Jump to content

United States Bridge Championships - Open

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tameware (talk | contribs) at 13:46, 6 June 2023 (Summary of past USBCs: Added the 2003 results.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The United States Bridge Championships (USBC) is a yearly competition held to select either one or two teams that will represent the United States at international competition for the game of contract bridge. The general conditions of contest used by the United States Bridge Federation can be found here. There are multiple events in the USBC including Open, Women, Seniors, and Mixed divisions. This article contains information about the Open division in which anyone of any age or gender can compete.

History and vocabulary

From May 17–21 of 1989, the "team trials" to determine which team would represent the United States was held in Memphis, TN. At that time, the trials had no name, and the name "United States Bridge Championship" was conceived by Matt Guagliardo, who was then the Director of Education for the ACBL, but was still actively involved in promoting bridge. Mr. Guagliardo, in collaboration with Barbara McBride, who was also the graphic artist for the ACBL, created the USBS logo, which was flag-shaped with a dark-blue square in the upper-left corner, with a white star, and a black spade inside the star. The words "United," "States," "and "Bridge" are in red, and are stacked vertically opposite the square. The word "Championship" is also in red, and is lengthwise below the blue square, and other verbiage. There is a blue line underneath the word "Championship," and a blue line extending from the right border of the square over the word "United."

T-shirts were printed and given to the caddies, who worked the sectional tournament that ran concurrently to the USBC, to wear. On the front, the T-shirts had the USBC logo, "Memphis, Tennessee" and "May 17–21, 1989." The back had printed in blue, in an arc shape, "A BIG DEAL FOR MEMPHIS," with four Aces printed below it, each with a different suit designation. The words and cards are all printed in blue.

Concurrent with the USBC was a sectional tournament, and the concluding event was a Swiss Teams, which was the norm then. In cooperation with the late Ralph Cohen, something was done, at least for the first time in the United States, and, quite probably, the world. This is what happened: The last round of the sectional Swiss Teams had "boards" ("hands') that were duplicated before the Swiss Teams began by Ralph and his small hand-picked group, and kept under ultra-tight security. Thus, in the last round of the "Swiss," at every table everyone was playing the same set of hands.

Immediately after the Swiss event ended, players adjourned to a large room, where, on Vu-Graph, they were able to see the same set of hands played live by contestants in the USBC. The showing of the hands was accompanied by expert commentary. Like the USBC itself, the concept of having the hands played by "ordinary" players in a competitive environment, then being able to see those same hands played by world-caliber experts was conceived by Matt Guagliardo.

The previous history was grossly inaccurate, and t-shirts autographed by players who competed in the 1989 event, and who are now deceased, give evidence that the term "United States Bridge Championship" was coined more than a decade before the formation of the United States Bridge Federation.

Summary of past USBCs

Below is a table of teams that have won the Open USBCs and how they fared in international competition. In every odd number year, the winners of the USBC Open division get to compete in the Bermuda Bowl that has existed since 1950. The events in the even number years vary between the World Bridge Games and a Transnational Event. The USBF sends 2 teams to every Bermuda Bowl and 1 team to every World Bridge Games event.

2017 Open USBC
The 2017 Open USBC was held from April 28-May 10 in Schaumburg, Illinois. Nickell (Nick Nickell, Ralph Katz, Bobby Levin, Steve Weinstein, Jeff Meckstroth, and Eric Rodwell)[1] team won the 120 board final against Diamond (John Diamond, Brain Platnick, Eric Greco, Geoff Hampson, Kevin Bathurst, and Justin Lall).[2]

2016 Open USBC
The 2016 Open USBC was held to select the USA team for the 2016 World Bridge Games held in Wroclaw, Poland. This USBC was held in Denver Colorado from May 6 - May 15. The eventual champions were team Diamond (John Diamond, Brian Platnick, Eric Greco, Geoof Hampson, Kevin Bathurst, and Justin Lall) who would go on to place 5th-8th in Poland.

2015 Open USBC
The 2015 Open USBC was held in order to determine USA2 for the Chennai, India Bermuda Bowl. It was held from May 8 - May 17 in Schaumburg, Illinois. The eventual winner after the 10 days of competition was team Fireman (Paul Fireman, Gavin Wolpert, Vince Demuy, John Kranyak, John Hurd, and Joel Wooldridge). They would then go on to win the bronze medal in Chennai.

2014 Open USBC
The 2014 Open USBC was held in Phoenix, AZ from May 9 - May 18 in order to determine USA1 for Chennai. Nickell (Nick Nickell, Ralph Katz, Steve Weinstein, Bobby Levin, Jeff Meckstroth, and Eric Rodwell) beat Diamond (John Diamond, Brian Platnick, Eric Greco, Geoff Hampson, Kevin Bathurst, and Brad Moss) by 8 imps over 120 boards. Nickell rallied by a score of 43–8 in the final 15 boards to claim the victory.[3]

2013 Open USBC
The 2013 Open USBC was held at Buena Vista Place in Orlando, Florida from June 1 - June 10. The purpose of these trials was to determine USA2 for the 2013 Bermuda Bowl. The eventual winners Fleisher (Marty Fleisher, Chris Willenken, Michael Rosenberg, Zia Mahmood, Chip Martel, and Michael Kamil) bested Nickell (Nick Nickell, Ralph Katz, Steve Weinstein, Bobby Levin, Eric Rodwell, and Jeff Meckstroth) 194–146.

2012 Open USBC
The 2012 Open USBC was held in Schaumburg, Illinois in order to qualify for the World Mind Sports Games in Lille, France. The tournament was held from April 27 - May 6. Team Nickell (Nick Nickell, Ralph Katz, Bob Hamman, Zia Mahmood, Jeff Meckstroth, and Eric Rodwell) beat Diamond (John Diamond, Brad Moss, Fred Gitelman, Geoff Hampson, and Brian Platnick) in the final.

2011 Open USBC
The 2011 USBC was held in Las Vegas, Nevada from May 10-May 17 in order to determine USA2 for the 2011 Bermuda Bowl. The winners would join team Fleisher who won in 2010. Team Bathurst (Kevin Bathurst, Dan Zagorin, Joe Grue, Justin Lall, Joel Wooldridge, and John Hurd) defeated Diamond (John Diamond, Eric Greco, Brad Moss, Brian Platnick, Geoff Hampson, and Fred Gitelman) 288–257.

2010 Open USBC
The 2010 USBC was held in Rosemont, Illinois from June 17- June 27 in order to determine USA1 for the 2011 Bermuda Bowl. Team Fleisher (Marty Fleisher, Michael Kamil, Chip Martel, Lew Stansby, Bobby Levin, and Steve Weinstein) defeated Diamond (John Diamond, Eric Greco, Brad Moss, Brian Platnick, Geoff Hampson, and Fred Gitelman) 260–218 to earn USA1 honors.

2009 Open USBC
The 2009 USBC was held in White Plains, New York from June 5 - June 15. Two teams would emerge from this USBC in order to represent the United States at the 2009 Bermuda Bowl in São Paulo. USA1 went to Robinson (Steve Robinson, Peter Boyd, Fred Stewart, Adam Wildavsky, Doug Doub, and Kit Woolsey) in their victory over Fleisher (Marty Fleisher, Russell Ekeblad, Ron Rubin, Michael Kamil, Peter Weichsel, and Matthew Granovetter). Fleisher then dropped into the USA2 finals. USA2 went to Nickell (Nick Nickell, Dick Freeman, Eric Rodwell, Jeff Meckstroth, Bob Hamman, and Zia Mahmood) when they beat Fleisher.

2007 Open USBC

2005 Open USBC

The 2005 Open USBC was held in order to select the second team that would represent the United States at the 2005 Bermuda Bowl in Estoril, Portugal. This year trials were held in Houston, Texas. This is the first year that Polish star Jacek Pszczoła or "Pepsi" is competing for the United States.

The eventual champions of the 2005 trials were Brad Moss, Ron Rubin, Eric Greco, Fred Gitelman, Geoff Hampson, Russ Ekeblad, Steve Landen NPC, Sheri Winestock Coach. They went on win the bronze medal in the Bermuda Bowl later that year.[4]

2004 Open USBC
The Nickell team (Nick Nickell, Dick Freeman, Bob Hamman, Paul Soloway, Jeff Meckstroth, and Eric Rodwell) was the winner of this USBC and earned the right to play in the Estoril, Portugal Bermuda Bowl in 2005 as USA1. They would go on to win the Silver medal the following year. They defeated Welland (Roy Welland, Bjorn Fallenius, Zia Mahmood, and Michael Rosenberg) in what was a close match after 90 boards but Nickell gained 91 imps on the last 30 boards.[5]

2003 Open USBC
The Cohen team (Steve Landen, Pratap Rajadhyaksha, Dan Morse, Robert Wolff, Doug Doub, Adam Wildavsky, Ralph Cohen NPC) defeated the Welland squad (Roy Welland, Bjorn Fallenius, Steve Garner, Howard Weinstein) in the final, 287-222. Cohen thereby earned the right to compete as USA2 in the Bermuda Bowl in Monte Carlo later that year, where they earned the Bronze medal. [6] [7]

2002 Open USBC
The Nickell team (Nick Nickell, Dick Freeman, Bob Hamman, Paul Soloway, Jeff Meckstroth, and Eric Rodwell) defeated Schwartz (Richard Schwartz, Michael Becker, Zia Mahmood, Michael Rosenberg, David Berkowitz, and Larry Cohen) to earn the right to compete in the 2003 Bermuda Bowl. Nickell led by just 7 imps going into the final segment, but was able to pull away to win by 29.[8]

2001 Open USBC
The 2001 Open USBC was held in Memphis. The finals were between Nickell (Nick Nickell, Dick Freeman, Bob Hamman, Paul Soloway, Jeff Meckstroth, Eric Rodwell) and Ekeblad (Russ Ekeblad, Bob Lipsitz, Ron Rubin, Matt Granovetter, Mark Molson, and Barnett Shenkin). Nickell would go on to win the final.[9]

International placement of USBC winners

Year International Event Team Place
2017 Bermuda Bowl: Lyon,France Nick Nickell, Ralph Katz, Bobby Levin, Steve Weinstein, Jeff Meckstroth, Eric Rodwell, Jill Levin NPC, Coach Eric Kokish[10] 5th-8th [11]
Martin Fleisher, Joe Grue, Chip Martel, Brad Moss, Jacek Pszczoła, Michael Rosenberg, Jan Martel NPC[12] Gold [13]
2016 World Bridge Games: Wroclaw, Poland John Diamond, Brian Platnick, Eric Greco, Geoff Hampson, Kevin Bathurst, Justin Lall, Oren Kriegel NPC[14] 9th-16th[15]
2015 Bermuda Bowl: Chennai,India Vincent Demuy, Paul Fireman, John Hurd, John Kranyak, Gavin Wolpert, Joel Woolridge, Shane Blanchard NPC[16] Bronze [17]
Nick Nickell, Ralph Katz, Bobby Levin, Steve Weinstein, Jeff Meckstroth, Eric Rodwell, Donna Compton NPC, Eric Kokish Coach[18] 5th-8th[19]
2013 Bermuda Bowl: Bali, Indonesia Kevin Bathurst, Kevin Dwyer, John Kranyak, Bobby Levin, Steve Weinstein, Gavin Wolpert, Shane Blanchard NPC 4th[20]
Martin Fleisher, Mike Kamil, Zia Mahmood, Chip Martel, Michael Rosenberg, Chris Willenken, Jan Martel NPC Eliminated in Round Robin[21]
2012 World Bridge Games: Lille, France Nick Nickell, Ralph Katz, Jeff Meckstroth, Eric Rodwell, Bob Hamman, Zia Mahmood 5th-8th
2011 Bermuda Bowl: Veldhoven, Netherlands [22] Martin Fleisher, Mike Kamil, Lew Stansby, Chip Martel, Michael Rosenberg, Chris Willenken, Jan Martel NPC 4th
Kevin Bathurst, Joe Grue, John Hurd, Justin Lall, Joel Woolridge, Curtis Cheek NPC, Daniel Zagorin Coach Silver
2009 Bermuda Bowl: São Paulo, Brazil Peter Boyd, Doug Doub, Kit Woolsey, Adam Wildavsky, Steve Robinson, Fred Stewart, Howard Weinstein NPC[23] Eliminated in Round Robin [24]
Jeff Meckstroth, Eric Rodwell, Nick Nickell, Bob Hamman, Ralph Katz, Zia Mahmood, Donna Compton NPC, Eric Kokish Coach[25] Gold [26]
2008 World Bridge Games: Beijing, China Nick Nickell, Richard Freeman, Jeff Meckstroth, Eric Rodwell, Chris Compton, Bob Hamman 9th-16th
2007 Bermuda Bowl: Shanghai, China Zia Mahmood, Michael Rosenberg, Steve Garner, Howard Weinstein, George Jacobs, Ralph Katz, Jan Martel NPC, Chip Martel Coach[27] Silver [28]
Bob Hamman, Jeff Meckstroth, Eric Rodwell, Richard Freeman, Nick Nickell, Hemant Lall, Sidney Lazard NPC, Eric Kokish Coach[29] Eliminated in Round Robin [30]
2005 Bermuda Bowl: Estoril, Portugal Paul Soloway, Jeff Meckstroth, Nick Nickell, Bob Hamman, Richard Freeman, Sidney Lazard NPC, Eric Kokish Coach[31] Silver [32]
Brad Moss, Ron Rubin, Eric Greco, Fred Gitelman, Geoff Hampson, Russ Ekeblad, Steve Landen NPC, Sheri Winestock Coach[33] Bronze [34]
2004 World Team Olympiad Michael Rosenberg, Bobby Levin, Roy Welland, Steve Weinstein, Bjorn Fallenius, Zia Mahmood, Sheri Winestock NPC, Fred Gitelman Coach [35] 9th-16th[36]
2003 Bermuda Bowl: Monte Carlo Paul Soloway, Jeff Meckstroth, Nick Nickell, Bob Hamman, Eric Rodwell, Richard Freeman, Sidney Lazard NPC[37] Gold [38]
Doug Doub, Steve Landen, Adam Wildavsky, Pratap Rajadhyaksha, Dan Morse, Bobby Wolff, Ralph Cohen NPC, Geoff Hampson Coach[39] Bronze [40]
2001 Bermuda Bowl: Paris, France Paul Soloway, Jeff Meckstroth, Nick Nickell, Bob Hamman, Eric Rodwell, Richard Freeman, Donald Krauss NPC[41] 5th-8th[42]
Peter Weichsel, Chip Martel, Rose Meltzer, Kyle Larsen, Lew Stansby, Alan Sontag, Jan Martel NPC, Fred Gitelman Coach, Sheri Winestock Coach[43] Gold [44]

References

  1. ^ United States Bridge Federation 2017 Open USBC Nickell Team
  2. ^ United States Bridge Federation 2017 Open USBC Diamond Team
  3. ^ "A Late Rebound at USA-1 Trials in Phoenix", Alder, Phillip New York Times 25 May 2014. Retrieved on February 27, 2014"
  4. ^ Alder, Phillip. "U.S. Championships Open in Houston With a 'New Face'" New York Times 14 May 2005. Retrieved on February 21, 2018
  5. ^ Truscott, Alan. "Bridge; A Traditionally Winning team Does It again, After a Squeaker" New York Times 17 June 2004. Retrieved on February 21, 2018
  6. ^ ACBL website via archive.org "COHEN is USA II"
  7. ^ ACBL website via archive.org "USBC TEAM ROSTERS"
  8. ^ Truscott, Alan "Bridge; Addled or Wily in a Retirement Residence?" New York Times 20 June 2002. Retrieved on February 21, 2018
  9. ^ Truscott, Alan "Bridge; American Teams Compete for a Chance to Play in Bali" New York Times 11 June 2001. Retrieved on February 21, 2018
  10. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 Roster Bermuda Bowl, 2017
  11. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 Bermuda Bowl Quarterfinal Elimination to Bulgaria, 2017
  12. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 Roster Bermuda Bowl,2017
  13. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 Gold Medal Bermuda Bowl, 2017
  14. ^ World Bridge Federation USA Roster World Bridge Games,2016
  15. ^ World Bridge Federation USA Round of 16 loss to Spain, 2016
  16. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 Roster Bermuda Bowl, 2015
  17. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 Bronze Medal Bermuda Bowl, 2015
  18. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 Roster Bermuda Bowl, 2015
  19. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 Quarterfinal loss to England, Bermuda Bowl, 2015
  20. ^ Alder, Phillip "American Team Wins Venice Cup In Indonesia" New York Times 28 September 2013. Retrieved on February 21, 2018
  21. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 loss in Round Robin standings, Bermuda Bowl, 2013
  22. ^ Alder, Phillip "Dutch Hosts are Winners of Bermuda Bowl" New York Times 30 October 2001. Retrieved February 26, 2018
  23. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 Roster for 2009 Bermuda Bowl
  24. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 Eliminated in Round Robin Standings, Bermuda Bowl, 2009
  25. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 Roster, Bermuda Bowl, 2009
  26. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 Gold Medal Match vs Italy, Bermuda Bowl, 2009
  27. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 Roster for 2007 Bermuda Bowl
  28. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 earns Silver medal in loss to Norway, Bermuda Bowl, 2007
  29. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 Roster for 2007 Bermuda Bowl
  30. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 Eliminated in Round Robin Rankings,Bermuda Bowl, 2007
  31. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 Roster for 2005 Bermuda Bowl, 2005
  32. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 earns Silver in loss to Italy, Bermuda Bowl, 2005
  33. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 Roster for 2005 Bermuda Bowl, 2005
  34. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 earns Bronze in victory over Sweden, Bermuda Bowl, 2005
  35. ^ World Bridge Federation 2004 World Team Olympiad Open Roster
  36. ^ Round of 16 Results
  37. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 Roster for 2003 Bermuda Bowl, 2003
  38. ^ World Bridge Federation USA1 wins Gold in 1 imp victory over Italy, Bermuda Bowl, 2003
  39. ^ World Bridge FederationUSA2 Roster for 2003 Bermuda Bowl, 2003
  40. ^ World Bridge FederationUSA2 win Bronze, 2003
  41. ^ World Bridge FederationUSA1 Roster for 2001 Bermuda Bowl, 2001
  42. ^ World Bridge Federation USA Loss in Quarterfinal Match, 2001
  43. ^ World Bridge Federation USA2 Roster for 2001 Bermuda Bowl, 2001
  44. ^ World Bridge Federation Gold Medal Match Bermuda Bowl, 2001