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Adrien Aron

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French tennis and bridge player, philately specialist
Adrien Aron
Harry Hopman and Aron in 1928, during a France-Australia match at Roland Garros
Born29 April 1902
Paris
Died30 November 1969
Neuilly-sur-Seine
Occupation(s)Tennis and bridge player, philately specialist

Adrien Aron ((1902-04-29)29 April 1902 in Paris – (1969-11-30)30 November 1969 in Neuilly-sur-Seine), was a French tennis and bridge player, and a philately specialist.

Biography

Adrien Aron was the older brother of philosopher Raymond Aron. He graduated with a law degree.

During the interwar period, he was described as "elegant, frequented the rich circles of tennis and gambling clubs; he perfectly embodied the man of pleasure, a type of man that my philosophical self despised and that perhaps a part of myself, barely conscious, humiliated by his sovereign lightness, admired or envied," said his brother.

Tennis career

He was described by Jean Samazeuilh as a "real machine to return the ball and a crocodile of the worst kind". However, he could not compete with the "Musketeers". At the end of 1928, he was ranked the eleventh best French player by the French Tennis Federation.

He won the Deauville tournament three times. He won the Porée Cup in 1928, defeating Louis Géraud in the final.

He participated six times in the French Championships between 1925 and 1931. Notably, he was defeated by the Hungarian champion Béla von Kehrling in 1926 and by Patrick Spence in five sets in 1927.

Bridge career

From the 1930s, he focused on bridge, becoming one of France's leading specialists in the game, alongside Pierre Albarran.

Philately

After the war, he gave up rackets and cards and became passionate about philately. In 1959, he published Les Secrets de la philatélie with Calmann-Lévy.

Works

  • Pierre Bellanger, Pierre Albarran, Adrien Aron, and Sophoklís Venizélos, Bridge, les 102 donnes d'un grand match, Grasset, Paris, 1933.
  • Adrien Aron and Jean Fayard, L'art du bridge, Arthème Fayard, Paris, 1938.
  • Adrien Aron, Les Secrets de la philatélie, Calmann-Lévy, Paris, 1959.

Notes and references

  1. Hopman won 2 sets to 1, "not without a very good resistance from the latter." Le Figaro, July 15, 1928.
  2. ^ Memoirs, Raymond Aron, 1983.
  3. Le miroir des sports, October 4, 1927.
  4. Le miroir des sports, December 11, 1928.
  5. Le Figaro, September 6, 1927.
  6. R-J Airdey, Aron won the Porée Cup, Paris-Soir, October 2, 1928.
  7. Le miroir des sports, June 9, 1926.
  8. Le miroir des sports, October 4, 1927.
  9. Albarran, Pierre (1957). Encyclopédie du bridge moderne. Fayard. p. 180..
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