The Senior
Home Internationals for the Teltscher Trophy (sometimes referred to as the
Senior Camrose) was first held in 2008. The competition for the trophy is between
the four home nations and the Republic of Ireland. The event has been
generously sponsored since its inception by Bernard Teltscher, who leads the
Great Britain team that brings the number of teams up to six. The Patron’s team
can come first, but it cannot win the trophy.
The event
is played over a single weekend with a double round robin of 14-board matches.
England has won the trophy twice, in 2008 in Oxford and in 2012 in Ayr. Wales has won once and Scotland has won twice, cannily finishing second in the two
years that the Great Britain came first.
England
is represented by the very experienced team that won the trials last December. Paul
Hackett, who has won the trophy twice in four appearances, is partnering David
Mossop, playing in the event for first time, having returned to England after a
number of years playing in and for Switzerland.
Gunnar
Hallberg and John Holland are playing together in a Teltscher Trophy team for
the fourth time; three times for England (two wins) and once for Great Britain
(a win but no trophy).
David
Price and Colin Simpson have also played together for England (once) and for
Great Britain (twice, one win). David and Colin were part of the England team
that won the Camrose earlier in 2013 and they hope (tempting fate, this bit) to
become the first pair to win the Camrose and Teltscher Trophy in the same year.
I have
the honour of NPCing the England team and I have supplied each of them with a
diet sheet, a fitness programme, and a detailed guide (with examples) of how to tell when a 4♣ bid is Gerber. You can do your bit by watching the match on BBO with your
fingers crossed; with your help England can do the Camrose - Lady Milne -
Teltscher Trophy treble in 2013.
Don't you mean the Junior Camrose, Camrose, Peggy Bayer, Lady Milne and Senior Camrose quadruple?
ReplyDeleteImportant not to forget that the two junior events.
Although since England have since failed to win the Senior Camrose it's a moot point.
Yes, indeed, important to look at the whole picture - although the two Junior events you mention would actually make it a quintuple.
ReplyDelete