Thursday, January 31, 2019

Bridge Blog 1073: Buffalo Winter Sectional


“Did you play in the Swiss teams on Sunday?” I ask Linda Burroughsford during Monday’s game at the Airport Bridge Game.
She assures me that she did, with Davis Heussler. They were on a team with the Weltes. They came in third.
That’s how dimly aware I was of my milieu on Sunday, the only day I felt well enough to play in the Buffalo Winter Sectional Tournament in the Social Hall at the Main-Transit Fire Hall in Amherst. A nasty upper-respiratory infection canceled my plans for the Friday and Saturday games.
I arrived as they were making the opening announcements for the game, having alarmed partner Gay Simpson enough to prompt a phone call from her a couple minutes before I showed up.
I spent the first rounds in kind of a fog as we managed to lose three times by just 5 International Match Points. A succession of unbiddable hands may have had something to do with it.
Our foursome – Florence Boyd and Ruth Wurster rounded out our lineup – rallied for a victory in the fourth round, propelling us into the lunch break with a dash of hope. In the final three rounds, we collected a couple more wins. We were Team 13 and, with a total of 92 victory points, we were 13th overall. Our winning rounds gave us 0.78 points. I was feeling better.
Random notes:
Chris Urbanek rules!
Her team – with Saleh Fetouh, Bud Seidenberg and Fred Yellen – won the Swiss event, allowing her to cap a winning weekend with another 8.25 points. She took a total of 28.27, winning the two-session pairs game on Friday with Sharon Benz, and finishing second Saturday with Stan Kozlowski.
Her partners and teammates filled the top places on the overall leaderboard. Sharon Benz was second with 17.19. Saleh Fetouh was next with 16.31, followed by Bud Seidenberg with 13.33 and Stan Kozlowski with 13.10.
Had I played Friday and Saturday and had I followed the Art Matthies strategy of playing only in the single-session side games, how well could I have done? Not as well as Chris Urbanek, but winners of each round earned 2.57 to 3 points and the competition is a lot easier. Max could have been in the 11 to 12 point range.
Did bad weather have an impact on turnout? Let’s compare it with previous winter sectionals:
2019 – 133 tables, 127 players earn points. 20-table Swiss.
2018 – 153 tables, 146 players earn points. 20-table Swiss.
2017 – 145 tables, 135 players earn points. 24-table Swiss.
2016 – 136 tables, 127 players earn points. 23-table Swiss.
2015 – 156 tables, 162 players earn points. 23-table Swiss.
2014 – 132 tables, 142 players earn points. 23-table Swiss. First weekend after New Year’s.
The field included a healthy component of players from St. Catharines, Ont., as well as a handful from Toronto and Rochester.
Surprised to see the 2018 District 5 overall point leader, Sue Lan Ma from the Cleveland area. She comes to our regional tournaments, but I didn’t recall her at a sectional previously. Could it be because her partner, Peter Petruzzellis, is from Scarborough, Ont.? They earned 8.23 points, mostly from a second-place finish in the Swiss teams. Silver-point pocket change for someone like her.

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Bridge Blog 1072: Under the Weather


Winter in Buffalo has a way of making bridge an uncertain pastime. Today, Wednesday, Jan. 30, for instance, has dangerous wind chills, a foot of snow and a travel advisory. By the time I wake up this morning, Airport Bridge Club manager Bill Finkelstein already has canceled today’s game.
This follows a week in which I was under the weather in the other sense. A week ago today I succumbed to one of the nastiest upper respiratory ailments I’ve ever had. After five days of decongestants, it went into retreat, but it still hasn’t disappeared completely.
So not only did I miss two days of club play last week, but I also had to cancel on my partners for the first two days of the Buffalo Winter Sectional Tournament. I finally rallied for the Swiss teams on Sunday.
Until that happened, it seemed like I was emerging from my post-Gold Master slump. The Swiss teams game, though not spectacular, yielded three wins for 0.78 of a point. A 52.78% game Monday with Usha Khurana produced another 0.92. And even a sub-par 47.50% game with Ruth Wurster on Tuesday was good for 0.57 of a point.
That makes nearly 11 points for the month, but it may be the end of the story for January. My Thursday partner already has bowed out because of the weather.

Monday, January 21, 2019

Bridge Blog 1071: Reverse Alchemy


Ever since I attained Gold Life Master status on Jan. 9, I’ve been turning gold into lead. As my partners and opponents alternately congratulate me and declare their intentions of cutting me down, I’ve made scant progress toward the next step on the ladder – Emerald Life Master at 3,500 points. It’s a sorry tale:
Thursday, Jan. 10. 45.83% with Florence Boyd, subbing for Marietta Kalman.
Friday, Jan. 11. 53.64%, fifth North-South at Bridge Centre of Niagara in St. Catharines, Ont., with Selina Volpatti. 0.26 of a point.
Saturday, Jan. 12. 44.78% with Denise Slattery.
Monday, Jan. 14. 42.92% with Judie Bailey on what would have been her last Monday game at the Airport Bridge Club before snowbirding off to Florida, except her flight Jan. 20 gets canceled by the big storm.
Tuesday, Jan. 15. 40.72% with Denise Slattery.
Wednesday, Jan. 16. 46.53% with Pawan Matta, filling in for the ailing June Feuerstein.
Thursday, Jan. 17. A breakthrough 52.71% with Marietta Kalman. Fourth in the A strat, second in B. 1.10 point.
Friday, Jan. 18. Back to the doldrums. 46.96% with Selina Volpatti in St. Catharines.
Saturday, Jan. 19. Deeper doldrums. 42.71% with Denise Slattery.

Bridge Blog 1071-A: I Have a Dream


The funk and the constant weekend snow clear away on a bright, frigid Martin Luther King Day at the Airport Bridge Club, where it’s holiday mode – two games with a free snack in between.
Morning is solid with partner Usha Khurana as declarer on eight of the 24 hands, notching three of our top boards, while I play three. 55.69%. Second overall in a five-table Howell. 1.64 points.
Usha can’t stay for the afternoon session, but I have no problem pairing with Nadine Stein, who’s not only funny, but good. This time it’s a four-table Howell and we bid aggressively. Nadine is declarer on 11 of the 27 hands, while I play nine. The result is my best effort in many a moon – 66.07%. First overall, to be sure. And another 2.04 points. Unofficial tally for the month so far: 8.65.

Sunday, January 13, 2019

Bridge Blog 1070: That Was The Year That Was



My goal is 15 points a month, minimum. Had I hit that target in 2018, I would have been a Gold Life Master by Christmas. Instead, I finished the year with 175.96, club points accounting for 142.79 of them.
Well, let’s see how that measures up against the rest of the world, unit-wise, district-wise and all across the land:
Unit 116 (Buffalo only), Ace of Clubs (club play only), Ruby Life Masters (players with 1,500 to 2,500 points). 
I add 13.29 club points to my total in December to get that final 142.79. That allows me to sneak past Martin Pieterse to snatch third place among the Unit 116 Rubies. I also move up from 13th to 12th among all players in the unit. I’ll take it.
Here's the top 10:
Mike Silverman breezes along in first with 190.24, fifth among all Unit 116 players. Missing from second place is former leader David Millward, who’s gone to Florida for the winter. His absence allows Allen Beroza to reach second place with 172.12, eighth in the unit.
So I didn’t surpass Martin Pieterese. I did that a month ago. He earned 14.08 in December and almost caught me with his total of 142.65. He’s 13 th in the unit.
Then it’s Fred Yellen, up from sixth to fifth with 114.38 (20 th in the unit), and Dorothy May making a strong finish at 113/02 (21 st). Ken continues his year-end sit-out and stands pat with 107.89, which allows Davis Huessler to pass him with 110.69 (22 nd). Rounding out the Top 10 are Gene Finton with 82.02 and Elaine Kurasiewicz with 60.48.        
Unit 116, Ace of Clubs overall. 
Never any doubt that it would be Alan Greer. He finishes with 438.69, having added 30.40 in December. His sometime partner Nancy Wolstoncroft maintains second with 272.23.  
Then it’s John Ziemer, with 237.13, Barbara Libby moving up to fourth with 191.58 and Mike Silverman with 190.24. John Welte, playing without wife Martha several times in December, rises to sixth place with 174.27, edging Liz Clark (who died unexpectedly Jan. 9 while recovering from a respiratory illness) with 173.72. Allen Beroza has 172.12, Martha Welte has 165.93, Bob Linn has 164.49 and in eleventh place is Mike Ryan with 162.61. It’s a big 20-point step down to me and Martin Pieterse after that.  (169.86) from fifth to seventh place.
Then it’s Allen Beroza, eighth with 161.49, followed by the Weltes, Martha and John, tied for ninth with 158.17.
        Rounding out the Top 20 are Gay Simpson, 140.09; Denise Slattery, 137.92; Bud Seidenberg, 130.97; Judi Marshall, 126.67; ailing Ron Henrikson, standing pat at 116.41; Sandi England, 115.39; and Fred Yellen, 114.38.
 Moving on to the Mini-McKenney races, which count all points earned everywhere, the disappearance of David Millward allows me to move up to fifth Rubies.
Winning by an infinite number of lengths is Davis Heussler, who had a 27-point month to reach 417.29 and climb to second among all Unit 116 players. Holding onto second place, and 14th overall, is Allen Beroza with 243.68. Mike Silverman takes third with 220.41, 15th overall, passing the inactive Ken Meier with that 215.43. He also falls back two more places to 17th in the entire unit.  
I’m a distant sixth with my 175.96, still 27th overall, followed by Martin Pieterse, up from eighth to sixth with 170.62 (30th overall) and passing Fred Yellen, who has 165.38 (31st).
Then it’s Dorothy May, up from tenth to eighth with 120.84 (47th overall), followed by Gene Finton, 118.75 (still 48th); and Elaine Kurasiewicz, 103.06 (53rd overall). Also passing the century mark is Art Morth with 102.56 (54th).
     Among all players in Unit 116, it’s Alan Greer, topping the half millennial mark with a 51-point month to reach 504.28. Ruby leader Davis Heussler nudges Saleh Fetouh out of second place, 417.29 to 410.50.
Jay Levy maintains position in fourth with 354.83, followed by John Ziemer with 353.82 and Linda Burroughsford, riding a 43-point month to 352.33.
Then it’s the Weltes, John with 343.09, Martha with 334.75. Rounding out the Top 10 are Nancy Wolstoncroft with 330.75 and Dian Petrov with 314.12. Eleventh is Chris Urbanek with 307.02.
Now let’s widen our horizons.
       District 5 (BuffaloClevelandPittsburgh) Ace of Clubs, Ruby Life Masters. 
Here Unit 116 players hold four of the top vie places, including the No. 1 spot.
Mike Silverman finishes ahead of Philip Goulding of Wexford,Pa., 190.24 to 187.77, ninth and 11th among all District 5 players, respectively. With David Millward missing, Allen Beroza finishes third with 172.12. He’s 17th in the district.
I move up from eighth to fourth place with my 142.79. Martin Pieterse, drafting me, apparently, advances from ninth to fifth with 142.65. Then it’s James Wheeler of EdinburgPa., motionless for the month with 137.60; Garnet Depner of Jeannette, Pa., with 135.83; and Marvin Shapiro of AkronOhio, with 135.51. Then it’s William Feeny of LatrobePa., with 126.99, and Wayne Heritage of North Olmsted, Ohio, with 116.68. Unit 116’s Fred Yellen and Dorothy May are 11th and 12th.
Mike Silverman is down on place, from eighth to ninth district-wide, while Philip Goulding continues 11th. I’m 28th, up from 36th.
Overall Ace of Clubbers in District 5 look like this:
Buffalonians hold three of the top four spots. It’s Alan Greer with 438.69 and Nancy Wolstoncroft with 272.23, with John Ziemer regaining third with 223.16, one point ahead of Arlene Port of Pittsburgh, with 245.56, regaining third in her seesaw battle with  John Ziemer, with 237.13.  
Then it’s Barbara Belardi of Pittsburgh with 214.78, Reanette Frobouck of Pittsburgh with 208.61; and Richard Katz of North VersaillesPa., rounding out the double-century winners with 206.92.
       Two more Western New Yorkers slip into the lower reaches of the Top 10 – Barbara Libby, eighth with 191.58, and Mike Silverman, ninth with 190.24. Robert Alexander of MentorOhio, rounds out the Top 10 with 189.63. Next Unit 116 players on the list are John Welte, 14th; the late Liz Clark, 16th; Allen Beroza, 17th, and Martha Welte, 20th. 
    Now for the District 5 Mini-McKenney, Ruby Life Masters. 
    Here Unit 116 players hold four of the top six positions, but Philip Goulding of WexfordPa., still outdistances everyone with 503.04. Unit 116’s Davis Heussler is second with 417.29. They’re ninth and 15th overall in the district.
Then it’s Craig Biddle of Pittsburgh, with 357.49 (21st); Allen Beroza, 243.68 (52nd); Mike Silverman, 220.41 (58th); and Ken Meier, unchanged at 215.43 (and down again from 58th from 61st).
Then it’s Leroy Hackenberg of Pittsburgh, 197.61 (78th); Martin Kumer of Monroeville, Pa., 197.57 (79th); Marvin Shapiro of AkronOhio, 194.88 (80th); and Russell Sheldon of Pittsburgh, 192.39 (83rd). I move up another notch to 145th from 15th among Rubies with my 175.96, and inch ahead to 106th from 111th overall. 
   Mini-McKenney leader among all District 5 players is, of course, Sue Lan Ma of Kirtland Hills, Ohio, who finishes with 908.85.
Bernie Greenspan of BeachwoodOhio, is second with 701.86, and Reanette Frobouck of Pittsburgh is third with 659.43.
She’s followed by Kathleen Sulgrove of TwinsburgOhio, 595.69; Phillip Becker, moving ahead with a 109-point month to reach 594.54; Robert Alexander of MentorOhio, 592.70; and Stephanie Alexander of Mentor with 573.99.
Unit 116’s Alan Greer moves up from 11th place to eighth with 504.28, passing Ruby Life Master leader Philip Goulding, down from seventh to ninth, despite his 503.04. In tenth place is Richard Katz of North Versailles, Pa., with 485.80.
Slipping to tenth from seventh without gaining a point at all for the third month in a row is Don Sulgrove of TwinsburgOhio, still with 469.78.
Next Unit 116 players on the list areDavis Heussler, 15tth with 417.29; and Saleh Fetouh, still 17th with 410.50.
    Ace of Clubs, Ruby Life Masters, nationwide.
    Paul Hassett of The Villages, Fla., sails to victory with 379.43, but he wouldn’t have needed any more points to stay ahead of second-place Joanne Matchette of Vero BeachFla., who has 341.19.
Then it’s Brian Breckenridge of CorvallisOre., with 328.15, and Mason Barge of Atlanta, fourth with 319.08. October’s second place-holder, Anna Maxcine Thacker of Palm CoastFla., remains fifth with a total of 302.78.
Then it’s Russ Pearly of The Villages, Fla., moving up from ninth to sixth, with a nearly 35-point month to reach 301.29. Richard Seidman of Orlando, Fla., rebounds to seventh with 291.65; followed by Bruce Ladin of Harwood Heights, Ill., 288.67; Aivars Lapins of Cambria, Calif., with 288.60; and Barry Nish of Little Neck, N.Y., with 285.34.
Unit 116 leader Mike Silverman slips a little, from 77th to 81st. David Millward is still out there, but he’s in Vero Beach, Fla., now having a good time at the tables. He’s ahead of Mike overall, 61st with 198.77. Allen Beroza slips from 135th from 147th. Other local notables include Martin Pieterse, up from  386th to 328th; and me, at 327th. The list of 500 cuts off at 128.73.
       Ace of Clubs, all players, nationwide. 
Bill Kulbersh of Atlanta cruises to the championship, up 59.28 points in December to reach 839.60. Repeating in second place is Irva Neyhart of CorvallisOre., with a 49.60-point month at 610.56.
A 60.50-point month lifts Sheila Gabay of Newton, Mass., from seventh to third place with 532.92. She bumps Harry Kaufmann of North Redington Beach, Fla., into fourth with 524.17; 499.53; followed by En Xie of St. Louis, with 523.92; and Bella Ionis-Sorren of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., with 523.76.
The rest of the Top 10 includes Robert Epstein of Atlanta, 507.49; Kay Schulle of Purchase, N.Y., with 467.43; and Diane Hurt and Edgar Hurt Jr., both of Laguna Woods, Calif., tied for ninth with 463.49.  
Alan Greer keeps his hold on 14th; Nancy Wolstoncroft slips to 204th from 191st and is just one step ahead of George Morrissey from the St. Catharines, Ont., club. John Ziemer slips from 375th to 386th. The list of 500 names stops at 222.04.
    Onward to Mini-McKenney, Ruby Life Masters, nationwide.
Robert L. McClendon of Ponte VedraFla., added another 204 points to take the crown with  2,248.71. That’s three times the total of second-place  Sabrina Miles of MansfieldMass., who has 743.71.
Next come Alex Krakovsky of Columbus, Ohio, 659.35; Mary Ose of Sacramento, Calif, with 611.13; 599.09, and Mark Fitzmorris of St. Augustine, Fla., up from sixth to fifth, thanks to a 51-point month with 596.75.
He displaces Darryl Legassie of MiltonN.H., now sixth with 569.61. After that it’s Mason Barge of Atlanta, with a nearly 75-point month to reach 566.15. Then comes Anam Tebha of CharlotteN.C., with 525.44; Mark Henderson of Wilmington, Del., with 509.54; and Ann Buchholz of Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., with 509.21. District 5’s Philip Goulding of WexfordPa., falls from ninth to 11th with his 503.04.
Unit 116’s Davis Heussler is up from 42nd to 38th with his 417.29. Allen Beroza moves up from 365th to 299th. With no new points, Ken Meier is down to 432nd from 367th. The list ends at 206.18. 
     And now for the really heavy hitters, the Mini-McKenney leaders overall.
Joe Grue of New York City, first for the 11th straight month, finishes with 3,636.65 points.  Second-place Mark Itabashi of MurrietaCalif., has 3,267.52. Kevin Dwyer of MelbourneFla., is next with 3,064.15.
Shan Huang, also of Melbourne, Fla., makes a last-minute move into fourth place with 2,723.95, passing Brad Moss of Denver, who has 2,647.04.
January leader Geoff Hampson of Las Vegas moves up to sixth with 2,274.45, passing the legendary Jeff Meckstroth of Clearwater BeachFla., who finishes at 2,260.02.
Robert McClendon of Ponte Vedra, Fla., with 2,248.71, and John Hurd of New York City, with 2,236.55, move ahead of Meckstroh’s longtime partner Eric Rodwell, who stands pat with 2,222.64. He’s the last one with more than 2,000 points.
Familiar names: Former Buffalonian Joel Wooldridge finishes 25th with 1,560.81. District 5 leader Sue Lan Ma finishes 106st with her 908.85.
Unit 116’s lone representative on this list, Alan Greer, reappears to finish the year in 470th place. The list cuts off at 492.27.

Bridge Blog 1069: Once in a Lifetime



In 14 years of duplicate bridge and five decades of social bridge before that, I never pick up a hand like the one I get Friday afternoon on Board 2 at the Bridge Centre of Niagara in St. Catharines, Ont.
But my amazement turns into a dilemma. How do I translate my good fortune into the slam that it deserves to be? Here’s the hand:

Spades: A-K-8; Hearts: A-K-5-4; Diamonds: A-K-Q-9; Clubs: A-K.

That’s right. 30 points. All the Aces and Kings. But what does partner Selina Volpatti have? And how do I find out? Ask for Aces?
Too many high card points to bid 3 No Trump, which would indicate 25 to 27, so I opt for 2 Clubs, an open-ended declaration of strength. Selina gives the 2 Diamond waiting bid. I go 2 Hearts. Her bid will tell me where to go.
It’s 2 Spades. Aha! She’s got five of them with the Queen. Or something. So I’ll take nine or 10 tricks and her Spades will do the rest. I take the leap. Six No Trump.
Percy Harcourt, sitting East, leads the 3 of Diamonds. Then I see the dummy:

Spades: J-10-7-5-2; Heart: J; Diamond: 7; Clubs: Q-J-9-6-4-2.

Ouch! Cash the Clubs and I’m golden. But how can I get over to the board? I unblock the Clubs by playing the Ace-King, then go after my best hope – the Spades. I play Ace-King, but Percy has three Spades and his Queen doesn’t drop. I’m sunk. I lose a Spade, a Diamond and a Heart. Down two. We get 2.5 match points out of a possible 12.
The hand record shows this making 4 NT, 6 Spades and 7 Clubs. So I need a better bid. Let’s go to the website and see how the others did.
Aha! Nobody finds the Clubs. They’re all in No Trump, except for Pair 12, Lise Rowland and Janet Rookley, who bid 6 Spades and make it, with South as declarer. Second-best bids are a pair of 3 NTs making five. Bottom board bid 7 NT, down four. Six of us bid 6 NT, three of us down one, two of us down two and one down three.
Meanwhile, we do better elsewhere, collecting three absolute top boards, two of them defensively, the third in the very first round when Selina makes a 3 Heart contract that’s only supposed to be good for eight tricks. We’re fifth overall with 53.04% and earn 0.26 of a point. Had I gotten Board 2 right, we would have been third.

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Bridge Blog 1068: Not With a Bang ...


As Walt Olszewski observes at the start of Wednesday’s game at the Airport Bridge Club, since I have 2,499.9 points, any scratch will get me to that magic milestone of 2,500.
But as partial results are posted, partner Gay Simpson and I are not among the leaders. In fact, we’re mired in the middle of the pack, below 50%.
So I brace myself for disappointment as Paula Kotowski, who’s directing, announces the names of the pairs who won points.
But, despite our mediocre 49.40% effort, we finally come up at the end of the B strat, in a tie for third place. Our reward – 0.78 of a point. A pittance, but it’s enough. Thank you, bridge gods! Gold! Life! Master!  

Tuesday, January 8, 2019

Bridge Blog 1067: Zeroing In


Just how far away is that Holy Grail – Gold Life Master?
Over the weekend, Airport Bridge Club manager Bill Finkelstein said he thought I was still about four points short of the required 2,500 when the year ended.
But that was before partner Denise Slattery and I came in first overall in the Saturday game and picked up 2.04 master points. And now, on Tuesday, Elvis Presley’s birthday, Dotty May and I manage to post 50.64% in a 6½ table game, fifth overall in the B stratification, for another 0.59 of a point.
So where do I stand? Well, by now the ACBL has done up the latest monthly tally of master points. A visit to MyACBL can set things straight. Here it is, my end-of-2018 career total – 2,497.28! Add 2.63 to that and I’m so-o-o-o close. All it will take is one game, one more slightly-better-than-average game.  

Wednesday, January 2, 2019

Bridge Blog 1066: How low can we possibly go?


I sincerely hope that my first day of the new bridge year isn’t an omen of things to come.
First of all, I oversleep, wake up 55 minutes before I need to be at the Airport Bridge Club. Get there a couple minutes after 11, which is kind of a miracle, but still have to pay $1 extra for being late.
Second, my Wednesday partner, June Feuerstein, thinks I canceled on her because of New Year’s. No problem, really. Club manager Bill Finkelstein always can arrange a partner. Today it’s Bill Boardman.
Third, Bill and I get off to a terrible start – missing our strongest suits and our best contracts, then running into people who bid slams and make them when nobody else does. Our top board of the day is the one we pass out.
Fourth, Bill predicts we’ll be under 30%. I tell him my worst-ever game was 22% with Tish Schiffman and this can’t be that bad. It comes close. 29.58%. Lowest score in at least two years. I didn’t have a sub-30% game all last year. Didn't in 2017 either.
Fifth, my Thursday partner, Marietta Kalman, calls about 10 p.m. to tell me she had a car accident last week and can't play Thursday. She's not hurt, but her car was totaled and her husband doesn't want her to go out. I inform Bill Finkelstein and he says call my Wednesday partner. Turns out June's available. Maybe I can start 2019 all over again.