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Matt Granovetter : ウィキペディア英語版
Matt Granovetter
Matthew "Matt" Granovetter (born 1950) is an American and Israeli bridge player and writer. Granovetter is from Ballston Lake, New York and graduated from Hunter College. He subsequently moved to Netanya, Israel. After spending the years from 1993 to 2005 in Israel, he and his wife Pamela returned to the USA and now live in Cincinnati.〔(Profile on US Bridge Federation website ) Retrieved Nov 28, 2014〕

In competition, Granovetter and Karen McCallum won the 11th quadrennial World Mixed Pairs Championship in 2006, finishing first in a field of 487.
In competition at the world level, Granovetter played on second-place teams in the 1974 Mixed Teams and the 2008 Seniors Teams. The latter, third in a quadrennial series played for the Senior International Cup, was a non-medal event at the inaugural World Mind Sports Games. Granovetter played with Russ Ekeblad on a US team that won its 5-day preliminary round-robin field of 16 teams with Japan second. After winning three long knockout matches each, over five more days, Japan defeated USA by merely 202 s to 200 in the two-day final.〔(Results index ). ''1st World Mind Sports Games''. WBF. Retrieved 2014-11-05.〕 Granovetter–Ekeblad scored very well in the 5-day preliminaries, third-best of about 100 pairs.〔(Overall Butler – Round Robin – Senior Series ). (2008 ). WBF. Retrieved 2014-11-05. Includes several individuals who did not play in fixed partnerships.〕
In 1983, Granovetter took part in a televised match between teams representing the US and Britain, arranged by the BBC. The match was featured in a book that described him thus:〔Jeremy James, Jeremy Flint, and Derek Rimington, ''Grand Slam'', London: ''Country Life'', 1983, ISBN 0-600-36878-5, p. 8.〕
He is a composer and lyricist and he plays Bridge like an artist. One moment he is suffused with extrovert optimism, the next he is submerged in gloomy introspection which leads to some unsound overbidding and some extreme conservatism. Very often, to achieve the artistically perfect result, he plays so slowly that the whole table seems frozen in some timeless still-life, but he demonstrated time and again that he was one of the best card players on either side.

He and his wife Pamela Granovetter co-edit the magazine ''Bridge Today''. He has written a number of bridge books, most of them collaborations with Pamela, as well as two musicals for children. He is the bridge editor of the ''Jerusalem Post''.〔("Picture the original shape" ) Retrieved Nov 28, 2014〕
The Granovetters have developed a bidding system known as GUS, standing for the Granovetter Unified System.〔(Interview with the Granovetters ) Retrieved Nov 28, 2014〕
==Bridge accomplishments==


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