Read The Penguin Book of Card Games: Everything You Need to Know to Play Over 250 Games Online
Authors: David Parlett
made only if the contract is fulfil ed and only for the number of
tricks bid. Above the line go any scores for winning additional
tricks, or to the defenders for defeating the contract.
(The terminology is il ogical. The declarers obviously defend
their contract, and their opponents, equal y obviously, at ack it.
Bridge is ful of such perversities. It is, for example, the only
bidding game in which the opening bid is made by the dealer
instead of by eldest hand.)
instead of by eldest hand.)
What gives Bridge its bite is the method by which the contract is
arrived at – the auction itself. For, although two partners are
bidding on what they can see in their own hands, they are also
conveying information about their hands to each other in the way
they bid, and listening in on their opponents’ conversation at the
same time. Developments in the structure of Bridge lie less in the
play than in the use of bidding systems to convey information.
Bridge has undergone few formal changes since the 1930s, by
comparison with the 50 years of development that preceded it. In
Biritch or Russian Whist (published 1886), the dealer specified a
trump suit or cal ed ‘biritch’ (No Trump), dealer’s partner put
down a dummy, and declarer’s aim was simply to win seven or
more tricks. In Bridge-Whist (1896), dealer either nominated
trumps or ‘bridged’ this privilege over to his partner. In Auction
Bridge (1904), al four players could bid by raising the number of
tricks to be won, and al declarer’s tricks and overtricks scored
below the line. In Plafond (Paris, c. 1915), only contracted tricks
scored below the line. Contract Bridge, a variety of Plafond, first
appeared in 1920, but did not displace Auction until several years
after its perfection by mil ionaire Harold S. Vanderbilt on his now
famous winter cruise of 1925-6. The first comprehensive bidding
system was developed by Ely Culbertson, who was also responsible
for launching the publicity campaign which placed Bridge at the
summit of social status, from whereithas yet o be toppled.
Culbertson’s system, further refined by Charles H. Goren, remains
the basis of the standard American system. Thestandard
Britishsystem, Acol, commemorates the Bridge club where it was
developed, in Acol Road, London, NW6.
Bridge is played in three distinct forms:
Rubber Bridge. The home game for four learners and sociable
players. A game is 100 points below the line, and a rubber is
the best of three games.
Duplicate Bridge. The club and tournament game for serious
and advanced players. Hands are prepared in advance, and
and advanced players. Hands are prepared in advance, and
every pair plays just one hand against every other pair, in
such a way that none benefits from being dealt ‘bet er hands’
than any other.
Chicago Bridge. A home game, ideal for a smal number of
tables (two to six) where players wish to rotate. It consists of
exactly four deals with the scoring of Duplicate.
Beginners should start with Rubber Bridge and progress to
Chicago. Complete beginners, with no experience of card
games at al , should start with partnership Whist before
embarking upon Bridge.
Rubber Bridge
Cards Fifty-two. It is customary to use two packs alternately, one
being shuf led while the other is dealt.
Preliminaries Scores are kept on a sheet divided into two columns,
one for each partnership, and it is customary for each player to
keep a record, as a check on accuracy, in columns headed
(ungrammatical y) WE and THEY. The sheet – readily obtainable
pre-printed from stationers – is divided into vertical halves by a
horizontal line. Points that count towards winning a game go below
the line, and premiums (bonuses) above.
Partnerships Each player draws a card from a shuf led pack spread
face down on the table. Those drawing the two lowest cards
become partners against those drawing the highest. If equal, spades
beats hearts beats diamonds beat clubs. The higher partners have
choice of seats, and the highest deals first. The turn to deal, bid and
play passes always to the left. If partnerships are fixed by social
agreement, players need draw only to confer choice of seats and
first deal.
Game Game is 100 points below the line, which may take several
Game Game is 100 points below the line, which may take several
deals to reach. The first to win two games wins the rubber. A side
that has won one game is declared vulnerable and is subject to
certain increased scores or penalties.
Deal Deal thirteen cards each, one at a time, face down. Rank Cards
rank AKQJT98765432 in each suit. Suits rank from high to low:
spades, hearts (major suits), diamonds, clubs (minor). Object In the
auction, each side’s object is to discover as much as possible about
the lie of cards and to arrive at a contract that best suits their
combined hands. In the play, the declarer aims to win at least as
many tricks as specified in the contract. In any contract the only
points which count towards game – below the line – are those
made for tricks contracted and won. Any extra or overtricks made
by the declarers are scored separately as bonuses, above the line, as
are scores made by the defenders for defeating a contract.
The Auction Each in turn, starting with Dealer, may pass, cal ,
double or redouble. If al pass immediately, there is no play, the
cards are gathered in, and the deal passes to the left. A pass –
pronounced ‘No bid’ by British players – (but not American) – does
not prevent one from bidding again if the opportunity arises. A cal
is announced as a number of tricks in excess of six which the cal er
proposes to make, together with the proposed trump.
Example: The lowest possible bid, ‘one club’, is an offer to win seven tricks with clubs as trumps; the highest, ‘seven no trump’, an offer to win all 13 without a trump suit.
Each bid must overcal (exceed) the previous one – that is, it must
cite either a greater number of tricks, or the same number but in a
higher suit. For this purpose suits rank from low to high: clubs,
diamonds, hearts, spades, no trump.
Example: ‘One club’ may be overcalled by one of another suit, and one of any
suit by ‘one no trump’. A bid at ‘no trump’ can only be overcalled by a higher
number.
Instead of bidding or passing, a player may announce ‘double’ if the
previous bid was made by an opponent, or ‘redouble’ if the
previous announcement was an opponent’s ‘double’. The ef ect of
doubling and redoubling is to double and quadruple the declarers’
score if the contract succeeds, or the defenders’ if not. But if a
double/redouble is fol owed by another bid, it is automatical y
cancel ed. When three players have passed in succession, the last-
named bid becomes the contract, whether or not doubled or
redoubled. This ends the auction.
Play Whichever one of the contracting partnership first named the
prevailing trump becomes the declarer, and plays both hands. The
opening lead is made by the player at declarer’s left. Declarer’s
partner then lays his cards face up on the table as a dummy, each
suit in an overlapping column of cards. The leftmost column, as
seen by declarer, should be the trump suit, or clubs if there is no
trump, and the columns should alternate in colour. The second card
to the trick is played by declarer from dummy, the third by the
leader’s partner, and the fourth by declarer from his own hand.
Normal rules of trick-taking apply: fol ow suit to the card led if
possible; if not, trump or renounce ad lib. The trick is taken by the
highest card of the suit led or by the highest trump if any are
played, and the winner of each trick leads to the next. Declarer’s
partner may not advise or participate in any way except to draw
at ention to any breach of rules he maybe about to commit (such as
revoking or leading out of turn). The tricks won by one partnership
are kept in one place, face down but overlapping, so that the
number taken is clear to al . If declarer wins a trick with a card
from the dummy, he leads to the next from dummy; if from his own
hand, he leads from his own.
Score See table and example for details. For making the contract,
the declarers score below the line the appropriate amount for the