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About the
ABF
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JIM
BORIN Jim Borin was born in London and attended Haberdashers School in Cricklewood.
After National Service in the RAF he worked in the diamond industry before
coming to Australia in 1961. In Sydney he met Norma Maguire, and a successful
and enduring bridge partnerships was formed. Jim and Norma came to live
in Melbourne, where they were married and Jim became Sales Manager for
ICL.
The Borins were immediately successful in the Victorian bridge scene.
Originally they had played a "Baronised Acol" system developed
by Jim in Sydney, but their principal successes were achieved with C.C.
Wei's "Precision" system, and they published Our Precision Style
in 1981. Jim had commenced teaching, and his charm and wit and ability
to encourage beginners soon earned him a following. Initially resources
were limited but by 1970 he and Norma had opened the Borin School of Bridge
in Selwyn Court, Toorak. Eventually the School outgrew the Selwyn Court
premises and Jim and Norma took over the bridge wing of the English Speaking
Union in South Yarra. In 1995, with his new wife Pam, Jim moved the Borin
School of Bridge to Spink St Brighton, where it has flourished under his
energetic guidance. Jim achieved remarkable success in competitive bridge at all levels from
the time of his arrival in Australia. The extent of his achievements is
evident from the Table below. Many of his triumphs were in partnership
with Norma. Jim's record in the Australian Open Butler Tournament is remarkable.
That anyone playing this exacting week-long event could win or place 8
times in 12 years is almost beyond belief. The qualities required would
seem to be consistency and mental toughness, which Jim had in abundance. Jim was always interested in the psychological aspects of bridge. His
skills as a motivator were successfully demonstrated in 1979, when an
all-Victorian team, toughened by exposure to a series of clinics with
Jim acting as guru, won the National Open Teams, a feat repeated the following
year but never since. Jessel Rothfield recalls his nervous first team
game in Canberra with Wally Scott. Before they started, Jim, a team-mate,
produced a pack of cards and insisted on a game of whist to settle the
nerves. By the 1990s Jim had more or less abandoned the Australian tournament
scene. His marriage to Norma ended in 1993 and he later married Pam James
(nee McLeish). With the emergence of significant Seniors events in the
new century he reappeared in fine style, and they became a happy hunting
ground for him. He was due to go to the Bermuda Bowl in Monaco in November
with the Australian Seniors Team. For the last several years Jim had been Bridge Columnist for the Age
newspaper. He took this responsibility very seriously, occasionally discussing
a hand with me (I. McC.) in his search for a mot juste. It was evident
from these discussions that although he had been almost everywhere in
bridge, and had done almost everything, he remained entranced by the complexities
and the perplexities that the game continually produces. Bridge was always
fun for Jim. This was never clearer than the day before he died, when a soft voice from a Coronary Intensive Care Unit led me through the hand that was destined for the Borin column for the next Saturday. He was gleefully exploring the mind of a hapless defender, who reached for the impossible and suffered the fate of Icarus. Jim Borin's achievements
Note: the first four entries relate to representative teams and * indicates winners. Remaining entries refer to wins, except as indicated in the Butler event. Prepared by Ian McCance and Jessel Rothfield, former bridge partners
and team-mates, with the assistance of Jim's brother Michael. |
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