Jeremy Flint

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Jeremy Flint (August 30, 1928November 15, 1989), an English bridge player, author and horse racing enthusiast, was one of the world's leading professional players. He was the son of a Leeds surgeon, and was educated at Radley College. He studied to be a lawyer, but soon gave up his legal career.[1]


Contents

[edit] Bridge career

Flint represented Britain in seven European championships, five World team championships and two World pairs. He won the European Championship in 1963, and came second in the world championships of 1960 (World Team Olympiad) and 1987 (Bermuda Bowl). He played rubber bridge and backgammon on a regular basis; this and his work as a bridge correspondent were his main sources of income.

In an extended visit to the USA in 1966, partnering Peter Pender, he became a Life Master in eleven weeks: this is still a record. They devised the Flint–Pender bidding system. He was also a collaborator of Terence Reese on the Little Major bidding system, and the author of several other popular bidding conventions.[2]

Flint was bridge editor of The Times, author of some significant books, and figured in successful television programs about bridge. His early death was caused by cancer. His second wife, Honor, was also an international bridge player.

[edit] Boris Schapiro's opinion

In 1962, Boris Schapiro gave this view of Flint:

"Jeremy Flint is very talented, and a beautiful dummy player and defender. If I had to find a fault in his game it would be slowness and the fact that he is easy to play against. Otherwise he approaches world class." [3]

[edit] Flint on the Buenos Aires affair

Jeremy Flint was a member of the British team at the 1964 Bermuda Bowl, held in Buenos Aires at the start of 1965: later, he gave an account of the accusation of cheating made against Reese and Schapiro.[4] The results of the BBL trials was: 1 Reese—Flint; 2 Konstam—Schapiro; 3 Albert RoseRalph Swimer. The BBL then announced the team, omitting Swimer and substituting Maurice Harrison-Gray. Controversy ensued, and eventually Swimer had to be content with being non-playing captain. Reese and Schapiro were hardly on speaking terms at the time; Reese played mainly with Flint, the pair using the Little Major bidding system.

Flint made two main points, over and above those made by Reese in his book: [5] 1. The bitter quarrel between Reese and Schapiro "was surely not the perfect background for alleged dishonest complicity". 2. When Flint was playing with Reese in the closed room, Geoffrey Butler (BBL official) and Waldemar von Zedwitz (senior American master) came to watch. After the session Flint said to Reese:

"Terence, you realise we were being watched."
"Good gracious," he replied "Do you think so?"
"I suppose they must be considering banning the Little Major," I ventured.

"Reese is considered a fool by no-one [yet] according to his accusers he continued to exchange signals for the next seven days". (Flint, op cit p125)

[edit] Bibliography

  • Flint, Jeremy and Freddie North 1970. Tiger bridge: the game at the top. Hale, London.
  • Flint, Jeremy and Freddie North 1971. Bridge in the looking glass. Cassell, London.
  • Reese, Terence and Jeremy Flint 1979. Trick 13. Bibliagora. (A novel)
  • Flint, Jeremy and Freddie North 1980. How to win more at racing. Sphere, London.
  • Flint, Jeremy and Richard Sharp. 1980. Competitive bidding. Cassell, London.
  • Flint, Jeremy and David Greenwood. 1980. Instructions for the defence. The Bodley Head, London.
  • Flint, Jeremy 1983. Bridge with The Times. Country Life, London.
  • Flint, Jeremy 1983. Grand slam. Country Life & Newnes, London.
  • Flint, Jeremy 1986. The winning edge. Faber & Faber, London.
  • Flint, Jeremy and Terence Reese 1991. Bridge with the professional touch. Gollancz, London. 50 hands from Flint's column in The Times, selected and edited by Reese.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Peter Hasenson (ed), British Bridge Almanack, 77 Publishing, 2004, ISBN 0-9549241-0-X, pp184-5.
  2. ^ The Official Encyclopedia of Bridge. ACBL, N.Y., various editions and dates.
  3. ^ Schapiro, Boris 1962. Contract bridge journal, reprinted in Hasenson P. British Bridge Almanack 2004. 77, London. p63
  4. ^ Flint J. 1970. Tiger bridge: the game at the top. Hale, London. Chapter 8.
  5. ^ Reese T. 1967. The story of an accusation. Heinemann, London.