Jim Yerkey
 

 

Personal Information:

Hobbies include:

Diplomacy Highlights:

Awards and Honors Received along the way:

I have never played regular postal or e-mail Diplomacy.  Back In the early '80s I played a game of WWIIIb (a variant of my own design) in Bob Sergeant's Saint George and the Dragon, which I was fortunate enough to win.

Since 1991 I have run the largest regularly scheduled Diplomacy Tournament in North America in Hunt Valley Maryland at AvalonCon / World Boardgame Championships.

 

In the summer of 2000 I hosted DipCon XXXV / World D!pCon X the second largest

Diplomacy Tournament in North American history.


The single most important result of the time I've spent playing the game of

Diplomacy Is the friendships that I have developed along the way.  

 

Jim Yerkey
Sketch by Buz Eddy



I first met Jim before our game at Columbus in 1996. Jim said he had been traveling to Diplomacy events for 20 years and this was going to be his last one. We played in the last round and I watched him perform some pure black is white diplomacy. As Turkey, he ripped three dots from Russia, then convinced Russia that he had to continue opposing England, otherwise England would take him out. And Russia bought it. The game was a two way between Jim and Tom Kobrin.

Jim was one of the very first supporters of the ratings. He achieved something of a coup in getting Robert Sacks to send in results in spite of the fact that Robert described ratings as "tools of the devil". He provided 1992, 1993, and 1994 AvalonCon  then disappeared into a dark cloud. I asked him for stuff in 1996 at Columbus, he said OK. Nothing. I asked him for stuff in 1998 at Chapel Hill, he said OK. Nothing. Then in late 1999 I got 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 and 1999 AvalonCon/WBC all in one pack. Jim is supportive, but he definitely does things his way.

At WDC in Chapel Hill he played a full schedule. "I thought you were retiring?" says I. "I am." says he. In directing the highly successful 2000 WDC in Baltimore he was forced to play a game to fill out a board in my game. He was in the draw, and I was not.

He played 1 game at Chapel Hill in 2001 and took a two way draw in what was then the game with the highest average rating to date. I don't know, but I suspect he played to round out the field.  Will he play more? I don't know, but I do know that if and when he does, he is as good a Diplomacy player as there is.

Jim Yerkey is a 'not very shy' retiring type.

 

 

 

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