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2/10/03:
Guy Knows What He's Talking About!
Dear Mark,
I have a question for you on the subject of placing the 6 and
8. It seems to be open for some debate. People in the know, who
I trust, like you and Anthony Curtis, say it¹s a good bet,
and I agree. But others, like John "I write about craps for
a living and never play" Gollehon say it is still too big
a house edge, that you should go through the come instead with
odds. Heck, I say do both and if it hits on the first roll after
the point is established, use the place bet for odds. If it doesn¹t,
well, you¹ve got plenty of action - a pass line bet with
odds on the point of 8, a place bet on the 6, and come bet with
odds on the 9 (or whatever is rolled). Hopefully it¹s a $2
table. It seems as if you did nothing but place the 6 and 8 all
night you would turn out OK. Please give me your side of the argument.
Josh N.
There are
plenty of reasons why I complement my Pass line wager and odds
with a Place bet on the 6 or 8; two quickly come to mind. First,
it¹s a wager with a small house advantage, 1.5%, and second,
it¹s plenty cheap. A Place bet can be made for as little
as $6. (Quick side note: When making a Place bet on 6 or 8, you
should always wager in multiplies of $6 [$12, $18, $24, etc.].
Why? 6 and 8 pay off at 7 to 6, so I win $7 for every $6 bet.
A win on any bet under $6 is spelled "shortchange",
since the dealer will round down to the nearest dollar and pay
you less than you actually won.)
As for Gollehon¹s
guidance, playing craps is not a prerequisite to dispensing sound
advice, nor is Gollehon¹s advice chasing the wrong rabbit.
This column, as readers well know, has NOT slept through the topic
of making Pass line and Come bets and taking odds. Why just last
week ...
Also, neither Gollehon, Tony Curtis nor I represent the vanguard
of faultless play on a crap game. A lot depends on the amount
of K-Ching weighing down your pockets. Taking odds can be an expensive
proposition, especially when dealing in multiples of 10X or even
100X odds, even though the house edge on the bet is a puny 0.09%.
As minuscule as this sounds, Josh, you have to be capitalized
to the hilt no, a bit beyond that to embrace this wager. A $5
pass line wager with 100X odds puts $505 of your hard-earned money
in play. Add a Come bet with full odds, and after just one seven-out,
line away call, you¹ll be begging for badly needed free drinks
in the keno lounge.
All the suggestions in your question are sound gambling strategies,
Josh, and I especially like your pursuit of a $2 table. But let
us all not forget one important thing: All craps bets come at
a cost. Craps is a negative expectation game, meaning, that no
matter how you bet, even a $2 wager with 100X odds, the house
has an edge on your action. No nuts-and-bolts plan from the Providential
well, cut that to prudential wisdom of Gollehon, Curtis or me
can beat a negative expectation game.
Here¹s the bottom line, Josh. I recommend that all players
treat craps like a bag of M&Ms. Eat (bet) only the colors
(Pass line and Come bets with odds) you like, and can afford (a
$6 place bet on the 6 and/or 8). Just make sure to keep your wagers
under the 2% house advantage threshold.
Gambling quote
of the week: "Because I know I¹m the worst bettor on
football, I always make my pick, and then bet against myself.
-Mark Twain impressionist, McAvoy Layne
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Who Is Mark Pilarski?
Mark Pilarski has 14 years experience managing in various casinos. He now writes
a nationally syndicated column, is a university lecturer, author, reviewer and
contributing editor for numerous gaming periodicals, and is the creator of the
best-selling, award-winning audiocassette series on casino gambling, Hooked on Winning.
Have a question? He will be sure to answer it with inside tricks to ensure
you increase your winnings. Ask Mark now at: pilarski@markpilarski.com.
The Mark Pilarski Archive Collection:
Dealers Progressive Betting and Texas Wipe Out
Dealers Do Bust, Really! ...With A Little Help From You
Buy, Lay, Place... What's A Player To Do?
Slots and Pots Revisited
Video Poker Is More Skill Than Luck
Bruisin' The Old Billfold
There Must Be Easier Ways to Make a Living
Midstream Switch?
Reader Takes This Writer To Task
The Casino Advantage, And Then There Is The Graveyard Advantage
Iacta Alea Est!
The Odds Way of Staying Even
Guy Wnows What He's Talking About!
Bucking The Odds
Hell's Kitchen
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