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Marty would be coming into Orlando for the second week of Nationals. Of course, that week was Thanksgiving week, so I would be leaving Orlando the day before he arrived. Marty had been my bridge mentor, and he and I had developed a fairly specialized system we play with each other, so it would be a shame if we weren't able to play together. Marty's plane tickets had him returning the next Saturday, so the most we could play together would be one day if I were to retrun the Friday. I was able to persuade my wife to be understanding if I went back to Orlando the day after Thanksgiving, promising to return on Saturday. This was no mean feat, given the amount of time our two young daughters require in addition to her work. Marty and I spoke on Tuesday as to which event we would enter on Friday. Available events were Open Pairs (a one day event), the North American Swiss Championships (a three day event) and the Reisinger. Marty recommended the Reisinger. I was certain that he was joking. The Reisinger is one of the three North American Majors and the top event of the Fall Nationals. Entry is limited to 48 teams. A three day event in total, the field is cut to 20 teams after the first day for the Semi-Finals, and then cut again after the second day to a field of ten for the Finals. Marty's logic was that we could play in the Open Pairs, perhaps do well, and leave with some masterpoints. We might qualify for the second day of the Swiss team event, but would have to leave. If that happened, we would be left wondering how we might have done if we had stayed. But, we could enter the Reisinger, meet the top players in the world and have them beat on us for a day. Since there was no chance that a team of amateurs would qualify for the Semi-Finals, we wouldn't feel guilty when we both left Saturday morning. If, by some quirk of fate, we managed to win a board or two against someone famous, that would give us something to talk about for years.
My family had a wonderful Thanksgiving meal on Thursday. Call it indigestion or nervousness, but I could not sleep that night. I managed to catch a few hours between from 2 a.m. to 6 a.m, woke early on Friday, and hit the road. My three hour drive turned into four as I hit gridlock around Disney World. Evidently the Friday after Thanksgiving is a popular time to visit the Mouse. My plan of a good night's sleep and a relaxing drive was obviously not faring well.
The Reisinger is unique among the three bridge majors due to its scoring format; Board-a-Match. The same hand is played by two teams against each other. The two results are compared, and a team either gains a win (one point), a tie (one-half) or a loss (zero). It doesn't matter whether the loss was by a 20 point overtrick or a couple thousand for the vulnerable grand they found and you didn't. As Horton would say, a zero is a zero, no matter how small.
Part II |
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