American Contract Bridge League
The American Contract Bridge League (ACBL) is the governing body for contract bridge in the United States, Mexico, Bermuda and Canada and is a member of the World Bridge Federation;[1] it is the largest such organization in North America.[2] ACBL games and tournaments use the duplicate bridge method of scoring, which greatly reduces the element of luck in competition.
The ACBL, a not-for-profit organization, was founded in 1937[2] in New York City and later moved its company headquarters to Greenwich, Connecticut. ACBL moved from Greenwich, Connecticut to Memphis, Tennessee in 1971[3] and to Horn Lake, Mississippi in 2010.[4] It has a full-time staff of 75 employees in the headquarters, plus about 170 tournament directors throughout the country.[2] As of 2009 it had more than 160,000 members.[2] Members receive the Bridge Bulletin magazine, but for many of them, the most significant role of the ACBL is its sanctioning of club games and tournaments to award masterpoints. If an event has the ACBL sanction, then the highest-finishing players are awarded specified numbers of masterpoints, which can be recorded with the ACBL. Most players value the increase in their masterpoint total as a measure of their success at the game. Unlike the Elo rating system developed for chess, the masterpoint system is strictly one of accumulation. A player's masterpoint total can never decline except as part of a penalty imposed for ethics violations.
Besides the Bridge Bulletin, other ACBL publications include the Laws of Duplicate Bridge (named Laws of Duplicate Contract Bridge until 2008), the ACBL Bridge Series of lessons for beginners, and free instructional software. The ACBL certifies bridge teachers and club directors.
Three times a year, in the spring, summer, and fall, the ACBL holds the North American Bridge Championships (NABC). The NABC extends over eleven days and includes many different events. The location of the NABC is rotated among major cities. Each is typically attended by thousands of players. The 2009 Summer Nationals in Washington, DC had 14,115 total tables played over the 11 days.[5]
The ACBL has also published the ACBL Bridge Series, a series of books written by Audrey Grant and designed to teach the game to beginners, as well as to help more experienced players review and expand upon their knowledge of the game.
The administrative headquarters of the ACBL, located on a flood plain in Horn Lake, Mississippi, also houses its Hall of Fame, library and museum.[2][3]
Districts
The ACBL is broken down into 25 Districts. Each District appoints a District Director (DD) who serves a 3-year term on the ACBL Board of Directors. Clicking on the district number brings up the web site for that District. Clicking on the Report brings up the District Director report.
District | Area | Director | DD Report |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Eastern Canada | Leo Weniger | Reports |
2 | Ontario, Manitoba, Bermuda | Paul Janicki | Reports |
3 | Eastern New York (not New York City), Northern New Jersey | Glenda Calkins | Reports |
4 | Central New York, Eastern Pennsylvania, Delaware, Southern New Jersey | Craig Robinson | Report |
5 | Western PA, Eastern OH, Western NY, Western MD, Northern West VA | Sharon Fairchild | |
6 | Washington, DC, Virginia & Maryland | Margot Hennings | Report |
7 | North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia & Eastern Tennessee | Bob Heller | Report |
8 | St. Louis, Northern Indiana, Central and Southern Illinois & Paducah | Georgia Heth | Reports |
9 | Florida and Puerto Rico | Jay Whipple | Reports |
10 | Mid-South Bridge Conference | Russ Jones | Report |
11 | Kentucky, Western Ohio, Central Indiana & West Virginia | Beth Reid | Report |
12 | Most of Michigan, Northwestern Ohio | Dennis Carman | Reports |
13 | Chicago, Wisconsin & Upper Michigan | Suzi Subeck | |
14 | Iowa, Minnesota, North & South Dakota and Nebraska | Sharon Anderson | |
15 | Southwest Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Western Arkansas & Northern Texas | Phyllis Harlan | |
16 | Most of Texas, All of Mexico | Dan Morse | |
17 | Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Southern NV, Eastern Utah, West Texas, Wyoming | Bonnie Bagley | Report |
18 | Western Canada, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Utah | Claire Jones | Reports |
19 | Alaska, Washington State, British Columbia | Donald Mamula | |
20 | Washington, Oregon, Northern California, Nevada & Hawaii | Merlin Vilhauer | |
21 | Northern California and part of Northern Nevada | Stu Goodold | Reports |
22 | Southern California | Ken Monzingo | Reports |
23 | California: Los Angeles County | Rand Pinsky | |
24 | New York City and Long Island | Alvin Levy | |
25 | New England | Rich De Martino | Reports |
See also
- ACBL Hall of Fame
- American Bridge Association
- List of bridge governing bodies
- North American Bridge Championships
- United States Bridge Federation
References
- ↑ "Zone 2- ACBL". World Bridge Federation. Retrieved 2009-07-29.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Commercial Appeal: Largest bridge group in country moving from Memphis to Horn Lake
- 1 2 DeSoto Times Tribune: Horn Lake gets $3 million project
- ↑ ACBL Bridge Bulletin, August 2010, page 9.
- ↑ "2009 Washington D.C. Report". Retrieved 2009-08-08.
External links
- Official website
- 75th Anniversary DVD part 1, part 2, part 3, published May 22–23, 2012 at YouTube
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