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May. 20th, 2008 @ 12:55 am Bridge
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Psyching is hilarious. My hand is: CAKQxxxxxx D7 HKx SAx.

(For those non-bridge players reading along at home, I'll add explanations in italics.

A, K, Q, J and T represent Ace, King, Queen, Jack and Ten; numerals represent numbers, and 'x' represents a small card where it's unlikely to matter which. C=Clubs, etc.


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The question is, is there anything else this hand could do in the bidding? It sounds like if there's no spade bid, it should try to find out if there's 6-8 honour card points opposite, and if not give up, and if so assume five clubs is ok, and then try to ask about aces, and bid 5C with none, 6C with one, and 7C with two. But I'm not at all sure, almost anything could be the right answer.

ETA: Oh, hey. Apparently you can lj-cut a close-italic tag. Hm.
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Feb. 25th, 2008 @ 02:39 pm Bridge
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I'm disappointed, the grand slam was a nice result, and I was the only person in either B team to bid it, although all the A team did. But our overall result as compared to other pairs was not very good: ok, but a lot worse than last time. Not just in absolute terms (since we may have been playing better people) but worse compared to people we did much better than before, which is a shame.

I think we played pretty well, but had several little mistakes that I wasn't sure if would drag down the result, but probably did. There were at least a couple of game contracts and slam contracts that we could have bid, but missed mainly because there were details in our system we hadn't discussed.
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Feb. 19th, 2008 @ 12:54 am (no subject)
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I felt tired at work, but an awful lot more bouncy after some silly bridge. Tonight's theme was "No Trump Slams", generally three in a row.

Now I just need to go to bead early enough that I might be not tired *tomorrow*.
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Jan. 31st, 2008 @ 01:30 pm (no subject)
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I've oft commented how every time you try to play bridge, there's some theme that permeates the evening. Of course, in any statistical process, you expect clustering, but the more specific it is, the funnier it is.

That night's theme was "Playing a 3NT with a strong hand and a void in dummy." The first time, 3NT, I had a void, I was dummy. The following hand, 3NT, I had a void, I was dummy. The hand after that we broke the pattern -- the opponents played 3NT with a void in dummy instead.

Come to think of it, is that so bad? Obviously an unbalanced hand is a lot better in a suit contract. But if declarer has shown a stop for the void suit, and there's a good chance that the partnership will have nine or ten cards in one suit, it might work. (Better if dummy has entries, of course.)
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Nov. 13th, 2007 @ 12:25 am Stop, Seven No Trumps
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I've still been playing bridge. Today I jumped to bid 7NT for the first time.

(For non bridge players: 7nt means you're going to take all 13 tricks, and without any suit as trumps. If you're playing with bidding boxes, this is the back-most card, and if you're exceptionally lucky, you'll be able to pull out the entire stack of thirty-five bidding cards and drop them on the table at once.)

Though it's pretty anti-climactic. I had 17 high card points, and two long suits, and partner made the opening bid, and when I saw this I groaned, as I expected him to be long in the suits I was short in, but instead he bid 2NT, meaning 20-22 points, and balanced lengths. That gives 37 between us, missing no ace and at most a king, so jumped straight to 7NT.

Actually, that didn't happen. I had a singleton jack (the only card of its suit, which isn't normally worth anything as it loses immediately if anyone plays queen, king or ace), and hadn't counted it, so thought we had 36 pts, which might conceivably be missing an ace, so I futzed about with three and four level bids trying to manoeuvre partner into a situation where I could find out how many aces he had with blackwood, before jumping to 7.
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Nov. 12th, 2007 @ 05:20 pm Victor Mollo -- Bridge in the Menagerie
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Whenever you play bridge, someone always mentions the bridge in the menagerie books. These are mostly waaaay out of print, but a few have been reprinted, and all seem to have a timeless charm.

The characters play in their gentleman's club, nicknaming each other after various animals.

The characters

The Hideous Hog is the best player, and aggressive, arrogant, and obnoxious with it, he's almost always right, and always in your face about it.

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Oct. 5th, 2007 @ 01:44 pm UBC
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I went to the UBC. That actually went very well. I met several nice people, partnered a second year who played bridge but hadn't come to ubc before, and we did very well.

It's a bit annoying, as I didn't get to *do* anything very good. We managed several very satisfying defences, (in fact, I think most of our score came from workmanlikely taking down contracts that were unfortunate or shouldn't have been in an extra trick (or four)), and I made the contracts I did play as well as I might have done, and we had a few insightful last minute overcalls, but nothing I can point to and say we were really proud of.

But mechanically it all went well. The timer was set very slow, and we finished a little bit inside it. We chatted to several nice couples passing us. We never revoked. We had one awkward moment of "2C oh shit", where I had to call the director because I had no idea what contract we'd have got into if I'd have believed it, but it turned out to be completely irrelevant because LHO had psyched a pass all the others bid to 2X or 3X and went down one, so we were due a bottom however many clubs we bid.
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Oct. 2nd, 2007 @ 03:52 pm Bridge: Freshers' pairs this thursday
By the way, if anyone is interested in duplicate bridge, (and doesn't mind university bridge club people :)), I'm planning to go to UBC this term, starting with freshers' pairs on Thursday. Is anyone else thinking of going?

Freshers' Pairs is, apparently, "go along, play with a fresher." (Though some may debate whether they count as a non-fresher or fresher, if they're played before but never at ubc events :)) so recommended for people who want to give it a go, but don't have a partner and play some crazy ltc system of their own devising :)

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Sep. 4th, 2007 @ 12:26 am Bridge
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Whereas that evening counterbalanced the previous one somewhat, with some mistakes, but a large number of successfully bid 3nt, 5minor or 6x, which made exactly, or made 6 or 7.
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Aug. 10th, 2007 @ 11:58 am (no subject)
Fairly recently I was a bridge beginner again. At school and in the first year I learnt in a more teaching session where the majority of people were equally amateur, but recently it's really been social, with two different groups.

But both as a beginner, and now as someone talking to beginners, I've noticed a tendency to pile someone with advice to the extent that they feel very put upon and did everything wrong. From both sides of the fence. I wasn't sure if it was just me, but watching other people's expressions makes me think it isn't. (FWIW, with sgo bridge player friends, there's been less advice but occasional groaning or telling off; with ubc bridge player friends, there's been no criticism, but sometimes reams of advice.)

I think, since you could say a lot to any of us about a particular hand, people get the impression they don't get any less wrong, because they get the same amount of advice when they improve, it just gets more specific :)

Does that sound familiar to anyone?

Of course, standard advice is *never* to criticise and simply always be polite, which makes for a social game. If you're playing with people categorised as bridge "little old ladies", or simply someone who wants some fun and not to navel-gaze every hand, don't try and impose your views, let everyone have fun playing the way they want to!

But most people I know are always seeking to improve, so *do* always welcome *some* feedback, as well as choosing to play with friends. But it's still good advice not to post-mortem unless there's a reason for it.

If you agree, I thought I'd try to articulate some tips for how to give and take advice. Do you agree? What would you add?

For the expert:

* Start with a general overview. This is probably always welcome and polite and useful. Eg. "Thank you partner! Well played. You might have got an extra trick if [], " Don't necessarily do this, but I think it's a mistake to give any more specific advice without letting them know how well it went overall.

* Put advice in context, what's absolutely basic, and what's more situational? How often have you/have you seen someone leading a singleton at no-trumps?

* Make it clear what someone should see and someone should know. You can explain taking a finesse, and they should see when and where to do it. But don't say "when you bid 1nt, that meant...", say "Actually, we assign a specific meaning to that bid."

* You can't explain something to someone unless you get where they are. The advice that may be useful might not be "You needed an extra trick, you should have finessed the king", but "When you start the deal, you should try to form a provisional plan on how you're going to take tricks". The former alone won't help until they deduce they need the latter.

* If you want to post-mortem a hand and consider how you might have been able to make the most tricks, make it clear that this is not "you did it wrong and here's how to do it" but "well done partner, can I have a look, I'm curious".

* If you happen to have tact at your disposal, try employing it. Perhaps *offering* advice first, so someone is grateful to have it, rather than imposing it and making them resent it.

* Adding more to someone else's advice, even clarifying advice, can sometimes just make more overload.

* If someone seems to be feeling overwrought, move on.

* Play sometimes in a casual pub-type way, so everyone can have a laugh and experiment.

For the beginner:

* Be aware of the distinctions drawn above. The vast majority of advice isn't criticism.

* If you feel put upon, SAY SO! Most probably no-one's criticising, they're just not as good as they could be at giving helpful advice.

* Don't be scared away. It doesn't matter! Bridge is fun! Play bridge! Be proud of the things you go right! I remember my first successful squeeze (it wasn't even in bridge!) :)

* Ask for advice! It's probably more helpful than letting it be given. Say what you saw, bring people on-line, and see where you should have gone. "I knew you had 16pt, and I wanted to bid game, but I wasn't sure if we had a fit. I [] but what...? Oh, I see. And if I'd done that, then []..."

I definitely need to get on some regular partners :) And want to go to the UBC proper next term, and see how things come into perspective with proper duplicate scoring :)

By the way, Ghoti, Colin -- did Benedict enjoy bridge?
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Aug. 7th, 2007 @ 02:45 pm Weekend
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Friday

People came over for bridge. It was fun. Though I'm inclined to gripe about not having an opening hand, considering what I did with it when I did, I won't complain.

Saturday Morning

I did a variety of productive and tidying things, making the weekend feel successful before it was over, and being able to relax for the rest of it.

Saturday Evening

I joined Mark in the Carlton, where I met a wide variety of people (including Ben with a surprise voles attack), including several I hadn't seen for a while and it was very nice to see again. Thank you Mark!

I came home quite drunk and late, and played computer games and tidied for a bit.

Sunday Afternoon

I went to Tim's birthday barbecue at his parents'. They've always been very nice to us, at university we visited a few times, and it was like a breath of home to be received into a proper house :)

Sunday Evening

The lovely Mair stopped over. We didn't get to see anyone else, but we chatted about books until late, and she divested herself of some she was trying to clear out, which I picked a bunch out of, also to be distributed to Cambridge friends at her direction (list of books to follow).

Monday Afternoon

I took a day's holiday and we went swimming and lounging at Jesus Green, and then read until pizza.

Monday Evening

Pizza was a little quieter than normal, so there was discussion including politics and genetics.

I went to bridge. Every bridge evening seems to have some theme, this could probably be best described as "be careful what you wish for, the gods' most savage curses come as responses to your own prayers." If you've got six diamonds, what do you want partner to say? Any other suit, and you're going to have difficulty showing what you have. And then he does, and what do you say then? You've got an eleven card fit, but 5D probably has three losers off the top. (In the most prominent example, we bid it successfully. As did the hand with a 7-6 zero-pointer :))
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Jul. 31st, 2007 @ 01:01 am Bridge
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That was more like it. I declared just about every contract in sight, played with Andy with a nice 1M-4M vibe going on, messed up some 3H contracts, stopped in several correct part-scores, didn't bid an unbiddable slam, and managed a decent squeeze in a 5C contract that should have been 3NT[1].

[1] I can't quite remember the layout now. It wasn't perfect -- technically if the opponents had known to guard different suits they could have kept it, but it went through textbookly.

ETA: And of course, we managed to correctly bid to 5H, despite one of us bidding blackwood and one of us bidding gerber :)
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Jul. 27th, 2007 @ 02:47 am Bridge
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Many people weren't able to come: there were about seven of us. But it went well, distracted I can play with confidence. There were no really great moments, though several entertaining hands: bidding 1nt x 1c x 1d x 1h x 1s x p p p; a string of 4 minor and 5 major contracts; my first jacoby 2nt-10pt-fit-showing response fell flat when partner had opened with a psych; I got to double four hearts holding QT98xx; I pulled out the only killing lead twice.
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Jul. 25th, 2007 @ 02:51 pm Summer university bridge club
Tomorrow, I hope to go to the summer university bridge club (at Trinity, BA rooms above the bar) -- the most casual duplicate play available. I know several (well, over the summer, maybe half) of the people, ranging from "worse than me" to "very good".

If any other non-ubc regulars would like to come along, now would be a good chance :)
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Jun. 27th, 2007 @ 02:00 pm Bridge and Shrek
Any-one else for Shrek 3?

Also, two or three of us were hoping for some sgo bridge this weekend, but not sure if anyone else is free. If anyone else not-sgo-bridge would like join in, shout.
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Jun. 12th, 2007 @ 12:38 am Bridge
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*Last* time I played bridge it was all 4443, 4443, 4432, 4443, 4443, every hand making me go "OK, now how do you bid to an uncontested partial score again?"

*This* time, 55s and 67s and other crazy shit singleton beer cards[1] abounded. I arrived to witness J play four consecutive hands, the last three with 4-0 or 5-0 trump splits against. *Several* hands with no notable feature other than a spade straight[1]. But it was fun and instructive, as always.

[1] The beer card is the 7 of diamonds. A spade straight is 356789 or similar. Neither has any importance for the play of the game, except if you find your life insufficiently illuminated by bidding conventions.
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May. 15th, 2007 @ 12:57 pm Bridge
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Mon -- Pizza, nice. Bridge, I'm getting the hang of this. Though the more situations that are familiar to you, the fewer are amusing anecdotes :)
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Apr. 24th, 2007 @ 12:19 am Greenenders -- LATE NIGHT POKER edition
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Or maybe top gear. I haven't had a nice spade slam for a month, but as soon as you sit down across a table from someone you haven't played with before you can go from a standing start to five spades in 8.2 seconds. (Metaphorically.)
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Mar. 9th, 2007 @ 01:26 pm Bridge
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I hadn't played bridge again for a while, but we got a couple of hours last night. The late-night effect aside, I was glad of the chance, it's relaxing, I need to keep it up. But we need to get more hands, and find more complicated slams to try to bid.
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Feb. 13th, 2007 @ 04:14 pm Bridge
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I've definitely got better. Better at bidding, seeing more situations as standard. Better at defense. Better at knowing partners and guessing what they're thinking. Better at forming a plan and then playing it out (which counting is a corollorary of). Better at keeping score. I definitely need more practice at making shaky two levels contracts, and playing quickly, though.

And I played with a partner used to loose ACOL and did ok, though I'm still at sea with people who have exact and prerequisites for bids different to mine.

I was pleased to be able to double on saturday, I think for the first time ever. Sorry to declarer, who wasn't to know I had AKJ10x of trumps, but I think it illustrates why I don't believe in giving points for trump honour holdings. By that rule, that would be a 100pt bonus. By doubling 4 down from 200pts to 800pts you get a 600pt bonus.
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