This week’s episode of the Setting Trick: Conversations with World-Class Bridge Players turns the tables and features professional player Greg Hinze interviewing host John McAllister. In this conversation, we cover John’s background, his favorite bridge books, his experiences at the national and world championships, his documentary movie about bridge, the reasons why he started the podcast, and more. 


[01.29] John’s background – Starting the conversation, John discusses his Virginia roots, where he lives, where he went to college, and why he wants to stay there. 

[08.40] Books – John and Greg talk about some of the best books about bridge. 

[20.43] The summer nationals – We talk about John’s experience with mixed board-a-match teams in Providence at the summer nationals and the open BAM at the fall NABC. 

[23.31] The movie – We talk about the movie called ‘Double Dummy’ produced by John, about bridge. 

[32.10] The podcast – John shares the reasons behind starting his podcast and continuing until now. 

[33:48] Meeting Migry – John remembers meeting partner Migry Zur Campanile and playing mixed teams at the world championships.

[43.50] Bridge conventions – John chooses his desert island bridge convention.


Resources

Connect with John

LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/johnmca/ 

Website - thesettingtrick.com/ 


Book by John Carruthers

Bridge with Another Perfect Partner – 

goodreads.com/book/show/60495965-bridge-with-another-perfect-partner 


Book by S.J. Simon

Why You Lose at Bridge – 

goodreads.com/en/book/show/1141603 


Movie - Double Dummy

imdb.com/title/tt3531224/ 

doubledummymovie.com/ 

Transcript


[00:00:00] Greg Hinze: Hello everybody. Welcome to the Setting Trick. I'm your guest host, Greg Hinze. Our normal host with the most will not be available today as a host. So, without further ado, let me introduce our special guest star today. Creator of the Setting Trick Podcast, producer of the new movie, Double Dummy and newly crowned NABC Champion, my friend, John McAllister.

Hi John.

[00:00:36] John McAllister: Hey, Greg. Thanks for having me, I think I cut you off there at the end.

[00:00:43] Greg Hinze: So how you feel being on the other side? Are you nervous?

[00:00:45] John McAllister: I am, I'm definitely nervous. I didn't know what to expect and I, I definitely like, probably 20 minutes before I got home – I was out – and I was definitely like, okay, this is, uh, I get nervous before I host the show, but, uh, to be this is a real honor to have you do this, uh, to have you do this for me. I feel a great honor for you doing this for me.

[00:01:06] Greg Hinze: I feel a great honor for you having me do this. Uh, so, uh, I, I'm nervous too, so, so we just dive right in? Okay. Uh, yeah, just tell me a little bit about yourself. Where are you from? Where'd you grow up?

[00:01:20] John McAllister: I'm gonna go back. The way this conversation came to pass is in Phoenix, after we won the Mitchell Board-a-Match, my first NABC victory, you, Greg offered to, to flip the script here on The Setting Trick and to interview me.

And so that's how this conversation came to pass. And when I texted you about it, you were like, I wasn't sure if you were totally committed to it, but you sent me a list of questions and you and you, you know, you had your intro planned, so I really appreciate that. I, um, it says a lot about you and just to go from there, I grew up, and I still live in Charlottesville, Virginia.

I went to college at the University of Virginia, which is here. My mom is originally from Charlottesville and it's a great place to live. I've thought about living elsewhere, but haven't really found a compelling reason to move just yet. I get a lot of travel playing bridge, so I get to see the world through bridge tournaments, which is, I think, as you probably would attest, a great way to see the world.

[00:02:33] Greg Hinze: Yeah. I haven't seen much of the world myself. Mainly just America. But you mentioned you went to college there as well. What did you study?

[00:02:43] John McAllister: I like to joke when people ask me what I studied in college, that I was in a fraternity, because I really, I was a good student in, like I went to a very academically rigorous high school, a boarding school, all, all male boarding school, about an hour from here called Woodberry Forest. And the, the teachers there really challenged me to work hard to learn the material. And then by the time I got to U.V.A, I sort of crapped out on school.

I was technically a history major. I tried to get into the undergraduate commerce school, and they didn't accept me and ... yeah, so I was technically a history major, but I had worse grades in history than I did in other subjects. It was sort of a last-minute thing. One of my best friend's dad was a history professor, and so he could be my advisor and it was sort of the easy thing to do when it was time to declare a major at the end of my second year.

[00:03:42] Greg Hinze: And so outta school, you went, I had read that you were involved in a hedge fund company or something. You did that for…

[00:03:50] John McAllister: Yeah. There's this guy named Jeffrey Woodruff, who is a hedge fund manager here in Charlottesville. And my parents, my, were actually friends with Jeffery's parents when, when we were younger. And so I got interested in trading because I played a lot of backgammon after I graduated from U.V.A. My roommate and I in New York City would play backgammon all the time, and we played for pretty decent stakes. And so, through backgammon I heard a, uh, I heard a recording where somebody was talking about trading, and that really appealed to me from like the same sort of thinking logic as backgammon.

[00:04:34] And so I got a… the reason I brought up Jeffrey's name is because three different people, my mother, my piano teacher, and then a woman that my piano teacher had set me up with all suggested they knew I was interested in trading, that I should reach out to this guy, Jeffrey Woodruff, and I didn't do it. I never reached out to any of those through any of those people suggesting it.

[00:04:56] Only when he, his company, appeared on the U.V.A. job site looking for interns did I actually reach out. And then I had a seven-and-a-half year career working there, which ended in 2012. And, uh, I just got, I just was tired of working for, uh, doing that.

Greg Hinze: At that time, had you played bridge yet?

[00:05:19] John McAllister: Yeah, so I played, I started playing bridge when I was 18. My parents knew how to play, and my aunt suggested it and I loved it immediately, but I didn't really have an outlet for it. Like in New York City, for example, I lived, after I graduated U.V.A, I lived probably two blocks from Honors, and it never even occurred to me to seek out a bridge game in the city.

[00:05:46] Greg Hinze: You didn't know it existed, but you were right nearby it.

John McAllister: Yeah. Yeah. There was a backgammon club that I never went to, but I was, I wanted to try to go there to play backgammon for money against other players, and I never got the courage up to do it, but it didn't even occur to me to think like …

I loved bridge. Like it, it was something I did with my parents when I came home and it didn't, like I played spades with friends in college, but it didn't actually occur to me to explain bridge to them.

[00:06:18] Greg Hinze: How did you find the bridge club or whatever to get into the ACBL?

[00:06:21] John McAllister: So, my older sister had three friends that were looking for a fourth for bridge classes when I moved back to Charlottesville. And she knew I loved it and she suggested it. And then that woman took me to the, uh, to the local Bridge Club for the first time.

[00:06:41] Greg Hinze: And had you, uh, thought about making a movie at this point yet or a podcast?

[00:06:43] John McAllister: No, no, no. This is probably, this is, this was in like 2000. And

[00:06:49] Greg Hinze: So you learned, you learned from your sister, you said?

[00:06:51] John McAllister: So my sister would be our fourth. So, my parents kind of knew how to play and my sister would be our fourth, but she wasn't, she never really got into it. She was just willing, a willing participant. And then she had friends that were looking for a fourth, for a, like a weekly bridge class. Oh,

[00:07:09] Greg Hinze: Oh, that's good. And did you start reading about Bridge? Like, do you read books? Did you play online?

[00:07:17] John McAllister: We had a Bridge for Dummies book that I bought and we would, when I played with my parents, we would sort of have that out. They had like a two-page cheat sheet maybe. And I had bridge books, uh, that I would read.

[00:07:32] Yeah, I don't exactly remember what, what my first bridge books were or how it all, but I mean, I like, I like consuming information about bridge. Like that is one of the things I, I love playing bridge. Like to this day I love playing bridge. I love consuming information about bridge and reading bridge books is a big part of that.

[00:07:57] Greg Hinze: What's your favorite, uh, couple bridge books?

[00:07:58] John McAllister: Uh, well, that's a good question. I'm reading right now Bridge with Another Perfect Partner, which I think was the IBPA book of the year. And so that's by John Carruthers, who I don't actually know. I don't think I know him. I, I don't know if he plays tournaments or not.

[00:08:17] He's Canadian. And it's like a at the table book where, you know, they give you the deal and he's got this partner who is a real, like a real expert. And so that guy explains the, uh, how the deal should be played or how he did play it, or how he created an illusion to, you know, to beat the contract. It's not something that you can read.

[00:08:46] I'll read, you know, a couple of deals at a time and then like, do something else because it's … bridge books are not like … Rare is the bridge book, uh, um, what's the name of that book? Uh, with the unlucky expert. Why You Lose at Bridge? That's probably the, that is a rare bridge book and that you can read it. Like I can read that book all the way through.

[00:09:16] Greg Hinze: I've always enjoyed the Bridge in the Menagerie series. Uh, and they had the rabbit, I think he was a unlucky expert or whatever. Uh, he was labeled as such. But, uh, that was always fun to read. Uh, they, they could, you could read through those things. Uh, just kind of, I just enjoyed the characters and it was a good bridge. Uh, like a lot of non-bridge stuff at the same time.

[00:09:35] John McAllister: Yeah, yeah, exactly. And hilarious. So well written Victor Mollo.

[00:09:42] Greg Hinze: So you just got into the ACBL and then you started, uh, going to tournaments, traveling the world, playing bridge everywhere?

[00:09:47] John McAllister:. No, no, no. So, Shuki, my first bridge teacher was a woman named Shuki, and she was a pretty eccentric French woman, and she could play with me once a month at the local bridge club.

[00:10:04] And so then she found this guy who was younger than me who was a UVA student, and she started playing with him. And then I started playing with him. His name's Jason Holderness, and he was better than I was. And we then went, uh, Jason and I, when the Nationals were in DC in like 2009, I think Jason and I went up there and we played in like a two session.

[00:10:30] 199er pair game that we won. And so, we got little trophies from that, which unfortunately I threw away, I think. I think I threw away the photo that they took too. But I forget what your original question was.

[00:10:43] Greg Hinze: Just like, you know, when you started playing tournaments and, you know, traveling a bit more, uh, as, as opposed to just going to the local.

[00:10:48] John McAllister: So like, uh, my first national was in 2012, so I quit my job at Quantitative Investment Management and I gave, like, they said, will you give us two weeks? And so the last day of my two weeks was, like that day, literally that day I left for Memphis to play in my first national, that was in spring of 2012.

[00:11:12] And there was a sectional the weekend before and I hired this kid named Rob Brady, who was a UVA student who was a, a pro to be my partner. And I forget who our teammates were, but we won the Swiss and that was my first time winning a sectional Swiss. And winning the Swiss made me a life master.

[00:11:36] Greg Hinze: Oh wow. That was a good timing for everything. pretty, pretty fun. Pretty fun. So, uh, so, so then after that you were just like hooked on nationals? Uh, I mean nationals are pretty fun experience. Uh, I mean, if you haven't been to one, I think they're really fun things to go to.

[00:11:54] John McAllister: So. Yes. I mean, essentially yes, I, before I played my first national, I was in at a conference for work in February of 2012, and it was in Palm Beach and Gavin Wolpert lives near there.

[00:12:10] And so I knew about Gavin from Bridge Winners and I messaged him on BBO and asked him if I could play with him. And so I played two days with him in the sectional. And he said, which I think is a great piece of advice that I like to give out to people is: play against the best competition that you can play against, and that's playing at the Nationals.

[00:12:31] So, uh, I've been fortunate to, I've gone to every national but one since then. And I've also played in, uh, one, two, played in four World championships now.

[00:13:10] Greg Hinze: Very good. Uh, where was your favorite place to play bridge?

John McAllister: I think Tromso Norway. I played in the European championships there, and it's inside of the Arctic Circle.

[00:12:58] So it's, it was in the summer and literally the sun didn't go down. Um, that was a pretty unique, a unique experience.

Greg Hinze: So how is bridge over there like, uh, run differently than it is here? Like, uh, because it feels like it, you know, we may be a little bit outdated in, uh, some of the technology available. When you played like in the world championships, uh, overseas, how did…?

[00:13:25] John McAllister: Well, I think the first time I played behind screens was at a bridge tournament in Bulgaria.

[00:13:31] And the top seven tables were behind screens, and they had like plastic boards. And I remember the, the further that we got down in the table ranking, we had never seen this before. We had like these leather, little leather sleeves that had the cards in them, but the European championships and the world Championships, as I imagine, you know, are like, they're all screens, all the tables are screens.

[00:14:01] You're playing the same deals at the same time. Everybody's playing the same deals. It's, uh, it's cool because there's a lot of people there that I, that are new to me. So, you know, the national, the US nationals tends to be, tends to be a lot of the same people. But in Europe it was like a whole new, whole new crew of people.

[00:14:25] Greg Hinze: More foreigners come to America than Americans go to the foreign countries. It seems, um, there's not very many Americans that really do much traveling to play bridge over there as, as far as, as over here seems. Do you find it that way or do you know a lot of Americans that are going all over [the world for these tournaments]?

[00:14:42] John McAllister: You know, the Americans that are hiring real, like good teams for the nationals tend to probably play over there, I would think. Like there's a tournament, the European Open is this summer in Strasberg, uh, which I think is in France, and the head of the EBL was telling me that he wants to get 200 teams in the open, which would be amazing.

[00:15:09] I would really like to go for it, but I don't have firm plans yet for planning that. Also, it feels like in Europe that the main events are really the main events like the, the ACBL does a good job of making the events that are going on concurrent to the Soloway, like the Board-a- Match that we won, they do a good job of making those like stand alone. Whereas I feel like when you get knocked out in Europe of an event, it's, it's not really a title and an event like that doesn't really carry the same magnitude that it might in the ACBL.

[00:15:48] Greg Hinze: I see. So, what kind of, uh, systems do you like to play?

[00:15:50] John McAllister: Um, I like to play pretty basic, uh, two over one natural bidding. Not a lot of complexity. I don't have a, like, I don't have a strong long-term partnership with one individual, so …

[00:16:09] Greg Hinze: I've noticed over the years, you do play with a lot of, a lot of different, uh, players, and I think that's a good thing. Do you feel you learn like a little bit of something from, you know, everybody you play with?

[00:16:19] John McAllister: I mean, one thing I'll say about bridge, I think I really like to play with people that I enjoy their company and I feel like that we're a good, I feel like, like it's important for me to be able to discuss like the, the, my partner has the right mentality and that we can discuss the boards that we didn't do well and not get, not get angry with each other.

[00:16:45] Greg Hinze: So, uh, yeah. Okay. We've been mentioning, uh, the Mitchell Board-a-Match, which you just recently won. There you were playing with a, a relatively new partnership?

[00:16:53] John McAllister: Yeah, I was playing with, uh, Sveinn Eriksson, who I met, I played the Icelandic, uh, the Reykjavik Bridge Festival a couple years ago, and I met Sveinn there and he was playing with this guy named Nils, who's Danish.

[00:17:10] And the two of them were just pure comedy. Like Nils had tried to rent a car for the tournament and it had all gone haywire. And he had gone through all these, all this effort to get this car that eventually really just sat in a parking garage in Reykjavik. Like he didn't even use it after spending all this energy and time trying to get this car.

[00:17:33] And so that story, being told that story over the course of like the days of the event, really, I mean, we laughed so hard about. So much. And so I really enjoyed him. And then in Austin, uh, the first NABC post covid, he was there, and I needed a partner for the Swiss. And so we got to talking and we did pretty well in that.

[00:17:59] And then we played the Swiss again in Providence and we did well in that. And so, we played …

Greg Hinze: The same teammates the whole time?

John McAllister: Uh, the teammates for the Swiss and Providence and, and for Phoenix were the same. Uh, Jovi, uh, Jovi Smederevac and Sasha Wernle, they're Austrian, a mixed pair, Jovi's a woman.

[00:18:26] Greg Hinze: And uh, so was that, uh, everybody, everybody's first, uh, been there on your team? Yes. That's pretty exciting for you all to experience it at the same time. So like how, how long were you just on the moon?

[00:18:39] John McAllister: Uh, you know, probably like a good, good 10 days.

Greg Hinze: Through the rest of the nationals for sure.

[00:18:45] John McAllister: Yeah, definitely. Definitely it, it's, I, I mean I playing with Jovi and Sasha in the mixed Board-a-Match in Providence, the summer national, we came in second and we were leading after every segment of the, of the event but the last one, and that was the first time I'd ever come in second and the first time I'd ever really even been close to winning in one of these events.

[00:19:08] And so we had a really good session in the, on the second day of the Board-a-Match, the Mitchell's a two day event. And I had been in the position before and I really wanted to win this time. And then during the session, Sveinn and I, we just didn't seem like it was going well. We got to probably the third from final round and we played against Curtis Cheek and we got to Disa and Curtis's table and they're like, how's it going?

[00:19:41] And Sveinn is like, no, we don't have a chance. . So, but yeah, I mean we just didn't, but you know, Jovi and Sasha play this canape system, strong club, so. I don't know how we won, but we won comfortably. It, it was, it was like, uh, yeah, when, when the woman from the ACBL told, told me that we had won, she goes, John, you won.

[00:20:09] And I went like, like I had to cut myself off from really squealing like I wanted to.

Greg Hinze: I think a lot of people. I think a lot of people did hear you.

John McAllister: And that was, that was like probably one half or one third of what I like if I really had [squealed] … yeah.

[00:20:32] Greg Hinze: I just remember seeing you that, uh, day right afterwards and uh, whenever to say, look, and you were just like, beaming, like, I mean, so happy.

[00:20:41] So you went from first National 2012 to winning national like 10 years later. Um, but it's somewhere in between there, you decided that you were going to produce a movie about Bridge called Double Dummy. So, why, what happened there?

[00:21:00] John McAllister: So my first national event was the IMP Pairs in Memphis, and I played with a local guy from Charlottesville named Greg Humphreys, who I'm sure you know.

[00:21:13] Greg Hinze: I do know Greg, he has an Emmy, right?

John McAllister: He has a, he has an Academy Award. He has like an Academy Award, I think for create, for writing a book about motion graphics or something like that. So, Memphis was my first national, I didn't know anybody, and he invited me to this brainstorming session on how do we get new players?

[00:21:42] Uh, young people playing bridge and I, I really didn't even know what the event was, but he said, there's a free dinner, there's gonna be people there. And so I thought, I thought, okay, great. I, I need to meet some people. I want to make some friends and free dinner sounds okay. I mean, maybe it won't be the best food, but whatever.

[00:22:00] And so that was, I had just quit my job. I did marketing for the hedge fund, so I knew, like I knew how to sell things or what sold. And so that was kind of the, that was the free dinner.

[00:22:14] Greg Hinze: I see. So, but the no experience or anything, you just up and like this is gonna be brand new, like the whole movie industry, uh, outta nowhere.

[00:22:23] Like, I mean, you didn't go to school for this and you just, I mean it just a lot involved, I, I'm sure in, like finding the right people and making a movie.

[00:22:33] John McAllister: So it wasn't, it wasn't at that brainstorming session that I had the idea for the movie. But it was at that brainstorming session. I didn't have another job lined up.

[00:22:43] I just knew that I wanted to stop, I needed to stop doing what I was doing. And so I thought I could be involved in helping introduce bridge to more young people. And then I came home and two of my friends were making a movie about a, a scripted film. And we, they took me out to dinner and they, one of 'em said, I think we're, you're the only person we know that plays bridge.

[00:23:08] And so I told him about some of the statistics from this brainstorming session, and he said, that sounds like a documentary movie. And then that was, that was where that, that came from.

[00:23:20] Greg Hinze: And so you just began filming, was it? Uh, just pretty much all, all at one Youth World Championships, right? Uh, most of it? Or is there was a lot of it outside.

[00:23:31] John McAllister: So I had, I had met Adam Kaplan through Greg at the, uh, at the NABC, the spring one, 2012. And he really, I was really impressed with, in spite of him being 20 years younger than Greg, Greg's my age, and Adam was 16 at the time, and the way he was making fun of Greg, talking about how Greg thought about these bridge deals that we were playing, that we were, you know, talking about after the round.

[00:23:59] And I knew about Adam from Bridge Winners and so he was already like kind of a star to me when I first met him. I'm like, oh, that's Adam Kaplan. And so he became the focal point of the film and he was, he was kind of the leader of a group that included the Grossacks and the Jeng brothers and his partner Zach Brescoll of like an under 21 team playing the junior world championships that took place in, in August of, uh, of 2012.

[00:24:30] So yeah, that's the focal point of the film.

Greg Hinze: Where are these World Championships?

John McAllister:It was in, uh, in Taicang China, which is about two hours from Shanghai.

[00:24:43] Greg Hinze: And this is a, like a really long tournament, right? With a big round robin phase and everything similar to like the Bermuda Bowl.

[00:24:47] John McAllister: Yeah, there was, uh, I think there was 17 teams in their, in their division, and you play all 16 other teams and then you have, uh, full day knockout matches.

[00:24:59] And the finals actually a day and a half. So it was 12 days, 12 days of filming that we were 12 days of play.

[00:25:07] Greg Hinze: So you took a lot of this footage and you, you made it, made a movie of it. And, uh, you're trying to, uh, attract some young people. That's, uh, that's really nice. So, uh, the Grossacks, also in this, uh, movie, they've done really phenomenal since then as well.

[00:25:22] So they've, uh, really had quite a lot of success together and, and even as partners, uh, particularly Zach Grossack, just recently on the cover of the Bulletin for winning Player of the Year. Um, so what do you think about how that is gonna impact the movie. You know, like because Zach is in this movie and then now here he is proving himself again later. You know? I mean, what do you think? What are your thoughts on that?

[00:25:47] John McAllister: So the movie's now freely available on pbs.org. If you search for Double Dummy, it'll come up. You can watch it anywhere in the world. It's not geo blocked. Obviously, as a filmmaker to have for the, the kid’s team in the tournament itself, the way that went down was really great for us. I don't wanna spoil it for anybody. I'm not gonna spoil it. But it was really a great event from the kid standpoint. And then when I originally Adam Kaplan was like, Zach has really turned into what I hoped Adam Kaplan would, would become.

[00:26:26] I didn't even know Zach before we got to China and I was hoping that Adam Kaplan would be the next Jeff Meckstroth. And Zach has really, I mean, you know, as you said, like he's player of the year. Like, you know, that's, I mean …

[00:26:45] Greg Hinze: At such a young age. I mean, uh, just really such a great accomplishment.

[00:26:48] John McAllister: Yeah. But it's hard. Like it, one of the things about this film is we send an email out to everybody that is on like a board, like a unit board. Or a district board or that owns a club or is it a member of the ABTA and I probably got like 20 emails back from, you know, maybe, I don't know how, I don't even know how many emails that was that we sent out.

[00:27:13] So if like getting people to actually pay attention to the film is challenging and I'm really grateful that it's on PBS. So it's airing on specific PBS stations. And you can find that on our website, doubledummy movie.com, but it's also freely available. I'm just glad that it's like that we have this PBS distribution arm because, you know, having spent 11 years working on this project, I just want people to see it.

[00:27:42] I want, and it, it, it's beyond me at this point. And hopefully it'll be me. It'll, there'll be a meaningful impact. You know, like, uh, there was a post on Bridge Winners today by somebody talking about the Nebraska airtime. It's, it's, but it's been frustrating, like doing this and not always feeling like people are taking, you know, taking the reigns like, of the film.

[00:28:10] Greg Hinze: I remember many years I would always come up to you go like, how's the movie going? How's the movie going, how's the movie going like year after year? And then, uh, to finally he, and then to finally get to, I saw, uh, you put, you did, uh, some kind of thing at a Nationals, I think where we aired it in the, there was a group of people, I mean, I don't know, maybe 50 to a hundred people, something.

[00:28:30] John McAllister: In Toronto, that was a longer version of the, this is actually a shorter version than if you ask my mother, she would say it's much better, which I agree with.

[00:28:38] Greg Hinze: A shorter version's better. Okay. I hadn't seen the new, I, I just saw the one, uh, at the, at the time, uh, where you put it.

[00:28:44] Uh, yeah. Okay. Toronto Nationals, I don't remember. So 11 years in the process. And, uh, podcast. Podcast now. So sometime, and now you're like, a movie wasn't enough, I'm going to also make a podcast. And is it, is it, is it the same type of a deal trying to draw a bridge into, to the world? Expand a bridge, or what, what's the reason for the podcast?

[00:29:06] John McAllister: So the original reason, rationale for the podcast was to spread the word about the movie, and then it just became fun.

[00:29:13] Like I, I enjoy the opportunity to have conversations like this. It's fun, it's challenging. It's a great way to share my passion for bridge. One consistent piece of feedback I've gotten though is from non-players that listen to the podcast is they don't really know what we're talking about. Like it's too high-level bridge.

[00:29:34] Greg Hinze: There's too many specific names of people and like things that, uh, we take for granted. Like we talk about a Vanderbilt. Or whatever, and they're like, what's the Vanderbilt? You know, something like that. I understand.

[00:29:43] John McAllister: And I've tried at points to, to be more inclusive and it's challenging. Like it's, it's definitely challenging, and I don't necessarily wanna water it down.

[00:29:57] Like, uh, I enjoy the high level of it, and we definitely have our fans, you know, like, I'm gonna give a shout out to, uh, one of your partners, Josh Donn's dad, Cliff, is a regular listener. Hope you don't fall off your mountain bike when you hear this reference. Uh, we actually started doing a segment because Josh told me that Cliff listens to all the shows and then he, if Josh is ever mentioned, he'll send him a, a like thing from the transcript.

[00:30:26] And so we started doing a Cliff Donn, where somebody had the Cliff Donn segment where somebody would tell a story about Josh. So my story about Josh, not that you asked. Was at my first nationals playing in the Vanderbilt for the first time, because Gavin suggested it. We, it was a three-way and we lost in the, uh, afternoon.

[00:30:49] So we were playing Josh Donn's team in the evening and it was, I think Kit Woolsey was on the team. Perhaps. I don't remember who Josh was playing with. I think Josh was playing with Roger Lee actually. And I remember thinking after the second segment that we won, and they beat us by like 40 in that segment.

[laughter]

[00:31:25] Greg Hinze: So anyway, uh, yeah. So you had a lot of, you ended up having a lot of, uh, you know, great people on, uh, on your, your podcast, uh, you know, great players, uh, like, you know, or even early on you had like Jeff Meckstroth and some. Who are your, some of your favorite, uh, episodes? Do you have standout episodes where it's just like, you know, wow, this is like, you know, bridge on a, on another level.

[00:31:48] Like, I just getting to know somebody this like, is just like …

[00:31:50] John McAllister: I think the three people that come to mind are Gavin because it was the first one and I've been wanting to do the podcast for a long time, probably three years. And so when I actually recorded the conversation, I thought, wow, this is, you know, it was just cool to actually finally do it.

[00:32:07] And he tells a great story about ducking with king and one offside, and I mean, that was just why I wanted to do it. And then Hamman, you know, probably the most recognizable bridge name and then Meckstroth because he just was great. Like he told great stories and. You know, Jeff has really, uh, helped me become a, like, get more out of my bridge ability by challenging me to, to be a better player.

[00:32:47] Greg Hinze: [00:32:41] Jeff is always a very fierce competitor. I mean, he is like, yes, I mean, but he's always so friendly and helpful away from the game as well, you know, but. He is, uh, always at the table. It's like nothing. He doesn't miss anything. He is never fazed. It's just like, how, how does this guy ever, never do anything wrong?

[00:33:03] John McAllister: He was my partner for a regional last year in Hilton Head and at first, it went from like being elated that I'm playing with Jeff Meckstroth and so frustrated with him because he was frustrated with me and it took me a while. I was driving back to Virginia after the second day we played together, and I was listening to these podcasts and I thought, man, this, you know, eventually it got through to me that the reason that he was upset with me is I wasn't getting the best outta myself.

[00:33:32] And that led me to have my best year of bridge ever last year, which, uh …

[00:33:38] Greg Hinze: Was a really, really good year. Capping it off. Still see you glowing. Yeah. Uh, okay. Well, uh, some of your other favorite bridge memories?

[00:33:48] John McAllister: Well, I'll tell a story. So, I played my first World Championships in Sanya in 2014, and the way that I ended up doing that was Christina Lund Madsen had emailed me and she said that her and Dennis Bilde, who's one of the, you know, great players, great young players, uh, in the world, they were looking for a partners for the mixed teams.

[00:34:14] And that sounded like fun. I really liked Christina. I didn't know much about her, her playing, uh, but I knew Dennis was a really like a rising star, and so I needed to have a female partner. I said, I don't have a female partner, and she suggested Migry Zur Campanile who's, who's also been a guest on the show.

[00:34:37] So I went up and met her in New York City. We had lunch on her birthday, and we hit it off and we're like, let's do this. And, and then I remember when we talked on the phone or we tried to talk on the phone for the first time. Migry’s originally from, uh, well she immigrated Israel, but she's originally from Romania.

[00:34:56] And I remember I couldn't understand her and I was like, I don't think this is gonna work. So, uh …

Greg Hinze: Are you speaking English?

John McAllister: Migry introduced me to a lot of her friends. I think just, that's one of the things about bridge is like, it's, it's kind of a strange dynamic because we're playing against the other people.

[00:35:19] So there are more often than not, you know, people are your opponent, but at the same time there's a lot of, there's a lot of kinship and, you know, spirit and, uh, you know, like for example, you congratulating me in, in Phoenix for winning the national, for winning the event. Like so many people were so excited for, for me.

[00:35:43] Greg Hinze: Yeah, it, it, it's nice. I mean, uh, yeah, it's a lot of camaraderie, you know, it's, it's bitter competition at the table, but then away from it at the parties at night or whatever afterwards, you know, the drinking at the bars and going over the hands and so. Speaking of hands, you're like most nightmare hand ever?

[00:36:03] John McAllister: Uh, well, there was a hand at the, I played in the mixed world championships this year with, uh, Olivia Schireson as my partner and we were playing in the pairs. We didn't make it to the, uh, heads up matches for teams; we're playing in the pairs. And I had like, ace-queen-jack-sixth of diamonds, queen-10 doubleton of clubs, jack-fourth of hearts.

So they opened a, I was fourth and they opened a Polish club on my right and every, nobody's vulnerable. So I bid three diamonds and it goes, What happened? I forget what happened, but they got to seven eventually, lefty bid six hearts.

[00:37:00] So Polish Club, you don't get, it's like a strong club in that you don't reveal your suit at first.

Greg Hinze: Or the fact that you are strong.

John McAllister: So, I, I didn't have jack-fourth of hearts. I had, I had like 10, I think I had ten-fourth of hearts anyway now. So now the guy bids five hearts, then lefty bids six hearts, and then they bid seven.

[00:37:22] And I'm kind of rooting for them to bid seven hearts. So, I lead the ace of diamonds because I'm thinking, you know, there's no way that they're bidding this grand slam with the king of diamonds. You know, they're not valuing that. But lo and behold, lefty had king-fourth of diamonds. So now declarer has a chance to make it.

[00:37:44] And I'm like, shit. I was rooting for that and now I'm get about to get burned. So dummy had ace-third clubs and declarer had king-jack-nine-fourth, and if they, so I'm like, am I gonna play the queen of clubs on the first round of clubs? So, he drew trumps and now he plays. I think I had three trumps. I don't know, I'm telling the story terribly, but he, on the first round of clubs, he plays club to the ace and I played the queen. [laughter]

[00:38:18] And now …

[00:38:20] Greg Hinze: Did he have like nine of 'em and now he played …

[00:38:21] John McAllister: No, no. It actually worked. He played, he played back, and he thought, and he thought, now I played the nine and I won the 10. I was like, yeah. So it went from being a nightmare to like …

[00:38:36] Greg Hinze: It was all, both your nightmare and your favorite hand.

[00:38:39] John McAllister: Yeah. Nightmare hands. I mean so many nightmare hands. I remember a hand Migry in the world championships. We were on the verge of qualifying for the finals of the world pairs in 2014. My first world championship, the World Bridge Series, and there was a hand where I had like, uh, king and one spade and we had a two over one auction and then she bid two no.

[00:39:03] And now I just bid three no, because you know, that was just the right thing to do. And they lead a spade through my king and it goes queen. And then the, and then my lefty plays the ace of spades and Migry’s jack-doubleton comes down. Now they got the whole spade suit and I'm like, God damn it, Migry, why are you hogging the hand?

[00:39:31] Greg Hinze: That's funny. Funny. So, uh, most important bridge convention if you can only have one.

[00:39:37] John McAllister: Oh, wow. Probably negative double. I think. Uh, I played in London, used to talk about the Bridge in the Menagerie series. I played rubber bridge for the first time over there and I felt like I was a character. I felt like I was in that book when I was playing.

Greg Hinze: Which one were you?

John McAllister: Well, I wasn't necessarily, I just felt like I, I didn't have a character myself, but I just felt like I was like playing with the characters in that book. And we, they don't let you play negative doubles there. They don't let you play.

[00:40:07] Greg Hinze: Don’t they all play like usually the same?

[00:40:08] Everybody plays the same thing?

[00:40:09] John McAllister: Yes. They don't play, they don't let you play Roman keycard. You can only, you can't find out about the king of trump or the queen of Trump.

[00:40:20] Greg Hinze: Bobby Wolff was a big, uh, advocator of, uh, not playing key card. He wouldn't mind being in a slam on the finesse of the king of trump.

[00:40:28] So he would always know, although you may know you're off a key card, he would know that it was the king because he would know about the number of aces because he didn't count the king as a key card, count on that later in the kings or whatever. So, so he would know that he would be on a finesse and he wouldn't mind.

[00:40:46] Is it better than like, being there and like, oh, am I off the ace ? It's not even on the finesse, it's off the ace. You lose the ace.

[00:40:54] John McAllister: Is he someone that's been a mentor to you? Like I know he is from Texas.

[00:40:59] Greg Hinze: I got to play with Bobby one time and uh, I just remember that was like we, we, we wrote down like four things on the convention card.

[00:41:04] We had those, uh, the white convention cards, the old fashioned white convention card. I think we wrote down like four things, like 15-17 real big with transfers or something, and we wrote down, you know, ace asking, it was like not, it was not. We, and we wrote down carding or something. And, uh, so we, we played, uh, we played that one time.

[00:41:24] And, uh, I played as a teammate of his, uh, a few times. He had some, uh, of his regular older partners, uh, that he played with some, some long ago. And, and I played against him many times from, uh, the area that I was playing in. Uh, I think he eventually moved to Vegas and, uh, I don't know what's happening. I don't even know.

[00:41:43] John McAllister: I'm sure I've played against him.

Greg Hinze: I only have a couple more questions.

John McAllister: By the way. I just wanna say that Greg sent me a full list of questions, including like, the best hand. I, I don't know if the best hand was in there, but I wanted to be spontaneous. It would've been something like the best hand would've been good to think, or worst hand would've been good to think about before, uh, but you did send me like a full list.

[00:42:08] Greg Hinze: I, I, I'm not even sure I included that. I did throw, I, I did have some questions that it weren't on your list that I asked you. So anyway, like this one who's faster, you or Justin Lall?

[00:42:21] John McAllister: Were you at that tournament?

Greg Hinze: No, but I heard about it.

John McAllister: So you're referring to at the Williamsburg Regional some years ago.

[00:42:31] We had a, a race in the hotel conference area and it was probably a 50-yard dash and Justin smoked me. Sad but true.

[00:43:18] Greg Hinze: Anyway, I don't, I don't have anything else. John, going through my list of questions.

[00:43:25] John McAllister: How, what do you, what is your setup there?

[00:43:27] Do you have like a sheet of paper with all the questions on 'em? Do you have 'em like, uh, yeah, I,

[00:43:32] Greg Hinze: I, I'm looking at my little questions here. Yeah. And then some of 'em, you know, I had to skip over cuz you kind of covered them already. You know, they were gonna be questions, but that's okay. I mean, that's great.

[00:43:42] You know, it's great. I don't have to ask questions. You just knew what I was gonna ask you. As if you knew, like, so somebody may have fed you the questions.

[00:43:50] John McAllister: No, he did, but I mean, I really appreciate it. When I saw that list of questions, I wasn't sure if you were like, how committed you were to it and if, what if it was more like me saying, oh, you know, you offered to do this, but maybe, anyway, when I got that list of questions from you, I was really, it really touched me like that you were.

[00:44:08] You were thinking about it so much.

[00:44:10] Greg Hinze: Well, I'm glad.

I mean, this went, I, I was a little nervous about how this may go cuz it's, you know, not so easy to just, to be, you know, talking and you're, you're used to it. I'm, I'm not, I'm not so used to it.

[00:44:21] John McAllister: It's funny how it's something that is so natural just to do.

[00:44:28] Like me and you, for me and you to talk, but then when it becomes a …

[00:44:33] Greg Hinze: Yeah, that's what made it easy for me. Because, I mean, you know, we're looking at each other on the camera or whatever, so we can see each other and it's just like, to me, it's not like really doing an interview at all. I mean, you know, it's more like just talking to a friend, you know, just like, tell me more about you, tell me something.

[00:44:47] John McAllister: What was the most surprising? Like, what was the depth? What was the depth? Can you. Is there a way for you to explain the depths of the research that you did or? Like what the depths, what do you think was like the most down a rabbit hole you went?

[00:45:06] Greg Hinze: I didn't go that far, really. I was like, uh, you know, I, I, I, I just, yeah.

[00:45:11] I found your police profiles and your mugshot. That, that was, that was the most surprising to me was when I found your mugshot.

[00:45:21] John McAllister: I have never been arrested, by the way, for all my loyal listeners out there. I, I have not.

[00:45:28] Greg Hinze: Well, they should take that off the internet then.

[00:45:28] John McAllister: Um, well, thank you.

[00:45:32] Greg Hinze: Seriously, I didn't, I didn't do that much research.

[00:45:35] Um, and you know, I mean, just, I, I, I know a lot about you already, you're a great guy and, and a lot of people, a lot of people know a lot about you.

[00:45:46] John McAllister: Well, I'm flattered, and I really appreciate it and, uh, thank you so much.

[00:45:52] Greg Hinze: Oh, you're quite welcome. And, uh, yeah, thanks. Thanks for having me once more.

[00:45:57] I really enjoyed it. We'll see you again on the circuit.

[00:46:00] John McAllister: Are you playing any tournaments?

Greg Hinze: Next nationals. So, who’s your team for the next national?

John McAllister: I've got some possibilities out there, but nothing is confirmed. The intrigue.

Greg Hinze: Okay, well, we'll see you there in New Orleans. You’re going though, for sure, right?

[00:46:15] John McAllister: Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure. No, I'm definitely playing.

Greg Hinze: You playing with Sveinn?

John McAllister: I don't think so.

[00:46:21] Greg Hinze: Nothing’s confirmed. Okay.

[00:46:24] John McAllister: All right, man. I'll see you in New Orleans. I'm, I'm actually playing in the North American Pairs. Are you gonna be there for that?

[00:46:33] Greg Hinze: No. No.

John McAllister: Have you won that?

Greg Hinze: Platinum Pairs.

[00:46:34] No. I've, I've, I. I think I only entered one time to the national level. We made it and we got knocked out first day or something.

[00:46:45] John McAllister: What was your first national win?

[00:46:48] Greg Hinze: Yeah. I've never done well in that event.

My first national win was in New Orleans where we're going now, and in 2004 we won the North American Swiss, but that was in the fall of 2004.

[00:47:00] This is spring of 2023.

[00:47:01] John McAllister: Had you been close before that?

[00:47:06] Greg Hinze: I was fourth in the LMs once, uh, before that, the three-day LM pairs, like basically lost in the last round. It was pretty close.

[00:47:17] John McAllister: Who was your partner?

[00:47:20] Greg Hinze: Uh, guy with, uh, I don't play with him, haven't played with him long time, but Nagy Kamel came out from, uh, he's from Texas also.

[00:47:28] He's one of my original players that I used to play with learning back in the day. Played a lot of bridge with him. But not, not so much in the last 15 years.

[00:47:36] John McAllister: If you could, if you could teach bridge to one person on the planet, who would it be? You got to choose your bridge student.

[00:47:49] Greg Hinze: To teach to one person on the planet? It would be like somebody famous, like, uh, I don't know, maybe, uh, yeah, I don't know. That's too tough of a question. Something like a famous actor or something. That would be pretty cool.

[00:47:58] John McAllister: All right, well you gotta gimme an answer in New Orleans.

Greg Hinze: Okay, I'll give you an answer in New Orleans, you put me on the spot now.

[00:48:05] John McAllister: All right, man. Thanks.