Talk:Bobby Goldman
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[edit]Robert (Bobby) Goldman (November 10, 1938 – May 15, 1999) was an American bridge player, teacher and writer. He won three Bermuda Bowls (1970, 1971, 1979), Olympiad Mixed Teams 1972, and 20 North American Bridge Championships. He authored books on bridge, most notably Aces Scientific and Winners and Losers at the Bridge Table, and conventions including Kickback, Exclusion Blackwood and Super Gerber (Redwood).[1]
Goldman first played duplicate bridge in 1957 while studying at Drexel University in Philadelphia. He began teaching six months later and taught "a modest number of classes" until he joined the Dallas Aces team in 1968.[2] His early partners with the Aces were Michael Lawrence and Billy Eisenberg; the team won Bermuda Bowls in 1970 and 1971. About that time he began "teaching heavily—15 department classes a week" and some private lessons.[2] His favorite partner was Paul Soloway, with whom he played more than two decades.[3] Goldman was an American Contract Bridge League (ACBL) Grand Life Master with more than 25,000 masterpoints and a World Bridge Federation (WBF) World Grand Master.[1] He was active in ACBL administration, participating in its Competition and Conventions Committee, Committee for an Open and Improved ACBL, and Women's Forum.[2] On the former committee he contributed to shaping the ACBL alert procedure, convention card, ethics and appeals process, and smoking ban.[1]
--P64 17:30, 22 May 2014 (UTC)
--repaired several minutes later in two stages --P64 (talk) 03:33, 16 December 2014 (UTC)
Date of death
[edit]Minutes ago I tagged the birthdate [citation needed] and changed the deathdate from May 15 to May 16, with citation [ref name=truscott]. Thus I reverted a six-year old change.
Originally we gave lifespan (1938 to 1999-05-16) and cited the NYT obituary bridge column by Alan Truscott for the deathdate (version 2007-05-13). Later one anonymous early contributor deleted the citation superscript and, in hirs last visit with edit summary merely "m", both [1] added a birthdate and [2] changed the deathdate from -05-16 to -05-15 (diff 2008-09-19).
Truscott states "died in Dallas on Sunday"; a perpetual calendar shows that Sunday to be the 16th, not 15th [1]; we have never cited another source afaik.
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