from the publishers of The Columbus Book of Euchre |
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Presented here are archives of euchre columns by Natty Bumppo, author of The Columbus Book of Euchre, published on line. |
Video games August 25, 2006
They call it swoosh. Its a bit like the home run in expansion baseball. No-hitters are boring. Bunts are boring. Double plays are boring. Pitchers duels are boring. Only home runs make the highlights on ESPN and the 11 oclock news. In a typical euchre game on Pogo, if one player has the rest of the tricks without a possibility of anyone else taking one the computer will sweep the rest of the cards into his hand, announcing the fact, but not showing the cards taking the tricks or the cards taken. You might never know what a player took the deciding trick with. It might have been the ace of spades, or the ten of hearts. If he takes two or more remaining tricks and the next-to-last was the decisive one, youll never know. (You can see last trick on Pogo but not last hand. And if a player takes the time to look at the last trick, he is liable to be booted by the others for delaying the game.) The feature is TRAM, an acronym for The rest are mine. Its optional, but if you set up a game without it on Pogo you will be verbally crucified by most other players. They like it. They like it especially for loners. Thats when they like to say Swoosh! when the program sweeps up three, four or five tricks at a time to make the loner. Picture this: You might make a loner with a left bower and king and ten of trump plus queen and ten of a suit outside, and swoosh the last four tricks or even all five tricks (in a five-trick swoosh, no one sees any cards). All it would take for a four-trick swoosh in that example would be one trump held by the opponents lower than the right bower, caught on the first trick, and no cards of the outside suit all three other trump and all four cards of the other suit would be lying in the stock (four cards) and your partners hand (five). Or, you could make a loner with a lone king of trump and a couple of ace-kings outside, and swoosh the last four tricks if you took the opponents only trump on the first trick. You could even swoosh all five tricks if the opponents had no trump (thats possible). In either event, wouldnt you like to see that regardless of whether you are on the receiving end or the bleeding end? Youre a card player, right? You like to watch the cards fall, and see who had what, right? Not if you play on Pogo. Its all in the swoosh. Players say, It speeds up the game. But (1) the time saved is infinitesimal among prompt players, and (2) whats the point of speeding up a card game? Granny and Aunt Gin taught me that playing cards is a pastime. Other live euchre sites on the internet Hardwood, Mystic Island, Playlink, Playsite have their own razzle-dazzle. Not all have TRAM (swoosh!), but those that dont have flashes, splashes, whoops and whistles. And I think that, after all these years, I have figured it out. These people are not playing cards. They are playing video games. Its not the speed at all. Its the bling. There used to be a site on the internet where you could play euchre as a card game, and it was the most popular of them all. Its still on line. Its called Yahoo! TRAM is not an option. There is nothing fancy. One of the critics of my critiques dissed Yahoos Commodore 64 graphics. Well, guess what? Commodore 64 has gone Kay-Pro. A Yahoo wonk came along in the summer of 2006 and fixed something that wasnt broken. There still is no bling about Yahoo, but (1) the explanatory fonts have shrunk (Where's the magnifying glass, Mabel?), (2) the table has expanded and, as a result (3) you can no longer chat with the other players, and (4) you can no longer see the score while you play. Besides which, they have done nothing about the spoilsport who can come along and, for whatever petulant reason, delay a game interminably by taking three minutes to play at every trick. A number of players, including yours truly, wrote Yahoo to complain. I received no reply; but a colleague in the Yahoo group Euchre Science reported, They responded that whatever it was they did has now been re-corrected, if there is such a word. Well, there is no such word; and there has been no correction. Yahoos hearts and spades setups are horse shit, too, for other reasons. Yahoo used to be the only internet site on which you could play euchre like a card game. No longer. Euchre on the internet is dead. If you dont like video games, turn off the box and get back to a card table. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Two lessons for the price of one: Lead trump when you make it; dont when you dont July 14, 2006
This was not the best hand I ever played, as my partner continues to remind me.
Shes an old hen from California and thinks she's a pretty good euchre player.
And she is. And she wont let me forget
this hand.
The dealer picked up the ace of hearts. Little did we know at the time, but the rest of his hand was the queen and ten of hearts, and the queen and ten of spades. I had the left bower, both black aces, and both black nines. I eeny-meeny-miny-moed the opening lead, and the ace of clubs hit the table. Dealers partner played the king; my partner played the ten, and the dealer ruffed with his ten of hearts. And led his queen of spades. My ace of spades took the trick, as the dealers partner played the jack of spades and my partner sluffed the queen of clubs. |
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Then, sensing a weakness in trump in the opposition, I led my left bower.
Dealers partner played the nine of hearts (that was the purpose of my lead, to strip
her of trump and I did); and my partner oops! took the trick
with the right bower, her only trump.
Then there was no way out. All my partner had left to lead were the nine and king of diamonds. Made no difference. She boldly led the king; the dealer prudently ducked (sluffing the ten of spades); I had nothing left but black nines; and the dealers partner took the trick with the ace of diamonds. The dealers ace of hearts by now high trump, and the only one left to anyone was good for the point. My partner bitched and screamed: We had them euchred! If you had not led trump. Well, she was right. It was not the best play I had ever made. But it was the dealer who had made the big mistake. If he had led trump to the second trick as he should have, with three trump he would have dropped both bowers from the opponents (my partner and me), and he and his partner would have made the point anyway. As Ryan says, Lead trump, damn it! When you make it. So the dealer sucked me into a dumb trump lead. Im not ashamed. He could have made the point anyway by leading trump himself. We already had the march stopped; so I took a risk. If my partner had had two trump, or the right bower had been buried, my lead might have been a good one. But there is a second lesson here: Dont lead trump on defense. In general. Hoist on my own petard, I was. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Youre trailing 9-6. Your partner, the dealer, turns a heart. The eldest hand (the age, the opponent left of the dealer) has passed, and you have the right bower and all three suit aces. What do you do? |
Many an aggressive player would order the heart to his partner (assist)
in this situation. Some would even go alone.
But if you are playing with the cognoscenti, you might consider passing. Why? Because the age did not order. The fact that he did not call a safety (donate), if he is smart, means that he has a loner stopped i.e., he has the left bower guarded, or the ace of trump guarded twice (as Billy Dozer Arnold would say). Desperate times call for desperate measures. You might want to play for a euchre and two points, instead of for one point on offense. Passing might call the ages bluff, and your partner may have the bowers in the other color. Think about it. [Thanks for this riddle to Paul Red Dogg McCreary.] Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Euchre once was Juckerspiel; Alsace is where it started; Thank you, Pennsylvania Dutch, For pastime so full-hearted! Euchre Doodle, deal the cards; Euchre Doodle Dandy! Give each five, in twos and threes, And with the cards be handy! Five tricks march but three tricks score; A lone hand might get four, yet; But dont forget to bag the prey: Its two for three when theyre set! Euchre Doodle, pick it up; Euchre Doodle Dandy! Mind the score and go alone, And with the cards be handy! |
Order, call, or pick it up, Or order as a donor, But keep your mouth shut in third chair, And don't queer partners loner. Euchre Doodle, turn it down; Euchre Doodle Dandy! Mind your drink and steal the deal, And with the cards be handy! If youre the age you must call next; The dealers partner crosses; But dont renege and dont forget that Jacks of trump are bosses. Euchre Doodle, bleed the right; Euchre Doodle Dandy! Could be your partners not too bright, But with the cards be handy! |
When your partner makes the trump, Dont start by leading aces; Lead what he called; hell get to you; Youll cash them in most cases. Euchre Doodle, show the left; Euchre Doodle Dandy! Play your hand the best you can, And with the cards be handy! |
You can order at the bridge Or any time it suits you; Just keep in mind you want to wind up With more points than they do! Euchre Doodle, trust your partner; Euchre Doodle Dandy! Dont complain about the cards, Just with the cards be handy! |
Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Right call, wrong lead March 3, 2006
Edie held the jack of hearts, and hearts were next the nine of diamonds had been turned down. |
But Edie held also four clubs ace, king, queen and nine and thats what she
called, from first chair.
She led the nine of clubs, however and that was her undoing, not the call. The opponent on her left held right bower and ten, and played second hand low, the ten, hoping his partner had left or ace (or both) and could beat Edie's partner. Turned out, neither Edies partner nor the dealer had any trump. The dealers partner took that first trick with the ten of clubs and eventually took another with the right bower, and the dealer had the ace of hearts for the setting trick. All Edie had to do was lead the ace of clubs (or the king or the queen, but the ace is better to let her partner know he doesnt have to go up with left-ten). That way she takes that ten of clubs, either then or later. Shes euchred only by finding all three other trump in the opponents hands, and even then only if she cant make both bowers fall on the same trick. The ace lead also might induce a left-hand opponent to spend a bower unnecessarily Honor on an honor, as they say in bridge. But this story is a better lesson in second hand low, speaking in bridge terms. Restraint is the order of the day for the player left of the leader. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
But the book Todd got a glimpse of (which he shared with me) was Hoyles Games,
published in Philadelphia in 1845 by Henry F. Anners, with four pages on euchre,
and so spelled (the author was unidentified, unless it was the same as the publisher).
The game described was very much like the game we know today but for the usual archaisms, such
as playing to 5 points, with 32 cards.
The site of publication was the biggest city near the Pennsylvania Dutch settlement; euchre was called a German game in the article, and going next was called Dutching. So much for uker, John Scarne, and the French bringing the game up the Mississippi River from New Orleans for the entertainment of the interior masses. Dealing in twos and threes was the way even way back then, and ordering at the bridge was one of the ploys described. Going alone was called cards away, but the principle was the same as now. Fascinating book, and not confined to card games: Entries in the table of contents included chess, backgammon, domino, rouge et noir, lottery, and pharo. And not even confined to board games: Entries in the table of contents included also goff (or golf), cricket, billiards, tennis, boxing, horse racing, archery, and the chapter immediately preceding the euchre chapter cocking. Cock fighting, that is. The book contained a reprint of an introduction to its 1838 edition in which the French card game écarté was introduced as one of a number of new Games, never before published. Todd and I are now looking for that 1838 edition and earlier editions, to see when euchre was a new Game, never before published. And then I found, corresponding with David Parlett and rereading his book The Oxford Guide to Card Games (1990), a mention of a book by the English actor and comedian Joe Cowell, Thirty Years Passed Among the Players in England and America, published in 1844 a year earlier than the Hoyles Games that Todd found in which Cowell recounted seeing passengers playing Uker and poker on a steamboat journey from Louisville to New Orleans in 1829. So now it is Cowells book that contains the first printed reference to euchre we know of although the 1845 Hoyles Games may be the first to spell it euchre. (The word Players in Cowells title, by the way, is surely a reference to actors, not to card players.) Parlett, you may recall, traced the origin of euchre to a game played in Alsace called Jucker or Juckerspiel, for which he found evidence recorded as early as 1808. Yes, yes, we know that Alsace is a department of France. But the people are Germanic. Alsatian immigrants constituted a large segment of the original Pennsylvania Dutch who were not Dutch, at all, but German. The German word Jucker is pronounced, in German, about the same as euchre is pronounced in English. Parlett suggested to me, in an e-mail, that the odd spelling of euchre might have been coined by someone thinking of the Eucharist when he heard the sound of the foreign word. Also, looking for used books on the internet, Todd Martin turned up two books on euchre not mentioned in Catherine Perry Hargraves History of Playing Cards and Bibliography (New York, 1966), and not previously mentioned in The Columbus Book of Euchre. One of them predated John W. Keller's The Game of Euchre (New York, 1887), which we previously thought might be the first book solely about euchre. They are The Law and Practice of the Game of Euchre by A Professor (134 pages, T. B. Peterson & Bros., Philadelphia, 1862 an 1877 edition with 10 additional pages was titled The Laws and Practice of the Game of Euchre to Which Is Added the Rules for Playing Draw Poker), and Euchre How to Play It (123 pages, ca. 1890, Griffith, Farran, Okeden & Welsh, London and Canberra). And the O.E.D. mentions an 1850 book titled The Game of Euchre, with its Laws (author and publisher not noted). It may be the first euchre book. The 1862, 1877 and 1890 books show up on http://used.addall.com and abebooks.com. They list Euchre According to Wergin also, at prices as high as $150; Gallaghers Winning at Euchre, at prices as high as $93, and The Columbus Book of Euchre, at prices as high as $28.75. Sounds like its time to go out of print and make some money. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
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