thehog
BANNED
KingsMountain said:I know quite a bit about bridge and the top players in the 70s and 80s. Hamman does not self promote his abilities as a bridge player, nor would he need to. During roughly three decades he was among the best handful of players in the world, and most people ranked him as the best.
However, that doesn't tell us anything about his own or his company's ability to accurately estimate the correct premium for consecutive wins or for guessing the effect that doping might have on the streak. I can tell you from personal experience that he doesn't like to be wrong, where wrong doesn't mean being on the losing side of a bet; instead it means making an error in estimating the odds. Besides the obvious value of recouping the payout, he would IMO want to justify the foundation of the premium SCA charged.
SCA’s own website promotes himself as Bridge player extraordinaire and he has an article on himself, linked from the main website – dubbing himself as “Mr. Bridge” –
https://www.scapromotions.com/about/mr-bridge.pdf
He has even written his own book about what a master he is.
Still not seeing with that ability and that knowledge that he wouldn’t know about doping in cycling. 1998 demonstrated it was wide spread and endemic. What made him think based on statistics at the time that the sport had changed? I’m just not buying that he had the wool pulled over his eyes.
Prior to launching SCA Promotions, Hamman managed his own insurance brokerage firm, Hamman Group Insurance Services Inc. He has also spent the past four decades working as a professional bridge player. Arguably the best known name in bridge, Hamman has won 12 world championships, over 50 national championships and was named American Contract Bridge League (ACBL) player of the year three times. He was inducted into the ACBL Hall of Fame in 1999.
A native of Los Angeles, Hamman moved to Dallas in 1969 when Ira Corn hired him to play on his professional bridge team, the Aces, which brought the world championship back to the U.S. in 1970. Hamman's education in figuring odds came from studying mathematics at California State University at Northridge, and from what Hamman terms "the school of hard knocks at the bridge table." Hamman is author of "At The Table - My Life and Times," an autobiography and bridge guide written with Brent Manley. It recounts his career as a professional bridge player
http://www.scapromotions.com/meettheteam/bios/bob_hamman.htm