11th World Bridge Olympiad,
Maastricht, The Netherlands |
Wednesday, 6 September 2000
|
Benito Garozzo:
Still Driven
by a passion for the
game
Two of the players
mentioned in this story - Benito Garozzo and Billy Eisenberg
- celebrated birthdays in Maastricht on Tuesday. Garozzo, winner
of 13 World Championships, is competing in the World Transnational
Mixed Teams. The article, written by Brent Manley, was first
published in the ACBL Bridge Bulletin in 1994.
Less than two weeks before
the start of the 1961 Bermuda Bowl, the defending world champions
from Italy --- the vaunted Blue Team --- had a problem. Guglielmo
Siniscalco, Pietro Forguet's regular partner and a member of
the world championship team from 1959, could not go to Buenos
Aires for the Bermuda Bowl.
Siniscalco's replacement?
A 33-year-old Fiat salesman from Naples, a player described
in one report as "an unknown in international bridge circles."
Was the Blue Team finally vulnerable?
There might have been
even more serious doubts if it had been known that the new recruit-one
Benito Garozzo - had been forced to learn the Neapolitan Club
system in 10 days. Although experienced as a bridge player,
Garozzo recalls, "I had never played any conventions before."
Far from being a liability,
Garozzo helped the Italians to a runaway victory as they vanquished
the U.S., Argentina and France by an average margin of 123 IMPs
in three 144-board matches.
Eight more world championships
--- six Bermuda Bowls and two World Team Olympiads --- followed
for the Italians before they retired from competition after
1969 championships. Garozzo was a part of each team.
In all, he won 13 world
titles --- four of them after the Blue Team "unretired" in 1972.
Today Garozzo enjoys a
relatively quiet life in Palm Beach FL --- he became a U.S.
citizen in January 1994 --- but he had lost none of his drive
to compete and, according to those who know him, little of the
skill that made him such a formidable player in his prime. In
the heyday of the Blue Team, Garozzo was considered by many
to be the best player in the world.
"He's still a very fine
player," says Billy Eisenberg, Gazorro's regular partner for
many years, "and he's one of the truly great theoreticians in
the game."
"For me," says Zia, the
globe-hopping internationalist , "Benito is one of the gods
of bridge. What he and the Blue Team did is legendary and I
love him for what he stands for- plus, he's a great guy."
Bob Hamman, who sits atop
the World Bridge Federation player rankings, was impressed by
Garozzo's performance in the computerized individual PAMP Par
Contest during the 1990 world championships in Geneva, Switzerland.
Garozzo, then 63, bested a star-studded field by a wide margin.
Hamman, who was second, has been chafing for a rematch ever
since.
"His performance," say
Hamman, "was remarkable."
A few months after Geneva,
Garozzo and Eisenberg were first in the Cap Gemini Pandata World
Top Tournament in the Hague, Netherlands --- perhaps the strongest
pair tournament in the world.
As recently as last spring,
Garozzo, Eisenberg and their teammates were in the thick of
the Vanderbilt Knockout Teams, finishing in a tie for third.
While many players with
his record might be content to rest on their laurels and relive
past glories, Garozzo is still ready to fight. There's no rocking
chair in his future.
"I miss the high competition,"
he says modestly, "and I think I can still do it. I would like
to play a big event, but it is difficult to get a team together."
Garozzo has come a long
way from the day when, at 16, he picked up a Culbertson book
on bridge and left another card game - the Italian favorite
tresette --- behind forever.
Born in Naples, Garozzo
lived much of his early life in Cairo, Egypt, where his father
did engineering work. In 1943, Garozzo was sent to a state college
in Italy to begin his education. While visiting his sister in
Naples, Garozzo found himself stranded in the city --- World
War II activity made it impossible for him to return to college.
While he was in Naples,
Garozzo, his brother-in-law and a couple of friends decided
to learn bridge for a change of pace. "We got a 1933 Culbertson
book," Garozzo recalls, "but none of us knew English. We were
playing a kind of bridge no one would understand."
A games aficionado from
his youth, Garozzo took to bridge right away. "I have always
loved cards," Garozzo says, "and I saw bridge as the most interesting
card game. It is the most complete game you can find. I still
love it."
Garozzo went back and
forth between Italy and Egypt a couple of times before returning
to Naples for good in 1954. By then he had met some of the rising
stars of Italian bridge - Forquet, Siniscalco and Eugenio Chiaradia
(inventor of the Neapolitan Club), among others. Garozzo impressed
them with his expertise, mostly in rubber bridge games.
When he wasn't working
with his brother in the road construction business, Garozzo
played more and more bridge. Drafted by the Italian army in
1956, Garozzo was fortunate to be stationed in Rome - he played
bridge every day during his 18-month stint.
He worked as an accountant
for a year after his discharge and went back to the road construction
business before starting the job with the Fiat representative,
handling some of the company's accounting. That lasted until
he opened a jewelry store in 1964, a business now operated by
his son, Fulvio. He also has a daughter, Silvana.
In his formative years,
Garozzo's skill as a player far exceeded his expertise in bidding.
"I was a wild bidder," he says. "I had a lot of flair in card
play but I was not a good technician in the bidding."
Garozzo's panache was
evident on this deal from the 1976 World Team Olympiad. He was
playing with Arturo Franco against Austria.
Dealer South. N/S Vul. |
|
ª
K Q J 8
© 10 5 4
3
¨ Q 6
§ Q 9 4 |
ª
10 6 5 2
© J 9
¨ 8 3
§ 7 6 5 3
2 |
|
ª
A 9 7
© K 6
¨ J 10 7 5
4 2
§ 10 8 |
|
ª
4 3
© A Q 8
7 2
¨ A K 9
§ A K J |
West |
North |
East |
South |
|
Garozzo |
|
Franco |
|
|
|
2§ |
Pass |
2ª |
Pass |
3© |
Pass |
4© |
Pass |
4NT |
Pass |
5§ |
Pass |
5¨ |
Pass |
6© |
All Pass |
|
Every North-South pair
in the field --- 23 in all --- bid to 6©. After any normal lean,
declarer's best hope for the contract is the ©K onside doubleton.
Thus the contract was made at every table --- except the one
where Garozzo was on lead.
Garozzo selected for his
opening lead the ©9! Declarer covered with the 10 and Franco
played the king, which he would certainly do from the holding
of K-J-6. Taken in, South went to dummy with a diamond and played
a low heart to his 8 and Garozzo's jack.
The unbreakable contract
had been broken. Garozzo's inspired lead had produced a 17 -
IMP pickup for the Blue Team.
After playing in the 1961
Bermuda Bowl, Garozzo set about improving the Neapolitan Club.
"It was quite a simple system," he says, "and not so good. I
improved it."
Garozzo is still very
much involved in bidding theory, recently devising a new Precision
system just for his favorite partner, Lea duPont. Garozzo jokes
that "Lea is on strike. She refuses to learn a new system."
"Of course I'll learn
it," said duPont, who met Garozzo at a bridge game in the Seventies.
They have been together since 1977 and have had success at high
levels as partners, winning the North American Swiss Teams in
1984 after placing second in the event in 1982. They were second
in the Mixed Pairs (1893) and the Open Swiss Teams (1993). They
also won several European tournaments while they were living
in Italy.
In the Seventies, Garozzo
was commissioned by the Volmac company in Europe to train the
men's and women's teams in the Netherlands. As part of that
effort, he developed a new Precision system.
From
1961 to 1975, Garozzo and the Blue Team played in 10 Bermuda
Bowls and three Olympiads --- and won them all. The streak ended
in Monte Carlo in 1976, when they were defeated twice, first
in the Bermuda Bowl by the U.S. and then in the Olympiad by
Brazil. They were second in both events.
A member of the U.S. team
which defeated Italy in the Bermuda Bould final was Eisenberg,
now one of Garozzo's closest friends. The two live 20 minutes
apart --- Eisenberg lives in Boca Raton --- and they get together
frequently. Eisenberg and Garozzo were born on September 5,
10 years apart.
"Benito is a very, very
novel person," Eisenberg says. "He has an orientation in bridge
that no one else in America has."
Garozzo knew America well
before he moved to the U.S. in 1985. He visited the U.S. regularly
to attend jewelry shows and played lots of bridge, including
a tour with the Omar Sharif Bridge Circus in the Sixties. In
1988, he requested and received a green card to work as a bridge
pro, allowing him to stay permanently. His sponsor was the late
Sam Stayman, an old bridge adversary but a friend away from
the table. "Without Sam Stayman," Garozzo says, "I wouldn't
be an American."
He still returns to Italy
regularly to give seminars on bridge and to coach the Italian
Junior bridge team.
Although proud of his
achievements in bridge, Garozzo knows his game had changed.
"I used to be very quick in dummy play and defense, but now
I've lost some quickness. Now I analyze the hands more carefully
before making a decision."
Has Garozzo slipped? Not
likely, says Zia: "In many ways, Benito still has the best mind
in bridge."
Nowadays, bridge is just
one of Garozzo's passions - golf and the horse races are two
others. "I play golf almost every day," he says, " and I go
to the races when I have no bridge game."
Zia, who has also discovered
a passion for golf, likes to kids Garozzo about his game on
the links. "Benito is a great bridge player but he has a hopeless
golf swing."
Taking the jest in stride,
Garozzo points out that he and Zia made a bet at the 1990 Fall
NABC in San Francisco that Zia couldn't lower his golf handicap
to 12 in one year. "We played the next year," says Garozzo,
whose handicap was 23 (it's now 20), "and I beat him. He has
a good swing, but the ball doesn't go straight."
Garozzo has observed many
changes in bridge during the four decades he has played seriously.
Not all of the changes are for the better, he says. "The new
style is to take too many chances to destroy the opponents'
bidding," he says. "And players of the new generation don't
work enough together on constructive bidding."
In the twilight of his
bridge career, Garozzo would like nothing better than to represent
the U.S. in international competition, although he conceded
it's unlikely. Looking forward, not back, he's still working
to improve his game, especially the bidding. Would he play for
America in the Bermuda Bowl? In a heartbeat, he says, "That
would be fun."
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