Walter Avarelli
Template:Use dmy dates Walter Avarelli (3 June 1912 – 1987)[1] was an Italian bridge player, a member of the famous Blue Team, with whom he won nine Bermuda Bowls and three World Team Olympiads from 1956 to 1972.
Avarelli was born in Rome and became a judge there.[1] He first took up rudimentary bridge during World War II when more than thirty years old.[2] Along with interests in tennis, riding and motor racing, he was especially noted for "his addiction to gastronomy".[2]
Avarelli was the longtime partner of Giorgio Belladonna using the Roman Club bidding system. They improved the system together and presented it in a book that was published in at least two Italian editions, 1958 and 1969.
- Il sistema fiori romano, Giorgio Belladonna and Walter Avarelli (1958), 163 pp.; 3rd edition (Bridge d'oggi, 1969), 181 pp., Template:Catalog lookup link
- The Roman Club System of Distributional Bidding, Giorgio Belladonna and Walter Avarelli (Simon & Schuster, 1959; Cassell, 1960)
Bridge accomplishments
- World championships
Avarelli won 12 world championships, all as one of six players on the Italy open Template:Gcb.
- Bermuda Bowl (9) 1957, 1958, 1959, 1961, 1962, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1969
- World Team Olympiad (3) 1964, 1968, 1972
Runners-up: none. He joined the Italy team after its second-place finish in the 1951 Bermuda Bowl and retired before its double second-place finish in 1976.
- European championships
- European Open Teams (4) 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959
References
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- ↑ a b "Walter Avarelli" Template:In lang. Biografie. Infobridge: Bridge for all the world (infobridge.it). Retrieved 2015-02-13. With English-language notes, said to be "powered by Google Translate".
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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Further reading
- Belladonna, Giorgio and Giorgio Manca (1955), Il sistema Manca: Fiori romano [The Manca system: Roman Club], Template:Catalog lookup link.
- Belladonna, Giorgio (1958), Il Nuovo Fiori Romano.
- Belladonna, Giorgio (1977), Il Nuovissimo Fiori Romano.
- Belladonna, Giorgio and Benito Garozzo (1986), Il Moderno Fiori Romano.