Jan
8
From the Archives: Winning Ugly
January 8, 2025 |
Winning Ugly, reviewed by Vic
After my recent writings on such things as social insects, evolution, cladification, hydraulics, technology, roulette, marketing, herding, communication theory, herding, piracy, military strategy and opera, I felt it was high time to return to the one thing that I really know about — the lessons from racquet sports. Thus, it was a pleasure to come across the 1993 book on the mental game of tennis, Winning Ugly by Brad Gilbert and Steve Jamison. We all have much to learn from any book by a player who beat Conners and was confronted by him in the locker room afterward in his jockstrap shouting, "You shouldn't be on the same court with me!" and whose victory over McEnroe prompted McEnroe vow to quit the game forever at the age of 27 (and actually do so for six months) or who beat Boris Becker while Becker cursed in German about the humidity and the low-flying planes.
Indeed, the subject of the lessons from games is one of the most valuable for all specinvestors because games are developed to teach us through childhood play the universal things that will help us become competent in our life. To keep it simple, here are 11 useful lessons that I learned from Winning Ugly:
1. Keep the eye on the ball. Gilbert recommends forgetting about the player and following the ball on the serve. I tried it and found that it gives you a split second of extra starting time that is key to proper positioning. I would suggest that this is analogous to watching the open rather than the call. So often , we wait for that great or terrible opening call to be realized, or that terrible reaction to the number that you know should ensue, and miss the trade entirely.
2. Bring proper equipment to the game. Gilbert has a list that for openers includes water, eight rackets (including two with lower and higher tension), energy food, Ibuprofin, Flex-All, chemical ice, towels, sweatbands, extra grips, shoelaces, Band-Aids, cap with visor, dry shirts, socks and sneakers, and pen and notebook. What do you bring as a trader to the opening of the game? Might I suggest that if Gilbert will go all out to win $5,000 in a match, your own efforts to prepare for the trading session might be just as careful? Be prepared with everything you conceivably might need — make up your own list — but strangely, many of the same items that Gilbert mentions might be useful. I would add such things as studies, financial numbers, position sheets, previous games against your trading opponent, a plan for the day, a limit as to how many and where you will trade, alternate communication links, a backup personage for when you leave the room, a phone intercept, music and food.
3. Keep a notebook handy at all times to record your thoughts about your opponent. Gilbert does this during the game, and I would suggest that this would be an excellent thing for specs to do — but your good ideas will come to you at all times. Carrying a notepad has the further advantage of convincing those you have contact with that you are a man of respect.
4. First points are key. Gilbert says that among top players, the person who takes the lead first wins 85% of the time. He believes that an early lead gets the adversary to play defensive and overly pressing tennis. I believe that in trading when you start out with a profit you become much stronger during the rest of the match as you can withstand a greater loss, and the adversary has to extend himself much greater with his mini-booms and busts to squeeze you out.
5. Practice hard before you play. Gilbert has a most unsportsmanlike workout he likes to go through which I deplore, involving getting your opponent to hit it to you first at the net, then hit you lobs and cross-courts and serves so that by the time you play the game you're thoroughly warmed up. I like the idea of preparing everything in advance, even to the extent of entering your orders before the session starts so that you won't, in the heat of the moment, miss the big ones. Certainly you should go over all conceivable contingencies before the game starts.
6. Some points are much more important than others. Gilbert believes that these are the advantage points and the points that lead up to them. My friend Martie Riesman, the champion table tennis player, believes the same thing, and so did Christy Mathewson in Pitching in the Pinch. To me, every point is key, but who am I to argue? Certainly there are key times in the market, I would include the first 20 minutes, the intervals before 11 a.m., and the opening relative to the call as key points here. Also what the market does at the beginning of a period versus the end.
7. Recognize your opportunity. Analyze what's involved, then capitalize on it. That's the Gilbert formula that he applies before, during and after the match. I guess this would be similar to what I consider the key to the spec world: Ask the right questions and then test. But the recognition part, trying to keep an open mind as to when, what and where the questions come from, would augment my guidelines, and it's something that I'll try to improve upon.
8. Be your own doubles partner. Partners in a good doubles team talk to each other about 90 times during a match. Do remind yourself to do the right thing, to prepare for your opponent's strengths, to move to the right position, to give the key points your all during the trading day.
9. Play to your opponent's strengths and weakness. This is key to Gilbert's success. And he has guidelines for playing against the retriever, the player with speed, the attack to your backhand, the good server, the excellent return of serves, the serve volley player, the weak server, the lefty and the heater (the player who makes the point last less than 3 seconds the way they do at Wimbledon). Think of who is on the other side of your trades — is it a dealer or a market maker, a chronic, a charlatrendist? — and act accordingly. Have a plan for dealing with each.
10. Learn from the experts. Gilbert has a chapter on what he learned from Agassiz (hit them on the rise), Lendl (vary the pace), Connors (go for the opponent's weaknesses and return serve properly) Becker (go for the lead and be aggressive). There are many books about how the experts trade. I would think that most of the material in such books is promotional or misinformation, but occasionally in an interview or by analyzing their objective actions, say in the positions of trader's reports, you can glean some information that is not out of date or designed to mislead.
11. Be tournament-tough. Here's a potpourri of catchwords from Gilbert: desire, dedication diligence, mental management, get the early edge, play smart, don't let the other player upset you, have a plan for every aspect of your tennis, mental preparation, stretching warm up, the start of your match, don't rush. All these things are key to success.
Gilbert is to be complimented on a masterful book. Everyone who's seen Gilbert play has the same reaction: "How the Hades did this man win? He hits like a caveman!" I can think of no type of player better to learn from. Anyone who reads Winning Ugly and applies the lessons to his own games and pursuits will find many beautiful outcomes arising from this ugliness.
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