Many elements contribute to success at bridge. Frank believes that two
areas account for the difference between players who do well
consistently and those who struggle. (1) A winning player has rock-solid
fundamentals. The best part of an expert's game is that he never --
never -- boots a simple situation. Give him a basic bidding problem or a
textbook exercise in dummy play and he will get it right. If you never
make errors in basic technique, you will have an edge over 90% of your
competitors. (2) A winning player keeps avoidable errors to a minimum.
Bridge is a game of mistakes. Nobody has ever played a perfect session,
nobody ever will. Everybody makes mistakes. Winners make the fewest.
This quote is attributed to Bob Hamman: "All players are poor players,
including some good players." Hamman wasn't being opprobrious; he was
just acknowledging that we all have shortcomings. Many types of errors
are common: mishandling suit combinations, forgetting to count, missing
inferences. Maybe the majority of errors stem from lapses in
concentration.