I can't stress enough
the importance of using the right strategy when playing in the casino. Over the years, I've heard all sorts of
excuses for why people abandon strategy, ranging from it doesn't matter in the short
run to some anecdotal story about how someone they know threw strategy to the
wind and it paid off massively. Yeah,
that's nice. If you're a sports fan, you
know the importance of having a good coach or manager. There are reasons why Pat Riley, Joe Torre
and Bill Parcells are in such high demand.
Yes, it is because they win. And
they win because the utilize the right strategies for their respective sports. This doesn't mean that once in a while their
strategies won't fall apart. Nor does it
mean that there won't be times that they'll execute their strategy perfectly,
yet still the other team will win due to a bad bounce. I doubt any of these coaches would abandon
their strategy over a bad bounce or a single loss.
The same is true when you walk into the casino. The coach/manager of your 'team' is you. You decide which game to play. This is the first key step in your strategy. In fact, this leaves you with more power than
any of the aforementioned coaches. I'm
sure many of them wish that they could pick their opponent on any given day,
but they don't get to. You on the other
hand can decided whether to play slots, video poker or a table game. If you decide on video poker (always a good
choice), you decide which variation and to some degree, which paytable. You can choose the short-pay paytable or make
sure you find the full-pay paytable for the game of your choice. Joe Torre isn't going to hit the field with
only 8 fielders, why should you play jacks or better video poker that pays only
8 for a Full House instead of the full 9?
Once you decide on your game and paytable, the real nitty
gritty part of the strategy begins.
There are 52-cards in the deck.
There are 2,598,960 ways you can be dealt 5 cards from a 52-card
deck. There are 32 ways to play each of
these deals, ranging from discarding none of the cards to discarding them
all. You have to make a decision on each
of these hands which ones you will keep and which ones you will discard. Fortunately, in about 75% of the cases, it is
fairly obvious which ones you want to keep.
The other 25% is the challenge.
Back to our baseball analogy.
Most of the time, there isn't a lot for the manager to do. He doesn't really have to tell his leadoff
batter to 'get on base' every time he comes up.
I think it is fairly obvious that's what he will be trying to do.
Unlike the baseball manager who has to outguess the
opposing manager and players, the video poker Player doesn't need to outguess
anyone or anything. Video Poker is a
game of pure math. For each of those 32
possible ways to discard, there is a finite number of ways the hand can be
completed. Using computers, we can
determine the final hand rank of every one of those hands and determine, on
average, how many units the Player can expect to have return to him. It is true that we don't know exactly which
cards will come up this time, but we do know that over time, the actual results
will approximate our expected results.
Based on this, we learn that the best play for the Player is to play the
hand whichever way results in the highest expected return of units. We call this 'expected value' or EV for
short.
This concept is used for EVERY single decision made in
the casino in every game with any strategy.
The decision to hit or stick in blackjack is decided by which of these
two decisions results in the higher expected value. We Fold on Q-6-3 in Three Card Poker and Play
on Q-6-4 because in the case of the Q-6-4, Playing has a higher Expected Value
than Folding. The opposite is true for
Q-6-3.
You are in complete control of how to play these
hands. In the case of video poker, the
decisions you make are ones that can result in the machine you are playing
having a 100.5% payback or a 96% payback.
One payback means you will win in the long run and the other means you
will lose (and lose a lot more) in the long run.
Does playing the right strategy mean you will win every
session? Absolutely not. It just means your chances of winning
increases greatly. In today's world,
the manager that utilizes matchup charts that show how hitters have done
against certain pitchers is likely to be far more successful than one who just
feels that now is the right time for a certain pinch hitter - he's due to get a
hit. Utilizing the right strategy is
important in a variety of situations. I
can't stress enough that the casino is most definitely one of these situations.
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