Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Awarded to the Open Board-a-Match Teams winners at the fall North American Bridge Championship (NABC), it was donated by the Greater New York Bridge Association in 1965 in memory of Curt H. Reisinger, a great benefactor and official of the ACBL, and replaced the Chicago Trophy. [3]
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 ...
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 Open Youth Championships
2024 U.S. Open broadcast schedule: TV and streaming All information and times provided by the U.S. Open . Broadcast for the tournament will be across NBC, USA Network and the Golf Channel.
How to watch the U.S. Open on TV —In the U.S.: ESPN ... What is the U.S. Open schedule? — Aug. 26-27: First Round (Women and Men) ... 9 — The number of women who have split the past 10 U.S ...
Swiatek and Alcaraz were US Open champions in 2022 and return to New York among the favourites for the final grand slam of the year. Follow latest news and results from US Open – LIVE
The United States Bridge Federation (USBF) is the national federation for contract bridge in the United States and a non-profit organization formed by the American Contract Bridge League (ACBL) and the American Bridge Association (ABA) in 2001 [1] to hold the United States Bridge Championships and to select, train, and support Open, Women, Senior and Junior teams to represent the United States ...
World Bridge Series Championships is the new 2010 name for a quadrennial meet organized by the World Bridge Federation in non-leap even years. (Another meet, the World Bridge Games, is held quadrennially in leap years.) Most of its world championship events are open in the sense that entries do not represent geographic zones or nations.