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  2. Rule of 11 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_11

    In contract bridge, the Rule of 11 is applied when the opening lead is the fourth best from the defender's suit. [1] By subtracting the rank of the card led from 11, the partner of the opening leader can determine how many cards higher than the card led are held by declarer, dummy and himself; by deduction of those in dummy and in his own hand, he can determine the number in declarer's hand.

  3. Opening lead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opening_lead

    from a suit headed by an honour, defender generally leads the fourth best card, allowing partner to employ the Rule of 11 from an honourless suit, the highest or second-highest is normally led, especially against suit contracts; some partnerships lead fourth best against notrump though.

  4. Contract bridge diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contract_bridge_diagram

    The diagram may include additional information such as deal or board number, scoring method (Matchpoints, IMPs, etc.), the final contract, vulnerability and the opening lead. Diagram variants may leave out one or more hands if irrelevant to the presentation. Partially played hands may be displayed to illustrate end-position play.

  5. Hand evaluation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hand_evaluation

    This method gives very similar results to length points as above except for a hand containing 11 HCP and 5–3–3–2 shape which gives 19 on the Rule of 20 (insufficient to open) but 12 total points by adding 1 length point to the 11 HCP (sufficient to open). Experience and further analysis are needed to decide which is appropriate.

  6. Laws of Duplicate Bridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laws_of_Duplicate_Bridge

    In general, only the defenders are subject to penalties for opening lead or other play out of rotation (law 53-59). The offender's LHO may accept the lead. If not, the lead reverts to the correct player, and the card led out of turn becomes a major penalty card. An opening lead out of turn (law 54) is perhaps the most frequent infraction. If ...

  7. Card reading (bridge) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Card_reading_(Bridge)

    the player who made the opening lead the player who has a long suit Card counting in bridge is considered a very difficult practice to learn, with speedier progress possible through concentration upon one or two suits for every deal played, regardless of the potential influence of the respective hand; through this process, the brain becomes ...

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  9. Rule of 10-12 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_10-12

    Ten is used if the lead is fifth best [1] and 12 is used if the lead is the third best. [2] The Rule of 11 applies when the lead is the 4th best. When following the Rule of 10-12, the lead is the third card from a three or four-card suit and the fifth card from a five-card or longer suit. Leading the third best is also applied to interior ...