi-physical" activities (like snooker), but also of mental activities like chess. There are very few chess players who maintain a world class level once they are over 50 let alone 60 or 70. Obviously, they are still very good compared to most other chess players, but they are not consistently challenging for the world title or winning major tournaments. This suggests that someone taking up chess at a late age could never reach that level.

Now is Bridge different? Or is Bob Hamman different?!
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#14 User is offline   mgoetze 

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Posted 2012-March-24, 07:13

 EricK, on 2012-March-24, 03:59, said:

In other activities, even people who reach the top at a young age, can't seem maintain that level into middle-age, let alone old age. This is not just true of overtly physical activities (like football) or even "semi-physical" activities (like snooker), but also of mental activities like chess.


Oh, proof by example, very good. Would you like a disproof by counterexample? I offer the game of Go.
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#15 User is offline   Statto 

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Posted 2012-March-24, 17:24

 32519, on 2012-March-24, 02:03, said:

We need to differentiate here between "Open" and "Seniors" (with seniors now 60+).

I was thinking open, but the fact that there is a separate seniors comp suggests there is some declination due to age. However, that may be in part due to not adopting the latest bidding theory...
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#16 User is offline   frank0 

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Posted 2012-March-24, 18:55

 mgoetze, on 2012-March-24, 07:13, said:

Oh, proof by example, very good. Would you like a disproof by counterexample? I offer the game of Go.

I don't understand how is that a counterexample, for Go, there are lots of legend pro players in China, Japan and Korea reach top level at their young age but cannot defend their title when the younger generation start to challenge them even though their skill is still there, or even better.
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#17 User is offline   mgoetze 

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Posted 2012-March-24, 22:58

 frank0, on 2012-March-24, 18:55, said:

I don't understand how is that a counterexample, for Go, there are lots of legend pro players in China, Japan and Korea reach top level at their young age but cannot defend their title when the younger generation start to challenge them even though their skill is still there, or even better.


Go Seigen, when he retired from tournament play, did so not because his Go was declining, but because he was not physically capable of playing stressful multiday matches anymore. He is still consulted by top pros today, at the age of 97.

Karigane Junichi challenged Go Seigen to a Jubango at the ripe old age of 62.

Honinbo Shusai played against Kitani Minoru (probably the 2nd best player in the world at the time) when he was 64, 2 years before his death, and aquitted himself quite well.

Sakata Eio won a professional Rapid Go championship at the age of 60.

So I think the reason that older Go professionals do not contend for major titles nowadays is a decline in stamina, not a decline in skill.
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#18 User is offline   EricK 

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Posted 2012-March-25, 02:02

Then we can ask the same question about Go. Can a player take up Go at a late age and still reach World Class level? Or does he have to have started young, reached world class level while relatively young, and then "simply" maintained that level?
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#19 User is offline   mgoetze 

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Posted 2012-March-25, 07:22

I'm not aware of any world class Go player who started playing after the age of 12 or so.
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#20 User is offline   JLOGIC 

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Posted 2012-March-25, 09:25

I would guess that all of the top 100 bridge players* in the world started under 30. I cannot think of anyone who didn't off the top of my head, someone may exist but I doubt it.

*-excluding clients if you are looking at some official ranking.
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