mikeh, on Oct 10 2007, 08:54 PM, said:
Helene, don't feel badly about the way you count
It's the way I count as well!
Yes, when I am considering a suit that either I will be attacking or that I am concerned the opps will be attacking, I do think of the various shapes that are possible, and I do try to construct the hidden hands in terms of shape. However, when it comes to tracking the cards played in a suit, and thus the remaining number of cards, I do it the old-fashioned, beginner's way of counting the cards played one card at a time.
I have read that, for example, when missing 5 cards in a suit, consciously hold in your head 5=0, 4=1 and 3=2 as patterns, both ways, and eliminate 5=0/0=5 when both follow and 4=1/1=4 when both follow to the second round, but that seems to me to be too much work
It may be that I am doing this pattern thing subconsciously... and that I've been playing for so long that the part of me that keeps track of these things is no longer something I think about or can even think about consciously...like riding a bicycle...if you have to think about what you are doing, you'll fall off. But it certainly seems to me that I count one card at a time while building pictures of hands.
I count that way as well. I also echo the rest of mikeh's post.
A couple of points to add:
i) on spot cards
It's particularly important to concentrate on the cards as they are played. I used to say each card mentally to myself as it was played to help fix it into my head, and I still do that to some extent when playing online, as I haven't played much on the computer and my brain finds it harder to remember what has been played than at f2f.
When I get to later in the play and I need to remember what was played earlier, I find I can visualise the card as it was played i.e. I can remember what it looked like and hence what the pip was. At least I can in f2f bridge.
As everyone else says, practice improves matters, but it has to be real, thinking, practice, not just playing hands without concentrating. The three exercises I used to get people to do in the days when I was teaching beginners and coaching the university B and C teams are, after a hand has been completed (and in ascending order of difficulty):
1. What was your hand?
2. What was dummy's hand?
3. What were the other two hands?
Initially just - what were the shapes, what were the high cards, but then move on to reproducing some, many, all of the pips.
At my local club it's not uncommon to hear declarer ask dummy, after the hand has been played, "how many points did you have?". I always wonder to myself "how can you not know?"
Playing online, or at a club, you don't really have time to do this after each hand although you might have time between rounds. But if you are dummy on the next hand, you could spend the time reconstructing all four of the hands from the previous one without looking at the movie.
ii) on counting
I seem to have two parallel processes going on at once - one is simply keeping track of what's been played, and how many of everything, the other is the reconstruction of the opponent's hands... I sort of come at it from two directions. I will also start with an hypothethis about the hand shapes from the auction and then develop it as a result of the lead, carding etc... one of my most frequent mistakes is to work out what I think the hand is, play on that basis, and then not adjust my line later when it transpires that I can also cope with some additional layouts I hadn't originally considered.