Today, we welcome a new member and one with actual Bridge(Whist) experience Sara. Chris was an absolute menace when it came to his luck with hands today, so we don’t need to talk about the hands. We talk instead about a new way to play bridge we learned about called Whist.

10-23-2023-meeting-photo

Whist is actually the predecessor to Bridge. When we say Bridge goes back to the 15th century, we actually are talking about Whist.

What is the difference between Whist and Bridge?

In Whist there is no dummy. The dummy is the partner of the declarer - the one who first bid the contract-winning suit. The dummy will lay his hand out after the first card is played and just play what the Declarer tells them to.

Sara actually played this version of bridge, and when she brought up the fact that the dummy role does almost nothing, we didn’t have a good response to justify the role of the dummy.

Why is there a dummy in Bridge?

The Dummy first appeared in the 1870s evolving from 3-person whist to create Biritch or Russian Whist. This would take London Whist clubs by storm over the next few decades, as people slowly realized that it was Bridge that was more scientific and strategic, because it removed a lot of the blindly guessing element from the game.

The dummy is what gives strategy and skill to bridge. Knowing 50% of the cards creates strategies like finessing, it allows you to predict other cards more accurately and requires precise play on almost every trick. While other trick-taking games do have some basic strategy, but overall it is much more random and less precise. Simply put, there’s more information for the players, so they can actually try cool plays like squeezing, rather than blindly playing.

The dummy also gives the contract winners a slight advantage so even if the Honors (Ace, King, Queen, Jack) are equally split, players are still encouraged to bid. This is arguably a better method compared to others like forcing the first player to always bid, even with bad hands.

That’s why Bridge took off in the 1900s and was played by some of the brightest minds from leaders like Eisenhower, Winston Churchill, Gandhi, Deng Xiaoping and World Champion Chess players.

Sources: Development of Bridge: https://www.britannica.com/topic/bridge-card-game/The-development-of-the-game
Dislike the Dummy Hand Discussion: https://boardgamegeek.com/thread/507027/am-i-only-one-dislikes-having-dummy-hand
Why is there a Dummy in Bridge, Forum Question: https://boardgames.stackexchange.com/questions/45906/why-is-there-a-dummy-in-bridge\