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Presented here are archives of euchre columns by Natty Bumppo, author of The Columbus Book of Euchre, published on line. |
White Buffalo, ahead 9 to 7, picked up the ten of dia- monds. The only other trump he had was the queen of diamonds, but he had the ace of spades and the ace- queen of hearts outside. Yeah, thats only one black ace; but stay tuned. |
Leespiller, on his left, led the ace of clubs.
Guess who took it with the ten of diamonds? Yup.
One for the Good Guys.
Guess what the White Buffalo led to the second trick? The ace of spades? The ace of hearts? Hell, no! He led his last (and first) trump, the queen of diamonds. Leespiller donated the left bower as Buffalos partner showed out (already, with nine of clubs) and Leespillers partner, Gordon McGourd, contributed the ace of diamonds (from ace-king). Lee then led the king of spades; Buffalos partner, Burro, ducked with the queen of spades; Gourdhead had to follow suit with the jack of spades (a bower, in any other color), and the White Buffalo cashed his ace. Two tricks to one. Now Buffalo led his ace of hearts. Lee, out of trump, dumped the ten of clubs. Burro, who never had any trump, dumped her queen of spades; and Gourd Head had to follow suit, with the nine of hearts. Gordon Gourd Head (who promptly booted White Buffalo from the table at the end of the hand) took the last trick, of course, with the king of diamonds (trump); but school was out. The game was over. What is so remarkable about this hand? Nothing, except the fact that White Buffalo played it right. He had two aces; and he got the trump out first, to make the aces good. Had he led the ace of spades instead of the queen of diamonds to the second trick, he would have taken the trick; but then the o-fays would have been sitting on him with the left, ace and king of trump. Yeah, he could still have led his last trump to the third trick; but, given his chicken lead on the second trick, do you think he would on the third? And what if Leespiller had had a void in spades? His left bower would have gone down on the ace of spades, and Gourd Head would have been sitting on the euchre with the two reamaining boss trump. What you accomplish by leading the little trump is a twofer: Dropping the opponents left bower and ace or king of trump on one trick. So, what if it was not a good idea to pick up the trump? What if youre euchred? Because the opps have the left and the right and the ace and the king, and manage not to play them all on two tricks. No big deal. Its only 2 points. Youre still in the game. If you turn that diamond down, youre at risk of an opponents loner. You have no suit stopped. Its the Bloomington corollary (to the Columbus coup) a safety play by the dealer, with a good chance to score. The main lesson is, lead trump, damn it when you make it. It promotes your aces. Heres the hand in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory in case you want to play with it. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
send the nine or ten when the queen is out against you?
The only thing that could have beaten his king was the ace (and, in this case, it was buried).
Then he could use the nine or ten of hearts to lead to his partners right bower.
He might as well have let the ten of clubs lead go. That would have been second hand low, for his partner, who did have the ace of clubs, after all (albeit not very effective against a trump from third chair). And, mistake No. 1? Not assist with four trump? The proscription is, Dont order a bower to your partner. Slotmans partner would have picked up the jack anyway, with two black aces and no black trump suit to run to. Trust your partner. With all the trump Slotman had, maybe his partner had a loner. There were three trump out, including the ace; and Slotman already knew his partner would have the right. When you see your partner turn up a bower, bite your tongue and JUST SAY NO. Or, with four trump, maybe Slotman should have gone alone himself. And played it like he had it. Coulda, shoulda, didna. But if you wind up playing the hand, dont send a boy (the nine of hearts) to do a mans job (the king of hearts). Heres the setup in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. Think about this: If the dealer has a black jack and either the ace or king of diamonds, he can turn down the jack of hearts with impunity and either euchre someone or help his partner. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
School was out.
Nor would it have done the Good Guys any good for Missy to have discarded her diamond on the second trick instead of her club. In that case Bart could just have let his partners king of clubs ride through to the dealer for an end play with his guarded left bower on the last two tricks. Had Bart let Reds king of spades take the first trick, Red would have had no opportunity to use his king of hearts; and the Good Guys would have made their point. Red would have led his king of clubs to Carls ace of hearts, and Carl would have taken Reds king with the right bower. Bart would still get another trick for the bad guys with his guarded left bower, but Missy would take the Good Guys third trick, and a point, with her ten of hearts on a spade, whoever led it (Bart or Carl). The theory is, if a maker in the dealers chair has to follow suit to the first lead, he is likely to have to follow again (wtih a typical three trump, two-suited hand). And thats exactly what happened here. Heres the hand set up for you in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory, where you can play with it. If the dealer can trump the second spade lead, your partner has the opportunity to overtrump him the dealer may not be able to afford to trump high, lest he lose a card he needs to draw trump. Heres a case where that works: Same pickup, same opening lead, same results on the first trick as in the first example; but give Red the left bower this time, unguarded; give Bart, his partner, the king and queen of hearts instead of the left-queen, and the king of diamonds instead of the queen, and give Carl, the dealer, the right bower and ace of hearts, the jack of spades, and the queen and ten of diamonds (Missy gets the same hand she had). Carl trumps the return spade lead this time, with the ace of hearts (he cant afford to go up with the right bower, and he cant trust his partner to overtrump Red after all, Carl is the one who made trump and if he did sluff his ten of diamonds, hed be unguarding his king). Red overtrumps with the left bower, and Missy tosses her little club. Two tricks for the Bad Guys, again. Red returns the king of clubs, as in the first example; Missy trumps, Bart overtrumps, and Carl is in a box again. He has to ruff with the right or its a euchre already. But hell lose a diamond to Bart before Missy can take another trick for the Good Guys with her other heart. If Bart had let his partners king of spades take the first trick or had led anything other than a second spade to the second trick, Carl and Missy would have been home free. Heres that hand in the Euchre Lab. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Stuffing euchres and loners down our chief opponents throat was fun, and euchring
him at least twice on his own loner calls was a particular pleasure (there are those, not
the least of them himself, who think he is a good player).
I was happy to be playing, so rare it is, with a partner who played well.
As you noted, one thing that worked well for us was my passing orderable hands as your partner when you had the deal. At least three times I had such as left-x with an outside ace of opposite color that I passed, that you made loners on. On the hand in question at the time I left, I was in third chair with both black bowers, the ace and ten of clubs, and the nine of spades when I passed a turned-up spade that Our Esteemed Opponent turned down. The score was 7 to 7. I could have ordered the spade and surely we would have scored maybe I could even have made a loner. But Our Esteemed Opponent wasnt turning anything down this morning; so I thought, what the hell, let him pick it up to give us two points and the deal. If he doesnt, weve still got a good shot at two points (and maybe even four) in clubs. He didnt pick it up; and, granted, you had no club. You would have had to pull Todd Martins full Eddy to have called next on that hand (and if OEO and his partner had had 8 points, next would have been the wrong call). You called diamonds, with three little king, ten and nine plus the ace and ten of hearts. You made it; and when I kidded you about calling the wrong color, you protested that the only help you needed was for me to have one trump because you had three with two winners outside. Not exactly. In the first place, between the ace and ten of hearts, only the ace is a sure winner, and then only if the trump are out and you have the lead. In the second place, the opponents had potentially three trump in one hand, including both bowers, even if I did have one (which I didnt, by the way), and potentially the lead on the fourth trick. Im not saying your green call was a bad call. It worked. All I said was wrong color. And thats all I was going to say, because I dont argue with success. Anyway, why didnt you order the spade? The dealers team had 7 points, and you had no sure trick. Wasnt it time for a safety, or donation? And since you didnt, why didnt I?. Heres why: When the opponents have 6 or 7 points and my partner passes in first chair, I am entitled to assume he has a sure trick; and if I have two sure tricks (and I sure did), then I should order from third chair. But my hand was so strong, I just didnt believe you; and, as I explained, I expected you to call clubs. So we both blew it. And scored. Im not arguing with success. If I had wanted to argue with success, I could have picked a few other bones with you: 1. There was at least one time I expected a trump lead from you, when I picked up, that you led an ace instead. Ill give you the benefit of the doubt on that. As I said, we were winning. 2. Another time, Our Esteemed Opponent went alone in hearts, as dealer, and you led the ace of diamonds (which OEO took with a small trump). Your lead did, in fact, squeeze me, because I had both black aces. Fortunately OEO was short and his loner was stopped anyway. 3. And another time, when we had seven points you turned down a jack of diamonds that I had passed holding left-ten and a black ace. I did not order because, even though a loner has diminishing returns at 7 points, it will end the game; and I had next stopped. But I had no suit to call in black, and ultimately it was a pass hand. Lucky for us. The only way you could have had everything stopped, though, was to have held three hearts to the ace with two black cards of different suits, one of them a jack. Perhaps you did. I did not mention any of these hands, at the time, and I gave you the benefit of the doubt on all of them, because I dont argue with success. You just dont need to get huffy when I suggest wrong color or otherwise that there might have been a better way to play a hand. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Discarding trump, part 1 May 1, 2009 [Note: This column revisits an issue discussed in my column published September 5, 2003. Also, it has generated some criticism, which will be discussed in my next column. NB] A reader wrote: |
I ordered up the dealer to go alone.
I led the right bower, and the dealer did not follow suit.
I called a renege and threw in my cards.
The dealer then showed the rest of his hand, and it appeared that he had discarded the
card I had ordered up.
The other players agreed that you can discard any card. I didn't agree because the dealer was ordered to pick up, which means it must be in his hand. How many points should be given? Who should get the points? Why? Can you discard the card that was ordered up? |
Four points, for the loner. Its a
little complicated how we get there. Stay
with me.
The dealer can discard anything he wants to, including the card ordered up. I do it all the time when Im the dealer and the loner has the lead, if I have only one little trump and four suits. Ive never seen any really good reason to do it, until now. But if it addles the maker to distraction, its a good idea. Order up means order up. It means the dealer must pick up the card, thereby establishing trump. It does not mean that he must keep it, or that he must play it if he doesnt have it. There is no rule on what the dealer can or cannot discard. He has six cards to choose from when he is ordered. The reader should not have thrown his cards in. Theres a rule against that. And theres a rule also applying to whistlike games in general, not just to euchre that a revoke (renege) cannot be proved by exposing cards, without consent, before completion of the hand (see irregularities in many card game encyclopedias). A revoke is not even established until the accused plays a card of the suit denied; and although it might be called then, proof without concession or agreement must await a review of the tricks at the end of the hand. This rule is often unwritten, but heres the proof: To prove a revoke sooner would require premature exposure of the accuseds hand. Thus throwing in your hand on the first trick, as was done here, amounts to an assumption of a revoke (and a challenge therefor) before it can be proved. Theres yet another rule that applies: A player has the right to correct a revoke, if made, before the next trick is led. If you can call a revoke before the next trick is begun, either by throwing in your cards or by demanding that the accused expose his cards to prove it, you are depriving him of his right to atone. So, why does the loner score, if he committed an infraction by throwing in his hand? Because the dealer showed his hand, too. There is no penalty imposed on a loner exposing his cards prematurely, because he harms only himself by doing so. But the penalty on anyone else who exposes two or more cards simultaneously and prematurely (thereby potentially assisting his partner) is forfeiture of the remainder of the tricks. Had the dealer not exposed his hand on the challenge of a revoke (as he should not have), the hand should simply have been played out with the loners hand on the table, if he has not raked it into the deck. If he has, or refuses to play out the hand, then theres a euchre, and two points for the dealers team. Rules about one exposed card leading or playing out of turn are as old as the hills. The rule I cited about exposing two or more cards simultaneously and prematurely is not universal, but its been in The Columbus Book of Euchre since 2003. For a further discussion of this rule, see my September 19, 2003, and October 3, 2003, columns. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
2. Your even distribution in the off suits
indicates also that it is not highly likely that your partner has a void, let alone a
void in the suit you lead (you have only one chance in three of picking the right suit
even if your partner does have a void and a trump).
It is not at all unlikely, however, that your partner has an ace (or other boss), given your lack thereof and the fact that the maker has only two cards available for suit aces. I dealt 50 hands in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory to test this idea. I dealt the dealer the ace, king and ten of hearts and named hearts trump for him; I gave the two red bowers to the eldest hand along with the nine of clubs, ten of diamonds and jack of spades, and I let the lab deal the rest of the cards at random. You can play with it here. Only five of the 50 hands required a suit lead to score a euchre with a ruff by the ages partner. And, no surprise, in each of those five hands, a particular suit had to be led. Since the chance of picking the right suit is only one in three, the probability of getting a euchre with such a lead was not 5 out of 50, but one-third of 5 out of 50, or 1-2/3 out of 50, or 3-1/3 per cent. In four of the 50 hands, a trump lead was required to effect a euchre; and it guaranteed a euchre in two of those four hands. One of the trump leads required a particular suit lead to follow, reducing its value also to one-third of a hand; and one required either of two suits to follow, reducing its value to two-thirds of a hand. So, the adjusted value of euchres based on required trump leads is 3 (2 plus 1/3 plus 2/3), or 6 per cent, compared to the 3-1/3 per cent of 2/3 required suit leads. That may seem to be a statistically insignificant advantage in a 50-hand sample, but its a start on a pattern that can be more fully explored in a simulation; and heres what would tip the balance: A euchre could be effected in fully 20 other of the 50 hands with a trump lead followed by a suit lead (or vice versa, leading the suit first). In all 20 it was your partners ace (or other high card, if ace was buried) that made the euchre, not a ruff. In other words, all told it did not hurt to lead the trump first. You might argue, well, since a suit lead would work too in those 20 hands, this brings us back to a statistically insignificant difference between the requirement of a suit lead and the requirement of a trump lead. But in at least four of these 20 hands, the trump lead set up two suits in which your partner had aces, only one of which was worth anything before you stripped the dealers partner. While the dealer himself still might trump one of them in three of those hands, he would have to lead to the other, meaning you had two viable suit leads after the opening bower lead, not just one. In the fourth of those hands, both your partners aces actually became winners. So you can add these four hands as 2/3 value hands to the trump required column, since the trump lead gives you two bites at the apple, making the trump-over-suit advantage now 5-2/3 to 1-1/3, or 11-1/3 per cent to 3-1/3 per cent. This is getting close to statistically significant if its not there yet. On two of the hands, interestingly enough, you got a euchre no matter what you led (they both went in the 20 column). On another of the 20, you could euchre by leading a trump or a club, or by leading both bowers off the top and anything to the third trick. But leading both bowers is not recommended, because (a) one of them should be enough to strip one player or another, (b) you dont want to strip your partner if he has two trump, and (c) leading an offsuit to the second trick gives your partner an earlier opportunity to sort his hand. Until theres a valid simulation to show that the trump lead advantage reported above does not hold up over the long run, I see no reason not to lead trump (Damn it!) even on defense in this case. Its a better idea when the dealers partner assists than when the dealer picks up on his own. Its more likely, in that event, that the maker has three trump. The dealer might pick up for only two trump if he, not your partner, is the one with the aces. But you cant know that. You might as well figure him for three trump. Heres one of the hands (No. 35) that I found instructive (pictured above): In addition to the three trump assumed, the dealer has the queen of hearts (i.e., four trump) and the ten of spades. His partner has ace-queen of diamonds, queen-nine of spades and nine of hearts; and your partner has ace-king of spades, king-queen of clubs and nine of diamonds. An opening spade lead would get your partner his trick off the top. But a bower lead would set up both his black winners. The dealer would trump your clubs, of course, but eventually would have to lead to your partners ace of spades. In other words, opening with a bower on this hand doubles your chances of euchre. If you open with a suit, it has to be the spade. If you open with a bower, you can score the euchre by leading either the spade or the club to the second trick. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
when your partner is more likely to hinder the march than help it.
The criterion is having five nearly sure tricks and needing to keep your partner out
of the lead to secure them (having five sure tricks is no excuse).
An example proffered in my book for many years is not the best. At page 39 (page 60 of the first edition, page 40 of earlier printings of the second edition) I suggested going alone at 8 when, in first chair with the lead, you hold left, ace and king of hearts and ace and king of clubs. I have revised that in new printings, as of the first of this year, to left, ace and king of hearts with both black aces. You can play with this hand in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory and see what you think of it. If your opponents have the right bower, your partner cannot help you march. If your partner has the right bower, he can take the first trick and lead back a club or a spade to be trumped by the opponents, mashing the march. You should go alone to keep your partner out of the lead. His right bower will help you more by being taken out of circulation than by being played. If you cant draw all the opponents trump in the first three leads (because one opponent holds four), your partner cant help you draw it, and he cant help you march. One thing wrong with my original example left-ace-king with ace-king of a green suit outside is that an opponent with three trump to the right bower, and a void in your green suit, can euchre you if you have to trump his lead to the second trick, whereas your partner might be able to take that second trick lead with a higher card. Here, play with the original example in the Euchre Lab and see what happens. Thats much less likely if you have two of the three outside suits stopped, as when you have both green aces (the new proposal). Another hand to go alone on at 8 is right-left-queen of hearts with ace-king of clubs outside in the dealers seat. You dont want your partner trumping the first trick and unable (or too unwise) to lead trump to the second. If he leads a club before you have had a chance to draw trump, it could be ruffed by one of the opponents. If he leads a spade or a diamond, your queen of hearts could be overtrumped on your left. If its a spade or a diamond he trumped on the first trick, you could overtrump him, of course (and would be justified in doing so); but if he trumped with the king or ace, you would have to use a bower to overruff, diminishing your power to draw trump from the opponents. Its much safer just to take control of the hand yourself, from the first trick, by going alone. Heres the setup in the Euchre Lab. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Aside from trumping in and leading the right bower (which would work in this case,
but you can't be sure of that), how can you get a point?
And how can you be euchred? The first way you can be euchred is to lead that right bower and find the left bower guarded. That's not the case here, but hindsight is 20/20. Do you want to take that chance? The safer bet is to return the lead to the age, if you can. That would give you an end play into the pocket of your right-ace trump tenace. Therefore you lead not the right bower, but one of your little hearts. The age goes up with the ace, and you've made it! You think. Even if he leads back his king of hearts for a second trick, he has to lead to the fourth trick into your pocket. But the pone the ages partner, your right hand opponent is not sleeping. He trumps his partners good king of hearts on the third trick and comes back with his good club, and now youre trapped. If you ruff with your ace, the age overruffs with the left bower for the euchre. If you go up with the right bower, the age ducks and his left bower is good for the fifth trick. Or it could happen this way: The pone trumps his partners ace of hearts on the second trick. He leads back a club, and you have three choices (all bad): (1) Ruff with the right bower; (2) ruff with the ace of spades; (3) duck (play your other little heart). If you ruff with the right, the age ducks (saving his left bower), and youre dead (the ages left bower is good, and so is his king of hearts). If you ruff with the ace, the age overruffs with his left, and you are dead (the ages king of hearts is still good). And if you duck, so does the age. Then his partners club is good for the opponents second trick, and you have to trump his club lead to the fourth trick. If you trump with the ace, the age takes it with the left (for the third trick and the euchre); if you trump with the right, the age ducks (and takes his left for the fifth trick and the euchre). But what would give the pone the opponent to your right the bright idea to trump his partners ace on the second trick? He senses your weakness, from your weak lead; and hes looking for a way to force your trump without forcing his partners. And hes right. How does he know his partner has a second good heart to lead to the last trick? He doesnt. He has two high clubs, and hes just getting in to do his damage when he knows he can. You can fall into the same trap if the age starts out with hearts instead of diamonds and his partner trumps his second heart lead. You want to play with this hand? Heres the setup, in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
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