Bridge For Dummies
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When you play a bridge hand at a trump contract, you count losers and extra winners. Losers are tricks you know you have to lose. For example, if neither you nor your partner hold the ace in a suit, you know you have to lose at least one trick in that suit.

Counting losers

Get ready for some good news: When counting losers, you have to count only the losers in the long hand (the hand that has more trumps). The declarer usually is the long trump hand, but not always.

Losers come in two forms:

  • Immediate losers: Losers that your opponents can take when they have the lead. These losers have a special signal attached to them that reads, “Danger — Unexploded Bomb!” Immediate losers spell bad news.

  • Eventual losers: These losers aren’t exactly a welcome occurrence, either. Your opponents can’t take your eventual losers right away because those losers are protected by a winning card in the suit that you or your partner holds. In other words, with eventual losers, your opponents can’t take their tricks right off the bat, which buys you a bit of breathing space (and some time to get rid of those eventual losers). One of the best ways to get rid of eventual losers is to discard them on extra winners.

You help yourself by knowing which of your losers are eventual and which are immediate. Your game plan depends on your immediate loser count.

Recognizing losers

Take a look at the spades in the three images to spot some losers. Assume in these images that spades is a side suit (any suit that’s not the trump suit) and hearts is your trump suit.

The following image shows a suit with two eventual losers. As long as you have the ♠A protecting your two other spades, your two spade losers are eventual. However, after your opponents lead a spade (which forces out your ace), your two remaining spades become immediate losers because they have no winning trick protecting them.

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In the following image, you have one eventual spade loser. The dummy’s ♠AK protect two of your three spades — but your third spade is on its own as a loser after the ♠A and ♠K have been played.

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In this final image, you have two immediate spade losers. Notice that you count two, not three, spade losers — you count losers only in the long trump hand (which presumably is your hand). You don’t have to count losers in the dummy.

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