Based on The Times Bridge column, an extensive bridge guide aimed at the less experienced or social player who longs to improve their game, with instructive deals and tips, as well as a helpful Index.
Andrew Robson, The Times Bridge Correspondent, is both a champion Bridge player and an inspired teacher. He teaches and tutors at his Bridge Club and has acquired great practical knowledge about how people learn to play Bridge.
Based on Andrew Robson's daily column in The Times, common scenarios are presented with an outline of what actually happened, as well as what should have happened. Along with every deal is the very popular handy tip ‘If you remember just one thing…', which features throughout the book.
The first section of the book, ‘The Game', is a basic outline providing the key to playing a sensible game of Bridge, subdivided into ‘Bidding', ‘Declarer Play' and ‘Defence'.
The reader can either read ‘The Game' first, paying particular attention to the tips, or they can dip in and out of the book, picking a common mistake at random, with the option to cross-reference to the same tip in ‘The Game' section.
Bridge is now reaching a new audience, and is being played by people of all ages. Let Andrew Robson help you to improve your game!
Previously published in 2005 as
The Times Bridge: Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them.
About the Author
Andrew Robson is Britain's leading Bridge player, teacher, writer. He is most widely known for his daily column on
The Times which he began in 2000, particularly for his Friday column for the less experienced, on which this book is based.Andrew has written weekly for
Country Life since 1994 and for Money Week since 2005. He has also written for
The Oldie, The Spectactor and the
Express on Sunday . As a player Andrew has won the World Junior Championship, the European Championship and every top domestic event several times.
Most recently he was one of the spearheads of the England team that reached the quarter-finals of the 2013 World Championships in Bali. As a teacher he runs the Andrew Robson Bridge Club which he started from nothing in 1995, now boasting over 2000 members and specialising in teaching the game to new players. He also travels the country giving Master Classes and leading Charity Bridge Days. Andrew, 50, lives in West London with his wife and two daughters. When not Bridging he likes to ride his Mountain Bike.