NYC Fall Regional Oct 11-14 2023

Pre-register using ACBL Entry Express.

Update 10/11/2023: Attendance was BETTER than expected. We highly recommend pre-registering using the link above to secure your spot, or email tournaments@gnyba.org

Results from ACBL Live: https://live.acbl.org/events/2310123

Information is available for our October 11 to 14 Fall Regional.

Download our Fall Regional Flyer.

Location: 25-22 Astoria Boulevard, Astoria, Queens
Card Fees: $25 per player per session / $200 per team full day

Oct 11th to 14th (Wed – Sat)
Daily 10:15am + 3:00pm
Open Pairs
Gold Rush Pairs
Open Swiss
Bracketed Round Robin (0-3500)

Newcomers Games (0-199)
Oct 12th: 10:15am (0-199 Pairs Game)
Oct 14th: 10:15am (Countess Cup Session 1)**
Oct 14th: 3:00pm (Countess Cup Session 2)**

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Do the Masses Prefer Bracketed Or Swiss Teams?

Today, the GNYBA Tournament Committee met to discuss whether to have Flighted Swiss versus Bracketed Teams. There are pros and cons.

Downsides of Swiss

A Flighted Swiss allows you to choose your bracket. However, the bracket could be very large, and you end up not playing all of the other teams (you play a team with similar cumulative Victory Points). Also, the depth of awards is less generous in a Swiss. With 32 teams in A/X/Y, which we had last October 2022, the top 8 teams in “A” received gold points.

Granted, 6 other teams received gold via “X” and “Y” strats, but that doesn’t always happen when some of the “X” and “Y” teams also hog the “A” awards. As always with strats, if you win both the “A” and the “X”, you only get the “A” award, and no one ends up getting the “X” award. Put another way, in a swiss you might need to beat 24 teams to win gold, whereas in bracketed teams you only need to beat 5 teams to win gold.

Swiss is also less fair in the way matchups are done. You don’t face every other team, so some teams might get lucky and play easier teams while your team might face all of the hard teams.

Downsides of Bracketed

Now we get to the pain points in Bracketed Round Robin. Yes, you usually play everyone else. There are no swiss gambits. Everyone SHOULD be around the same masterpoints. Also, usually 3 out of 8 or 4 out of 9 spots will pay gold. However, there are three annoying problems with bracketed round robin.

You can’t play up, unless you are willing to play top. Many players have a clear track record of playing stronger than typical players at their masterpoint level. However, bracketing must be done by Masterpoints, and an underrated team often dominates the entire bracket. Neither the winning team or opponents have much fun in this situation.

Second, there are no stratifications. After all, a bracket should only have at most 9 teams. If the bracket happens to have a clump of strong teams and a clump of lower rated teams, there won’t be a lower strat prize.

Lastly, you don’t know what convention chart you will play. There is a little-known quirk in the ACBL convention charts when it comes to bracketed teams. If every team in the bracket has a Masterpoint average of under 299, that bracket plays the Basic Chart (it used to be 750, which is even more awful). If every team in the bracket averages to under 1500, you play Basic+. If every team in the bracket average above 3000, you play Open+. Otherwise, you play Open. It is a bit awkward when you find out that you bracketed into a lower bracket than expected and suddenly can’t play certain conventions.

Best of Both Worlds

Thankfully, we have a solution that gives the best of both worlds (we hope). For the Oct 11-14 regional, we will run an open swiss with stratifications (open / 8000 / 4000). Concurrently, there will be Bracketed Round Robin for the rest (0-3500). For newer players, you can play in a bracket that is filled with 7 other less experienced teams. For the underrated, stronger teams, they can choose to play the top bracket in the round robin (with other players who have 2000-3500). Everyone in between can play their bracket. The top tier teams and those who want an extreme challenge can play in the open swiss.

For those trying to reach Life Master or any other ACBL rank requiring gold points, the Bracketed Round Robin is your best bet. Your bracket will probably only have 8 teams and 3 of the 8 will win overall gold points (the rest get red points for match awards). It is much better odds than a pairs game and much easier for players who are no longer able to play in the gold rush pairs. If you have over 750 masterpoints but need gold, go for Bracketed Teams!

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D24 GNT Dates for 2024 Season

Our District just finished our most successful Flight C GNT run in history, taking 1st and 2nd place nationwide! Even though Chicago NABCs just concluded, we already have dates set for the next year NAP and GNT District Finals.

Championship Flight:
Round 1: Saturday Feb 24th
KO Phase 1: Sunday Feb 25th

GNT Flight A (0-6000 Masterpoints):
Round 1: Sunday, Feb 4th
KO Phase: Saturday, Feb 24th

GNT Flight B (0-2500 Masterpoints):
Round 1: Sunday, Feb 25th
KO Phase: TBD, the Unit will consult with semi-finalist teams

GNT Flight C (0-500 Masterpoints, Non-Life Masters only):
Round 1: Sunday, Feb 4th
KO Phase: Saturday, Feb 24th

Changes to Conditions

This year we will see a few interesting changes to the conditions. Most notably, Flight C for NAP and GNT will follow the Basic+ Convention Chart. For the last 4 years, Flight C and all 0-750 events followed Basic, disallowing Multi-Landy 1N-(2D) showing an unknown suit. Also, opening 2N showing both minors with 8-12 HCP is disallowed in Basic. Strong 1C followed by an artificial response of 1H, 1S, or 1N was disallowed. Thankfully, all of these are ok in Basic+.

You are still not allowed to play transfer walsh, or most transfer oriented systems unless it is a game-forcing response. Polish club showing an ambiguous strong or average hand is also disallowed in Basic+ and Basic. Opening 1D that could be as short as 1 or 0 is not allowed because all 1D openings must be quasi-natural.

That means the chart and allowed conventions for Flight B and Flight C are identical. It will be interesting to see how that impacts the already blurry B/C line in our District.

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October Regional, NAP, Gold Points

As we all recover from the Chicago NABCs, there are still many exciting events on the horizon for earning gold points.

Astoria World Manor

It’s happening. We will hold a regional this fall at an all new location, the Astoria World Manor! The venue is accessible by public transit, and for those driving, parking should be MUCH easier to find compared to Midtown Manhattan.

Save the dates of October 11th to 14th. This is the primary tournament each year where you can earn gold points without leaving NYC. We will offer pairs, teams, and newcomer games.

NAP District 24 Finals

We are still in the middle of NAP club qualification and there are still plenty of chances to qualify. In fact, this week is the face-to-face club qualifiers at Bridge and Games, located at 177 East 87th Street.

Save the date for our District 24 finals. There will be two dates. Sunday, October 15th is our Flight A and Flight C finals. The following Sunday, October 22nd is our NAP Flight B finals. Just like with GNTs, eligible players are welcome to play both days. However, you may only play in one flight for the national finals next Spring in Louisville, KY.

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PickleBridge?

Very interesting. Today is the Advisory Council General Meeting, formerly the ACBL Board of Governors. ACBL Executive Director Bronia Jenkins revealed the new Picklebridge initiative. ACBL will work with Pickleball clubs and encourage members to play a game of pickleball, followed by lunch, then a game of bridge.

Will it work? I’m up for creative solutions, but I guess the key will be finding volunteers who will teach bridge to a small group of Pickleball players. On a personal level, I am a fan of both volleyball and badminton, but I am not sure if I have ever played both in the same day. Something about doing both physical exercise and mental exercise on the same day doesn’t seem to have so much appeal to me. But to each their own, and I’m happy to experiment. What do others think?

(To be fair, there are a couple of other interesting initiatives going on, which ACBL will announce in the coming months)

The Advisory Council

Btw, District 24 has a VACANT spot on the Advisory Council. Each district gets 5 spots, and currently we have Jeff Bayone, Silvana Morici, Lee Lin, and Philip Grella using only 4 of the 5 spots. If anyone is interested, reach out to your favorite Unit board member and you likely can be nominated to become our 5th. The Advisory Council has been compared to the House of Representatives while the Board of Directors is the Senate. It is an all-volunteer position that allows you to stay informed and keep others informed. You can also give some input with a more direct line to ACBL higher ups.

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Chicago NABC Day 8: 2x NYC Micro-Spingold Semi

Another District 24 Showdown?

In an incredible display of skill and stamina, we might see another NYC final KO as two primarily District 24 teams ascend to the semi-finals of the Chicago 2023 Micro-Spingold. The team of Avery Silverstein, Jack Boge, Nicole Hudak, and Benjamin Levine beat Team Cusson in the quarterfinals to reach the 2/3 bracket of the semi-finals. And yes, this is the same Avery and Jack that won the GNT Flight C national championship earlier this week in the Battle of the Jacks Rematch, capping a draining 5-day Soloway style KO.

Over in the 1/4 side of the bracket, the team of Susan Davison, Daniel Lev, Catherine Williams, Sharon Phillips, Jeffrey Schwartz, and Michael Xu emerged as one of two survivors in their difficult Day 1 three-way KO (the other surviving team includes Henry Shi and Ping Hu, who just won the Young Pairs 3 days prior).

Impressive District 24 Mini and Micro Spingold History

In addition to our robust GNT-C history, District 24 has achieved a very impressive showing in the Mini-Spingold II for 0-2500 players (aka Micro Spingold). In 2018, a team captained by Leon Yu from Syosset won the Micro-Spingold in Atlanta in a field of 20 teams. The following year, an exclusively New York team comprising Christopher Moh, Jacqueline Chang, Siqing Yu, and captain Jordan Lampe took 1st in the 2019 Micro-Spingold, hosted at the Las Vegas Cosmopolitan.

Interestingly, these two captains faced off in Providence last year during the more prestigious Mini Spingold I (0-6000), culminating in a dramatic all New York mini-Spingold finals (with David Yoon and Lorraine Cable joining the Lampe roster).

Let’s wish our New York teams good luck in delivering us yet another District 24 final KO.

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NABC Chicago Day 5: LM Pair Winners

Congrats to all of the Unit 155 and Unit 242 finalists in the various LM Pairs events. In particular, Charles Bilich from Hewlett and Michael Krevor from Port Washington paired up to finish 4th nationwide in the Young Pairs (aka, the micro-LM Pairs).

D24 Young Pairs Finalists (0-2500)

Michael Krevor and Charles Bilich (4th)
Jeffrey Schwartz and Cynthia Ogden (12th)
Alan Davidson and Lee Lin (15th)
David Sloane and Susan Calabro (25th)

D24 Bruce LM Pairs Finalists (0-6000)

Bonnie Gellas and Leonardo Fruscoloni (19th)

D24 von Zedtwitz LM Pairs Top 40 (Open)

Joel Wooldridge and Kent Mignocchi (6th)
Ron Smith and Oren Kriegel (8th)
Sam Lev and James Krekorian (14th)
Joshua Donn and Jan Jansma (16th)
Chris Willenken and Geir Helgemo (18th)
John Kranyak and John Hurd (26th)
Andrew Stark and Franco Baseggio (33rd)
Jack Lipson and Tom Trachuk (34th)
Radu Nistor and Tim Archdeacon (36th)
Russell Samuel and Jeffrey Rothstein (40th)

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Chicago NABC Day 4: Young Pairs Qualifiers

Congrats to the District 24 Pairs who are advancing to the semi-finals of the Young Pairs in Chicago. Previously called the Young LM Pairs, a few years ago ACBL dropped the requirement that a player achieve Life Master prior to entering the event. The Young Pairs is the ONLY 6-session pairs event all year that follows the Basic+ convention chart. To win, contestants must rely on solid fundamentals and card play rather than extremely complex bidding systems. The Basic+ chart disallows many of the methods played in other NABC and NABC+ events.

District 24 Qualifiers Into Young Pairs SemiFinals:

Cynthia Ogden and Jeffrey Schwartz
Michael Krevor Charles Bilich
David Sloane Susan Calabro
Lee Lin and Alan Davison

Barbara Schwartz and Brenda Hatton
Michael Schwartz and Janie Woo
Melanie Petsch and Frank Dinoff

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Chicago NABC Day 3: Both NYC Teams Reach GNT-C Semi-Finals

Amazing! A huge congrats to our two GNT-C teams, who have both made it to the semi-finals after Day 3 of the Chicago NABC 2023. For many of them, it was their first time playing behind bidding screens, and each team finished with commanding leads and over 150 IMPs on the scoreboard! Let’s wish good luck to Team Boge and Team Mandel as they enter the last two days of the GNT.

District 24 GNT-C Records Broken!

Our District has had a very successful set of GNT-C runs in the past decade. The last time a D24 player won a face-to-face national finals was 2014, when Sam Kuang led a team to victory in Las Vegas (he was playing for D21 according to the Daily Bulletin photo of their victory) The year prior, Matt Rudary and James Southern reached the semi-finals in Atlanta 2013. Matt paired up with Dan Lev, and Yoko Sobol in Washington DC 2016 to reach the quarter-finals. Most recently, Henry Xing won the national finals in 2021 during the online GNTs held during the pandemic.

For this year, it will be the first time ever we have two teams entering the semi-finals, and by luck of the draw and victory points, they were in separate parts of the bracket for the entire knockout phase. We might even see an all-NYC finals, giving us a 52-board rematch for the Battle of the Jacks.

For the semi-finals today, Team Boge will play against the District 4 team from Devon, PA. Team Mandel will play against the District 8 team from Urbana, IL.

Update: Team Boge has won the entire national finals, with Team Mandel taking 2nd place. A great Distrct 24 showing!

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Chicago NABC Day 1: New York GNT Teams

Today is a great day in District 24 history as we kick off the national finals of the Grand National Teams. For the first time ever, New York City and Long Island is sending 6 teams to the face-to-face NABCs. Starting in 2019, any district with 8 or more teams in the district finals may send two teams in Flight B and Flight C, and for the first time we cleared the hurdle.

D24 NABC Chicago GNT Teams

Let’s wish all of our teams good luck. The GNTs run Soloway style, meaning the first day is an 8-round swiss, surviving 16 teams into the 2nd day seeded by victory point results. In the pre-2019 era, day 1 should have 25 teams, one per district, cutting 9 teams. Things are a bit harder now, but thankfully most districts do not field the 2nd B and C team.

In Flight C, Team Mandel and Team Silverstein are playing in a field of 29 teams, which will cut 13 teams moving to day 2. For the observant, we previously called them Team Latta and Team Boge, in order to launch the Battle of the Jacks final (with Mandel / Latta winning).

In Flight B, Team Verrier and Team Schwartz are playing in a field of 34 teams, with a fairly harsh 18 teams cut on the first day. Interestingly, neither team played each other during the District KO stage. Verrier beat Petsch in the semifinals, then lost to Team Latta in the finals (to make things more confusing, Team Latta playing in Flight C is not the same roster).

Flight A is playing under the name Team Trabulus, but for today’s roster, Joseph Byrnes is the acting captain. They defeated Team Lampe in the district finals to become the only qualifying GNT-A team from District 24. They are playing in a normal 24 district field (one district didn’t send a team).

In Championship Flight, Team Lipkin is playing in a 22 team field — Montreal had to cancel last minute due to weather issues 2 other districts did not field a team. Team Lipkin beat Team Miniter in the D24 Championship Flight finals.

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