- Bridge scoring
:"For overall scoring of duplicate bridge tournaments, see Duplicate Bridge Scoring."
Bridge scoring is the method of keeping score in
contract bridge . There are two basic types of scoring for a single deal: "duplicate" and "rubber" scoring, which share most features, but differ in how the components of the score are accumulated. In duplicate scoring, the outcome of a deal presents a single number assigned to the pair who won the deal (the other pair receiving the same negative score by implication); in rubber bridge, that number is divided into two components: "above the line" and "below the line", both assigned to the winning pair.General
In general, if the contract was made, the score consists of the following components:
*Contract points, assigned to each odd trick bid
*Bonuses, assigned for:
**level of the contract,
**making a doubled or redoubled contract,
*Overtrick points, assigned for each trick which was taken over the contracted number of odd tricks.If the contract was not made, the side that defeated the contract receives
*Penalty points, assigned for every undertrickContract points
Contract points are awarded for the level of the contract, and depend on the denomination and double/redouble (but not on vulnerability):
Penalties
When the contract is defeated, regardless of its level and denomination, only the penalty points are assigned to the pair who defeated the contract. The penalties are summed up for every undertrick, and depend on number of undertricks, (re)double and vulnerability:
Without double and redouble, every undertrick has fixed cost of 100 or 50 points. The figures for (re)doubled undertricks are set up so that "n" vulnerable undertricks cost as much as "n+1" non-vulnerable ones; for example, 4 doubled undertricks non-vulnerable cost (100+200+200+300) = 800, the same as 3 undertricks vulnerable (200+300+300).
Duplicate bridge
In duplicate bridge (and the type of "friendly games" known as Chicago), all the categories are summed up, resulting in a single figure. The following table shows some examples (X denotes a double and XX a redouble):
Rubber bridge
Rubber bridge uses the same values for tricks, bonuses and penalties, but they are divided into two categories:
#Below the line are entered only the contract points
#Above the line are entered slam bonuses, "insults", overtrick points and penalties wrung from the opponents. Partscore and game bonuses are not assigned; however, a form of game bonus is added at the end of the rubber, worth 700 points if the opponents did not score a game and 500 if they did. For details, seerubber bridge .In addition, special (rummy -like) bonuses (referred to as "honors") are awarded in rubber bridge for particular holdings in one hand, regardless of the outcome of the deal:
*Four out of five top trump honors (A,K,Q,J,10) in one hand are awarded 100 points;
*All five top trump honors (A,K,Q,J,10) in one hand are awarded 150 points;
*All four aces in one hand in notrump contracts are awarded 150 points.Recent scoring changes
If you read old Bridge books, you may notice some differences in the scoring rules.
As of
1987 ,World Bridge Federation imposed the following scoring changes for duplicate bridge, and as of1993 also for rubber bridge (however, since there are no official competitions, rubber bridge players accept them as they see fit):*The undertrick penalty when doubled, not vulnerable, used to be 100 for the first undertrick and 200 for each subsequent. This was changed because it was too easy to sacrifice against a grand slam. A vulnerable grand slam is worth 1500 (slam bonus) + 500 (game bonus) + 210 (
major suit trick score) = 2210. Down 11, doubled not vulnerable, used to be 2100, a profitable sacrifice.This change also ensures that if one makes a sacrifice not vulnerable, on a hand on which "They" are vulnerable, a result of down five (-1100) will show a profit if the slam is bid and made at other table(s), down six (-1400) may be a loss or a small gain, and down seven (-1700) will be a loss. In the old scoring down seven (-1300) would be a gain, down eight (-1500) would be a loss.*Also, the "insult bonus" for making a redoubled contract used to be only 50. This was changed to 100, so that playing 5 of a minor, redoubled, making an overtrick, is always worth more than an undoubled small slam.
External links
* [http://www.acbl.org/learn/scoreDuplicate.html Scoring in ACBL official site]
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