fred, on Jan 20 2005, 01:11 PM, said:
Jlall, on Jan 19 2005, 05:19 PM, said:
This is funny, because I can't figure out how to answer it. I'm not really sure how I count. I just do lol. Really weird, I've never thought about it.
My experience is similar. I don't really have to think about counting the hand - it is almost like a program running in the background of my mind handles this for me.
Another strange thing is that I did not always have this ability and it is not something that I gradually developed.
I don't think this is strange at all. Some are probably aware of a simple experiment done with chess players in which pieces were randomly placed on a board and exposed to the player for a few seconds. The chess players were not very good at reproducing the position. The same chess players were also shown placements of pieces from actual games and they were able to reproduce these very accurately. That's because the players were not merely noting that the a white bishop was on a specific space, but rather how the pieces were related in the overall position.
The same thing happens in bridge. When a bridge player is just starting out, they have trouble remembering a hand after the last card has been played. As a player gains experience, he'll often be able to recall hands from days, months or years ago. It's not because he's remembering a random arrangement of cards, but rather because he's remembering the overall position and how it relates to the bridge result.
You've already learned the only significant trick I know of: count just the cards your opponents play, not the ones you play. If you started with eight between declarer and dummy, you know the opponents have five between them, so count just those five rather than all thirteen. (I believe I first learned this trick from a Dorothy Hayden Truscott book, probably Bid Better, Play Better. I remember where I was when I read it -- it was that much of a revelation.) When I was teaching absolute beginners and I told them about this trick, someone would always ask: "but, how do I remember how many I started with?" Remember when you couldn't recall dummy's shape after a few tricks had been played? Seems inconceivable, now, doesn't it? (Well, most of the time, anyway.) To someone like Fred or Frances it seems inconceivable not to remember the spots that have been played to all the tricks. This mostly comes from experience (and the resulting deeper understanding of each hand) rather than in inate ability to remember spot cards.
On to the original exercise. No, I don't think there is any special trick to remembering the cards that have been played. This is almost a pure memory test. But, it's not one that is that hard: you're counting five spades, six hearts, eight diamonds and seven clubs. And, the spades will be known soon enough, so you won't have to remember how many of those you've seen, but rather how they broke, and it's doubtful that it's important to have any idea which spade spot card either defender had. In fact, you'd probably do just fine if all you payed attention to were the Queen, Jack and Ten of Clubs; the King and Queen of Hearts; and the King of Diamonds. By thinking through a plan, you've basically reduced the amount of memory needed to remembering which of six cards have been played. So, this hand is probably easier from a memory standpoint than most.
Tim