AL78, on 2023-September-27, 11:55, said:
Another near record low score for me at the club. Hands like this contributed to it (I was East):
That was -790 and a bottom. The double made no difference as no-one else was in game. Two pairs played in 1
♠ and the third pair played in 4
♥-2. Somehow one of the pairs in 1
♠ only made eight tricks. Time to take a break from bridge
![:(](https://www.bridgebase.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/default/sad.gif)
.
Results like this, when they arise during a session where little seems to go right, are subjectively very irritating. You did nothing wrong (if opener is bidding 4S over 3H, he’s definitely bidding 4S over 4H and, as you noted, nobody else bid game, so whether partner doubles after 4H is irrelevant)
However:
I’ve probably had many hundreds and probably well over one thousand of these ‘we got fixed’ bottom boards in my life….having played roughly 100,000 boards of duplicate, and yet we won club games, sectional and regional pair games on a regular basis. Indeed, unless one is lucky enough to play nothing but top level bridge (where the opponents are too good to do weird but lucky things more than maybe once every couple of years), everyone has to deal with them, and these sorts of results even out in the long run.
I strongly suspect that, were we to look at each board you played that session we’d find a lot of unforced errors by you or your partner. It’s human nature to react most strongly to the fixes but that’s not the way to improve. Nor does ‘quitting bridge’ improve your game😀
It’s been said, repeatedly, that your posts show that you play with weak partners who make very poor decisions. You need (and I know this is easier to suggest than to do) a partner who is willing and able to put in some effort. It’s almost certainly unrealistic to get coaching, even online, and it’s not always easy for a non-expert player to recognize who might make a good coach anyway. But it’s still possible to learn through reading!
Imo, recognizing that I’m pretty old and my habits formed many decades ago, very few people have the ability to learn without either or both playing with/getting coaching from a better player or reading. Since it’s unlikely (based on your posts) that there are good players in your locale, reading is the realistic path…but it does little good for you to read if your partner doesn’t! In fact, it might make things worse since your partner won’t understand what you’re doing.
If you can’t find someone who wants to get better, and is willing to put in some effort, then either find another place to play (online?) or accept that you’re playing for purely social reasons.
Meanwhile, frustrating though it is, learn to distinguish between truly unlucky results beyond your control, good decisions that work out badly, bad decisions that work out well, and bad decisions that got what they deserved.
Every session is likely to contain at least one of each.
There are some excellent books and, imo, if you can get your hands on old Bridge Worlds starting from about 1975 onwards, you’d learn a lot. BW bidding is based on NA practices, and even so has changed significantly over the years…however….The Mastersolvers Club has international participation and it’s, imo, the single best resource I’ve ever seen for ‘how to think’ at the table, mostly during the bidding but with an opening lead problem every set. How to think is more important than the details of any bidding system, which is why Strong Club players, for example, are often excellent contributors despite being forced to answer in a non-forcing club system.
More ‘locally’ you’d do well to find as many Kelsey books as you can….share with partner, and discuss. Again, the emphasis is not on the methods used (which in Kelsey books are antiquated and UK-centric) but on ‘how to think’.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari