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HMC Bridge Club to Compete in Collegiate Bridge Bowl

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The 无忧视频 Bridge Club recently qualified for the American Contract Bridge League Collegiate Bridge Bowl tournament in Toronto, Canada, this July. Marissa Gee 鈥18, Nicholas Koskelo 鈥20, Kemper Ludlow 鈥18, Daniel Sonner 鈥18 and Jake Williams 鈥20 will compete for bragging rights and an opportunity to claim scholarships from a $20,000 pool.

Bridge was a popular pastime in the 1940s, which may be why a lot of people associate it with their grandparents. But if the dedication shown by these Mudders is any indication, the game may be about to enjoy a renaissance. The team meets several evenings per week in the Platt Living Room to play, strategize and teach others the game, no small commitment considering their academic workload and the fact that bridge, while it may be relaxing once learned, is not exactly uncomplicated.

The HMC Bridge Club had been relatively defunct for several years before Sonner restarted it last fall, a development that alumni Michael Hughes 鈥73 (chemistry) is happy about. 鈥淭here was no HMC bridge club in my days so, I am very glad that there is one now,鈥 he says. Lack of an organized club didn鈥檛 stop Hughes and his friends from playing, though.聽鈥淲e just played in the Mudd Hole (downstairs in Platt center at the time) and eventually started playing in club games and local tournaments. Now that there is a college championship within the ACBL it makes a lot more sense to have a formal club.鈥

Something current club members might be happy to know is that Hughes and his friends from college still play together, though not usually in person. 鈥淢y HMC Bridge partners Bob Bell 鈥72 mathematics, Ben Tucker 鈥72 mathematics and Steve Evans and I get together frequently online to play against each other; we live in four different states,鈥 Hughes says. 鈥淭ucker, Evans and I all finished in the overalls in the National IMP Pairs in Reno, Nevada, last spring, as did a team which included Bell, Tucker and me in the National Open Swiss.鈥

The success of Harvey Mudd students past and present might suggest that a scientific mind might also have an aptitude toward bridge. But humanities majors out there shouldn鈥檛 despair; according to Williams, 鈥淩eally, it鈥檚 for anyone who doesn鈥檛 mind doing the same thing over and over and over.鈥

Williams did, in fact, learn the game from his grandparents, with whom he and his brother have partnered in competitions, and has played regularly throughout his life. His brother will join him at the Bridge Bowl and participate in the competition. Sonner, who acts as captain of the team, also played bridge before coming to Mudd and is an avid student of the game (鈥淗e has lots of books on bridge in his dorm room,鈥 Ludlow laughs). However, prior knowledge of the game isn鈥檛 required to join the club. 鈥淚鈥檓 still learning,鈥 says Ludlow.