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Cribbage
,→The Summer 2004 Season: added scholars, minor edits, table formatting
The most games of cribbage on the Williams campus in a four-year period were probably played between the [[Fall 2001|Fall of 2001]] and the [[Spring 2005|Spring of 2005]], during which ran a continuous tournament between two students. A concise history of this semi-epic battle, complete with win-loss statistics, is collected in this article.
==Rules of the Game==
There is little need for this article to enumerate the rules of Cribbage. If you do not know how to play, one of the following sites can teach you. The Williams Cribbage championship was played without the Muggins rule, otherwise all rules were standard.
== The Summer 2004 Season ==[[Image:CribbageSmr04.jpg|right|thumbnail|Jonathan (left) and Zach (right) face off in Jonathan's summer penthouse, high in [[Morgan#East|Morgan East]], [[Summer Season2004]]. Photo taken by Alaya Kuntz '04.]]
A modest total of 29 games was played over the summer, but looking back it was these games that allowed for the frenzy of senior year games to reach an amazing cribbage milestone. It was agreed before the start of play that the summer would not count toward the “years won†tally, so Jonathan remained behind 2 years to 1 going into the final year, still with the chance to even the epic struggle. Interestingly, only 2 skunks were recorded, one per man, as it appeared both competitors were happy simply to play cribbage over the summer and less concerned about piling up points at the end of games. Whatever the reason, cribbage played with warm summer breezes through open windows is as close to a real sport as golf is, in some people’s opinion. From the point of view of most analysts, this season is the least important, and most overlooked in scholarly writings on the Great Williams Cribbage Series. However, those who scholars who approach their study from a geographical point of view have found this era to be an invaluable source of information for juxtaposition with years in which Zach and Jonathan lived across campus. Studies have sought a relationship between ''d'', the distance between the competitors, and ''g'', games played. With Jonathan and Zach cohabiting a room, the Summer 2004 series has provided an invaluable set of data points in the lower end of the ''d'' scale. Though models have been inconclusive, the sheer simplicity of the model has made it good grist for entry-level courses in study on Williams Cribbage. Many freshman a lab report has been written on the trends in ''d'' and ''g''. === Final Statistics, 2004 Summer: === <table border=5><tr><td><pre> Zach : 17 (1 skunk), Jonathan : 14 (1 skunk). Total games: 29, including 2 skunks </pre></td></tr></table>