- Eel - one who can wriggle out of a doubled contract relatively unscathed
- Carp - constant moaner
- Minnow - fodder for the big fish
- Monk fish - players who get a real face on if they lose
- Barbel - female member who spends more time at the bar than at the table
- Red Mullet - one whose face goes a deep red after making a disastrous mistake
- Grey Mullet - an inconspicuous and unemotional player whose attendance at the club usually goes unnoticed
- Goblin shark - predatory type with a voracious appetite for the little minnows
- Tiger shark - renown for very bold and aggressive bidding
- Flatfish - players who rarely get tops or bottoms - always situated in the middle
- Tench - nervous sort
- Duckbill - players who can always get out of paying their dues
- Perch - one with a tendency to look down on others from a lofty position
- Swordfish - renown for using "s" words to insult clueless partners, such as "stupid, scatter-brained, screw-loose"
- Kipper - dozy sort having a tendency to nod off and lose concentration
- Catfish - someone who occupies the bottom position for long periods of time
- Brill - name given to players who are exceptionally gifted
- Snapper - player who is quick tempered, flaring up at the slightest provocation
- Whale - powerful player prone to occasional blow-outs
- Humpback whale - their blow-outs leave them moody, mardy and miserable for hours to come
A 'Must Read' blog for all motorists currently being shafted by morally bankrupt private car parking companies as well as aspiring players and addicts of the game Bridge.
Friday, 13 November 2009
BRIDGE PLAYERS ALL AT SEA... ( Article by Bridgemeister Gibson )
Victor Mollo may well have lampooned bridge players as animals, but he would have had more more fun depicting them as fish. For whenever I enter my local bridge club, it is almost as though I've dived into an exotic aquarium surrounded by weird and wonderful fish. Indeed, each species displays a particular quirk or behavioural trait , we have all come to recognise so well. So let's look at some of these fishy characters, some expertly schooled in bridge, which we so often encounter at tournament events.
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