The Classic
Roman Myth Approach to Gambling
Dear Mark,
I'm about to make my first trip to Las Vegas. Can
you give me your favorite King Midas tip that will
turn my trip into gold? Jerome S.
Why King Midas, Jerome?
When I think of King Midas my thoughts turn toward
greed. In Ovid's Greek tale, Midas was so greedy he
wanted everything he touched to turn to gold. To his
delight, his wish came true, and he proceeded to gild
everything in sight. But like a rapacious player who
wants to win every hand, his fate was tragic in the
end. He killed his own beloved daughter with his magical
touch
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Blackjack: With
perfect basic strategy.
Video Poker: Again, using perfect basic strategy.
Craps: A pass line wager, odds on that pass
line bet and placing the six or eight.
Baccarat: The bank or player hand.
Slots: Yes, even a cybernetic one-armed bandit
can be a good play if it's advertised as a 98 plus
percent return machine.
Horace once said: "Gold
can be slave or master." So can the wrong casino
wager.
Dear Mark,
Every time I chip away (no pun intended) at the casino,
they return larger chips than those I'm betting. I
get the feeling they want me to cash out and keep
what I've just won. Why are they being so polite to
a winner? Randall C.
Quite the contrary, Randall.
The second you get on a hot streak, casinos prefer
pit employees to "change color" or upgrade
your chips. No, they're not being courteous, just
trying to induce larger play. Because most players
don't equate casino chips with real money, it's easy
to get caught up in the game and forget what you're
actually betting. Treat all chips, won or lost, like
Friday's paycheck-your hard-earned money.
Dear Mark,
I have a system in roulette where I play all the odd
black numbers and if I lose I follow it by playing
all the red even numbers. The dealer took note of
how I was betting so he knew my style of play. While
betting my odd black numbers, I placed $2 on 17 black
as the ball was about to drop. Suddenly the dealer
reached for my money and handed it back to me. As
you probably guessed, it came up 17 black. To say
the very least I was extremely upset and demanded
to be paid. The dealer said he couldn't pay me because
he had already called "no more betting"
before I put my bet on 17 black. The pit boss came
over and agreed with the dealer's decision.
Even though the ball did not land in a slot yet, and
the dealer probably knew my style of play, shouldn't
I still have been paid? Tom D.
Your question reminds
me of the roulette player who sent home this telegram:
"System working well-send more money."
As a rule, Tom, the casino wants the dealer to wait
to the final "reasonable" moment before
he barks "no more bets." The house wants
to get as many wagers per decision as possible because
they hold a hefty 5.26% advantage over the player
on roulette. The long and short of it, Tom, is that
every casino has its own set of guidelines it wants
its dealers to follow. Additionally, every experienced
roulette dealer has his own sense of timing on when
to halt wagering.
In this case, Tom, I side with the dealer (casino).
The simple solution is to get your bets in early.
Better yet, how about finding a new game that does
not have such a precipitous house edge? All you need
now is a new system.
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