Source:
English Bridge Union
winning the Gold Cup in 1998
Born August 22, 1909.
Died December 1, 2002
aged 93.
The bridge world mourns the
passing of one if its most
colourful, irreverent and
irrepressible bridge players.
Boris Schapiro almost defies
description he was a
ruthless and brilliant bridge
player, an intimidating opponent
who, despite a sometimes
cantankerous exterior, had
enormous charm and warmth. He was
a force to be reckoned with at
any bridge table, a force that
did not lessen with age.
Boris will certainly be
rememberd as one of the all time
greats in bridge, still winning
world championships at the age of
89, when in partnership with
Irving Gordon he took the Senior
Pairs World Title in Lille in
1998.
Born in Riga, Latvia, his
family of wealthy horse traders
fled the Bolsheviks and finally
arrived in England where they had
business interests at the end of
the First World War. Boris was
educated at Clifton and at
various universities, including
the Sorbonne in Paris. He started
playing bridge during his school
days when the game helped to
supplement his income, but it was
only after the Second World War
that he started playing in
earnest.
In a career that spanned six
decades, Boris won the Gold Cup
11 times, the European
Championships four times and the
Bermuda Bowl in 1955. He came
second in the World Teams in 1960
and the World Pairs in 1962 as
well as winning the Times
Invitational Pairs in 1964 and
coming second in the same event
in 1991 at the age of 81.
Boris Shapiros first
Gold Cup win was in 1945 and he
won again the following year in
partnership with the late Iain
Macleod, the future Conservative
Cabinet Minister and author of
the book Bridge is an
Easy Game. The next
year, the partnership with
Terence Reese was formed, and
this was to become one of the
best known and most feared
partnerships in the history of
bridge. They won four European
Championships in 1948, 1949, 1954
and 1963 and, in 1955, the
Bermuda Bowl, the World Open
Championship. They were second in
the World Teams Olympiad in 1960
and the World Open Pairs in 1962
when Boris also won the World
Mixed Teams playing with Rixi
Markus, Nico Gardener and Fritzi
Gordon. He and Reese went on to
win the Sunday Times Invitation
Pairs in 1964.
In 1965, when playing in
Buenos Aires, Reese and Schapiro
were accused of using finger
signals to give information about
the heart suit, and although a
thorough enquiry held by the
British Bridge League determined
that no advantage had been
gained, Schapiro decided that the
time had come to retire from the
arena, only coming back to
Championship bridge as a veteran
player. He was runner up in the
Sunday Times Invitational Pairs
in 1991. 1998 was a particularly
successful year for Boris, as he
won his 11th Gold Cup and the
South African Championships as
well as the World Senior Pairs.
Irving Gordon has described
Boris as being emotional, loyal,
true-hearted, excitable, well
known to scream and shout, but
not afraid to apologise and make
his peace.
In 1968 he became bridge
correspondent of The Sunday
Times, a post he held until his
death. He was made an honorary
Life Member of the English Bridge
Union in 1998 in recognition of
his immense contribution to the
game.
He is survived by his wife,
Helen, whom he married in 1970,
forming another strong and
durable partnership.
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