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Adam  MEREDITH

 Adam Meredith è nato in Irlanda il 16 giugno del 1913 ed è stato sempre conosciuto da tutti soltanto con il suo curioso soprannome "Susina".

 Figlio di un professore universitario, Plum era un convinto pacifista e nel periodo antecedente la grande guerra ebbe per questo non pochi problemi.

 Oltre al bridge, l'altro grande amore della sua vita fu il balletto per il quale coltivava una profonda passione e al cui sostegno dedicò gran parte del suo tempo.

 Campione del Mondo a squadre nel 1955, due volte Campione d'Europa nel 1949 e nel 1954, Adam vinse molti altri trofei internazionali e nazionali tra cui, 5 volte la prestigiosa Gold Cup.

 Con Leo Baron scrisse e pubblicò nel 1948 "Baron System of Contract Bridge".

 Nel 1957 si trasferì negli Stati Uniti dove morì il 1 gennaio del 1976, non prima di aver vinto un gran numero di Tornei Regionali che nel 1960 gli fruttarono il titolo di Eastern States Master Pairs.

 Vero gentleman, fu clamoroso il suo rifiuto a partecipare ad un incontro internazionale con la Nazionale perché alcuni avversari erano sospettati di gioco illecito. La sua tesa fu condivisa da molti, ma Adam fu l'unico a non tornare indietro.

Nell'ultima parte della sua vita fu tormentato dal poté contare su una rendita di 460.000$ che gli fu assicurata da Ruth Sherman che fu la sua partner di gioco fin dal suo arrivo negli USA.

 Fa parte della ristretta cerchia degli eletti nella "Hall of Fame" britannica.

 

Adam 'Plum' Meredith (1913–1976) was a British professional bridge player. His origin was in County Down, Ireland. He was a key member of the British team which won the Bermuda Bowl in 1955. He won the European Championship in 1949 and 1954, and also played in 1955, 1957 and 1959. He won the Gold Cup five times, and the Master Pairs in 1960.

Little is known of Plum's early life, except that he did have a good school education. As a man, he was fearlessly honest. Long before World War II he was a convinced pacifist. Although unfit for military service in WWII, he declined to plead ill-health, and registered as a conscientious objector: he felt it would not be honest to put secondary reasons forward. Instead, he was allocated work as an ambulance driver in London, and also an ARP warden during the blitz. It did not last, because his ambulance section petitioned against the use of 'conchies' (conscientious objectors) and secured his dismissal to farm work: the worst possible outcome for an asthmatic.

The rest of his life is shrouded in some mystery, though one glimpse is given by his enthusiasm for ballet. When the Ballet Nègre (a creation of Katherine Dunham) came to London he was one of its financial backers.

Unfortunately, the latter part of his life was limited by ill-health, some of which was self-inflicted. Plum was a severe and chronic asthmatic and also a diabetic. Whilst resident in Britain, he spent months each year in the south of France where the dry climate helped his lungs. Later resident in America, alcoholism further reduced his vitality and shortened his life. He was always a charming man and a courteous opponent, and his death was widely mourned.

Meredith was a bridge professional: he played rubber bridge for a living. He was not a writer, journalist or teacher of bridge as so many other players were.

Plum was not only good-looking and intelligent, but had a highly original turn of mind. His personal honesty extended to his bridge career. He created a precedent when he withdrew from a British team on the grounds that a pair from a continental team were cheats. Others also thought so but had nevertheless played.

At bridge he liked to seize the initiative early in a match, some of his bidding maneuvers (which often centred round the spade suit) became legendary. He was also a remarkable dummy player. He was a strong and regular rubber-bridge player, and when he could he used a bidding system called 'Baron', and co-authored its text-book The Baron System of Contract Bridge with Leo Baron.

Leo Baron brought new concepts to bidding, and was one of the first to apply the losing trick count, instead of honor tricks or the Milton Work point count. A 2S response to a 1NT opening asked for the shape of the hand. Baron extended the principles of the LTC by using the 2NT and 3NT bid to show a fit with a flat raise: 2NT = 6 losers or better, flat (typically a very good 14+); 3NT = 7 losers flat (typically an 11-16 HCP). The system put more emphasis on constructive bidding than did Acol, and extended the 'change of suit forcing' idea. This influenced the development of later versions of the Acol system. Also, the system incorporated a one no-trump overcall as a weak distributional take-out bid.

Plum did not play the Baron system in the Bermuda Bowl victory. He was one of the four players who played CAB, the system favored by Konstam, Dodds and Pavlides. Meredith was also quite au fait with Acol.

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