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ACBL District 4

4 THE LOVE OF BRIDGE

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Tag Archives: story

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Ken Levine – Club Master

ACBL District 4

My “story” is one that I am confident has never happened before, but may now happen again soon enough. I am a 55 year old attorney who lives in Chester County, Pennsylvania, and I learned rudimentary bridge from my parents back in my teenage years, but never played it outside the home or more than a dozen times with them.

Now, jump ahead 40 years to 2018. While visiting my recently widowed father in Boca Raton, who had taken up duplicate bridge himself with more energy after my mom passed away, I offered to join him and play duplicate bridge at a popular club down there. We did fine, and I got the bug/itch to play more. My busy schedule up north was not very conducive to active in-person bridge play. I started playing on BBO online, basically every night after my family went to bed. Over the past two years, I have accumulated about 300 ACBL points through BBO, but they were almost exclusively just “online points.” In turn, I became a Junior Master very quickly, but was not in any position to gain greater master rankings without in-person matches.

One Saturday, after playing for about 6 months, I contacted the folks at Valley Forge Bridge Club and asked if they could find me a decent playing partner if I showed up for a Saturday afternoon game. Unfortunately, the only unattached person with whom they could pair me was a rather elderly gentlemen who had not played himself in decades and who was admittedly not that great way back when. He was understandably awful in bidding and card play, but we were also playing at a very low level at the club. About a third of the way through the hands, I realized what was happening and changed approaches, jumping ahead into what seemed the best contracts. Amazingly, we ended up winning the match with 1 1 1 across. I mention the details only for one reason – it tainted my view of trying to continue my rare local efforts at any in-person bridge.

Whenever I returned to Florida, though, to visit my father – which I did for a weekend about every 3 or 4 months for the past 2 years, we would play that Saturday at Jourdan’s Bridge Club, or another club down there more recently. It was not that often, and Jourdan’s never provided ACBL with the points earned from my matches. They were not much, but they would have allowed me to reach Club Master level sooner. I recognized the absence of such black club points recently, and shared it in emails with Jourdan’s and ACBL, but nothing has come of it.

At the end of all of this, I just figured that I would forever be stuck as a Junior Master despite 300 ACBL points (with more on the way) because I only play online. BUT, along comes COVID19, and the only good thing to come from COVID19 for me is that ACBL started recognizing certain tournaments online as black points to support the game and support local clubs. Through such more open policy, I was able to gather up almost 17 black points in the past 2 months while in the “comfort” of my pajamas (figuratively or literally, depending on the day).

I love the game, and I enjoy the additional interpersonal and social aspects at in-person matches, but my schedule just does not allow me to actively join any local club events. The lack of a local partner does not help as well. I expect this to change as my professional career crests and my family responsibilities change (and my remaining teenage daughter at home moves on to college), but for now I will continue to enjoy the game on-line every day.

This is the long story to the brief comment above as to my “unique” journey. I suspect I am amongst the first players (if not the very first player) to earn Club Master online, and I am grateful to the ACBL for the way it has addressed the COVID19 situation to give me this opportunity.

Thanks for reaching out. Hopefully, ACBL will stay the course and its many players will in the near future be back at tables both in person and online enjoying the game.

John Small – Sectional Master

ACBL District 4

I am 75 years old and had been away from duplicate for almost 40 years due to business commitments. I started playing again two years ago in the local club events. It took me a while to get up to speed on the latest trend in bidding since I learned from Goren’s book.

The local players were very patient with me and in time my mistakes became learning experiences and I was able to reach 25 points in about a year since I could only play once a week with various partners.

I quickly found out that I had to break out my copy of Watson’s Play of the Hand to improve further, which I did. Talk about a book that hasn’t lost it’s relevance

Since the Corona Virus has suspended local club play i started playing on the BBO web site solitaire competetively and found I could both learn, try out some new things and gain master points.

I feel soon I will be ready to try my hand with the higher level of play

I have an insight that may have applicability for others learning or relearning.

It seems that the bridge literature and teaching focuses on bidding and bidding conventions and of course the play of the hand. I have found that there are process steps I need to follow that I’m sure experts know them intuitively or through their experience – the basic example is – identifying trump count and distribution.

I am at the level where i conciously go through these 3 process thoughts on every hand –

1 – What have i learned from the bidding about opponents and partners holdings?
2 – What is the trump distribution for a trump contract play?
3 – What is the significance of the opponents lead, if I am the declarer?

I have found that going through these three simple questions conciously have helped me and I’m sure I will add to them as they become habitual.

My point is that articles on process steps like these may be an idea for collecting like ideas to help others.

David Laskin – Junior Master

ACBL District 4

I was first exposed to bridge in 1974 by my medical school colleagues. Instead of attending classes some days, a group of us would play bridge in our dorms. I played intermittently for approximately 18 months and as the saying goes, “Life got in the way.” I quickly became overwhelmed with the responsibilities of being a medical resident and then before I could blink, I was a father to two little girls, who are now in their thirties. I had never played another hand (nor had any interest) since 1976.

Fast-forward to Autumn of 2019 when my wife and I went on a spectacular cruise to Southeast Asia. Offered onboard, among other things, were bridge lessons. As a recently semi-retired physician, one of my retirement goals was to learn to play bridge again. On the ship, I coincidentally ran into an old acquaintance who informed me of a local bridge club (South Jersey Bridge Club), literally five minutes from my house.

In December of 2019, shortly upon returning from vacation, I signed myself up to begin taking more lessons, reading books, playing in tournaments and getting pushed around by all of the “bridge sharks.” However, I noticed that my game continued to dramatically improve, and I was learning something new from each hand played. Now, I am “addicted” and playing and reading regularly!

This April, during an online class, I virtually “met” a gentleman with a quick wit, a jovial personality and an aggressive bidding attitude–we are now a wonderful partnership. Oddly enough, given the impacts of COVID-19, I still have never physically met him!

Regarding my personal bridge goals, I am deeply concerned whether my bridge club, or any bridge club for that matter, will survive the financial hardships imposed by COVID-19, as well as the opportunity for all of us to congregate again once a vaccine is developed. Being semi-retired, I have now “invested” in the game, but realize the social aspects are just as important. It has been a wonderful journey so far and I hope I am just at the beginning

David Wachsman – Emerald Life Master

ACBL District 4

The journey to Emerald Life Master began 50 years ago. I love both the social aspect of bridge as well as the intellectual stimulation and challenges. I enjoy sharing my thoughts via the ABC of Bridge articles that I write for our district. I am grateful to my favorite partner, my wife Janis. Most of all I believe the most fun is derived from constantly seeking ways to improve my bidding, defense, and declarer play.

Buddy Hano – Emerald Life Master

ACBL District 4

After 38 years of playing bridge, I finally achieved Emerald life master. I want to thank all of the many partners I played with over the years, especially Norma Bernstein , who I’ve been playing with for over 20 years. Most of all I want to thank my wife, Joann, who I met playing bridge and we’ve been married 37 years. Without Joann I wouldn’t have achieved this goal.

Rick Olanoff – Sapphire Life Master

ACBL District 4

I learned to play bridge in the dorm lounge at Harpur College (Now SUNY Binghamton). That is how I got to know my first wife, Claudia, the mother of my two bio daughters. She was my partner in some early District 112 sectionals. I remember one time playing our opening match against a team headed by Don Dalpe, knowing we’d have to be fortunate to win. So I psyched Flannery (legal back then), we won the match, lost the next three and won the consolation.

I won my first master points at a club near Binghamton playing with my roommate Marc Saperstein. We played a homemade system borrowed from a friend’s brother that required us to open every hand e.g. 1C=0-6 HCPs. The director thought about this and let us play it. We finished 5th of 18 pairs….Interestingly Marc started playing in clubs and sectionals a few years ago, with a renewed passion and we’ve played a few times on BBO.

I made Life Master back in 1977 in the Toronto Nationals playing with Peter Katz, a favorite friend and partner, who also went to Harpur, but we didn’t meet until we each had moved to the Syracuse area.

I remember the joy of winning the first ever District Flight B GNT’s. Our team was Larry Merritt and I along with Anne Scharmach and Jan Scanlon. We won the final very easily, but alas there was no national Flight B GNT until the next year.

The GNT’s became my favorite event, and fortunately we won Flight B a few more times and Flight A several times. In 2010 playing with Doug Dye, Howie Cohen, Corey Krantz, Andy Kauffman and Elliot Shalita, we won it all after qualifying last. They were excellent teammates and none of our matches were nail-biters. And you, Joann, were there to congratulate us. I never expected to win. My teammates did, while I told Doug that my goal was to become closer to him and our other team members.

I won my first Regional titles playing on a Men’s team with Peter Katz, Bernie Gorkin, Dan Boye, and a Canadian pair who drank beer throughout the event. Fred and I later won a pairs event in a Niagara Falls Regional. (no beer drinking, though).

I later developed a partnership with Don Dalpe and we won several Flight A GNT’s but never contended at the national GNT’s. We did have high finishes in the 3- day National 0-5,000 limited pair events, including a third, as well as a third in the North American Pairs, Flight B. Another time we won the District 4 NAP’s in the top flight and after trudging through 10 inches of snow in Detroit to find our hotel we finished 23rd overall.

However, when Don moved his bridge affiliation to his other home in Florida, Fred died, Larry and Peter had moved away long ago and bridge club games dwindled in Syracuse, so did my enthusiasm for playing in clubs, Sectionals, Regionals and Nationals.

I exclusively played bridge on-line with Don mainly. More recently I’ve also played with an old partner Bill Burnet and even more recently with Doug Dye. I thought it would take me years at about 50 mp’s a year to reach Sapphire Life Master. But along came the on-going endlessly tragic COVID-19 era and on-line bridge appealed to me more often.

Bridge is a great game; I’ll play it as long as I can. I do miss in-person bridge, larger club games, tough fields in sectionals, the GNT’s and many of my old friends and partners, but I’m very happy that one of the ways people relaxed at Harpur College was to play bridge in the dorm lounges.

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