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The first North American College Team Championship was held in 1987 at the Spring NABC in St. Louis and the winners (except Barry Goren, who was not eligible because of his age) represented ACBL in the first World Junior Championships in the Netherlands.
Awarded to the National Knock-out Team championship winners at the spring North American Bridge Championship (NABC)s. It was donated in 1928 by Harold S. Vanderbilt, who won in 1932 and 1940. The event was contested annually in New York as a separate championship until 1958, when it was incorporated into Spring NABCs.
Asia Pacific Bridge Federation Youth Championships. 19th Asia Pacific Bridge Federation Youth Championships Wuhan, China 2013, 19–25 August 2013 20th Asia Pacific Bridge Federation Youth Championships Bangkok, Thailand, 1–7 April 2015 22nd Asia Pacific Bridge Federation Open Youth Championships Bogor, Indonesia April 13–20, 2018 2018 APBF ...
Winner Masterpoints 1952 Al Roth: n/a 1953 John Crawford: n/a 1954 Paul Hodge: n/a 1955 Milton Ellenby n/a 1956 Paul Hodge: n/a 1957 Lew Mathe: n/a 1958 Sylvia Stein: n/a 1959 Mort Rubinow n/a 1960 Oswald Jacoby: n/a 1961 Phil Feldesman: n/a 1962 Marshall Miles: n/a 1963 Eric Murray: 211 1964 Harold Rockaway 180 1965 Mike Lawrence: 211 1966 ...
The winners list is a who's who of bridge – including Vanderbilt himself, a winner in 1932 and 1940. Winners receive replicas of the trophy, a practice initiated by Vanderbilt from the first running, and perpetuated under the terms of his will by a $100,000 trust fund that the ACBL administers.
The College Football Playoff bracket is SET. After weeks of speculation, the world knows what the first-ever 12-team playoff looks like, but it’s far from a perfect system.
Charles Coon (June 2, 1931 – January 18, 2003) [1] was an American bridge player. He finished second in two world championships and won six North American Bridge Championships (NABC). A son of Carleton Coon, Coon was from Gloucester, Massachusetts. [2] He graduated from Harvard College and served in the Korean War. Then he "devoted himself to ...
NCAA Division I champions are the winners of annual top-tier competitions among American college sports teams. This list also includes championships classified by the NCAA as "National Collegiate", the organization's official branding of championship events open to members of more than one of the NCAA's three legislative and competitive divisions.