Your Cavendish top 5
#21
Posted 2009-May-06, 09:37
2) Nik Demirev + Nicolas L'Ecuyer
3) Geir Helgemo + Tor Helness
4) Fred Gitelman + Brad Moss
5) Bart Bramley + Mike Passell
Bonus top 3 in the Roberts Teams
1) Deutsch-Kranyak-Cohen-Smith-Cheek-Grue
2) DeKnijff-Wrang-Fallenius-Fredin-Bertheau-Nystrom
3) O'Rourke-Jacobus-Hampson-Rodwell-Levin-Weinstein
#22
Posted 2009-May-06, 09:56
2) Levin - Weinstein
3) Rodwell - Hampson
4) Piekarek - Smirnov (hope Alex will not forget my 10 for the auction pool this time)
5) Bakkeren - Bertens
#23
Posted 2009-May-08, 02:53
Bessis - Bessis
Levin - Weinstein
Welland - Willenken
Multon - Zimmerman
#24
Posted 2009-May-08, 16:08
JLOL, on May 3 2009, 05:28 PM, said:
1/5 has been done, GO Justin GO, don't stop and don't look back
#25
Posted 2009-May-08, 16:17
#26
Posted 2009-May-08, 16:18
Kick ass and take names. Rooting for you 100%
(BTW, I've heard that Bar Charlie at the Palazzo has pretty damn good sushi)
#27
Posted 2009-May-08, 18:49
Echognome, on May 8 2009, 10:17 PM, said:
And we wonder why Gnome always nails the pick 'em games ....
#28
Posted 2009-May-08, 18:58
Lev & Pszczola
Bathurst & Lall
Gitelman & Moss
Helgemo & Helness
#29
Posted 2009-May-08, 18:59
1. Hampson/Rodwell
2. Bramley/Passell
3. Goldberg/Eisenberg
4. Johnson/Meckstroth
5. Levin/Weinstein
#30
Posted 2009-May-08, 21:47
#31
Posted 2009-May-10, 16:48
Adding up the rank of your top 5 players the top 10 were:
1. inquiry (35)
2. mbodell (39)
3. skorchev (40)
4. hanp (42)
t5. tomi2 (43)
t5. y66 (43)
7. glen (46)
8. se12sam (51)
9. crazy4hoop (53)
10. gerben42 (55)
Instead of adding up ranks, you could just add up the IMPs won (since the difference between 10 and 13th may not be the same as the difference between 1st and 4th). Then the top 10 were:
1. skorchev (9767)
2. tomi2 (9594)
3. hanp (9333)
4. inquiry (9230)
5. glen (9192)
6. crazy4hoop (8607)
7. mbodell (8550)
8. bb79 (7362)
9. y66 (7216)
10. jdonn (6859)
If you take the five most popularly chosen pairs in this thread you'd of had, in order:
1. Hampson-Rodwell (2)
2. Helgemo-Helness (7)
3. Levin-Weinstein (1)
4. Gitelman-Moss (8)
5. Lev-Pszczola (5)
Which would top both top 10 lists with a 23 total rank and 10922 total IMPs. More proof of the wisdom of the crowd.
#32
Posted 2009-May-10, 17:28
#33
Posted 2009-May-11, 07:08
Mbodell, on May 10 2009, 10:48 PM, said:
Adding up the rank of your top 5 players the top 10 were:
1. inquiry (35)
2. mbodell (39)
3. skorchev (40)
4. hanp (42)
t5. tomi2 (43)
t5. y66 (43)
7. glen (46)
8. se12sam (51)
9. crazy4hoop (53)
10. gerben42 (55)
Instead of adding up ranks, you could just add up the IMPs won (since the difference between 10 and 13th may not be the same as the difference between 1st and 4th). Then the top 10 were:
1. skorchev (9767)
2. tomi2 (9594)
3. hanp (9333)
4. inquiry (9230)
5. glen (9192)
6. crazy4hoop (8607)
7. mbodell (8550)
8. bb79 (7362)
9. y66 (7216)
10. jdonn (6859)
If you take the five most popularly chosen pairs in this thread you'd of had, in order:
1. Hampson-Rodwell (2)
2. Helgemo-Helness (7)
3. Levin-Weinstein (1)
4. Gitelman-Moss (8)
5. Lev-Pszczola (5)
Which would top both top 10 lists with a 23 total rank and 10922 total IMPs. More proof of the wisdom of the crowd.
It looks like you did your calculations before the (several) score corrections that took place after the standings were first posted. The final standings (which I think are now official) are available here:
Link
I agree that the crowd chose wisely. No surprise - you are a wise crowd
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
#34
Posted 2009-May-11, 10:03
Robert
#35
Posted 2009-May-11, 10:20
4783.59 Bobby Levin & Steven Weinstein
1946.41 Sam Lev - Jacek Pszczola
1640.5 Fred Gitelman & Brad Moss
1490.5 Gier Helgemo & Tor Helness
786.36 Zhong Fu - Jie Zhao
_____________
10647.36
Worst part, this was the first Cavendish in quite a while I didn't get to watch much of.
#36
Posted 2009-May-11, 11:16
inquiry, on May 11 2009, 12:20 PM, said:
On the hand, there are the interesting plays of ♠ 9 at trick two (i.e. deliberate lead of 9 from K9 into dummy's spade holding), and of the ♠ ten by Fred on the spade play up to dummy. I wondered if playing the ♠ ten was the expected play from Txx after the long thought by declarer, and thus not playing the ten might have been quite right.
#37
Posted 2009-May-11, 15:23
fred, on May 11 2009, 05:08 AM, said:
Link
I agree that the crowd chose wisely. No surprise - you are a wise crowd
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
Yep, I'll have to run the numbers again when I'm home with the excel sheet I had (should be easy to recalculate). I find it amazing that the 2nd place pair were closer in IMPs to the 25th place pair than they were to the 1st place pair. That is domination.
Congrats, also, to Fred for a good result as well.
#38
Posted 2009-May-13, 06:50

The correlation coefficient between IMPs and log(price) is 0.6153759

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