Source:
ACBL Dictionary
John
Gerber of Houston, Texas was
famous as the inventor of the
FOUR-CLUB ACE-ASKING CONVENTION;
served for 2 years on the ACBL
board of directors and was a
highly important and influential
power in bridge politics. At
North American Championships, an
early riser, he could usually be
found in a comfortable chair in
the hotel lobby, collecting and
dispensing information.
He was
non-playing captain of North
American Teams in the Bermuda
Bowl competitions of 1962, 1963
and 1965. He was in the eye of a
storm on more than one occasion.
In 1962 in New York he split the
partnerships of Bobby Nail/Mervyn
Key and Lew Mathe/Ron von der
Porten, putting Mathe and Nail
together as partners in an
unusual move that worked well and
almost capture the title from
Italy.
The next
year in St. Vincent, Italy, he
again broke up a long established
partnership, pairing Nail with
Howard Schenken and benching
Peter Leventritt and Jim Jacoby.
This move was not successful and
may have cost the Americans the
championship.
It
followed a little known incident
that occured at the time Gerber
arrived at the Grand Hotel Bilia.
An anonymous letter written in
Italian was delivered to him. He
secured a translator, but after
the first paragraph was read to
him, he asked the translator to
stop; to deliver the letter to
Italy's captain, Carl Alberto
Perroux and to explain that
Gerber had listened only to the
first paragraph. The writer had
accused the BLUE TEAM of
cheating.
Perroux,
after reading the letter to his
team, suggested that the match be
played with screens running
across the tables(this was 12
years before present-days screens
were employed), but Gerber would
have none of it. The goodwill
engendered by this exchange
inspired by Perroux and his team
to present their championship
trophies to Gerber and the
American team in what was
described as the Greatest
sportmanship in bridge history.
When
Gerber's daring move to pair
Schenken with Nail backfired, he
faced a lot of flak, but the ACBL
Board nevertheless appointed him
captain of the next Bermuda Bowl
in 1965. That was the time when
two members of his team brought
cheating charges against a
British partnership(Buenos
Aires Affair).
Gerber spent 10 minutes in the
grandstand watching the famous
British pair who were accused of
using finger signals to tell each
other how many hearts were held.
The 10 minutes were enough to
convince him and he became one of
the strongest witness against the
pair when the World Bridge
Federation suspended them.
A very
strong captain, Gerber was a
great player in his own right. A
very strong captain, Gerber was a
great player in his own right. He
represented North America in the
Bermuda Bowl in Buenos Aires 1961
and won the Chicago (now the
Reisinger) 1964, Master Mixed
Teams 1964, Mens Pairs
1959, Mens Teams 1953 and
placed 2nd in the Spingold 1954,
67; Chicago 1957, 59; Mens
Pairs 1957, Master Mixed Teams
1967, Mixed Pairs 1953, 68; Life
Master Mens Pairs 1974.
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