Edgar Kaplan on WBF
Edgar Kaplan on Wikipedia
ACBL Hall of fame
Edgar Kaplan Is Dead at 72,Top Bridge Player and Writer by Alan Truscott
Norman Kay on Wikipedia
Norman Kay a bridge champion sans title
Edgar Kaplan, one of the major figures in the history of bridge and Editor and Publisher of The Bridge World for more than 30 years, died of cancer on September seventh. For several years, he had battled against the disease with remarkable optimism, resolution, intelligence and courage. Edgar never surrendered to this fearsome enemy and maintained his usual schedule of tournament attendance and participation until the end. He won a national championship (his twenty-eighth) earlier this year, and competed in the Spingold and other events at the Summer Nationals a few weeks before his death.
Edgar was born in Manhattan and, with the exception of attendance at college and military service during World War II, lived there throughout his life. From 1960 on, he and his beloved wife, Betty, who died in 1985, resided in the brownstone house on West 94th Street that also houses The Bridge World. He is survived by his sister-in-law, Sylvia Kaplan; a niece, Beth; and a nephew, Michael.
Edgar Kaplan participated in organized bridge in virtually every possible way, filled a wide variety of roles, made major contributions in important areas, and inspired several generations of participants through his standards of behavior and achievement. He was one of the most successful American players, representing the United States 8 times in world championships (twice finishing second in world team events), winning 16 major national team championships, and garnering innumerable lesser titles including, in the one year that he set out to win it, the then-called McKenney
Trophy for the most master points in one year. His partnership with Norman Kay was one of the strongest and longest-lasting expert pairings ever. For more than 30 years, Edgar regularly held official and unofficial positions as captain, assistant captain, coach or advisor to American international teams. Most recently, he was captain of the 1995 Bermuda Bowl champion team.
A highly effective teacher and lecturer, Edgar was a co-founder of The Card School in New York. The combination of his teaching style and outstanding writing skills led to a series of successful books: « Winning Contract Bridge Complete, » and « Competitive Bidding in Modern Bridge, » have been in print for more than 30 years. Also still available, « Kaplan-Sheinwold Updated » is the most recent book on the system that gained many adherents and left its mark on standard bidding techniques, a method originally developed with the late Alfred Sheinwold; it represents the agreements he used with Norman Kay. His other books were
« How to Play Winning Bridge » (the original K-S book), « The Complete Italian System of Winning Bridge, » and « Duplicate Bridge: How to Play, How to Win. »