Tip 1: Endgame two-on-one, part
1
Tip 2: Pegging psychology
Tip 3: Endgame two-on-one, part 2
Tip 4: Reading your opponent's cards
Tip 5: Flush fakes
Tip 6: Endgame pegging, part 1
Tip 7: Endgame discarding as pone
Tip 8: Endgame two-on-one, part 3
Tip 9: Pairing your opponent's lead
Tip 10: Discarding pointers
Tip 11: Pegging quiz
Tip 12: Endgame pegging, part 2
Tip 13: Endgame discarding quiz
Tip 14: Endgame pegging, part 3
Tip 15: Endgame pegging, part 4
Tip 16: Endgame pegging quiz
Tip 17: Endgame two-on-one, part 4
Tip 18: Discarding quiz
Tip 19: Always play it out
Tip 20: Endgame pegging, part 5
A good player occasionally decides which card to play based on suit rather than denomination. Say you're playing against me, and I lead a
K
. You play a7
for 17, myQ
makes the count 27, and you score 31 for two with your4
. Now I lead aJ
. You must play either the3
or the2
. If all three of my cards are hearts, you would play the2
. You suspect that I have a flush and if I do, I can't possibly pair your2
. If all three of my cards are clubs, you would play the2
, again fearing I have the flush.A related strategy I first encountered in DeLynn Colvert's fine book, Play Winning Cribbage, could help you gain a few holes every now and then. When you hold three cards of the same suit, try to play them first. Your opponent may become so concerned with your "flush" that he/she makes the wrong play. Here are two examples:
1) You're playing a tough competitor. You hold a
9-10-10-J
. You lead off with a10
, making sure that it's the10
. Opponent scores 15-2, you play the9
, and opponent scores 31-2 with a7
. Now you lead theJ
. Opponent's last two cards are6-9
. Normally, he would play the6
to prevent you from scoring a run, and he may well do that anyway; but with those three spades staring at him, you know he's at least thinking flush. And he knows you can't peg on his9
if you have a flush. He's worried that you have the6
. He squirms in his seat, smokes a couple of cigarettes, and plays....the9
! The flush fake claims another victim. Had you led the10
, there would have been little or no chance of the opponent's giving you those three holes.2) You're playing another strong opponent, which is nothing to worry about normally, but this opponent is unusually sharp this match. Opponent leads an
8
, you score 15-2, his7
pairs you, and you make the count 30 with an8
. He says go, and yourA
gets you two holes. Opponent must lead from7-9
. He notices that all three of your cards are diamonds. He knows you can't peg on his7
if you have a flush, but that you could peg on his9
. Perspiration is pouring down the sides of his face. Finally he plays...the7
! Your card is the8
! Flush fake! Two Hall of Famers in one Tournament! You may not win, but at least you have something to tell the grandchildren.Faking a flush can backfire. If your fourth card in Example 1 had been the
6
and your flush fake convinced opponent to play the9
rather than the6
, you lost two holes. How do you know when to fake the flush and when not to? You probably don't, unless you have x-ray vision. But go ahead and fake those flushes, because in the long run, the more often you convince your opponent that you have something you don't have, and the more often you give him/her something extra to worry about, the more often he/she will make the mistake that gives you the holes that win you the game that qualifies you for the finals of the tournament you were destined to win from the very beginning.- Text copyright © 2002 by Dan Barlow. All rights reserved.