The
Greeks have a natural feeling for card play
By Svend Novrup
Interview with Ioannis Damigos, npc, and Kostas
Kapayannides, one of the players who seem to be headed for
Bali after a convincing performance.
Greece are on their way to the best result ever in their
bridge history. Until now the best performance was winning the
qualification group in the Venice Olympiad 1988 after which they
lost the quarter-final to India. In the Europeans in Turku they
came 4th but at that time that did not qualify for the Bermuda
Bowl.
Kostas Kapayannidis, Greece
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I asked the non-playing captain Ioannis Damigos,
and Kostas Kapayannides, one of the players about
the reasons for this effort which has come as a surprise
to many. They explain:
A main reason is that on this occasion we have three strong
pairs, and that is important in such a physically demanding
event. It is important, too, that we are close personal
friends. The team was picked after a selection procedure
which started with a butler-scoring pairs won by one pair
of our team who thereby qualified directly. After that the
pairs placed 2-7 formed three teams which played a round
robin. "Our" team won, and thus we have the team
we could wish for.
Kostas Kapayannides explains the reasons for his teams'
exploits
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We are all amateurs who have to use our holiday for the bridge,
we can not afford to go to bridge festivals, we do not get all
expenses covered, and there could be no question of compensation
for lost income. Our federation is small, we have just about 2,500
members, and we have a very small revenue from membership dues.
We are a member of the Greek Sports Federation and receive a subsidy
of around $65,000 per year (25 million drachmers).
Kapayannides gets very excited here: If we qualify for
Bali, I am sure that this will be a wonderful opportunity and
be a great boost to bridge in Greece. The government will support
us strongly, they usually do if a sport is suddenly a success.
It seems that Damigos is not quite as optimistic but he
hopes that Kapayannides is right. I ask how a federation with
so few members can field such a strong team.
80% of the organised players in the country come from Athens,
and the top players meet in all our top events which occupy around
12 weekends every year. We play rubber bridge, we discuss bridge,
we read whatever books we can get hold of, and now we have the
internet as well. In the months ahead of Tenerife we came together
one extra day per week to practice our bidding or to play together
with pairs we invited. We really try to inspire each other.
It is a great advantage that the Greeks have a natural feeling
for card games. That is why we think that we would have thousands
of bridge players if we could get a foothold in the schools and
Universities but most parents do not want their children to take
up bridge as they still associate it with gambling. If bridge
went Olympic or we qualify for Bali, this might help a lot.
I remember the Europeans in Athens 1971 when there were very
few players, most of them from the aristocracy of the country.
One very idealistic friend I got on that occasion was Costas Kyriakos
who was working with juniors and trying to spread the game to
all social groups. Amazingly Damigos and Kapayannides know him
very well:
You know, we were both among his pupils. It was difficult for
him as the Greek Federation had been founded only four years earlier
and did not become a member of the Sports Federation until 1975.
But since then the bridge interest has grown considerably.
We have some juniors though at present they are not so strong,
and we did not participate in the latest European Junior Championships
but we will be back. In 1986 the European Junior Pairs was won
by Thanos Kapayannides (his friends never call him Athanasios)
and Liarakos, and as you see, they are in our team today.
And when the Generali Individual event was played in Athens last
year, a Greek player won the junior event.
Asked about a good hand, Kapayannides presents this, round
21, Greece - Switzerland:
Board 7. Dealer South.
All Vul.
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ª 2
© 9 8 4
¨ K 8 5 4 3
§ Q 9 6 5 |
ª A Q J 6 5 3
© K 7 6
¨ -
§ J 10 3 2 |
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ª 10 8
© A 5 3
¨ A 10 9 6 2
§ K 8 7 |
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ª K 9 7 4
© Q J 10 2
¨ Q J 7
§ A 4 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Kannavos |
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Kapayannides |
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1¨* |
1ª |
2¨ |
Dble* |
Pass |
3ª |
Pass |
4ª |
All Pass |
1¨
could be three cards. |
This is no brilliancy but it demonstrates how Kannavos thinks
and analyses. Here he gave the bidding and the lead some thought
and concluded: North did not make a negative double over 1ª so
he probably has a maximum of three hearts. The lead (3rd and 5th
highest) indicates five diamonds, and suddenly he realised that
South had to be 4-4-3-2 since he had neither three clubs (he would
have opened 1§) or five cards in a major.
With this analysis in mind he quickly solved the problem of the
hand which is to avoid more than two club losers. He won trick
one with ªJ, played a heart to the ace and a low club from dummy
to the ten and queen. He ruffed the diamond return and played
a low club to §8 knowing that South now had the bare §A. The rest
was trivial. When declarer failed at the other table, we gained
12 IMPs.
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