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A DISCUSSION TOPIC: INSTEAD, PLAY THE DEALER...

Started by esoito, January 03, 2013, 12:21:40 AM

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esoito

Presenting this to you in no way implies my acceptance or rejection of the author's ideas.

But it does offer itself to testing...

[Apologies for the layout. Took me ages just to get it to this point! ]


The Worlds Only Professional Roulette Player

Written by Ben Grant

When I was 25 years old I made a living playing poker. It was a much easier game back then, a
few years before it went mainstream and people actually knew how to play before walking into
a casino. Anyone with self-restraint and a quick mind for math could have made a decent living
playing poker in those days. I put in a 40-hour work week and was very strict about keeping a
log that included my playing time, as well as every other statistic imaginable.

I quickly learned that playing poker in Las Vegas was far more profitable than floating back and
forth between the few Ontario casinos that offered the game, so I spent most of my time down
there fleecing wealthy tourists and conventioneers.

I generally played for about seven or eight hours a day, and I always made sure to get at least nine hours of sleep a night,
but that still left me with a lot of time on my hands. I didn't drink, I only danced at gunpoint, and I wasn't going
to spend any of my hard-earned money shopping at marked-up boutiques, so I spent most of
that time wandering through casinos. While milling about one day in the MGM Grand, I decided
to check out the action at a very busy roulette table. That's where I met Harry, the world's only
professional roulette player.

You see, you can't be a professional roulette player – welll not for long, anyway. There isn't a
casino game with worse odds than the North American roulette wheel (except for Caribbean
Stud when the jackpot is under $90,000). Paying out at 35 to 1 with 38 numbers on the table,
the casino holds a 5.26% advantage over the player on every single spin. Unlike blackjack and
other card games, there is no method or skill involved to reduce those odds let alone turn them
in the player's favour.

I stood there watching Harry for hours. Most of the time he didn't put his
chips in play, he just kept them there in front of him, but when he did play, he generally won. I
just figured he was lucky, but I thought I'd ask anyway.

"What's your secret?"

He smiled with the corners of his mouth and responded, "I'm not playing the wheel. I'm playing
the dealer, and the dealer is psychic."  Then he winked.

This didn't make much sense to me. As far as I was aware, a roulette dealer had zero impact
on the results of each spin. Sure he fired the ball around the wheel, but there were so many
thousands of variables in play, even the dealer himself couldn't possibly know where the ball
would end up. Even if he did, he certainly wouldn't announce it to the table. I wouldn't have
though much more of it if it were not for the fact that the next day, while strolling through The
Flamingo, I spotted Harry at the roulette table raking in the chips once again.

He decided to take a break for a while so we headed over to the noodle bar to have a late lunch together.

I looked him up on my next trip to Sin City, and over a steak dinner at Binions, he explained his
secret to me.

He would wait at the table until three consecutive spins missed all of the following
numbers: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 13, 14, 17, 18, 20, 21, 25, 26, 28, 29, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36.

Sometimes it was quite a wait. As soon as this happened, though, his system was on.

What he now had to do was wait until one of the above-mentioned number came up. If a 1-6 or a 31-36
come up, he would play all 12 of those numbers on the next spin.

If a 10, 11, 13, 14, 17, 18, 20, 21, 25, 26, 28, 29 came up, he would play each of those 12 numbers on the next spin.

He maintained that his winning percentage with this method had him at a 4% advantage.

I tried to explain to him that his math made no sense, and that since a wheel has no memory, playing
those combinations still has him at a mathematical 5.26% disadvantage.

"You're right", he said, "the wheel doesn't have a memory, but the dealer does".

He then went on to explain his belief that the dealer, in his subconscious mind, knows exactly
where the ball is going to land on every spin. Further still, under certain circumstances, he
subconsciously influences where the ball is going to land based on his expectation of
probability or regression to the mean.

In other words, when the above-mentioned numbers do not come up for a period of three spins,
the dealer expects for this to be made up, and thus  influences the wheel on consecutive spins.

He added to this that his system didn't work on computer-based roulette programs, that there had to be a live dealer.

He also said that his system worked better when the dealer was unaware of the success he was having. It is for this
reason that he always moved from casino to casino and only played at crowded tables.

I thought this was a cute theory, but at the end of the day I couldn't accept the math. As far as I
was concerned, it had to be luck.

But what if it wasn't luck?

Could a roulette dealer really influence the ball with that degree of accuracy and not even be aware of it?

Is one's subconscious capable of breaking down that many variables? 

The dealer still needs to go through the physical act of spinning the wheel in one direction and launching the ball in the other,
with the precise amount of force and timing to achieve the desired result.

Harry had attributed his success to the dealer's expectations, but what if it was he himself who was unknowingly influencing the ball?

Could it be that the faith he had in his method was so strong that he was willing the ball into the correct slot?

If so, did Harry have a special gift, or could anyone with that much conviction manipulate the ball with that much success?

There is also the possibility that Harry wasn't controlling the ball at all, but rather the dealer.

It had to be luck though, didn't it?

I stopped playing poker for a living at the end of that year. My wife liked the tax-free money I
was making, but that kind of lifestyle as well as the travel back and forth wasn't exactly
conducive to family life, so she convinced me to seek more stable employment.

I said goodbye to Las Vegas and wished my friend Harry the best of luck, believing that the math would
eventually catch up to him.

Last year, my wife and I decided to meet up with some American friends of ours at the Grand
Canyon. My wife had never been to Vegas, and it had been about eight years for me, so I
insisted on staying there for a few days after our Canyon adventure to show her around my old
stomping grounds.

In the last few hours of our vacation, as we wheeled our suitcases through
the maze of the Caesars Palace casino, I spotted a familiar face at the roulette table.

There was Harry, perched behind a stack of purple chips, the world's only professional roulette player,
getting rich betting on the dealer's subconscious tendencies and defying math with every spin
of the wheel.

...ends

SamNL

Great little article Esoito,


I enjoyed reading it. It's really interesting.


But I really don't know what to think of it :broken:



esoito

Thanks, Sam. Glad you enjoyed it.

We all have some psychic capital to some degree. (At some stage we've all thought of someone and they've subsequently rung/knocked on the door/met in the street etc etc. Other examples proliferate if you think about it.)

But it's what we choose to do or don't do with it that's very revealing.


       
  • Some choose to ignore it and the capital never increases. (What's the point of having it if it's not used?)
  • Some choose to use it and derive some benefit.
  • Others choose to develop it further for whatever reason(s).


And, of course, there are those governed purely by their five sense who deny it exists at all in them. 

They take the view if they can't see, smell, taste, touch or hear it then it simply ain't there !!  ;)


Anyway -- back to the article.  You can always have a go at testing the method.

Note well he says it's for where there's a LIVE DEALER. (So not RNG)

TwoCatSam

I've heard so much bull.  Let me share!

This guy was at the table acting like a newbie, betting birthdays and what-not.  He noticed when certain players bet heavily, the dealer either hit 0 or 00.  He waited for the big bettor to lay down and put a hundred between the greens.  The dealer turned pale, but the ball was in motion.  Nothing he could do.  Sure, he hit green.

Believe it or not.

This begs the question:  Say the big bettor was betting on red.  The dealer then had twenty changes to beat him, but he went for the zeros.  Why? 

I've heard so much bull.

Sam
If dogs don't go to heaven, when I die I want to go where dogs go.   ...Will Rogers

esoito

LOL...Bad day at the office, Sam?

It's of no concern  what you think either way.

But to tip a bucket on it without even testing it first ... !! Well, bless ma soul.

You might be surprised (Or, indeed, you might not.)

XXVV

Nice stories.


I love them when there is a final long shot after a suitable prior time lapse.


Zooming in we see Charles, Harry, Martin, and all our favourite larger than life casino cartoon characters behind a mountain of coloured coded chips. Martin even has a shot where his in the spa bath and the chips are flowing over the side into the water as the waiter comes in with the champagne..... and one glass.


That says it all.


Fade to black.


We love happy endings, and the never ending story of roulette, winds on for the next reel.


Story is, there are rumours of freshly stirred 'psychic capital' about to be distributed, for much benefit from Mr Kite.


Watch this space.

TwoCatSam

No, office here Esoito........

No bad day, either.

I guess my post was offensive.  Sorry.

But, I swear, I more believe that Putin is right and aliens from other planets live among us than I would believe that first post.

And here's the thing:  You can never get into the dealer's head and know what his subconscious mind is thinking, therefore you can never be sure why those numbers hit.

And there's always some crusty ol' guy sitting around a table in worn out clothes with a three-day growth of beard who stinks like yesterday's cat box and he always has the answer.  God, during my five years at the horse races I heard it almost daily!

Sorry...I'm ranting again!

Sam
If dogs don't go to heaven, when I die I want to go where dogs go.   ...Will Rogers

Lady K

Thank you Esoito for posting this. I found it very interesting.


Food for thought.


I suggest that the gentleman was not completely up and up about what he was doing, and that was the story he gave people. I imagine he needed crowded and different tables, as he was always playing the same bets and did not want to be noticed.


I wonder if he was not actually playing a European wheel. Line 1 and 6 go very nicely together. If you wait 3 or 4 spins and do not see those 2 Lines, then see the one... the other will "usually" follow thereafter.


I was just dabbling a bit with it today. The quads don't seem to work on the european wheel, but Line 4 and 5 seem to go nicely together too.








TwoCatSam

Lady K

You probably hit the nail on the head.

I've ran across a few winners at tables here and there.  If you try to talk to them, you usually get a cold stare.

Sam
If dogs don't go to heaven, when I die I want to go where dogs go.   ...Will Rogers