Beer card

7diamonds.gif

In trick-taking card games like bridge, the beer card is the seven of diamonds (7) playing card when it is agreed that, if a player wins the last trick of a hand with the 7, his partner must buy him a beer. It is not considered as part of the rules of these games, but an optional and informal side-bet between players. This practice is likely originated from Danish Tarot or Skat in the middle of the 20th century.[1]

Requirements

The Jack holding the 7

The requirements vary depending on whether the winner of the last trick is the declarer or a defender. In every case, though, the last trick must be won by 7.

For declarer, the requirements are generally that:

  • He must make the contract (exceptions may be made for a successful sacrifice)
  • Diamonds must not be trumps (though some people play that only diamond part-scores, and not games or slams, are excluded)
  • He must take a justifiable line to win as many tricks as possible

For a defender, the requirements are generally that:

  • The contract must be defeated
  • Diamonds must not be trumps (though some people play that doubled contracts are excluded)
  • He and his partner must try to win as many tricks as possible
  • His partner must try to stop him winning the last trick with 7

If the contract is doubled, then two beers are earned. If the contract is redoubled, then four beers are earned.

Examples

7
Q 8 3 2
A K Q 10 9
Q 7 6

N



S

Q 8 3 2
A K
J 7 3 2
A K 5

South plays in the inferior contract of three notrump (6 is excellent), against which the opponents cash the first four spade tricks. To maximize the chance of getting a beer, declarer must discard two top diamond honors and a small heart from dummy. If the diamonds do not break 4-0, it is straightforward to cash nine winners, ending with the beer card. If the diamonds don't break, there's a chance that a defender will be pseudosqueezed and choose to discard a diamond. For declarer to discard three diamond honors risks losing the contract unnecessarily, and so forfeits the beer, even if diamonds turn out to break normally.

Alternately, if North-South only exclude diamond partials from beer card enforcement, then the declarer in six diamonds can easily beer assuming trumps break. Declarer wins the (say) heart lead in the South hand and cashes one high trump in the North hand. When they break, declarer cashes two more high trumps, exits a spade, uses the rounded-suit entries to ruff two spades in the North hand, and finally trump the losing heart with the beer card. When they do not break, the simplest line (ruff a heart in the South hand) forces declarer to use the beer card while drawing trumps.

A
A 8
A K 9 7 6 5
K Q 9 3

N



S

K 10 8 7 6
9
Q 10 3
A J 7 6
West North East South
1 Pass 1
2 3 Pass 4
Pass 4NT Pass 5
Pass 7 Dbl Pass
Pass Pass

Note that the four notrump bid is the modern Roman Keycard Blackwood with 1430 responses and clubs as trumps. South won the K lead in dummy, drew trumps in three rounds and played a diamond to the ace. When both minors broke, South ruffed the remaining heart in hand and claimed his doubled grand slam along with the beers. Plus 2330, two beers, and 14 IMPs.

In theory, South should have interpreted the final double as a Lightner double and removed to seven diamonds. However, given that his priorities placed the probable doubled beer ahead of trusting the opponents, he should still not redouble. Since the opponents were non-vulnerable, it just may have occurred to them to remove to seven hearts. While the sacrifice rates to go down two thousand, there is certainly no hope for even North to score the beer.

References

  1. ^ McLeod, John. Contract Bridge at pagat.com. Retrieved 4 October 2016.

See also

External links


This page was last updated at 2019-11-08 05:40 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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