Bridge
Escape
by Matthew Granovetter
Wherein the richest man in the world
finds
refuge in a bridge tournament.
Bill
Gates, where are you? There's a board meeting at Microsoft,
the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is hosting a dinner,
you're scheduled to talk to computer grad students at MIT
... But Bill can't be found. That's because he's at a bridge
tournament and even his cell phone is disconnected, and
he's not going to be reachable for 4 hours, or until all
28 bridge hands of the day have been completed. And even
then, he may not reconnect to the real world until he's
rehashed the hands with his partner and teammates over
dinner. In short, Bill is engrossed and captivated: He
has escaped to another world - the bridge world.
Perhaps it's Warren Buffett's fault. Buffett
has played bridge for years and is the guy who recently hooked
Gates on the game. Buffett even gave Gates his world champion
bridge partner, Sharon Osberg, to teach him and play bridge
with him at national tournaments. Since Gates entered a team
championship a few years ago, and made the cut in the qualifying
rounds, he's come back time and again for more. Why? Because
the challenge is great, and the game is fun!
Perhaps
it's Harold S. Vanderbilt's fault. He was also a rich guy,
and he invented the game back in 1925 while taking a cruise
aboard his ship, the Finland. The game was
called contract bridge, based on an old game
called whist, which (it is said) even George
Washington played at Valley Forge, when his troops were
held up there. Today the game is simply called bridge,
and often rings a bell for young people as something
my grandmother used to do. Bridge today, however,
is nothing like the game grandma played. It's still played
with four people at a square table, two against two, with
partners facing each other, but by the time a session of
bridge is over, a recent study showed, most participants
have a faster heart rate and have lost more weight than
a professional football player in one game. Of course,
we shouldn't underestimate grandma - she got us here, and
bridge probably helped relieve the stress even back then.
Yet bridge creates stress, too. And that's part of the
fun.
Have
Deck, Will Travel
At
the Spring North American championships this March, in
Reno, Nevada, I played seven bridge hands against Bill
Gates. Since I have been playing bridge for 41 years
(since I was 12), and Bill has been playing for less
than five years, readers might wonder why we were opponents
in a tournament? Have I not improved over four decades
or is Mr. Gates a natural genius at the game?
The answer is that most bridge events are open to anyone
who knows how to play, and it takes only about nine minutes
to learn the game. Some of the most exciting memories
for me are playing bridge as a teenager against the all-time
great players of the early Twentieth Century, like Oswald
Jacoby and Alvin Roth. Getting your head handed
to you is also part of the fun (for awhile), because
you can learn a lot from your expert opponents, and in
some cases, even losing can be fun. This doesn't mean
that Bill Gates likes to lose, but he can take the punches
and that's a sign he may have what it takes.
In
tournament bridge, bridge pros are like hired guns. Wealthy
people, who want to improve their game fast or simply
want to enjoy the game more, and occasionally win, hire
top-of-the-line bridge players as their partner and teammates.
Prizemoney bridge games, in which the players win large
sums of cash, have yet to realize their potential, mainly
because a corporate sponsor has not yet ventured into
the field. Larry King, a former tennis promoter, who
with the help of his ex-wife, Billie Jean King, put women's
tennis and Virginia Slims on the map, is now trying to
do for bridge what he did for tennis in the 70's and
80's. The game of bridge is far more interesting
to watch and play than women's tennis ever was.
For the last three years, King has run a prizemoney bridge
tour around the USA, and is closing in on the right sponsor
to make the tour into a successful tool for inspiring
people to take up the game. King has yet to talk with
Gates about this (despite the fact that Microsoft would
be an obviously perfect sponsor), possibly because Gates
is very well ... protected.
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By
protected, I don't mean that he has a bodyguard. He hardly
needs one. At the bridge table, among the seasoned tournament
players, Gates is considered a novice, and in the tournament
bridge world everyone is solely judged by his skills. When
we draw the Gates team and my partner and I come to his
table for a seven-hand team match, there is only one kibitzer,
a fellow with his chair about eight feet from the table,
on Gates' partner's side. Meanwhile, various people around
the room with about 50 cents in their bank accounts (combined),
have half-a-dozen or more kibitzers each, because the kibitzers
are interested in watching fine bridge. Our sole kibitzer
was probably interested only in staring at Gates in the
flesh. Gates' partner doesn't like to make a big show of
it either. She protects Bill by keeping a low profile when
they're at the tournament together, not wanting anyone
to step too harshly on her Microsoft turf. This may be
a good thing at first, to keep Gates coming back to tournaments,
where he can blend into the crowd and relax with his hobby.
But one day soon, he's going to come out of his shell and,
I hope, for the sake of bridge, he will strike up a friendship
and business partnership with Larry King.
So
there I am with Bill Gates on my right, and seven bridge
hands to be played, and all I can think of is how to
make friends with the man, introduce him to King, and
get bridge back in the national limelight, where it deserves
to shine. But then the bridge hands get in the way. Once
the hands are dealt and put into duplicate
boards (so
they can be passed to another table where our teammates
and his teammates sit), we must think about the
game. We are on my turf now, not his, so it's not
a difficult task for me. In my sleep I can play out the
52 cards of a bridge hand just as easily as he can count
his stock options and volatility spreads. Nothing dramatic
takes place on the first three hands, but then my partner, Sparky Rosenbloom,
from New York, opens the bidding with four spades (contracting
for 10 tricks with spades as trump). This buys the contract
and when, early in the hand, Gates ducks his ace of diamonds
(fails to win the trick), Sparky has sneaked through
the tenth trick and stolen the hand for a
swing for our team. There are no harsh words from Gates'
partner (as is usual under more normal circumstances,
where partners are of equal caliber), and the next hand
is picked up from the duplicate board. Sparky is at the
helm again, with me as dummy (which means
my 13 cards go face up on the table and Sparky plays
them as well as his own cards, while I just sit there
and watch). This time I notice something very interesting
about Gates' manner. He's a studious bridge player, no
doubt, but not yet relaxed at the table.
To
be a winning player, you must not only concentrate well
but also relax to some extent - a winning psychological
strategy for most games and sports. When Gates has a
difficult decision to make about which card to play,
I notice that he pulls the card out of his hand and flips
it to the table in a spinning motion, which is quite
unique. For example, at one point in the hand, Sparky
leads the 9 of spades toward dummy's ace-king-eight-seven.
Gates, next to play, suddenly produces the Gates
flip, wherein the card vaults into the air, hits
the table face up and spins around clockwise for two
or three circles. When it stops spinning, Sparky eyes
him suspiciously but fails to take full advantage of
the inference that Gates is nervous and has played his
card this way because he holds the queen, jack and ten
of spades. Sparky grins when he later sees what has happened,
and Gates happily smiles, too, having successfully made
a tricky play.
Since
Gates is in a good mood at this point, and the tension
is broken, Osberg takes a moment to introduce me to her
famous partner and I take the opportunity to give Gates
a present, a book I have written with my wife called How
to Play Bridge in 9 Minutes. The book is a rare item,
since it is the last book ever illustrated by Peanuts cartoonist
Charles M. Schulz. Gates puts the book on the floor next
to his chair; he isn't impressed. He's hungry for another
bridge hand and another opportunity to compete against
the big boys. I end up as dummy again, and drift off in
my favorite fantasy that one day soon a little learn-bridge
booklet, with a few Snoopy cartoons, will be packed inside
every Microsoft Windows upgrade. Perhaps Larry King's tour
will be called the Microsoft Bridge Tour. When that happens,
the world's greatest game, bridge, will be exalted to its
rightful place as the hottest hobby out there.
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