Julian Y. Pottage (born 1962) is a British contract bridge player, writer, and teacher, [1] who studied mathematics at Trinity College, Cambridge. [2] He is also well known as a collector of bridge problems, and writes a monthly problem column in Britain's Bridge Magazine. [3]
He is the Bridge Correspondent for The Daily Telegraph, a regular contributor to English Bridge and, prior to Mr Bridge’s retirement, was Associate Editor of BRIDGE. [4]
He has written or co-authored 26 books on bridge, including Bridge Problems for a New Millennium and The Extra Edge In Play with Terence Reese (1913–1996). He also co-edited the 2010 [ when? ] second edition of Clyde E. Love's Bridge Squeezes Complete . [5]
His book Play or Defend? won the International Bridge Press Association's 2004 Book of the Year Award, as did A Great Deal of Bridge Problems, in 2014.
Pottage is from Hampshire and went to school at St John's College in Southsea and Millfield school in Somerset. After reading mathematics at Trinity College Cambridge, Julian had a career in the occupational pensions industry. More recently his work has concentrated on bridge writing and breeding golden retriever dogs, his kennel name being Yorkbeach.
As a player, Pottage has participated in several national and international events, [6] notably winning the Pachabo and Tollemache double in 1999. [2] In recent years he has won several simultaneous pairs, including the inaugural Peter Jordan trophy. Julian was in the winning England team in the 1984 Junior Camrose and, having moved to Wales in 2005, has represented Wales in a number of international competitions. Since 2023, his caps for Wales include the most recent 3 European Championships and at least 1 Camrose weekend for each of the preceding 6 years.
He lives in Wales. He and his wife have 4 now adult children.
Title | Published | Co-author |
---|---|---|
Art of Psychic Bidding, the | 2003 | Peter Burrows |
Back through the Pack | 2006 | |
Bridge Behind Bars | 2008 | Nick Smith |
Bridge Player's Companion, the | 2006 | |
Bridge Problems for a New Millennium | 2001 | |
Clues from the Bidding at Bridge | 1990 2005 | |
Defend or Declare | 2012 | |
Defend These Hands with Me | 2006 | |
Easy Guide to Defensive Signals at Bridge | 2005 | |
Extra Edge in Play at Bridge | 1994 2005 | Terence Reese |
Golden Rules for Rubber Bridge Players, the | 2005 | |
Golden Rules of Competitive Auctions, the | 2003 | Marc Smith |
Golden Rules of Constructive Bidding, the | 2002 | Marc Smith |
Golden Rules of Declarer play, the | 2001 | Marc Smith |
Golden Rules of Defence, the | 2000 | Marc Smith |
Golden Rules of Opening Leads, the | 2004 | |
Great Deal of Bridge Problems, a | 2007 | |
Little Book of Bridge Secrets | 2012 | |
Masterpieces of Declarer Play | 2001 | |
Masterpieces of Defence | 2002 | |
More Hocus Pocus | 2002 | Erwin Brecher |
Play or Defend | 2003 | |
Positive Declarer Play at Bridge | 1986 2005 | Terence Reese |
Positive Defense at Bridge | 1985 2005 | Terence Reese |
Why You still Lose at Bridge | 2013 | |
Win the Big Match | 2004 |
Trinity College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge. Founded in 1546 by King Henry VIII, Trinity is the largest Oxbridge college measured by the number of undergraduates and has the largest financial endowment of any college at either Cambridge or Oxford.
St John's College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge founded by the Tudor matriarch Lady Margaret Beaufort. In constitutional terms, the college is a charitable corporation established by a charter dated 9 April 1511. The full, formal name of the college is the College of St John the Evangelist in the University of Cambridge. The aims of the college, as specified by its statutes, are the promotion of education, religion, learning and research. It is one of the larger Oxbridge colleges in terms of student numbers. For 2022, St John's was ranked 6th of 29 colleges in the Tompkins Table with over 35 per cent of its students earning first-class honours. It is the second wealthiest college in Oxford and Cambridge, after neighbouring Trinity, at Cambridge.
A squeeze play is a technique used in contract bridge and other trick-taking games in which the play of a card forces an opponent to discard a winner or the guard of a potential winner. The situation typically occurs in the end game, with only a few cards remaining. Although numerous types of squeezes have been analyzed and catalogued in contract bridge, they were first discovered and described in whist.
Sir William Timothy Gowers, is a British mathematician. He is Professeur titulaire of the Combinatorics chair at the Collège de France, and director of research at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1998, he received the Fields Medal for research connecting the fields of functional analysis and combinatorics.
Sir Henry Peter Francis Swinnerton-Dyer, 16th Baronet, was an English mathematician specialising in number theory at the University of Cambridge. As a mathematician he was best known for his part in the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture relating algebraic properties of elliptic curves to special values of L-functions, which was developed with Bryan Birch during the first half of the 1960s with the help of machine computation, and for his work on the Titan operating system.
Oswald "Ozzie", "Jake" Jacoby was an American contract bridge player and author, considered one of the greatest bridge players of all time and a key innovator in the game, having helped popularize widely used bidding moves such as Jacoby transfers. He also excelled at, and wrote about, other games including backgammon, gin rummy, canasta, and poker. He was from Brooklyn, New York and later lived in Dallas, Texas. He was the uncle of activist and author Susan Jacoby, as well as father of James Jacoby, an author and world-class bridge player in his own right.
Hugh Walter Kelsey was a British bridge player and writer, best known for advanced books on the play of the cards.
Edward Henry Bickersteth was a bishop in the Church of England and he held the office of Bishop of Exeter between 1885 and 1900.
The Camrose Trophy or "The Camrose" is an annual bridge competition among open teams representing the home nations of Great Britain and Ireland: England (EBU), Northern Ireland (NIBU), Republic of Ireland (CBAI), Scotland (SBU) and Wales (WBU). As such it is the open teams-of-four component of the "Home Internationals" organised by Bridge Great Britain.
Marc Smith is a British bridge player, columnist and writer. Marc Smith represented Great Britain as a junior, winning the 1985 European Union Junior Teams Championship. He has a host of wins in national events, and reached the final of the World Mixed Pairs Championship playing with his wife, Charlotte. His book, co-authored with Barbara Seagram, 25 Bridge Conventions You Should Know, won the American Bridge Teachers' Association 1999 Shirley Silverman Award for Best Student Book.
Gareth Owen Roberts FRS is a statistician and applied probabilist. He is Professor of Statistics in the Department of Statistics and Director of the Centre for Research in Statistical Methodology (CRiSM) at the University of Warwick. He is an established authority on the stability of Markov chains, especially applied to Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) theory methodology for a wide range of latent statistical models with applications in spatial statistics, infectious disease epidemiology and finance.
The University of Cambridge is a public collegiate research university in Cambridge, England. Founded in 1209, the University of Cambridge is the third-oldest university in continuous operation. The university's founding followed the arrival of scholars who left the University of Oxford for Cambridge after a dispute with local townspeople. The two ancient English universities, although sometimes described as rivals, share many common features and are often jointly referred to as Oxbridge. In 1231, 22 years after its founding, the university was recognised with a royal charter granted by King Henry III.
Tim Bourke is an Australian bridge player and writer. He is internationally renowned as a collector and composer of bridge hands, or deals, having composed most of those in David Bird's "Abbot" series since 1996.
Bridge Squeezes Complete is a book on contract bridge written by Ann Arbor, Michigan-based mathematics professor Clyde E. Love, originally published in 1959. Written in a "dry, mathematical way", it is still considered one of the most important bridge books ever written and the squeeze vocabulary Love invented remains the basis for all discussions of squeezes.
Clyde Elton Love was an American contract bridge author and mathematics professor at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He was a native of Bancroft, Michigan and graduated from the University of Michigan in 1905.
Barry Rigal is a bridge player, author, commentator and journalist. Born in England, he was married to world champion Sue Picus and lives in New York.
Patrick David Jourdain was a British bridge player, teacher and journalist. Over six decades he played in more than seventy international matches for Wales, more than any other player. He was bridge correspondent of the Daily Telegraph from 1992 until his death. His World Bridge Federation obituary described him as "the bridge-journalist’s journalist". According to the English Bridge Union's death notice: "Ever the dedicated journalist, he penned his own obituary to ensure that the media would have their copy in timely fashion."
James Niblett is a British former civil servant who served as Head of International Policy at Ofcom. He studied at Trinity College, Cambridge 1971–1975. He began his career in the civil service, and in 1996 moved to Oftel. In 2003, he joined Ofcom when that organisation was created. In 2012, he was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for services to telecommunications.
William Henry Whitfeld was an English mathematician, leading expert on bridge and whist, and card editor for The Field. He is known as the poser of the Whitfeld Six problem in double dummy bridge.
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