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. |
What did he discard? Why, the
nine of hearts, of course.
But if he had discarded the ace of clubs as he should have we would have stopped the loner on the first trick. I held the jack and nine of diamonds, the king and nine of hearts, and the king of clubs; and I led the king of clubs, only to see the maker take it with the queen of spades although my partner could have overtrumped had he discarded his ace of clubs. Heres the hand in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory if you want to play with it. A convention wont work if you dont play it. When the player to your right orders you up to go alone, discard something to give yourself a void (unless it was the nine ordered up, it is your only trump, and your only void choices are aces). And, if you have a choice of voids, discard next. Your partner will know to lead it if he, too, plays the convention. Yes, the maker could have squelched even the convention by trumping in with the ace of spades instead of the queen but he didnt have the ace of spades. Besides, trumping in with the ace (or the left bower), without all three top trump, would set up an opponents guarded king. It does make sense to hold two aces against a loner, but you lose the advantage of discarding when your partner has the lead and you dont create a void. And if you are the dealer, one of your aces will be squeezed out if your partner does not lead to one of them. Theyre not as pretty as they look, when you dont have the lead. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
o call clubs o call spades o call diamonds o pass Heres the evidence: |
Exhibit A: First hand Third hand |
Second hand Dealer |
(See it and play it in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. This is set up for a spade call; but you can change it to clubs or diamonds, or even pass, on the scenario page.) |
Exhibit B: First hand Third hand |
Second hand Dealer |
(See it and play it in Gerry Blues Euchre
Laboratory. This, too, is set
up for a spade call; but you can change it to clubs or diamonds, or even pass, on the
scenario page.) And here were the closing arguments: |
Natty Bumppo, Attorney for Spades:
Clubs work better in Exhibit A, and spades get euchred if the lead is the ace of diamonds and the leaders partner sluffs his nine of clubs. But if a club is led -- not clearly a bad lead from king-queen -- spades work. In Exhibit B, clubs get euchred and spades earn a point.
Return your verdict for spades: Spades
give you three potential winners, not just two:
Left-ten of trump and ace of clubs. You
have no suit ace if clubs are trump. Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, with all deference to learned opposing counsel, you should give a spade call your attentive consideration. But render your verdict for clubs. The hand has more trick-taking potential with clubs as trump, and you will have more control over the play with clubs as trump.
With clubs as trump, a diamond lead would probably set up what could be a third trick
in your own hand. You could pitch the
ten of spades on a heart lead and count on your partner on that trick.
On a trump lead you could go up with the right bower and return your low diamond.
With spades as trump, a heart lead would make you uncomfortable.
You would want to trump it, but with what? The
ten? The left bower? Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, with deference to both learned counsel, and in accord with the learned counsel for clubs, I would not term a spade call utter lunacy. But although it may give you three potential winners, it gives you also the potential to get blanked. And you have great assurance of taking two tricks in clubs. Even if the ace of clubs is snagged, there remains a chance for a diamond trick. And you know that old maxim, Count on your partner for a trick. Theres your third trick, and the point. You must not pass this issue you must return a verdict for spades or clubs: Theres a defensive benefit as well. Its fairly unlikely that your partner, having turned a heart down, has a red jack; and it is unlikely also that the opponent on your right has one, since he did not call next. And if those two dont have them, and you dont have them, guess who might? No third hand loners on your watch. Thank you. |
The jury retired, and deliberated, and came in with a split verdict somewhat in proportion to the weight of the closing arguments: Seven of the jurors had voted for clubs, and two had voted for spades. And the other three jurors had voted to pass (the two jurors dismissed as alternates immediately before the deliberations confided to counsel that they, too, would have voted to pass). And the Judge, after he had sent the jury back for further deliberation, snickered to counsel: Theres further confirmation that you should never trust your fate to a jury of your peers! Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
But there are times, experienced players know, to do it.
Many of those who do it and get away with it a time or two, however, are apt to think
its the thing to do and wind up overdoing it, to their disadvantage (and
their partners).
One of the times clearly not to do it, it would seem, is when the right hand opponent has the right bower. Dont lead trump to the right bower! (Even when you are the one who made trump.) If the opponent with the right has yet another trump i.e., a right-high tenace all he has to do is wait to see how high he needs to play to take your trick; and then he has another trick, too. So, heres when to lead trump on defense (and, to the right bower): I held the ace, king and queen of diamonds, and the jack was turned. My other two cards were the queen of hearts and the ten of clubs. My greatest fear was that the dealer would not pick up that bower she had turned. I could not order it myself without expecting to be euchred, and I had nothing to call if it was turned down (next, mabye on a prayer). Not to worry: The dealers partner ordered it up. I immediately led the ace of diamonds. Here was my thinking: With all the trump I had, and if the dealers partner had enough to order, surely the right bower was the dealers only trump; and I could drop it right away, and cost the maker one, too. I had no illusions that my lead would not make my left hand opponents left bower good: My intent was to establish my queen of trump, not my king. But it worked beyond my dreams: Even my partner followed suit (ten of diamonds). And the dealers partner laid down the left bower. Now I had the two boss trump king and queen and good reason to believe that the nine, if it was out, was in my partners hand (unless the dealers partner was a stone idiot a proposition of which we now already had some evidence). So, when the dealer led back the queen of spades, I ducked. Threw my ten of clubs. Second hand low, and all that. Maybe my partner had the ace. Dealers partner followed suit with king of spades, and here came that little nine of diamonds! Bingo! BOOM! Euchre. Turns out it was a poor order from the dealers partner. He had two suit aces to go with his singleton left bower (hearts and spades), but he had four suits. Another good reason not to order a bower to your partner. Ever. Hyperbole! So, why did the dealer return a spade? Because, thats all she had (besides the right bower). Jack, queen, ten and nine of spades. We dont know what she threw away to pick up that right bower ordered to her; but it could well have been the jack of clubs, which did not show up in the play. Would she have picked that right bower up had her partner not ordered it? I would have. Although she would have had a loner in spades, and help for her partner in clubs, she would have had no defense at all to a call in next. And she had no way to know that I was sitting there with three diamonds, not three hearts. But thats another story: Dont turn down a right bower (see page 40, The Columbus Book of Euchre, second edition). Just dont do it! Hyperbole! If she had picked up that right bower on her own instead of having been ordered, I would have been much less inclined to lead trump: No way to strip her, no guarantee of stripping her partner, big chance of stripping my partner, virtually no likelihood both bowers would have fallen on the same trick. (The score was 3 to 2, dealers teams favor, in case anyone thinks thats important.) Playing this hand was a lot of fun. Here it is in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory if you want to play with it. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
(Whatever you lead to open a hand, dont lead the suit turned down. Theres a reason the dealer turned it down. He doesnt have any. He will trump it if you lead it. This is so elementary that this whole paragraph is in parentheses. I only added it because there was some space left over on this page and I got an e-mail from an expert who mentioned that he had never seen this admonition in any euchre book. So, here it is. Like all rules, this one has exceptions, of course. Dont ask.) |
I ran it by Redd Dogg. Of course,
he said, you mean to say that the chances are more than average that the dealer
will have none of what he turned down.
Playing the percentages, it is best not to lead the turndown.
Well, of course. But instruction to the uninitiated, especially gains advantage from hyperbole. Thus, He doesn't have any, Never lead the suit turned down, Never order up anything you cant catch, Never trump your partners ace, Never go alone with 8 points, Never sit between the markers, etc., etc. Dont ask. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
I would play the ace of diamonds. My
hand does not have much value if one of my diamonds doesnt take a trick.
The ace tells my partner I have no trump and have the king (boss diamond) to help with,
if diamonds are ever led. My hearts are
worthless; and if I played one of them on that first trick, my partner might take that
as a signal I have higher hearts, which would be a wrong signal to give.
Another reader, Joseph J. Cravero, essentially agreed: If we do not have 8 points, he said, then I tell everyone at the table I have the king of diamonds and three remaining red cards by dumping the ace of diamonds, since that king of diamonds is the only help I have for partner, as Dwend suggests. Joe said his partner should know that he better lead trump to pull some from both opponents (unless he has right-ace-ten, in which case he leads away from right-ace for the surest route to a point). Strike the 8 points exception and the parenthetical phrase at the end of the last sentence, and we now have what Paul McCreary (Redd Dogg) was thinking. The play of the ace of diamonds is necessary to induce the dealer to lead out trump when he otherwise might not. And heres the rest of the story for the context. The dealer, in the hand from which Paul created this riddle, held just about what Joe posited in the parenthetical: Right-king-ten of trump and queen-ten of diamonds. When he takes that opening ace of clubs with the ten of spades, he ordinarily better not lead trump (as Joe suggested in the parenthetical). If his partner has not given him a signal, he cannot necessarily count on that partner for a trick; and the prudent thing to do is to go for an end play get out with a small card (as Joe suggested in his parenthetical) and hope that he loses the trick to his left rather than to his right if his partner cannot take it. Thats a two-out-of-three shot. But when he sees that red ace sluffed by his partner, he knows that he can safely lead trump. He does not have to rely on an end play for the point, and he can shore up his partners king of diamonds by taking a round of trump first. This is true (but not as sure) even if he holds no diamonds to lead to partner: Chances are, the opponent who takes the third or fourth trick will lead a diamond if the dealer doesnt. And in this case, because the dealer has two diamonds, he even gets to cash his own queen of diamonds for the fifth trick and two points. Heres the setup in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. Joe asked, What is the score? If we have 8, I keep the ace and king of diamonds for the last two by dumping the ten of hearts and hope that the diamonds can take two tricks for march and game. Redd Dogg and I disagree. Having eight points is not a situation of desperation: Better to ensure getting one point than to take a chance on two (and, concomitantly, a chance on getting euchred). The time to take a big chance on two is when you are way down, like 9 to 3 their favor. And in the hand presented, sluffing a heart actually sabotages the two-point try. The dealer has to go for the end play and leads the diamond at trick 2, and the opponent on his right gets the trick with a trump. You still get the point; but the way to get two points (in this scenario, at least) is by sluffing the ace of diamonds on the first trick. Joe said also, Partner should know that I have no trump regardless of which red card I pitch. Dwend said the same thing, essentially (The ace tells my partner I have no trump . . . ). But thats not exactly true; and Joe himself pointed that out, however inadvertently, by what he said right before that: The ace of clubs is a weaksuit lead, and partner should be able to trump. In the dealers eyes, his partner might merely have been playing second hand low instead of trumping, even though an ace was led. Generally you should not trump the first trick if you cannot lead trump back to the partner who made it. Ace and king leads create exceptions to that maxim; but, depending on the score, and recognizing that the ace of clubs came from a weak suit (next), you might be right not to trump that lead even though you can. So: Any red card does say that you have no more than one trump, and that you probably have none; but it does not necessarily say that you dont have any. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
My kings were squeezed Part 2, July 16, 2004
Tell me, I said in my last column, in which I reported that my kings were squeezed. And several readers told me. |
The most telling telling came from a reader calling himself Blake (and/or
bauerpower200). He wrote:
You allowed them to be squeezed. By my understanding you should very well have set this hand. You had done perfectly up until trick 4. You had two guarded kings, and you had made one of them boss. You must stick with that one and either live or die with it. . . . On trick 3 you did fine by throwing the small spade and unguarding your king of spades. Your whole point in leading the low club was to set up your king as boss, and this you achieved. But on trick 4 you abandon it and save the king of spades. You played the numbers game and got burned by it . . . . You have good reason to believe that first is void in one suit, since he has called . . . . Well, as Blake indicated in that last paragraph, saving the king of clubs instead of spades fits the minimum suits hypothesis as well as the idea of saving a boss. A trump maker even one going next is more likely to have two or three suits than four. And already we have seen three; so we can reckon another club more likely than a spade. Heres the scenario again, postulated in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. Just for fun, swap the makers ten of clubs for your partners queen. The result is not pretty. For even more fun, bury the ace of clubs and give the maker the queen and the ten (and your partner the nine, replacing it with the ten of diamonds in the makers partners hand). In this scenario its not so clear. It still makes sense to keep the king of clubs by the minimum suits hypothesis (but if the makers remaining club is the ace and not the ten, the jig is up). And the argument for saving the king of spades (this is hindsight) is that the makers partner does have the queen of spades. See what Im doing? In keeping with the principle Never apologize, I am looking for a way to blame my partner. Setting up a king, by the way, is a tactic that will work on occasion; but leading the jack of clubs to set up the king was not the whole point of the lead to the second trick. Setting up a king works most often leading through strength, not leading to strength (unless you have a king-queen to lead from). I led the jack of clubs not just to set up the king but also in hope that one of the black kings would fly e.g., the maker himself might have set up my king of spades by leading the ace on third trick (or it might have been boss all day as, in the initial scenario given, it was once trump were gone). Thanks for writing. - - - Heres Redd Dogg riddle No. 37: Your partner has picked up the ten of spades, and the ace of clubs is led. You hold ace and king of diamonds and queen, jack and ten of hearts. What do you play? Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
My kings were squeezed Part 1, July 2, 2004
Ron burst into my house, a little early for the euchre game, and white as a sheet, but nonetheless full of excitement and life. |
Natty! he exclaimed.
Ive found something better than dope!
He had been traveling a back road at 80 miles an hour and missed a curve hidden by a hill, and had ridden a barbed wire fence (at 80 m.p.h.) in his Chevy Suburban for about 80 yards before regaining the road (and maintaining direction and an upright position). Gave him quite a rush. Well. I have found something more frustrating than having your aces squeezed you know, when you have two aces off suit, and the maker leads trump one more time, and you have to decide which ace to sluff (and its always the wrong one)? Its having kings squeezed. Heres the deal: A ten of diamonds is turned by my partner, and the first player passes. I am holding both black bowers, both of them guarded by kings, and the left bower (jack of hearts). I dont think so. I pass too. The third player has nothing, and passes. My partner holds two queens one of them being the only diamond in her hand, the other being her only club. She, too, passes (and wisely, in my opinion. Her other cards are the ace and ten of hearts, which is next, and the ten of spades). So the first player calls next, as he should, and leads it, as he should. His trump holding is king and queen of hearts. His other cards are the ace and ten of clubs and the king of diamonds. My jack of hearts is now the right bower, not the left; and it is still the only trump I have. So, I take the first trick, as the other opponent plays the nine and my partner plays the ten. Not believing in leading a guarded king, so early in the hand, I lead back one of my black jacks. At random I choose the club. The opponent on my left plays the nine of clubs (she has nothing, remember); my partner plays the queen, and my lead finds its way to the first players ace of clubs for the second trick. Now, he has to decide: Another trump? King of diamonds? Ten of clubs? Not a pretty choice. The ten of clubs would be a disaster for him. He does not know that, but he does not lead it. His king of diamonds would take a trick but would get him euchred eventually; and, fortunately for him (and fortuitously), he does not lead that, either. He leads trump again his last one. So already I am squeezed. I unguard my king of spades, playing the jack, and now hold two black kings. The other opponent has nothing, again (plays nine of diamonds), and my partner takes the trick, with the ace of hearts. Trick score at this juncture: We, 2; they, 1. And my partner leads the queen of diamonds, and the guy who called trump puts up the king, which is good, of course, for a two-to-two trick score, and I do not know which black king to throw away on the trick. Eeny, meeny, miny, moe, he played a club once befoe, but so did his partner. The percentage is with spades. I keep my king of spades. Down the drain goes my king of clubs. And opponent No. 1 takes the last trick with the ten of clubs, as there go my king of spades and my partners ten of spades (surprise! The other opponent played the queen of spades). Now the questions: 1. On the third trick, should I have gone for broke, throwing the king of clubs and keeping the king of spades guarded? Or was I right to keep both black kings? Tell me. 2. And on that fateful fourth trick, should my partner have led the ten of spades instead of the queen of diamonds? Theres one reason she should not have led the diamond: She had seen me play the jack of hearts, and if I had had a tall diamond to go with it, I would have had a reason to order the ten of diamonds to her and I hadnt. In fairness, however, she had seen me play two black jacks, which she might consider sufficient reason for me not to have ordered the diamond. (This begs the first question, I realize: If I had kept the king of spades guarded on the third trick, she would have seen me play only one black jack.) 3. And, on that fateful fourth trick, should I have coughed up my king of spades and kept the king of clubs? Tell me. (Hindsight not allowed.) If you want to play with the hand, here it is in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. (And, one reader told me. See next column.) Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
That is, you have all the aces off suit but only one small card and no stopper in the
suit turned. Do you order up, or do you
pass?
Eleven of those who responded to the poll said pass. I was among the two who said order it up. The mathematicians agree that the probability one of the opponents will cash a loner in this scenario is not better than 3½ per cent. One of the respondents to the poll calculated the probability at less than 3 per cent and reasoned further that he had a pretty good shot at scoring in next i.e., in diamonds if the heart was turned down. He pointed out that the dealer would have to have, in order to make a loner, at least three trump in addition to the one he picked up (the dealers partner would have to have four to begin with) and all without guarantee that the partner of the player with three aces, i.e., the player in third chair, did not hold the right bower (and that possibility was factored into the calculation). And even if an opponent had four trump without the right bower staring him down, the player with the aces had one chance in three to stop the loner on the first lead, and, that failing, still a 50-50 shot on the last trick with one of his other two aces (thats a 2-out-of-3 shot all day). So why, uh, er (ahem!) donate? In the first place, I would not call it a donation to order up in this situation. Its a safety play. Most donations are. They are donations only if they result in a euchre, and not all of them do. (Why dont they call a safety in football a donation? The opponents always score on a safety in football. Not so in euchre. By the way, I cannot resist pointing out that the opponents score on a safety in football is the same as it is in euchre: Two points.) In the second place, I am not one to invoke the safety as often as many players do. I think it is done too much (in euchre). This is not a case of ordering at the bridge. You have to be at the bridge i.e., you must have nine points to order at the bridge. And if you have nine points, and your opponents have six or seven, and you do not have a sure trick in the suit turned, you must order up. Thats ordering at the bridge. Its a matter of survival, with another chance to win, dealing, ahead 9 to 8 or, at worst, tied, 9 to 9. In the scenario of the poll, the score is 6 to 6. Discretion is allowed, and advised. Ordinarily I think that ordering with a high likelihood of being euchred (donating, if you will) should not even be considered unless the opponents have 6 or 7 points (or you have a huge lead to protect, like 9 to 3. And it should never be done when the opponents have four or five points). But all of the above is, for me, only part of the story on the poll question. First, analyze the hand: Three aces off suit with one small trump is not a good hand, except in support of a partner. There are too many suits (is that five, or only four?), and there are no bowers. I do not at all share the one respondents optimism over a next call (with ace-ten of trump and still three other suits) if the little trump is turned down. I find little likelihood the card will be turned down in the first place. And I find, from the hand held, not much better than a 50-50 chance of making it on next and not much less than 50-50 of getting euchred, for a net minus score, and not unlikely minus 2, even if you are lucky enough that everyone passes on the first round. Thats OK. Next is largely a defensive call in the first place: If you dont hit your partner, you hold the opponents until you get to deal. And you can afford a two-point setback at 6 to 6. But is it any better to be set back two points on a next call than on an order? The chance of losing to a loner may be relatively small, but the chance that someone will order, assist or pick up that ten of hearts for a point or a march is relatively high. It might be you or your partner. And if the opponents are the ones likely to make a point anyway (or maybe two, with a march), why not hold them to two with an order? Allowing them the chance at the loner could be fatal. Its not a "donation." Its an offensive tactic with defensive overtones (if youre an optimist. If youre a pessimist, its a defensive tactic with offensive overtones). Your chance of making the call is arguably as good as the opponents: Who has all the suit aces? Who gets to lead the first trick, with a trump, to clear out some other trump to make those aces good? The hand is actually better on the first round than on the second. On the first round it has three bona fide aces. On the second it has only two, as one of the three becomes a sophomore to two bowers in whatever suit is called. Why not take a chance on scoring and, at worst, holding the opponents to two points? It might put you down 8 to 6, but at least you win the deal (in the same game). You want to play with this? Try it in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
The lead, by David, was the jack of clubs.
Tex had to follow low, of course, and Davids partner, Lamb, ruffed with the
right bower as Ugly Bill dropped the king of clubs.
Lamb then led the ace of spades; Bill followed suit with his other black king; David
played the ten, and Tex took the trick with his left bower.
He led back his other trump, the ace of hearts (which was boss by then, of course).
Lamb was already out of trump, of course, and sluffed the nine of spades. Bill played the nine of hearts, and David played the queen. Lets count trump, now: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 played two out. We know where the ten is, remember? (thank you for not false-carding, Bill). And the king of hearts has not yet been seen. Tex then led the ace of diamonds; Lamb played the king, and Ugly Bill trumped with the ten of hearts. David overtrumped with the king and cashed the jack of spades for the euchre (catching Bills ace of clubs in the bargain). All Ugly Bill had to do to guarantee the point was to lay off his partners ace of diamonds on the fourth trick (yes, sluff his ace of clubs). If Tex ace of diamonds flies, that's the point. If David trumps it with the king, then Bills ten of hearts is good for the third trick and the point. Guaranteed. No risk. But, nope. Ugly Bill (rated 2168 on Yahoo!) trumped his partners ace not only with no good reason, but with a very good reason not to. You can see and play this hand in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. Idiot No. 26: My partner, Figmuffin (rated 2175 on Yahoo!), never led trump on his call or mine, and always led trump to the opponents call (dropping both our bowers on the same trick twice in the game). Believe it or not, it was a close game. But we lost. And as I was pointing out one of the reasons, Figmuffin booted me, with the admonition, Learn how to play the game! Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Mike asked him that very question after they marched for two points.
Because, Hank explained patiently, he was sick and tired of partners who interpreted all sluffs as demands for leads in the suit sluffed. The game was on Yahoo!, and Hank did not know Mike. Of course the correct play would have been to sluff the diamond loser if you could trust your partner. But Hank did not want to invite a diamond lead from his partner. He wanted to make sure his partner led trump. And if Mike had led his nine of diamonds as so many partners would have Bobbys Girl would have had to follow suit, but Sir Edwin would have clobbered Hanks ace with the nine of spades. Mike and Hank still would have got a point, but . . . . So, what did Mikey lead? No, he didnt even get that message. Instead of diamonds, or trump, he led the ace of clubs. That was even dumber, since clubs were next and even likelier than diamonds to be trumped by one of the opponents. But it was luckier, also: Hank had the good sense to clobber his partners ace of clubs with his ace of spades (trump) preventing Sir Edwins taking the trick with the nine of spades. And Hank then led back his left bower taking Sir Edwins nine of spades away from him (and his partners king of spades. Bobbys Girl showed out). Hanks ace of diamonds was quite safe now; he cashed it; and he led the little jack of diamonds back for his partner to claim with the right bower (taking Bobbys Girls previously guarded king of diamonds with it). As our friend Ryan Romanik would say, Lead trump, damn it! Had Mikey led the second trick with his right bower, Hank could have followed with the left bower; Mikes ace of clubs would then have been a much safer lead (and Hank could ditch his jack of diamonds then), and Mike could get back to Hank with the diamond or the trump either one for the last two tricks. Or, Mike could have made a more conservative trump lead, the king of spades. Either way, it works; and either trump lead tends to secure his ace of clubs and his partners likely ace of diamonds (which he nonetheless had reason to suspect, from his partners trump sluff). Next time Hank plays that hand with Mike, he will overtrump his partner and lead back the left bower. Maybe Mike will get the message then. Big trump are for taking little trump. And taking trump is for making aces good. Heres the hand in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory if you want to play with it. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Dirty deals
May 7, 2004
An amazing apology appeared recently in the messages of the Yahoo! group Euchre 4 Money: |
To all of my old friends that know me, I apologize for the methods
I used to win tonight. However,
when in Rome . . . !
I abhor . . . this type of play while playing with friends, but I was accused of playing dirty. With the old group, this type of play was unnecessary; however with the new type of players that are playing in our club today, I find it necessary to play as they do. I am disturbed to be forced to play against my old friends this way . . . . I am truly sorry . . . . |
Well! I had not attended that tournament, and
this was the first I had heard of this incident, and it sounded, well just
awful!
And I was quite curious. So, in a posted reply, I asked this guy just exactly what he (and the new type . . . playing in our club) did. And I pointed out, in passing, that the only way to cheat on line is by conversation with your partner either out loud in the chat line, or, worse, privately, by telephone, instant message, sitting in the same room, etc. After all, you cant renege on line; you cant steal the deal on line; you cant stack the deck or deal off the bottom on line; you cant lead or play out of turn on line. And the player replied, No mention was made about cheating. . . . I was called a dirty player because I employed the tactic, that has been used against me, of donating. My opponent feels that this is dirty playing, but when in Rome . . . . I again apologize to my friends, but this type of play has now been cast upon us. Oh. What it was, was (as Andy Griffith might say) donating. That's dirty? I assured the guy that I was not making any accusations; I just wanted to know what had happened. But when I was growing up, as I recall, we saved the word dirty for cheaters. I even belonged to a baseball team called the Sandlot Dirties, and our motto was, Cheating never wins but it helps! Just to be sure, I looked up dirty in my dictionaries. None of them used the word cheating in the definition, but they got close enough: unscrupulous, dishonest, illegal, etc. Donation is ordering or picking up or calling trump with the expectation (even with the intention, if you take the word donation seriously) of getting euchred, to prevent a suspected loner against you. I.e., you are donating two points to the opponents to prevent their scoring four. Its called the Columbus coup in Southern Indiana (and some kind of coup is probably a better term than donation because, even when you call or order with the expectation of getting euchred, you should nonetheless play to score; and sometimes you do). Its probably overdone, but its a legitimate stratagem used on appropriate occasions by all good players. I have written elsewhere in my book and in other columns about when and when not to donate or stage a coup, and I wont belabor the stratagem here. (See, e.g., pages 33-35 of The Columbus Book of Euchre and the columns Ordering at the Bridge and Trust Your Partner.) I had no idea anyone considered it dirty. But, then, I have always been curious about those protective rules, common in some regions, allowing defending alone when the maker is not going alone (that will stop donation in a hurry; its a rule on Playsite), prohibiting the making of trump without one already in your hand, requiring the dealer to discard before he picks up the turned card, prohibiting the lead before the discard, prohibiting the dealers partners ordering up (without going alone) that sort of thing. I guess those things are dirty, huh? And if those things are dirty, where does that leave sandbagging? You often see messages in the games rooms lobby chat such as, Dont play with so-and-so hes a bagger! As if thats a social or legal no no. Sandbagging is lying back with a possibly or probably makeable hand, hoping an opponent will call trump in your suit so that you can get twp points (with a euchre) for the price of one. (The term, as used in games play, derives probably not from the use of a bag of sand to fortify a levy or a bunker, but from its use as a blackjack something you use to whop someone on the head after sneaking up on him from behind.) I dont get it: If its within the rules and helps you win, what's wrong? Both the apologist and I received e-mail from a mutual acquaintance who had read the exchange on Euchre 4 Money: Alls fair except for out-and-out cheating, she remarked. Another message on Euchre 4 Money congratulated the guy on a game well played: With the score as it was, it was an intelligent maneuver on his part. The only thing wrong is, you have to be careful with these stratagems; they can backfire on you. One common form of sandbagging is a dealers turning a card down, with a makeable hand in the suit turned down, but with equal or better strength in next. That doesnt help much when next is not called by your left hand opponent, however. Few tactics are risk free. Heres something that is not sandbagging but frequently draws the accusation: Player to left of dealer has two jacks in the suit turned; all pass to the dealer; dealer picks up and gets euchred. "What!" he or his partner will yell. You had both bowers and didnt order? Bagger! Well, hell no, you dont order with that. You wait for the dealer to pick up, if he will, to give you a good shot at scoring two points. If the dealer turns it down, you can still score one, two, or even four points in next. Its not bagging. But all kinds of good play will get you a bad reputation in the lobby. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Joe asked these secondary questions:
If you were the dealers partner, would you have ordered up the queen of clubs? No. You have one sure trick and four suits. Theres a reason for that Canadian rule that the dealers partner must go alone if he orders, and thats to encourage him to keep his mouth shut. If you were the dealer, would you have picked up with two aces off suit but no defense against spades? Probably. Depends on the score, and whether you can afford a euchre (you can, at 0-0). With two red aces, its an even better shot. But you have at least three suits after you discard, and your trump are few and small. Countin on your partner for two tricks? Your aces give you a pretty good loner defense whatever is called. If you were left of the dealer, would you have donated, or called diamonds, or spades? Donate? No way. Thats a long shot at best, and so what if youre down 4 to 0 with the deal? The game is young. Play cards. Diamonds? Why? Sure, you have three; but where are the red bowers? Where are the black aces? Chances are much better than two out of three that one of those red bowers is in one of your opponents hands, and chances arent bad that both are in the opponents hands. Did they want those black clubs? And what good are your spades with red trump? You dont even have an ace. Maybe your spades will take one trick. Long shot. Spades? Absolutely. Theyre next (and this is why making it at third hand was a fluke. The call should never have got to the dealers partner, let alone to your partner). Next is a call for my partner: If you dont have a bower, there is a good chance he does; the opponents turned that color down. And even if you get euchred, its no big deal; you may have stopped a loner in the opposite color, for the same reason your opponents shunned the color you are calling. Heres Joes scenario set up again in the Euchre Lab with a call in spades (next) by the player to the left of the dealer. Play with it. Lead a spade, as you must do when you call next. And you should lead low trump (easy enough in this scenario; thats all you have) because your partner may have an unguarded bower: The only indication you have is what the opponents do not have, not a direct indication of what your partner does have. Joe will take the first trick with the ace of spades (unless his partner stupidly goes up with the left bower, in violation of the second hand low principle). Only if Joe returns a lead of the lowly ten of clubs and you trump it (forgetting second hand low) will you be euchred. And Joe and his partner have the top two trump in this scenario. Thats not the usual case. You have to play for the average scenario, not one thats given. The only hand you know of the four at the table is your own. One group member said, " . . . Id call diamonds. Why? Because Ive been keeping mental track of when next works and when not. Have been doing this for several months now. Next seems to have no significance when the card turned down is lower than an ace. . . ." There is a reason to call diamonds in this situation, but thats not it. The reason is, you have to keep your opponents guessing. If you always call next when it has a prayer, an alert dealer will suck you in to a next call that he can handily euchre even though he might have been able to make a point in the suit turned up. When I call off color in this situation I explain to my partner, Ya gotta call green once in a while just ta keep em honest. Empirical evidence can be convincing (look at what the American Cancer Society did with smoking and lung cancer), but it is no substitute for probability. And one players mental track . . . for several months will not pass many statistical tests. The pip of the card turned down has little to do with the application of next; its the color that counts. The question is whether the dealers team has a bower in the color of the turned card (a downturn is a probable not). Thats easy to know if its a bower turned down, but a bower turned up is rarely turned down. If youre calling next only when a bower or an ace is turned down, youre not taking full advantage of the principle (and if the dealer who turned that bower down is a good player, thats particularly when you had better be on your guard against getting sucked in). There is a question also of what is meant by when next works: It works not only when it scores; it works also when it gets euchred but stops a loner in the opposite color. And it works in ways not so easily seen, as when it induces the opponents to pick up cards they dont want, or to turn good cards down in situations in which they think there is more profit in a chance of sucking you in. Diamonds do work better than spades in the scenario Joe gave us (you can see that, too, in the Euchre Lab). But that, too, is a fluke. The lady left of the dealer does not know that her partner has the left bower when she calls diamonds, and she has not nearly as much reason to expect it as she has to suspect that her partner has a bower in spades. The proability her partner does not have the left bower in diamonds is 72 per cent, and the likelihood is even greater than that, given the opponents rejection of clubs. What if the opponents have both red bowers? Not unlikely. Whats worse, what if one of the opponents has both red bowers? Or either of them has two diamonds? Its not so pretty. You dont analyze a call, when youre playing, on the basis of knowing whats in all four hands; you must analyze it on the basis of what is in your hand alone, and what is likely to be in the others. Heres a case where next will work well even when the green diamonds will work better. Most of the time green won't. And what if your partner is sitting over there with both black bowers and three little hearts: Is he going to be disappointed with your diamond call, or pissed? Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
So, Joes partner called spades.
Well, thats fine. Joe had help
for him, and he led it the left bower.
Joes partner overtook it with the right bower as everyone followed suit, and he
led back the ace of spades. He caught
the opponents last trump and Joes too, the king.
The opponents had all the offsuit winners, and they euchred.
Joe and his partner were down 9 to 7 now, at Joes deal.
The problem was not only in calling trump, and it was not in leading trump the first time. The problem was in exhausting the partnerships ruffing power. Yes, lead one round of trump to disarm the opponents. But lead a second round only if you have winners to cash. The caller, after leading his ace of trump, had no more aces and no more trump. He had no idea whether his partner had an ace (and he could be pretty sure Joe had no more than two trump to begin with, since it was next and he didnt call it). What he had to do in that situation was give Joe and himself a chance to ruff the other suits separately and he didnt. This is a general principle in playing next (or across): Lead trump only once. When the player left of the dealer does call next (or the dealers partner goes across), its often thin: Its for my partner because partner is more likely to have one or both of the missing bowers (than the dealer who turned that color down or than the dealers partner, if the call is next, or than either opponent, if you are the dealers partner calling across, because the dealer eschewed the original color), or its to stop the opponents going alone in the other color. Its as much a defensive call as an offensive call (which is the reason Joe, in the scenario above, passed; he already had all the defense he needed). And next should be played the same way on offense as on defense, whether called by the player left of the dealer or by his partner, unless the one with the lead has winners in suits or a fistful of trump. The ace and king of trump held by the team that made trump, in this case, would have been winners of the second and third tricks necessary for the point but only if they did not fall on one trick. And thats what happened when the maker led trump again on the second trick. The opponent with the suit power could have achieved the same result by leading trump after taking the second trick with a red ace or the king of clubs. It was not a real good idea for Joes partner to take the first trick, and it probably was not a real good idea for him to call trump on this hand in the first place. In general it is risky to call trump with fewer than three, especially at third hand; and he could have given Joe credit for a good defense just from the fact that Joe passed. You can play with this hand in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. -- Heres the answer to Redd Doggs Riddle No. 8, posed in the last column: Remember the query: You are playing for a million dollars or the loss of a finger, the score is 9-9, and you have the right-A-Q of trump and no good suit cards: How do you play against the left-K-10-9 of trump and an outside ace? You lead losers (until you have two tricks in). Make the defenders lead to you so that they dont catch your trump. Rob Wilk submitted the first correct answer, and his prize is [drum roll] he still has all his fingers. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Paul says hes writing a relatively mid-level euchre book that will
include some euchre heaven hands for example, jack, ace and king of
diamonds and ace and king of hearts, sitting in first chair with a heart turned up.
Or, even better, both red jacks, the king of hearts and two diamonds, with the ace of
hearts turned. Of course,
Paul says, you would never order the dealer; and you would have almost a sure
four points if he turns the card down.
Holding four jacks is almost euchre heaven, Paul says, because you can make trump depending on your fifth card; but often four bowers does not mean a sure point or euchre. Well, thats a lot of fun, fer shure! But I would call four jacks a euchre hand, not euchre heaven. Bad things can happen even if you get to name trump on your fifth card, and sometimes the call will not get to you and your two bowers will be one trick short of a euchre. But I would not mind playing a whole game with that holding every hand, especially at stick the dealer. I might not even open my mouth the whole game. In addition to his dreams of euchre heaven, Paul has a collection of euchre puzzlers I call Redd Doggs Riddles. Heres Redd Dogg Riddle No. 8 (see illustration above): You are playing for a million dollars or the loss of a finger, the score is 9-9, and you have the right-A-Q of trump and no good suit cards: How do you play against the left-K-10-9 of trump and an outside ace? (Redd Dogg and I are not gonna give prizes like that puzzle guy on NPRs Weekend Edition Sunday, but I do welcome submissions. Answer in next column which may be delayed, on account of vacation.). Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Chardonnay, on her left, led the queen of hearts; Fannies partner, Ruffy, covered
it with the ace, and ChevyCoupe, the right hand opponent, ruffed with the left bower.
Without hesitation Fannie covered the left with her right and led her king of diamonds.
And got euchred. Chevy took the second trick with the ace of diamonds (Ruffy had a diamond and no trump anyway; he was out of action after playing his ace of hearts on the first trick). Chevy then led the queen of diamonds. Fannie, worried about an overruff on her left, ruffed with the king of clubs as Chardonnay sluffed the queen of spades. Fannie then led her ace of spades; Chardonnay trumped it with the ten and led back the queen of trump, and school was out. You can play with this hand in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. OK, back to the drawing board. What if Fannie had led the ace of spades? That works, but it does not work if Chardonnay is void in spades. What if Fannie had led trump? The nine of clubs gives Chardonnay a gift trick with the ten and sets up her queen of trump when Fannie has to use her king to trump Chevys lead back of the queen of diamonds after he takes his ace. The king of clubs would take a trick, and the ace of spades would still work; but thats risky: You dont know where the ace of clubs is (turns out it's buried, but who knows? If its in either opponents hand, Fannie is in big, big trouble leading clubs). What if Fannie had not overtaken Chevy's left bower on the first trick (let the baby have it)? Its a wonderful opportunity to ditch that loser king of diamonds, and then she can ruff either red suit low (thats all she has in trump besides the right: low) meaning, in particular, diamonds, since Chevy has no hearts to lead. If Fannie gets in the drivers seat that way, she can draw one round of trump to shore up her ace of spades (and one round might be enough, with the left gone). Or if she gets in with the ace of spades, she has three trump left to the right with which to take two tricks. So, what if Chardonnay overtrumps a diamond, or ruffs the spade? At least that would give Fannie an end play with at least two trump headed by the right bower (and she would have got an end play from Chardonnay also in the original scenario had she trumped Chevys queen of diamonds with the nine of clubs instead of the king). Its something to think about with a marginal hand: Let the baby have it. And its a decision that some would call situational: If you need only one point or simply cannot afford a euchre (say you have 9 points or your opponents have 8, or both), its the safest way to play it (its not guaranteed, but the possibility of getting squeezed for the euchre is remote). If, on the other hand, its 9 to 8 the other guys favor, you might choose to go for broke. And you might as well go for broke if youre way down, like 9 to 3 or worse. [The initial issue of this column has been revised to correct errors pointed out by Tom (Ten OClock) Scolar.] Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
Setting up a king January 16, 2004
Heres an example of how leading away from a king can save the day. SmoothPapa, the dealer, picked up a heart and declared alone. |
Hand left of dealer heart picked up alone |
BartSimp, in the lead, held the king and ten of spades, the king and jack of clubs
and the queen of hearts. He knew better
than to lead trump to a loner (many advanced players on Yahoo!
dont know that); and which black suit to lead was, essentially, a toss-up.
Eeny, meeny, miny, mo; he chose spades.
And led the ten, not the king. His partner, Bluebird, followed with the queen of spades (which was as good as Barts king anyway), and Papa took the trick with the ace of spades. Papa proceeded to draw trump with the two bowers and the king (Bluebird had to cough up her ace on the second round); and Bart held tight to his king of spades, giving up his clubs (including the guard to his king on the second draw). And, sure enough, Papa was two-suited with three trump: On the fifth trick all he had left was his second spade the jack which fell to Barts king, stopping the lone march. There was no better opening lead. Bluebird could have trumped a club, but Papa could overtrump. The king of spades would have drawn Bluebirds only spade, the queen, making Papas jack good for the fifth trick. A trump lead actually could have worked; but it is too stupid even to consider, and Bart would have had to decide on the second trick which king to protect (or to hold them both for good luck, which would not have arrived). He maximizes the defense with the little spade lead because it gives his partner a chance to trump and it saves his king for a possible trick. You can play with this hand in Gerry Blues Euchre Laboratory. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
These were the results of the poll:
50 per cent said to call diamonds. 33 per cent said to call hearts. No one voted to call clubs. 17 per cent said, Pass. I was with the 17 per cent who said, Pass. Had I had to call trump (by rule), I would have called diamonds, as 50 per cent would have. Here is the reasoning: Whatever you call, if you make it, will probably get you only one point. But if your opponents call, you are sitting on them, for two possible points. If your partner calls, you can help, and maybe for two points (maybe even likely, since your partner would have to be pretty strong to call, considering what you have). And you can get euchred if you call, even in diamonds, for two points in the opposite direction (we call that a three-point turnaround if youre going for a point). This is the classic euchre hand so called not because it likely will be euchred, but because it is so good for euchring an opponent (not to mention for helping a partner). It has every suit stopped. I almost always pass such a hand. Yes, many of them result in passed hands (without STD); I am aware of the danger that this hand will pass altogether, and that then you will not realize the almost sure point you have in diamonds, and I am aware of the danger that the opponents might score a point in clubs. But, so what? Its only a point, and its only 3 to 3. Im going for two points by passing. And I get the deal if everyone else passes. P.S. I said I almost always pass the euchre hand. The exceptions are based upon the timidity levels of the other players, if you know them your partners as well as the opponents. Natty Bumppo, author, Borf Books http://www.borfents.com |
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