“Method” euchre – October
11, 2002
Sick and tired of drawing stone idiots for partners in euchre games on line, and wondering
where they came from, and how they managed to survive the ratings wars, I decided to become
one.
I created a new screen name on Yahoo! and resolved to play it by a rigid formula that,
while not totally stupid on its face, defies conventional euchre wisdom and discretion.
This is the formula (and read on past it to see the amazing results it gave me):
1.
Join any game found open, without regard to
any other

player’s rating or won/lost ratio, not even your partner’s.

Give preferences to three-player tables when available

(in order to begin play as soon as possible) and “stick

the dealer” tables (because a dumb player can rely on

luck a little more with STD).
2.
Call trump only if you have at least three
trump including a

bower (except when “stuck” as the dealer), and always

call trump on three with a bower.
If your
partner is the

dealer, count the card turned up in this formula in deter-

mining whether to order.
3.
On offense – whether your partner has
made trump or you

have – never lead trump if you have an ace of another suit.

Always lead an ace off suit if you have one.
If
you have

more than one ace, lead the one from the suit you have less

of (in the case of a tie, see No. 8 below).
Color does not

matter.
If the ace has been played on
a prior trick (by you

or anyone else) and you have the king, treat it as an ace.
4.
If you have no ace to lead on offense,
always lead your

highest card, regardless of color, regardless of the number

of cards you hold in its suit, and regardless of whether it is

trump or not (in the case of a tie, see No. 8 below).
5.
On defense, always lead trump
if you do have an ace

in another suit; and always lead your lowest trump (even

if it unguards a left bower).
Lead an ace only
when you

are out of trump; lead another card only when you have

no ace in a suit other than trump; and then, as in No. 4

above, simply lead your highest card, regardless of its

color or the number of cards you hold in its suit (in the

case of a tie, see No. 8 below).
6.
Do not trump your partner’s ace
or overtrump your

partner (except to overtrump an opponent who has

overtrumped your partner), and never undertrump;

but otherwise always trump if you are void in the suit

led (and have trump).
Always use your
lowest trump

unless an overtrump is needed at the time you play.
7.
In discarding when picking up and in
sluffing on a

trick on which you can neither follow suit nor trump

(or have no reason to trump), throw a singleton if

you have one lower than an ace or a king; otherwise

just throw off your lowest card, regardless of color

or number of cards you have in the suit (in the case

of a tie, see No. 8 below).
8.
If none of the rules above dictates your
play – e.g.,

in deciding which ace to play if suits are equal, in

following suit on a trick you are already beaten on,

or in deciding what to sluff if you cannot follow suit

or trump, or in deciding what to discard if you are

picking up – always select the playable card farth-

est to the left in your hand.
(Note:
Yahoo! sorts

the cards lowest to highest, and by suits, left to

right, except for the left bower, which remains in

place in its nominal suit instead of going to the trump

suit it joins.)
9.
Do not go alone without both bowers and
at least

one additional trump, and do not go alone with any

“losers” (i.e., you have to have aces in both off suits,

or ace-king in one off suit, or nothing but trump).

10.
Do not “donate” or “order
at the bridge,” under

any circumstances.
Adopting this system and my new screen name, I began in the Yahoo! “beginners”
lounges and moved up whenever I achieved a new rating appropriate to the level to which
I was moving – i.e., I would not enter an “intermediate” lounge
unless my rating was at least 1500, and I would not enter an “advanced” lounge
unless it was at least 1650.
After 26 games I had worked myself up to four games over .500 and a 1602 rating –
just 48 points short of “advanced” in the ratings scheme.
Things went downhill a little after that (ratings do go up and down on Yahoo!),
but then after just 43 games I had a 56 per cent winning percentage and a 1651 rating –
“advanced”!
After 50 games I was at 58 per
cent (won 29, lost 21) and had a 1719 rating.
I have no doubt that, with patience and perseverance, and with a little selectivity on
partnerships and on games to enter, and with a little discretion on when to call trump,
I could work myself up to a rating of 2000 or more on this system, but – it’s
a little tiring.
You have to keep reminding
yourself to be stupid.
You can do it, too.
But it’s tricky.
You actually have to get yourself into the mode of thinking (or not thinking, ha! ha!)
like a numbnock.
It’s not easy declining a
trump call or declining a play that you know, in your gut, is the right thing to do.
But once you have memorized the rigorous dumb precepts, just let it flow.
And you will be a winner.
Maybe not a big
winner, but a winner.
And, who knows?
Why does this work?
I don’t really know.
I think it has something to do with the synchronicity of stupidity – “dumb and
dumber.”
A truly dumb player can
actually outthink himself at a euchre table (and there is plenty of proof of that), but
two mere idiots may have some symbiosis going for them.
Also, you get the “50 per cent factor” on top:
Most of your opponents are as dumb as you are, if not dumber.
Your advantage is the consistency of your idiocy.
Playing my “stupid” system will not work with partners who know how to play –
besides which, they will not stay with you.
But, who cares?
There are so many dumb players out
there you are actually better off, if you are a dummy, with a dummy for a partner.
And at random that is what you will get.
You can even talk about it while you are doing it.
I even explained what I was doing to some of my partners – e.g.:
Partner:
“Why didn’t you
lead the right bower?”
Me:
“Oh, I was just trying to
play as stupid as

everyone else and see what happened.”
Partner:
“Oh.
Yeah.
I understand.”
Then my partners would try to play as dumb as I was playing.
Often they would outdo me.
NOTES:
1.
In a non-STD game I played in a
“beginners” lounge,

there were four pass hands in a row.
2.
In another game I led trump on
defense on the first

trick so often that my partner said, “Why do you

always lead trump when the dealer picks up?”
I

answered, “I only do that when I have an ace.”

And everyone said, “Oh, OK.”
3.
In another game I unguarded a left bower
by leading

a low trump on defense on the first trick.
The dealer,

on my right, took all five tricks.
And she said, “Wow

– sry p – never thought it was a loner!”