Why You Can't Score 19 in Cribbage: Impossible Scores Explained

Learn why 19, 25, 26, and 27 are impossible scores in cribbage, and why a zero-point hand is called a 'nineteen.' Complete mathematical explanation.

Why You Can’t Score 19 in Cribbage

“I got a 19.”

If you’ve played cribbage, you’ve heard this — and you know it means the speaker scored zero points. But why 19? And what makes it impossible?

Welcome to the strange mathematics of cribbage scoring.


The Impossible Scores

In cribbage, there are four scores you can never achieve with a 5-card hand:

Score Status
19 Impossible
25 Impossible
26 Impossible
27 Impossible

Every other score from 0 to 29 is achievable with the right combination of cards.


Why 19 Is Impossible

Let’s break down cribbage scoring:

The Building Blocks

Combination Points
Fifteen 2
Pair 2
Pair Royal (trips) 6
Double Pair Royal 12
Run of 3 3
Run of 4 4
Run of 5 5
Four-card flush 4
Five-card flush 5
Nobs 1

The Math

To get exactly 19 points, you’d need a combination of these values that adds to 19.

Possible without any fifteens:

  • Pure runs don’t help (3, 4, 5)
  • Pairs (2, 6, 12) don’t help
  • Flushes (4, 5) don’t help
  • No combination of these equals 19

With fifteens (multiples of 2):

  • Fifteens contribute 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, or 16 points
  • Adding pairs (2, 6, 12) and runs (3, 4, 5) and flush (4, 5) and nobs (1)
  • No combination totals exactly 19

The problem: 19 is odd, and the only odd contributions are:

  • Runs (3, 4, 5)
  • Five-card flush (5)
  • Nobs (1)

To get to 19 (odd), you need an odd total from the non-fifteen elements. But the hands that produce high fifteens also tend to include pairs (even), creating combinations that skip 19.


The Mathematical Proof

This has been verified by brute-force computer analysis of all possible 5-card hands.

There are C(52,4) × 48 = 778,320 possible hand+starter combinations.

None of them produce exactly 19, 25, 26, or 27 points.

Near Misses

Score Example Hand What’s Missing
18 6-6-7-8-8 +1 would need nobs, but no Jack
20 5-5-5-10-J Has fifteens, pairs, nobs — skips 19

Why 25, 26, and 27 Are Impossible

These high scores fall in the gap between achievable totals.

Achievable High Scores

Score Example Hand
24 5-5-5-J with 10 starter
24 4-5-6-6 with 5 starter
28 5-5-5-J with J starter (wrong suit)
29 5-5-5-J with 5 starter (matching J suit)

The Gap at 25-27

To score above 24 but below 28, you’d need a very specific combination that doesn’t exist. The hands that produce 28+ require four 5s and a Jack (or similar), which creates such strong scoring that it jumps over 25-27.


Why “19 Hand” Means Zero

The term emerged because:

  1. You can’t actually score 19
  2. Saying “I scored 19” is obviously a joke
  3. It’s less embarrassing than saying “zero”
  4. The humor is self-deprecating

It’s been cribbage slang for generations. When you hear someone announce “19,” you know they got skunked on that hand.


How Often Does Zero Happen?

Zero-point hands (actual 19s) occur with specific conditions:

  • No fifteens (hardest to avoid)
  • No pairs
  • No runs
  • No flush
  • No nobs

Example 19 hands:

  • A♠ 4♥ 6♣ 9♦ with K♠ starter — no scoring combination
  • 2♠ 5♣ 7♥ 9♦ with K♣ starter — the 5 and K don’t pair, no flush, no fifteens, no runs

Frequency: Approximately 1.5-2% of hands score zero — about once every 50-70 hands.


All Achievable Scores

For completeness, here’s evidence that everything else is possible:

Score Example Hand
0 A-4-6-9-K (no combos)
1 Nobs only (rare)
2 Single fifteen or pair
3 Run of 3 only
4 Two fifteens OR flush
18 Various combinations
20 6-7-7-8-8 with 9
24 Multiple hands
28 5-5-5-J-J
29 5-5-5-J with matching 5

Trivia: Impossible vs. Improbable

Situation Status Odds
Scoring exactly 19 Impossible Never
Scoring exactly 29 Possible 1 in 216,580
Scoring exactly 0 Possible ~1 in 60
Scoring exactly 1 Possible but rare ~1 in 500+

What This Tells Us

The existence of impossible scores reveals that cribbage’s scoring system, while elegant, has mathematical constraints. The designers (17th-century card players) almost certainly didn’t know about these gaps — they emerged naturally from the scoring rules.

It’s one of those delightful quirks that makes cribbage mathematically interesting centuries after its invention.


Next Time You Score Zero

Remember: you didn’t score zero — you scored 19.

And that’s the cribbage way.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why can't you score 19 in cribbage?
The scoring combinations in cribbage (fifteens, pairs, runs, flushes, nobs) don’t produce any 5-card hand that totals exactly 19 points. The possible scores jump from 18 to 20, skipping 19 entirely.
What does 'I got 19' mean in cribbage?
It’s a humorous way of saying you scored zero points. Since 19 is impossible, saying ‘I got a 19’ signals that you have nothing. It’s traditional cribbage slang used for generations.
What other scores are impossible in cribbage?
Besides 19, you also cannot score 25, 26, or 27 points in a hand. All other values from 0 to 29 are achievable.
How often do you score zero in cribbage?
Zero-point hands (nineteens) occur roughly 1.5-2% of the time — about once every 50-70 hands dealt. They happen when your cards have no fifteens, no pairs, no runs, no flush, and no nobs.
Can you score 19 in the crib?
No, the crib follows the same scoring rules as a regular hand, so 19 is equally impossible in the crib.