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Jonathan Pinyan
Registrace 13. 09. 2013
Another Game of Cribbage
An instructional video teaching how to play the game of Cribbage, featuring Jonathan Pinyan and Bill Sundheim.
Jonathan is a math teacher at Bergen County Academies in New Jersey, and this video was produced for his History and Strategy of Card Games elective.
Bill is the club president for the New Jersey club of the American Cribbage Congress's grass roots program, of which Jonathan is also a member. For more information on the ACC and cribbage, please see cribbage.org.
Jonathan is a math teacher at Bergen County Academies in New Jersey, and this video was produced for his History and Strategy of Card Games elective.
Bill is the club president for the New Jersey club of the American Cribbage Congress's grass roots program, of which Jonathan is also a member. For more information on the ACC and cribbage, please see cribbage.org.
zhlédnutí: 221
Video
A Game of Cribbage
zhlédnutí 12KPřed 2 lety
A demonstration of the rules and play of cribbage, via a short game played between Mr. Pinyan and his father. Here is the rule sheet and quick guide to scoring mentioned in the video: drive.google.com/file/d/1GpDCApyBSGWuffO5V7UVgcxKSPuwAedk/view?usp=drive_link
Vector Addition
zhlédnutí 292Před 3 lety
Demonstrating the two methods for adding vectors: (1) Law of Cosines and Law of Sines; (2) Components This shows two solutions to Exercise 20 on page 488 (Lesson 8-1 of Glencoe Precalculus).
When you end with a 31 isn’t it 2 points for 31 and 1 point for last card?
Hey can you help me count this hand 4 4566
Sure. We check for fifteens. 6+5+4 = 15, and there are four ways to do that (pair each 6 with each 4). No other set of cards adds up to 15, so that's 4x2 = 8 points. Next, we check for runs. Each 4-5-6 is a three-card run, and again there are four of them. 4x3 = 12 points. Next, we check for pairs. Obviously, there's a pair of 4s and a pair of 6s. 2x2 = 4 points. With two 6s in the hand, we can't have a flush, and we obviously don't have the "right jack", so those don't apply. Adding it all up, 8+12+4 = 24 points. 44556, 44566, and 45566 are three of the most common ways to get a 24 hand.
Thank you!
Do you always keep the cards spread out as you play the hand out so that you can see the previous cards played? Or are you just doing that so that people viewing the video can see the previous cards that were played? (In other words: if you were just playing a regular game without recording it to teach people, would you lay your own cards directly on top of the previous cards that you played?)
Thank you for posting. I don't get to play in my local club too often because it is on a night when I work, so I usually only play on my phone app and although I do manual scoring at the end of the play, the app automatically scores during play. I am a new player and was always confused about the "Go" score during play. My cousin plays that you do not score a 1 point "Go" if you can play to continue the rally, so this was very helpful to see that a 1 point "Go" is scored because it is the "last card" in the rally. Thank you very much. Great video. Very clear instructions and I appreciate the cheat sheets. It was hard to see Bill's cards, but I appreciate that he started counting them out at the end. I think your students will like this video. I am glad I saw your post on FB ACC site. :)
We had a cribbage match at our local fire station last year. It was a boiled chicken dinner and Cribbage match, and all the beer you can drink for $12.95. One of our local drunk got wasted, tried to flush a whole chicken down the toilet. Man what a mess. We had toilet overflowage running out of the street even. The mayor said if we have another one of these cribbage matches there will be no booze. He was so mad I don't even think we'll have another one
Cloudy with a chance of meatballs ahh story
How do I score my 4 queens?
There's six ways to make a pair: Spade-Heart, Spade-Club, Spade-Diamond, Heart-Club, Heart-Diamond, and Diamond-Club. Each of those is worth two points, so four-of-a-kind is worth 12 points.
Thank you , great video
Where could I find the paperwork you refer to?
I've added a link to those documents in the video description.
amazing tutorial, thank you!
This is by far the best video on this game. So many try to explain it by just stating the rules. This is the type of game with so much going on with scoring you have to see it in action for it to really "click".
I fully agree! This teaches the game amazingly well
Your first hand , was actually 17 points
How do you figure? It was 5JJK with an 8 turned up, and the right jack.
Is the rule sheet mentioned shared anywhere? great video!
I didn't get the 24 points at the end? I only came up with 14, so I'm missing something. 🤷🏼♀️ I used to play 40 some years ago, but the house fire destroyed my board and it's hard to find players! ❤
The hand my father had was A788+7, which scored 14. After that, I made an example hand of 7889+7, which would score 24 points (4 runs of 3, 4 fifteens, and 2 pairs). Depending on where you live, there may be a local cribbage club near you. If you're in the USA, look at cribbage.org to see the list of grass roots clubs of the American Cribbage Congress.
@@jonpinyan Thanks so much! 👍🏼
We always turn cards face down after a GO. And then start the next plays. Is there a rule about turning played cards face down after a GO.
In most casual play, the cards get turned face down. In American Cribbage Congress official play, the cards remain up for the rest of the hand, which helps in case there are disputes about a misplay, and avoids accidentally mixing the hand and crib.
Where can I buy that same Cribbage board?
Excellent job with the video. Your voice is easy to listen to. And I like the way you stop and give us time to calculate the score before telling us. You are a natural teacher. Thank you. I'm just learning for the first time and your video explains the game very well.
This was so useful and so well explained! Thanks a lot for the video, I can't wait to try to play this game with my mum hoping I won't confuse her (and me) too much!
Always easier for me to learn while watching an actual game, thank you
Good video, love your dad!
THANK YOU for sharing this,, I am trying to learn this and you guys were really helpful
Just like when I play my grown son - he shows no mercy! 😜
I’m a pro in this game