Alan M. Sontag (born May 2, 1946) [1] is an American professional bridge player. He won six world championships, including two Bermuda Bowl wins. Sontag is also known for his book The Bridge Bum, a book "on everybody's list of the top ten bridge books ever written." [2] [ clarification needed ]
Besides the two Bermuda Bowls, his other victories are the Rosenblum Cup, Transnational Open Teams, Senior Bowl, numerous North American Bridge Championships, and two wins in the London Sunday Times and Cavendish Invitational Pairs. [3] In 1973, he and Steve Altman became the first American players to win the Sunday Times Pairs, at the time the premier invitational tournament in the world. [4] Two years later, Sontag returned to London and won the tournament again, this time with Peter Weichsel, [4] with whom he formed one of the strongest partnerships in the world from the 1970s until 2005. [3] The two were partners in the 1983 Bermuda Bowl tournament in Stockholm, when the United States defeated Italy in one of its most exciting final matches. [4] Sontag returned to the final in 2001, in Paris, where team captain Rose Meltzer became the first woman to win the Bermuda Bowl. [4] Meltzer teams including Sontag won the odd-years Senior Bowl in 2005 and 2007 and the open Rosenblum Cup in 2006. [5] (During this time Weichsel and Kyle Larsen have been Meltzer's partners in international competition.) [6]
Sontag was inducted into the ACBL Hall of Fame in 2007. [7] [8]
Sontag was born in New York City. He and his wife, Robin, live in Gaithersburg, Maryland, with their son Robert. [3]
Widely regarded as one of the fastest players in the world, [4] [8] he is known by his nickname Sonty. [3]
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