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  1. Winning trick count, losing trick count, Monte Cristo Count (where you count the number of times your partner has wronged you and plot appropriate vengeance), etc. are useful tools, but let's master the hammer before we start using a grappling hook.

  2. www.larryco.com › bridge-learning-center › printBridge with Larry Cohen

    One other popular way to evaluate opening bids is to count losers. I'm not a big fan of losing trick counts, particularly for opening bids, since they often wind up either confusing us or miscalculating the value of the hand.

  3. In bridge, the Law of Total Tricks (or simply "The Law") is a hand evaluation method for competitive auctions. Technically stated, the total number of cards in each partnership's longest suit is equal to the number of "total tricks" that either side can win in a suit contract.

  4. Losing trick count (LTC) is a method of evaluating hands. It can be very helpful to both opener and responder when deciding whether to bid game and slam. Use LTC only when considering suit contracts — for notrump, other methods including simple high card points are better.

  5. Mar 21, 2013 · When trumps go 4-1 or 5-0, as they will fairly often, you go set, but shrug it off. The game was still worth bidding. Larry Cohen argued, above, that estimating total tricks rises above the luck of the deal. It is a scientific concept, a Law, not an expected value estimate.

  6. Sep 21, 2020 · This week we close out our hand evaluation collection by looking at a method for evaluating highly distributional hands: Losing Trick Count. Specifically, we focus on Losers and Covers.

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  8. Count 1 losing trick for each missing Ace, King, and Queen. If you have only two cards, count each missing Ace and King. If you have only one card, count 1LT unless it’s the Ace.

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