Source:
Bridgeguys.com
Mr.
Ronald E. Andersen was born
in 1941 and died in 1997. He
lived in New York, Dallas and
Chicago. Mr. Ronald E. Andersen
was one of the most successful
American bridge players and a
professional bridge author.
He
was a World Bridge Federation
World master and an ACBL Grand
Life Master with more than 31,000
Master Points, which put him as
Number Three on the list of
members with the greatest total
points.
Mr.
Ronald E. Andersen was involved
in many bridge-related
activities. He held bridge
lectures, hosted even panel
shows, and moderated bridge
programs at NABCs, and was the
chief vugraph commentator at the
European Championships.
As
an experienced bridge player, Mr.
Ronald E. Andersen placed 6th in
the World Open Pairs in 1978,
placed 8th in 1982, tied for 5th
place in the 1984 World Teams
Olympiad. He finished third in
the 1990 resumption of the London
Times Invitational. He won the
London Times Charity Pro-Am event
in 1991, won the Proton
Invitational Teams in Taipei in
1990.
In
1981 Mr. Ronald E. Andersen
played in the first international
bridge tournament ever held in
mainland China (Shanghai). He
delivered a lecture at the
Chinese University in Shanghai
with the aid of Catherine Wei as
translator.
Among
his accomplishments in the bridge
world, he developed the DOOP,
which is a device which permits
one table duplicate games, so
that hands previously played in
tournaments can also be played in
the home. He was also a
contributor to the development of
the Precision System. He hosted
and coordinated vugraph
presentations at NABCs and was
chief commentator at many
European Championships for
several years.
Mr.
Ronald E. Andersen was the Editor
in Chief of the Devyn Press
Championship Bridge Series, and
the author of two pamphlets in
the series titled Killing
Their No Trump and Matchpoint
Tactics. He edited four books
on Precision, and was Associate
Editor of the International
Precision Newsletter.
Other
articles by Mr. Ronald E.
Andersen were articles written
for the ACBL Bulletin and several
other Bridge Periodicals
throughout the world.
He
is the author of:
Where
and How High
Lebensohl
Convention Complete, 1996
Counting,
1992 (Championship Bridge
Series, No. 24, Vol 3/0234)
and
is the co-author of
Matchpoint
Precision, with C.C. Wei
Making
the Most of Your Limited
Opening Bids
Profits
from Preempts, 1997 with C.C.
Wei
Perfect
your No Trump Bidding, with
C.C. Wei
Action
For The Defence
Preempts
From A to Z, with Sabine
Zenkel, 1993
Bridge
From A to Z
Mr.
Ronald E. Andersen was coach and
acting captain of the US Venice
Trophy team that reached the
finals in Rye, New York in 1981,
and was npc of the Venice Trophy
team that reached the semi-finals
in Yokohama in 1991. In 1974 he
won the Mott-Smith Trophy
with a record 250 Masterpoints.
He was a four-time winner of the McKenney
Top 500 (more than any other
living player), and he was the
first to win more than 2000
Masterpoints in one year (2009
MPs in 1977, 2725 MPs in 1980,
and 2994 MPs in 1983).
| 1970 |
|
Life
Master Men's Pairs |
| 1971 |
|
Master
Mixed Teams |
| 1974 |
|
Men's
Teams |
| 1974 |
|
Winner
of the Mott-Smith Trophy |
| 1974 |
|
Open
Pairs, Placed 2nd |
| 1974 |
|
Vanderbilt,
Placed 2nd |
| |
|
Team:
2.
Ron Andersen, Mark
Feldman, Stephen
Goldstein, Merle Tom,
Kathie Wei |
| 1975 |
|
Blue
Ribbon Pairs, Placed 2nd |
| 1977 |
|
Vanderbilt,
Placed 2nd |
| |
|
Team:
2.
Ron Andersen, Gerald
Caravelli, Hugh MacLean,
Milt Rosenberg, Kathie
Wei |
| 1978 |
|
Blue
Ribbon Pairs |
| 1979 |
|
Vanderbilt,
Placed 2nd |
| |
|
Team:
2.
Ron Andersen, Dave
Berkowitz, Jeff
Meckstroth, Judi Radin,
Kathie Wei |
| 1980 |
|
Vanderbilt,
Placed 2nd |
| |
|
Team:
2.
Ron Andersen, Mark
Feldman, Eric Kokish,
Peter Nagy |
| 1980 |
|
Reisinger |
| |
|
Team:
1. Ron Andersen, Malcolm
Brachman, Bobby Goldman,
Eddie Kantar, Mike
Lawrence, Paul Soloway |
| 1982 |
|
Reisinger,
Placed 2nd |
| |
|
Team:
2. Bud Reinhold, Ron
Andersen, Tommy Sanders,
Paul Soloway, Bobby
Goldman |
| 1982 |
|
Life
Master Pairs |
| 1983 |
|
Spingold |
| |
|
Team:
1. Malcolm Brachman,
Bobby Wolff, Bob Goldman,
Bob Hamman, Paul Soloway,
Ron Andersen |
| 1986 |
|
Reisinger,
Placed 2nd |
| |
|
Team:
Bud
Reinhold, Ron Andersen,
Tommy Sanders, Paul
Soloway, Bobby Goldman |
| 1986 |
|
Spingold |
| |
|
Team:
1. Malcolm Brachman,
Bobby Goldman, Ron
Andersen, Mike Passell,
Mark Lair, Paul Soloway |
| 1988 |
|
Spingold |
| |
|
Team:
1. Jim Mahaffey, Ron
Andersen, Paul Soloway,
Bobby Goldman, Eric
Rodwell, Jeff Meckstroth |
| 1989 |
|
Men's
Swiss Teams |
| 1990 |
|
Spingold,
Placed 2nd |
| |
|
Team:
2. Jim Mahaffey, Paul
Soloway, Bobby Goldman,
Ron Andersen, Jeff
Meckstroth, Eric Rodwell |
| 1992 |
|
Reisinger,
Placed 2nd |
| |
|
Team:
2. Jim Mahaffey, Alan
Sontag, Eddie Kantar, Ron
Andersen, Tony Forrester |
| 1993 |
|
Mixed
Pairs, Placed 2nd |
Mr.
Ronald Andersen won many regional
events. He died at the European
Championships while commentating
on vugraph.
Source:
New York Times
Ron Andersen, Bridge Titlist
And Commentator, Dies at 56
By ALAN TRUSCOTT Published:
July 13, 1997
Ron Andersen, a leading
personality in the world of
bridge, died on July 3 at
North-West Hospital in Chicago.
He was 56.
While officiating as chief
commentator at the European
Bridge Championships in Italy
last month, he suffered two
strokes associated with kidney
failure, said his brother Kenneth
Andersen of Dike, Iowa. He was
flown home to Chicago, where he
suffered a third stroke.
In 1977, Mr. Andersen became
the first player to win more than
2,000 master points in a calendar
year, giving him the Barry Crane
Top 500 title, which designates
the top player on the tournament
circuit.
He won the title again in 1980
and 1983, setting new point
records both times, and in 1986.
He was a three-time winner of
the prestigious Spingold Knockout
Team Championship, in 1983, 1986
and 1988, and his eight other
national titles included two
victories in the Reisinger
Board-a-Match Team Championship,
in 1980 and 1992.
He was a four-time runner-up
in the Vanderbilt Knockout Team
Championship, and he won hundreds
of regional titles.
He represented the United
States in several world
championships, with his best
result a tie for fifth in the
1984 World Team Olympiad.
Mr. Andersen was also a
commentator for major
championships, and he officiated
at hundreds of regional, national
and world championships. Often
paired with Edgar Kaplan of
Manhattan, he described the
proceedings as shown on the
Vugraph screen.
He was the first choice of the
American Contract Bridge League
and the World Bridge Federation
to head panels of expert players
to discuss the action.
He lectured widely and was
also an author. Seven of his
books concerned the Precision
System, with C. C.Wei and Kathie
Wei as co-authors. His most
recent book was ''Preempts From A
to Z,'' with Sabine Zenkel
(Magnus, Stamford, Conn., 1993).
Mr. Andersen was born in Cedar
Falls, Iowa, and studied for
three years at the University of
Iowa before taking up bridge as a
career. For the last six years,
he owned a seat on the Chicago
Options Exchange.
He was married three times,
and two of his former wives are
world bridge champions: Sue Picus
of Manhattan and Sabine Zenkel
Auken of Copenhagen.
In addition to his brother
Kenneth, he is survived by
another brother, Gary, of Dike,
and a sister, Diane Burns of
Portland, Ore.
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