EPISODE 32: Greg Hinze

Meet Greg Hinze: Three time North American Bridge Champion, world champion and he also has a world class sense of humor! After first hearing there was such a thing as a professional bridge player, Greg made it his five year goal. He played a lot, read lots of books, practically went broke and now is a highly desired pro. 

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Episode Highlights:

1:35- How Greg first decided to pursue his goal of becoming a professional

3:15- How Greg got hooked onto bridge

6:10- Greg and his poker job

7:55- How Greg quickly improved into an expert

9:40- Live bridge and RealBridge

12:50- Greg’s favorite event

15:20- Reject those who rejected you

18:50- Strong club vs natural system

21:45- Greg’s 2D opening system

24:10- Winning a world championship on a team formed the night before the event

26:50- Greg, his wife, and fun midnight knockout deal

29:30- Broke North American champion 

31:35- An interesting strategy to pick between two close calls and a happy accident

35:20- His prediction on the future of live bridge

40:50- “Swiss Master” ~ Justin Lall

43:55- Bridge connects

48:30- Greg’s biggest bridge tip

Link to listen to episode

Transcript

John McAllister: Hello. My name is John McAllister and welcome to The Setting

Trick podcast. One of the reasons I started this podcast is because I wanted to share

Bridge with a wider audience. One of the absolute pleasures of my eight-plus year

foray into the world of Bridge, my deep dive, has been making new friends and I had

no idea that I would make so many great friends. I'm excited to have here with us

today, top professional Bridge player, Greg Hinze.

Greg is a world champion, a Grand Life Master, a three-time North American Bridge

champion, and I really wanted to have him on because he makes me laugh. The one

big takeaway, the new thing that I learned about Greg in this conversation is that

when he first heard about the possibility of being a professional Bridge player, he

said, "I want that," and he gave himself the time, five years, to do it and now here he

is. Greg Hinze.

Greg Hinze: How are we doing?

John: Bridge player, Grand Life Master, world champion, and Setting Trick guest.

Now you can add that to your resume.

Greg: Thank you. I'm glad you had me here.

John: You're a professional Bridge player?

Greg: Yes.

John: When did you make the decision?

Greg: I started playing Bridge about 1996, maybe a year later that I actually found

out there were professional Bridge players. At that point, I had already fallen in love

with the game. The game, to me, is the best game in the world. When I found out

that people were making their living playing Bridge, I set that as a goal to myself and

I decided that I would study and try to become one of the best players and gave

myself five years. If I can't do it within five years then I'm going to have to go do

something else.

While I was doing that, I was actually dealing poker for a guy who ran home games.

He was understanding of my passion, he was a Bridge player himself, and making

money dealing poker to support myself while I was learning the game of Bridge. It

was just under five years, maybe four years, early in four years, that I got my first gig

and I was excited and then it just exploded from there. With the help of a national

win, I got a few more gigs and it's been-- That was probably in 2003, I guess, maybe

that I really started getting moving and ever since then, that's just been full time. I

quit the poker thing and all that.

John: What were the circumstances in 1996 whereby you learned that people made

a living playing playing--?

Greg: Oh, no, '96 I didn't really quite know yet, '96 is when I first started playing

Bridge. It was in the middle or late close to 1998 that I actually found out. The

circumstances that got me playing Bridge was interesting. My mother, we played like

kitchen Bridge maybe five times and they didn't play Stayman, they didn't play

transfers and not even artificial strong 2 clubs, there was nothing. I played with my

mother and my grandfather. They knew how to take tricks so we'd play lots of hearts

and spades. I was good at taking tricks, but we did not understand the bidding at all.

Anyway, she had a Goren Bridge book that she was getting rid of in a garage sale.

She worked in selling wholesale to retail and have odd rid-offs so she would twice a

year have this huge garage sale. One day she just decided to get rid of some old

books and the book was in there. Some guy came and saw the Goren book and

asked to come play at the local Bridge club and she said, "Oh, I don't know if I'm

interested, but maybe my son might be interested." It turns out she did go and take

lessons at the Bridge club herself and on the seventh lesson, she went to Hawaii and

she said, "I have one lesson left. I've already talked to the teacher why don't you go

and see what it's all about?"

They were teaching out of the Audrey Grant books. I read the book and went to the

class and the teacher was basically just teaching out of the book. I'd already learned

everything from the book that she was teaching and she, I guess was impressed with

me so she asked me to play one day after that lesson. We went and played in the

club, that was my very first game that I ever played and we won. From there, I was

just instantly hooked.

Then the guy who bought the book from my mother was also-- he was a local pro

he'd played locally, so then he asked me to play and we won. I won my first two

duplicate games and from there, it was-- I found a young Russian guy I started

playing with, exchange student Alexi [unintelligible 00:04:49]. I don't even know

what's happened to him now, but we started playing quite a bit. We were winning a

lot and then I found one of my longtime partners, Negi Campbell and we just went

from there. That was all before I actually became professional myself.

John: Did your mom have the Audrey Grant book as part of being in the club?

Greg: Yes. The class gave her the books. It was four books, I guess, the Club

Series, Diamond Series, Heart Series.

John: You read it before you went to have the-- You were reading it while she was

studying it?

Greg: It was a quick read for me so no. I had read it when she told me to go to the

class. I'd read it in one night, the book that they were teaching out of, which was just

the Club Series, but she had bought all the books, the clubs, diamonds, hearts and

spades. I ended up reading all of those and then 100 or 200 more books after that.

John: Was this in San Antonio? You live in San Antonio now is that where you--

Greg: No, at the time I lived in Dallas, Arlington. Arlington, Texas, between Dallas

and Fort Worth, that's where I grew up. I was going to college-- I think I'd just

finishing dropping out of college. I never really graduated and so my mom was just

probably looking for something for me to do.

John: How did you get the job as the poker dealer?

Greg: I got the job because the poker dealer, the guy who actually bought the Bridge

book, is the same guy. He ran his own poker club. I was waiting tables at the time

and he's like, "Stop doing that. Why don't you come deal poker for me every now and

then?" Then I played a lot with his wife actually, as one of my first partners.

John: Was that a legal game, or was it an illegal game?

Greg: I don't know that it was in the up and up or not, but I made all my money from

tips. He didn't pay me anything. All my money came from tips, but it was fun. I did

that for about four and a half years. It was about the same timespan that I was

learning Bridge and then once I made the transfer over to professional Bridge player,

I stopped dealing the poker.

The games started drying up too because in poker, you really need to have some

people to support the game because otherwise, if you don't have the players that

keep coming, that are willing to lose the money day in and day out, then the game

will fall apart. You can't just have a whole bunch of really expert players because

nobody can do well except for the house.

John: What were the circumstances whereby you learned about Bridges as a

profession?

Greg: One of my partners I think clued me in on it. Another good player we were

playing and I think at one point he just said like, those professionals always doing

whatever and I was like, "What are you talking about professionals Bridge players or

whatever? People are professionals? I thought we were just playing for fun." I don't

know. That attracted me. I was like, Well, then if people-- and he's like, "Yes, they go

to regionals and regionals and that's all they do is play Bridge." I was like, "It sounds

like a life for me."

John: What sort of steps did you take to get yourself to that level?

Greg: I read a ton and ton, ton of books. I was wanting to become a Bridge player

professional, but I had no idea where to go. I never even asked for my first gig. I

think Billy Miller gave me my first gig as a side pair me and my partner, Negi. We

had played on his team. From there, Bruce Ferguson was helping me out quite a bit

too and I played a lot on his teams and just grew from there. Once you start getting

in and start doing well, it perpetuates itself.

John: You started out playing-- you weren't playing with clients initially?

Greg: Right.

John: You're under filling at a team you were not [crosstalk].

Greg: Yes, I was filling at a team. I didn't ever have a regular partner yet either early

on. Nowadays, I mostly play with clients. I don't do so much partner anymore, but I

still do that occasionally. Currently, I'll be playing with Josh Donn if it ever gets back

to live Bridge which hopefully won't be too long.

John: Do you guys have a deal?

Greg: We're supposed to play on the Philly's Fireman's team for the next cycle.

Other than that, I don't have any deals for regionals or say anything, but that's our

cycle team. Which has Summer with a [unintelligible 00:08:58] then the Fall, all the

Fall and the Spring for that. We had them for this last year too, but there was no live

Bridge. Right when we were about to play in our first one was the Summer Nationals

got canceled. Even the Spring Nationals got canceled, but I was on another team

playing with David Grainger. That tournament got canceled. We basically decided to

do the same cycle because we had never really played.

John: You think the Summer Nationals are going to happen like live in-person?

Greg: I'm hoping so. I wouldn't bet on it yet, but I sure hope they will. I miss live

Bridge. I like holding the cards in my hands. I like being at the table with the people.

You can pull in a lot more like sometimes you know that they were actually thinking

opponents as opposed to like, "Oh, did the cat come in and you turn around and pet

the cat or did the doorbell ring?" You don't really know what's going on when you're

on the computer. Although have you played on RealBridge yet?

John: Yes.

Greg: The RealBridge platform is really nice because there you at least have being

face-to-face because they're there always, and it's also nice if you play a team game

on one of those. Recently they held the USBF JLall online on RealBridge, and it's

pretty fun because in between the matches-- when you start off, you're sitting with

your teammates. You can chat with your team and all four of you are there like a

team, and then when it's time to play then boom, it just changes, and you're at the

table with your opponents. Then it's even great because when you get a hand, then

North and East are together, South and West are together.

It simulates the screens and you can't no longer see your opponent or your partner

until the hand is over. Then you have a brief 10-second window where you can-

should we be playing this over this or whatever? You could hit the pause button to do

it, but I like the RealBridge quite a bit. It really adds that extra element, and you don't

have to Zoom. I've also played some other games we're Zooming on the side, but it's

not the same as the RealBridge. RealBridge is really great. It's brand new relatively,

but I'm sure they're doing updates to it all the time and improving the software and

functionality and features and all that.

John: Do they IMP the scores in Real Bridge or do you actually compare with your

teammates?

Greg: No, they IMP it for you. In fact, it's great because as soon as you finish, you

can see all the IMPs from what your team has done and you see the board as it, but

you can't go and actually kibitz them but you see the scores. Real good for review

because you can go back and see how they played it and all that stuff. That is the

one good thing about online Bridge versus live Bridge is the hand record and record-

keeping of the plays and all that stuff which you don't really have in live Bridge. A lot

of times you go in over a hand in live Bridge and maybe somebody doesn't quite

remember exactly how it went or a day later or two days later, it starts to lose it.

I play so many hands at Bridge, it's hard to really remember hands these days. They

all blend together. I don't know [laughs], but having the online record is really nice.

That part is nice about online Bridge.

John: I agree. I played in the premier pairs in the Fall Online NABC. Geoff Hampson

sat in my seat for example. I could look at every deal, see the cards he played.

That's really cool.

Greg: That's really good too. I do that all the time in between, I play a ton of these to

BL things and all the regional two session events and I play fair amount regularly on

just the regular small tournaments, but in between, you have five minutes and you go

and see all the results and, "Oh, that was a weird result, what happened?" You can

go and look and again if everybody's making five and you see like they are getting

different leads or played something wrong or incorrectly or whatever, and you can

compare and check it out. It's nice.

John: Yes, you anticipated one of my questions. I was going to ask you if you had a

favorite event and while you haven't said you have a favorite event of this since the

COVID, but it sounds like RealBridge has been really positive for you.

Greg: Yes, I do like RealBridge. My favorite events are obviously the Spingold or the

Vanderbilt. Those events. I've been playing a lot also of the OCBL and the Alt. It's

really nice because we get to play against a lot of Europeans and there's a lot of

strong Europeans and their systems are way different than what we're used to here

in America and it's fun to compete against new styles and new treatments.

John: Have you had any good wins in the online era?

Greg: The online era, I haven't had any wins. I've made the quarter-finals once and

the semifinals once and those event. They're very tough, some of those events,

really tough teams, world-class players all-around. Great events though. I like

playing stronger competitions. I don't like playing when people don't know what

they're doing, not because they're going to get me or anything like that, but it's not

the same. You can't take as much inferences and it's no fun when you win to beat

bad players. It's more fun to beat the good players. It means more. It means

something when you do. Yes, they're very tough. They're very tough. Top players in

those events.

John: What's it like seeing your former sponsor, Mike Levine doing so well?

Greg: Oh, I'm happy for him. He's got a great team now. They're playing with the

Meckwell, they have the Norwegians. Yes, Hellness and Helgemo.

John: Hellness and Helgemo.

Greg: He has a great team right now and they deserve to do well, so I'm happy for

him.

John: Are you and Kay playing in the Christina's event that starts tomorrow? The

Mixed Pairs.

Greg: No. Kay and I are in the Alt league, the Alt Open league, and it's like the last

week of most months, it's 10 months long, anyway.

John: 10 months long?

Greg: Something like that. You don't have to play in all of them, but it's 10 weeks

total. It's a long event. I think they're playing for different types of leagues where you

move up and down. That's like a more European style. They have these leagues

where once they break you into leagues, the top 10 teams will be on whatever they

call bracket one or whatever. Next 10 teams in the second bracket. Then after a

season is over, they move the bottom one or two pairs down from top league to the

next league and they'd move the first and second pair from the second league up to

the top league. Therefore you can change leagues.

John: Going back to your start in the game. You won the 2003 North American with

Nagy and you came second twice in 2005, 2006. How did you two start?

Greg: It was interesting. I asked him to play one day-- we had played against them

and he had a lot of talent taking tricks and stuff. He was a very, I would say wild,

aggressive, bitter, but it paid off for him very well. He could take his tricks and he

knew what was happening, defended quite well. I asked him to play and he actually

said no at first, and then later he asked me to play so I said no. Then we ended up

playing after that, and we played for quite a long time. We played several years

together.

John: You said no just out of quid pro quo?

Greg: Yes, it wasn't too much longer after that we started playing, but anyway, I was

moving onto professional Bridge. That wasn't really his life. He had a family and he

had his own company and stuff like that that he had to run. He wasn't really looking

to be a full-time Bridge player like I was. I moved on because of that. It had nothing

to do with anything other than that.

John: You and Granger were playing strong club, I think.

Greg: Yes, played a lot with David and I played several years in a played strong

club. Actually, I was on a team. Chris Compton added me for one event as a fill in

and I got to play with the Geoff Hampson. Geoff Hampson filled me on in precision. I

had never played it. I played [unintelligible 00:16:45] so it wasn't too bad, but he

walked me through the basics and taught [unintelligible 00:16:49] in about three

hours in an afternoon, we played an event together.

I played a whole week with Geoff Hampson. I played one event with Bobby Levin.

That was the one that Compton had got me to play for one knockout. I got to play

with Bobby Levin. We did not play precision there, but Hampson taught me the

precision and that was fun to get to play with Hampson for a week. That was really a

pleasure. One of my great experiences. Play with Bobby Levin also was fun too.

John: You played with Geoff as a pro pair on a regional team.

Greg: Right. Yes, for one week. That was the end of my-- It wasn't like we were

forming a partnership or whatever. Chris just put together this team and put us

together.

John: Circumstances whereby, "Geoff, you want to play?" Or you said, "What

system do you want to play?"

Greg: I think he asked me, and I was like, "I would like to learn the precision. I've

been wanting to do that." He said, "Okay, I'll go over the card and tell you what we

play over one club and one diamond opener, and then you tell me what we play over

one major and one [unintelligible 00:17:48] opener." That was a give and take.

That way he wouldn't totally overload. We didn't do a lot of-- I'm sure our system

wasn't anywhere near what him and Greco play or anything like that, but it was a

very good intro to the system.

From there then, like anything else, I like the deal system, but I take bits and pieces

from everybody. I don't really just copy anybody's systems. I wouldn't say that I make

up the majority of my stuff, but I do have my own ideas as well. I usually just take

pieces from here and there and mix and match a mesh of what you learn. I always

think it's great to learn to play different things from everybody, and then you can

decide what you like and take the things that you like and the things that you don't

care for as much, you can replace them.

John: Are you in Josh playing strong club.

Greg: We also play strong club, very similar to the same system that David and I

played. Although we are making a few changes.

John: What do you like about strong club over a natural system?

Greg: I don't know that I really prefer it a lot over one or the other. I think that you

can do just as well with either. The best part about precision to me is when you don't

open a club. A diamond opener can be a little bit messy too, but when you open a

major, that's when you really cleanup because your partner knows you're limited and

you get lots of good options for like one heart pass four hearts and they don't know

whether they should come in or not because where everybody else they can't just do

that with four tripple three, because they're fearing that you may miss a slam

because their partner could have a big moose over there, but you don't have that.

I like that part of it. The preemption part is a little bit nasty when you open a club.

There's downsides to that and that the two club opener can be bad because you

often sometimes miss four-four fits when you don't have game. When you have

game values, it's not so bad, but when you don't have game values, a lot of times it

might go one club, one spade, two spades, and there you are.

When we open two clubs we're like, we don't know if we can bid in the six one club

fit. When we had a five, four spade fit that's not fun sometimes, but I don't know. Like

anything, it creates swings and you got to be able to deal with sometimes that a

swing costs you board, but it also swings gain you boards as well. I don't think the

system really matters. What matters is what you play, that your system covers all the

bases. Your system covers how to invite, how to game fours, how to sign off, and

that kind of thing, and the various different things like in what suits you're going to

play in the strains. As long as you have all those, you can combine them, it doesn't

really matter, in my opinion, what you play.

John: When you and Josh started playing together, how did it go in terms of did you

send him notes? Did you sit down and create a new set?

Greg: I just sent him the notes that I had with David and asked him look it over and if

he wanted to change anything, just feel free to tell me. I think it was good to start

with something and then go from there as opposed to just-- I wasn't sending him the

notes saying, "This is what we're playing." I'm saying this is what we'll start with.

John: How many pages [unintelligible 00:20:45]

Greg: Surprisingly, my system notes are very small. Even with David, we had 23

pages of notes, I think, that's it. I have a lot of plug and play, I call them plug and play

where I use same techniques in a lot of places. You write the technique once and

then you plug it in. For example, it's named different things, but people call it woody

or mulberry or four club, four diamond RKC or whatever. That's all the same thing.

We play a relay structure where we pattern out, and so I use the woody in that

sequence. It's in the to diamond opener, it's in a lot of places. Once you have the

woody notes, which is like half a page, then you can plug it in. I'll have one page

where it says woody like 25 times. If I were to expand all those notes out, that makes

it quite a bit.

John: Right. What's your two diamond opener?

Greg: For precision, it is short diamonds. I always say it's 4-4, 1-5, which is 14 cards

minus any card. The woody is really good when you know-- The relay structure, a lot

of times I play one of a major then we play two clubs relay. To me it doesn't work as

well to in a standard system.

That's another part that I like about precision. Since we're limited, we can basically

pattern out the opener just defined as distribution and since our range is very narrow,

then we can just make a sign off or a slam try or a key card auction [unintelligible

00:22:10] known as pattern. The woody just says which one of those you're doing.

You start all your slam tries with four clubs.

Four clubs is a puppet four diamonds, and we make a natural slam try, inviting

partner to bid again if they'd like, but not forcing them to, then you have your in signal

which is four diamonds, which is a relay four hearts saying like, "I've heard enough.

I'm going to sign off somewhere" and then we keycard, keycard, keycard in any of

the three suits. The relay is just to pattern out the partner and then decide on the

strain and level.

It doesn't always work. Sometimes, it's harder for us to find some nice two fits

because it's easier if we know our partner has an opposite or a three little, then we

might be able to find a five two fit, but it's harder to find some five two fits when they

don't have a stopper in a suit. We don't know that. We know the partner has two

diamonds and I have a jack third, and I don't know-- is it diamonds, king queen or

ace king or what?

All in all in the end, I think a lot of good boards by knowing the exact distribution of

partners' hands where a lot of people have no idea where their shortness is like one

spade, two hearts, three hearts. Now I cue bid, and now you cue bid four clubs. Was

that a single 10 club or is that the ace of clubs? It really would make a difference. For

us, we'll know because we wouldn't even start with one spade, two hearts. We would

start with one spade, two clubs and pattern out, and then we would know about the

stiff club if we had one every time.

John: I should interfere over your one major, two clubs auctions or one spade

[unintelligible 00:23:42].

Greg: You got to be careful because we played penalty doubles over those. We turn

the relay off. It can be weird though, because we're bidding two clubs with six hearts.

One spade, two clubs with six hearts and you're like, "Oh, throw in my king jack fit

the hearts." check, check, double. Okay. You would have never bid two hearts had I

known you had six hearts to the ace queen to nine.

John: In 2010, you won the mixed team World Championship team. I think you told

me it was formed basically the night before the event.

Greg: It was formed the night before. I had gone to the World Championships not to

play in this event. I went to go play in the World Open Pairs. The World Open Pairs

is five sessions of qualifying, five sessions of semi-qualifying and then five sessions

of finals. We got knocked out after the semifinals. What are we supposed to do? My

partner went home and I had nothing but I was still going to be there, and so I

wanted to play in any kind of world event I had.

I asked Betty and Kennedy. She has passed now, unfortunately, but she was a good

friend of mine. I played on teams with her a few times. I had told her that I would be

looking for the mixed teams if she knew of anybody. She said she couldn't play. We

hadn't finished getting knocked out, but we were pretty sure we we're getting

knocked out of the semifinals My partner was going to be leaving.

We would have had to have a 70% game to qualify. Now, JoAnn Sprung comes

along and drops a note off at my table saying, hear you're looking for a game or

whatever. We had never played before. I didn't even know JoAnn Sprung. We

teamed up, and we didn't even fill a card that night. We filled a card in the morning.

We had a married couple, the Johannessen's from California.

That was the only established pair we had, and I think Daniel Lavee and Connie

Goldberg were a new partnership also formed. They also agreed to play the night

before. Here we are, two brand new partnerships playing in the World Swiss Mixed

Teams, and the team was just running really, really well. We almost led all the way

from front to finish. I think we lost the lead going near the end stretch, which was the

worst time to lose it, but we got back up and won the last match to pull ahead to win.

I think we won by like seven VPs. We pretty much almost lead from start to finish.

John: I guess it was a transnational team, and Daniel is Canadian. Did you get the

national anthem?

Greg: No, we didn't have any national anthem.

John: Do you have a gold medal?

Greg: I have a gold medal. It's not made out of gold, but it's a gold medal.

John: I know, Greg. We've played together. We've played a couple tournaments

together. I'm just telling the audience. I would say you're a pretty unassuming guy.

You're not out there puffing your chest. How many times do you think you've told

people that you're a world champion in Bridge?

Greg: Not often at all. I think my wife told some of her work people who I hang out

with. They're non-Bridge players, and they're the most impressed anybody. I don't

think I really tell people, particularly Bridge players, but I've told some non-Bridge

players that I won a World Championship, but I really don't do that that much.

John: You mentioned your wife, Patty. Were you and Patty married in 2010 when

you won the event?

Greg: Yes. We got married in '07.

John: Did you meet at a Bridge table or at a Bridge tournament?

Greg: Yes, we met at a Bridge tournament. I remember the first time-- we had met

and maybe we had been dating for just a little bit. I played a midnight game with

some of her friends and that was the first time we had ever played. We had this

curious auction where a club, a diamond, a heart, and I bid a spade. This is only us

bidding. I thought we were playing 4C/4C in the game-- Something, I don't

remember. Maybe a no-trump.

I bid two hearts, I'm planning on her bidding again and it went all pass. It was a funny

hand because I was trying for slam. She made six hearts, four three. I had delayed

raised with three hearts only, just trying to get some more information, but she was

all flustered and everything, we had missed a slam. I said, "Don't worry about it

because they're going to be in six no-trump and six no-trump has no play."

Sure enough, they were six no-trump, they went down one. We probably would have

been on six also, I don't think I was going to find the four three heart fit. I was just

fooling around to see if she had some more information to give me. Anyway, that's

my first memory of the hand that I played with my wife.

John: Was she in Philadelphia when you won?

Greg: No. She doesn't come with me that often at all when I'm playing Bridge. She

plays locally. She herself was in Collegiate Championships in 1996 beating Darren

Wolpert, who has played for Stanford. She played for A&M, and I think it was 1996.

Before we had met, they won the Collegiate Championship, her team.

John: I didn't realize that Darren went to Stanford.

Greg: I could be wrong on that. Don't quote me. I can tell you that I'm not 100%, but

she said it was Darren Wolpert. It was one of the Wolpert's she beat. I'm pretty sure

it was Darren and I'm pretty sure she said it, Stanford.

John: [unintelligible 00:28:28] left school on September 11, University of Toronto,

as he said here on the Setting Trick. Did Patty know that you were in contention? I

guess, because the event was multiple days and we were winning most days

[unintelligible 00:28:39].

Greg: Okay. She really kibitz, sort of watching, and that was very interesting. They

had the Bridge [unintelligible 00:28:46] in the World Championships, and you could

put in the contract and the opening lead. You could almost watch live because that

being fed online, and then they would have access to the hand records after the

hands are done. She could like-- What was happening the scores, so she could see,

Oh, yeah, on the hand, they led the this against your that.

She didn't know the auction or anything, but she knew the contract and the opening

lead and was able to-- Most of us can almost imagine how they'll go a lot of the time.

Sometimes may be different based off the auction, a lot of times it really defines itself

just by the play. It was was fun for her I'm sure, exciting for me.

John: Did you call your mom?

Greg: Yes, I did. I did call my mom. Actually, the other thing, Patty was at the

Nationals when I won. This is funny. 2003, when I won the Swiss Teams, the North

American Swiss, she was there for the whole time, but she had to leave at the end.

There, she was kibitzing, but I think that she left for the last two. She maybe saw the

first day or whatever. When we won, she left, and I was like, "We won. We won." I

had called her.

It is a funny thing because that was in New Orleans, and at the time I had no money.

I was dead broke. We were staying at a cheap place across, we had to take a ferry.

We were taking the ferry back and forth. We didn't stay at New Orleans. We were

taking a ferry and I won that last night and we were running for the ferry to try to

make the last ferry after winning and doing the pitcher and all that stuff for the

bulletin.

I remember the night before I had actually host hotel with some friends and so I had

my suitcase and then I'm trying-- I'm running with this trying to catch the ferry

because if you don't catch the ferry, it was going to be like an hour and a half taxi or

something around the water, but I barely made the ferry.

John: That was just a team of friends. That wasn't professional.

Greg: Right. That was before I had my first gig. That was the one that probably got

me my first gig because we won that four-handed. We played every board.

John: Oh, so you didn't get your first thing with Billy Miller until after you won both.

Greg: It was four, I think maybe at the first gig, something like that. It may have been

a little bit later when I first found out about the Bridge player. I'm not very good with

dates, but I do know that my first game was like midway through in 1996 and my first

game was 04 ish. It probably took me about two years to find out about Bridge as a

professional.

John: Is your mom a life master?

Greg: Don't know if she is or not, but she'd play for very long. She played and then

she got tired of it and she may be a played like two years, three years. She probably

maybe she isn't a live master. I don't think so. She probably is not, she definitely

didn't do very many regionals, so I don't think she had her gold points.

John: You told me a great story once about Ira [unintelligible 00:31:29] and

preempting. Will you tell about how he lets the hand decide?

Greg: Sometimes you have these decisions where it's very close. You're like it's not

a hundred percent which way to go. Should I open this hand three or four spades or

two or pass or whatever it is and it's the closest session and so he told me that he

often lets the hand aside. Meaning he starts reaching towards the bidding box, not a

hundred percent sure which one he's going to do and then at the last minute, the

hand just goes for one of them. Then that's the one he'll do. There's another great

story from Ira.

His vision isn't the best and so there was one time. This is the greatest thing. So his

right-hand opponent had opened, I think a heart and Ira had overcalled tween 10 six

of clubs, and then they're defending some heart, whatever it was, and so now Ira

decided to lead his stiff hearts. I think it was four hearts. He leads the stiff spade and

at this moment after the hits table, he realizes now that he did not ace queen 10 fifth

of clubs, and he had ace in one spade.

He, effectively, instead of leading [unintelligible 00:32:42], he under led his ace on

one spade and had over-called two clubs with the queen-high suit. The dummy hit

with King Jack of spades, played the Jack and then the [crosstalk] and now his

partner underlet in one club that Claire had King Jack of that suit. So Jack to his

queen fifth, and now he cashes ace of spades and played a club to his partner who

gave him a spade rough and then he gave his partner a club rough.

[laughter]

John: Oh, man.

Greg: The things that happened in Bridge.

John: Do you have any more Ira?

Greg: Not at the moment. There's some more-- Ira is a great guy. Ira reminds me of

the guy for Back To The Future, the science. If you don't know Ira and you see this

guy, he's like a splitting image and he's brilliant. He's a PhD professor and a very

good Bridge player too and a funny guy and one of the nicest people you'll meet.

John: Have you played an event today?

Greg: I played in the two-session regional this morning.

John: Yes. How many consecutive days have you played in a Bridge event? Is it

every day for you?

Greg: No, it's not every day. I play about half the time, every other day. My longest

streak though ever, one time when I was on the regionals, I played five consecutive

regionals in a row where they had a day off and it was only because of the holiday

and it was travel day or whatever, but other than that, I was traveling and playing on

the same day, like play Sunday, travel Sunday night, play Monday, and did that five

weeks in a row. It does start to get a little tiring, but I caught a second wind, and then

like after you start playing so much, I feel isn't it rhythm.

File name: Greg Hinze.mp3

12

When COVID started and they canceled the tournaments in March, I don't even think

I played online for months. I sat at home doing nothing, basically, for two months and

then started playing online and I was horrible at first. You get in the groove and it's a

different environment. You're clicking instead of playing cards. To me, I played much

better in person than online. Online, there's just distractions around the house and

it's harder for me to focus.

Although I've gotten used to it now, July, August, I started playing quite a bit. Since

August, I've been playing quite a bit but at the beginning, I was like, what are you

doing? You're watching the spots and stuff like that. It's hard to play that way, but

once you get used to it clicking instead of pulling a card, it's easier.

John: Do you think that the format that Bridge has been for the last however many

years pre-COVID-- do you think that's going to come back with regionals and

everything?

Greg: I think that a lot of people want that. Maybe not everybody. I just hope that--

I'm worried a little bit of those. I'm not worried about the future of Bridge, Bridge is

such a grand game. I don't think that it will die. I would rather see it go to in-person

for several reasons versus cheaters. That's been a big topic of these days, but

Bridge itself won't die. It's too good of a game. There's no better game than Bridge,

but as far as going to regionals or having the club games, I haven't even played it.

Maybe like once a year or something playing a game. I really didn't do club games

anymore. I pretty much just played regionals and nationals, but I do hope that it

comes back.

I think it will. Almost everybody I talked to says they miss going out to the game. Just

a matter of whether the general public, which is older population, are they going to

fear catching COVID and that may be the reason that they don't want to go. We'll

see.

John: How often do you play with Patty?

Greg: Not too often. We play local sectionals when I'm off. When I'm not being hired,

we'll play together at local sectionals. It usually ends up being about a year. I haven't

played with her-- I played a couple of times online recently, like when I play with Kay

and Kay can't do a session and we're in a long event or whatever. So she'll play.

When I was traveling a lot, I would basically play with her about five weekends a

year, I would guess. Maybe 15 days a year.

John: I'm dating a Bridge player now. We played in the event last night where we

played against you and Kay. You said hello in the private chat and it took me a while.

I don't know if you noticed, but it took me a while to respond because I was so bad.

Do you get frustrated with Patty for what you think are poor plays?

Greg: Depends on my mood. Like sometimes-- if they've been adding up, adding up,

I'll get more frustrated, but I am not so frustrated, particularly in real life when you're

face to face, but being behind the computer where nobody can see you, I often find

myself yelling at the screen or whatever, but in person, no, I really don't. Of course, I

always understand, I don't play perfectly. Nobody does. My partners understand my

mistakes. So, therefore, I try understanding their mistakes.

John: It says here that your favorite Bridge memory is winning the Swiss teams.

Greg: Yes, at the time that I wrote that, that probably was. Because I wrote the

Bridge winners profile is probably where you found that at the time, since then, I may

have had some more fun memories. I've never been in finals of a Vanderbilt or

Spingold. Recently with the Levine team, we played. It wasn't the same Levine team

that I'd always been on, but he wasn't going to go actually, instead of Eddie Wold,

who was on another team, Orin Kriegel played with Levine and we had a good run

where we got the third, fourth losing to Nickel in the semifinal, but making it that far

on that team was really good because our team was like 25th or something in that.

We really weren't even supposed to be that far, and that was a pretty exciting run for

me because that was the first time that I really tasted for a moment that I can almost

taste that we were going to really do something good, but Nickel decided, they told

us-- with their cards and their bids that we were really going to be doing it. I think we

withdrew after being down like 80 or 90 or something. So anyway in their front four

was about to be playing.

John: This was Memphis.

Greg: I think maybe, maybe it was recently maybe like three years ago or two or

three years ago. I [crosstalk] the Colonel [unintelligible 00:38:53].

John: Do you remember, we played the Washington and ABC together. We played

as partners and there was a hand we played that when we opened the bidding and

they overcalled a heart, one spade denied four spades?

Greg: I played that before. You were trying to tell me this story, I think a while back,

and you said that I bid in spades and I bid one speed without spades. I don't

remember the final details or where we got, but you were trying to tell me the story. I

really, honestly, the only thing that I remember about this is that you told me about a

month ago, when you just told me we were going to do this interview and I don't

remember it actually happened. I don't know how high we got.

John: We did get to a slam.

Greg: Six spades?

John: [unintelligible 00:39:39]

Greg: I probably thought you were like 7/5 you bid spades so many times.

John: Oh my gosh. Would you say that making four spades in the last deal of the

mixed team, would you say that's your best? Is that your best played?

Greg: I don't know. I briefly remember that's the article they wrote up, I guess, in the

New York Times I briefly remember [crosstalk]

John: The squeeze and play.

Greg: Yes, I think that they could have actually beaten me earlier in the hand but

then they didn't.

John: Do you have a best-played hand?

Greg: No. First time I consciously did a double squeeze but turned out it didn't

matter, but it was one of my favorite hands because I knew I was going to do it but

the queen and one diamond popped up on-site, so it didn't even matter what I did. I

don't think I have any favorite all-time best plays. I actually don't remember a lot of

my hands. After about a week or so, they disappear.

John: I want to ask about Justin Lall but I understand if it's too soon.

Greg: No, you can ask me about Justin.

John: He called you the Swiss Master in our research.

Greg: Yes, he dubbed me the Swiss master because all my wins were in Swisses,

the Jacoby Open Swiss, North American Swiss, I've been second in the Roth Swiss,

the North American Swiss twice, I won the Roth's Swiss Teams, I have another

second, the Levin Team in the Swiss, and I have lots of top 10 finishes and I've

always been in the round of eight and the Spingold like twice, so I guess that's why

he calls me Swiss Master. All my good results are from Swiss.

John: Do you remember meeting Justin?

Greg: Yes, I do remember meeting Justin. Justin was a friend of my wife before. He

lived in San Antonio which my wife had lived all her life and she played Bridge with

Justin for a couple of years and he was like 13, 14 years old, and she would go pick

him up from the hub and they would play. My wife learned how to play the Bridge

from Justin and she was in her late teens. Justin in the process of moving from San

Antonio to Dallas, maybe he had already moved and he was going to go-- at that

time my wife lived in San and I lived in Arlington and Justin was in Dallas having his

mother living in San Antonio.

Justin was going back to San Antonio, I played against him one time. I remember I

played against and beat a grand slam, that required a 3-2 Trump break, a finesse,

and then a squeeze and it all came to fruition, Justin, I remember, made a comment,

he said, "Nice bidding" a little sarcastically. That was pretty much my only interaction

with Justin.

Now I was dating Patty and I was going go up to San Antonio to visit her and Justin

needed to go back to San Antonio to visit his mother. She was already friends and

played with Justin, so she said Greg is coming down, he can take drive you down.

Justin came over to my house, we were going to leave early in the morning, so he

spent the night in my house and we had a lot in common. I liked to play video games

and he played video games and stuff like that, so we instantly hit it off and then we

drove down, he liked the music that I was driving around the car, and we instantly

became friends.

I played quite a bit of Bridge over years and then he moved. He really became

accomplished pro much sooner than I and played. Justin is one of the smartest

people that I have ever met. One of the greatest, fairy at giving, I miss him a lot. He

was one of my very very close friends. That was the first time we had met. Here we

are, we don't even know each other driving him to San Antonio.

John: That's a nice tribute, man. He is a great guy. Yes, he really is. I've never met

Patty, but I saw that her picture on Facebook was of her and Justin. I didn't realize

how they knew each other and that they knew each other so well.

Greg: Yes, she knew Justin two or three years before I ever met him, One time they

were probably best friends and that was what he was younger. When you get older,

things change, but they were still very good friends.

John: I think that's something that's cool about Bridge is that you could become best

friends with somebody who's twice your age. In that age, as a 14-year-old, and that's

something that I think that's pretty unique about the relationships that are forged in

Bridge.

Greg: Yes. You find all kinds of people in Bridge. We have Nobel Prize winners and

all kinds of people, all walks of life and we have a [unintelligible 00:44:09] we all

understand each other. It's really great, there's a connection. You talk to a Bridge

player and you never even met the guy before, you can talk the conversation and

everybody else around you is like, "What are these guys doing? What are they

talking about?" Ace four, three little, I don't get it. You're speaking English words but

none ever makes sense.

John: Yes, one of the challenges about having this podcast is like who do I want the

audience to be? There's been a couple of conversation where I've thought, "I wonder

if I should get Greg to go back a little bit so that people will understand who are

maybe not as familiar with Bridge as you and I are, not to do that" [laughs] each time,

so they might be listening on YouTube about 300 people on this conversation.

Greg: 300 people that don't play Bridge or 300 total audience?

John: One of the piece of feedback that I have had from friends and people that

don't play Bridge that have listened to the show is that they just don't understand.

Greg: Yes. It really is some kind of game it's like my friends who like Bridge? I was,

"Do you have a week?" Then you'll just know the very basics, you won't even be

anywhere-- You can teach the basics there like, okay, you have to bid higher than

wherever. You can teach the concept but to really learn Bridge takes years and even

then, I've been playing for 24, 25 years and I still find myself finding a way later like if

I saw something that I didn't-- it's a game that I always tell myself like when I ever

feel like I've mastered the game of Bridge, you will no longer see me anymore and

that will never happen because I don't feel anybody can ever master it completely

where you're just playing totally perfect.

I'm not talking about double-dummy perfect, I'm talking about even single dummy

perfect. To play it although we all strive to do it but that keeps coming back. Another

thing that I love about Bridge is all the actions I've ever had, every time I go to

regional, I see a new action that I've never seen before, so it's really exciting to know

you can play hundreds of thousands of hands and still have new things happening all

the time.

John: Have you taught anyone?

Greg: You mean from beginning? No, I haven't taught anybody. As a Bridge Pro, I

teach people Bridge but I've never taught anybody from the intro level. Normally, I

prefer to have somebody have some experience, the basics down and then you can

work from there, but I've never really taught anybody from the very very beginning.

John: Do you still play Hearts?

Greg: No, I haven't played Hearts or Spades in years. I haven't played Spades or

Hearts really since I played Bridge.

John: I played Hearts with my parents and I play Hearts with a group of friends here.

Greg: That's fun. My grandfather played a game we call Taroky, I think maybe some

other countries have some variants of it, but it uses its own deck, it's a very fun

game. It's a four-handed game like Bridge, and you have a partner like Bridge but

the weird part about this game is, first of all, they have a trumps suit, it's a Roman

numerals are trumps, one through 22, and then they have eight cards in each suit

past the 22 trumps.

As a deal rotates, the dealer changes and the partner of the dealer is whoever has

the 19 trumps. The person who own 19 trumps and those who are partners is but the

other people do not. Part of the game is trying to figure out who your partner is by

the way the tricks are going and it's not about taking tricks, it's about taking certain

parts [crosstalk] worth it, so the way it plays is you're leading choosing your tricks

into your partner or throwing points on their tricks and stuff like that. You figure out

who the partner is, so every deal if you have a 19 on your own or whatever.

John: You're the dealer?

Greg: Yes, you are the dealer or anyway there's a draw phase. It's a complicated

game but it works similar to Bridge, but you must trump when you can't follow suit.

There's some different rules but the fascinating part to me is the fact that you'd start

of a deal.

John: Hinze is from? Is it Czech or Slovak?

Greg: Hinze is a German. All four of my grandparents were born in following

countries, that's Switzerland, Norway, Czechoslovakia and Germany. My name

comes from the German which I speak zero of.

John: What's your bold step?

Greg: My bold steps, watch the spots. The spots in Bridge mean everything.

Knowing when a seven is low versus high and knowing when to play it like how

many cards are lower than the card player, higher than the percentage chance that

that is a low card or high card. The spots in Bridge is everything.

John: If you could change one thing in Bridge, what would it be?

Greg: I don't know, I like the game. Think of an improvement really. Although I've

played variants of Bridge like Pass Left and stuff like that but like [unintelligible

00:48:56] to what you're drinking or something like that. I think Bridge is a brain

testing incidence.

John: I'm going to be interviewing Andrew Robson on the show soon and he said

something which I'd never heard before. He suggested-- this was in an interview that

was like 25 years ago, but he suggested having the opening lead take place after the

dummy has come down.

Greg: Interesting. That will improve a lot of opening sure. It wouldn't be like firing out

the base King and Queen Jack fifth and the dummy.

John: [laughs] Think about it like at one point they didn't have the dummy, they used

to play double-dummy as a two-person [unintelligible 00:49:34] game. You could

see all four hands essentially, two hands were down and I think that's where the

concept of the dummy came from.

Greg: I think the dummy is a good concept actually, I like it's a unique feature that no

other game has. Have you ever played Pass Left?

John: No.

Greg: Pass left, you bid the hand and after then everybody passes a hand to the left,

so you don't want to be bidding too much when you have a lot of high points

because you're about to pass all your points to the opponents. That is played without

a dummy, and so everybody can show us a little hand that every card that you pass

to your LHO opponent so you know which finesse and stuff to take. The bidding is

really tough because if you have four-triple-three yarborough, you're opening two

notrumps because you know that left is going to have nothing.

John: It's literally Bridge.

Greg: Yes, and that systems for it, say you're notrump and you're two, three majors,

so that's a perfect time to stayman. [chuckles] Because it'll be passed in three, and

then so when you respond to stayman, then you respond shortness, like, "Okay, I

have two or three spades," they'll be like, "Aha, we have a fit," because you have

short space and I have short space, so then you're-

John: [unintelligible 00:50:44] contracting.

Greg: Yes. I remember I was playing with Dan Korbel once and we bid to six

spades. It's really hard to beat a slam and pass left, but we had a great, great

auction that bid to six spades. Then there was some great play that Dan or

something to make.

John: All right, I don't have anything. I'm fresh out.

Greg: I'm fresh out too. It's been fun. It's been fun.

John: Yes man, definitely. Yes, it's good to see you.

Greg: Good to see you too. I know you guys are only hearing us but we actually

have the video here, so it's not [unintelligible 00:51:19].

John: Yes, right. Yes, that's true. Do you do anything to get ready online? Do you do

look at like bidding problems or any sort of warm-up?

Greg: No, not these days. I pretty much just play two-precision system and I have a

standard precision that I play with some partners and I've played them so much now

and there's not much difference so I haven't been having to do much studying.

Normally, like I played recently-- I played with Dan Korbel recently, we played in the

online knockout that I barely lost, but we normally have some discussion, we talk

about an hour, we have two page notes. Those, I review, always, when I'm in a new

partnership, I always review my notes, which I tried to keep to a minimum, but I

definitely review those before I play an event.

John: Would you be willing to share your two pages of notes with me or even the--

Greg: I don't even know if it was like notes, it's just like-- I can maybe find them but

you would be shocked. I can try to send them to you but it's not much there, it's just

names of conventions and maybe little-- like Dan wrote these up and sent them to

me like when we were talking so he had some feelers, they're not notes like you

would think, they're more like reminders we talked about.

John: Yes. No, I would just be curious to see those notes but it would be interesting

just to see what that looks like, for me.

Greg: Yes, sure.

John: All right.

Greg: It's been fun.

John: I appreciate you doing this and I look forward to seeing you in person.

Greg: Yes. We will again, we will again. Oh and I still have the socks that you gave

me.

John: There you go.

[00:52:59] [END OF AUDIO]