Casinos Online-Internet Gambling Few casinos have High Odds Multiples at Craps


Probability and the 50 50 Bet
Jacks or Better Video Poker
By the Time Progressives Hit
Before You Can Expect to Win?
All-or-Nothing Gambles
Percentages are Fact, not Opinion (Baccarat)
Winners May Need Advice
Know What You Can and Can't Control in the Casino
$10 bets at double-zero roulette
Law, Luck, and the Leningrad Elephant
Blackjack Hands
Gambling Advice
Nickel Slots
Simpler is better
Spreading money around the craps table
Best dealers upcard for Blackjack players
Picking numbers and RNGs
Results after quitting the game
Witless winners
Bankrolls
Bankrolls 2
Betting Progressions
Bank roll fluctuations in Blackjack
Flipping a coin
Laws of Probability
Bad Start to a Game
Game Show Comparisons
Quick Fixes

Place Betting at Craps
Balance Between Chance and Payoff
Self Help Quiz
Quitting While Ahead
Betting on Don't Come in Craps
House Edge vs. Betting Strategies
Anticipating Bankroll Savings
Rules to Estimate Chances of Success
Even Fighting Edge
Beating the Odds to Overcome Edge
Strategy for Craps Fans
Gambling Books
Intuition in Games
Betting at Craps
How Often Should You Get What You Expect?
Can Casinos Predict Jackpots?
Gambling Theories, History, and Other Lies
Overestimating Your Chances of a Hit
Give Lay Bets at Craps a Look-See

PLAYING IT SMART by ALAN KRIGMAN

Why Few Casinos Have High Odds Multiples at Craps

Casino craps players can augment Pass, Come, Don't Pass, and Don't Come wagers with bets known as "Free Odds" or, more simply, "Odds." This is money put into action after the come-out roll, with a point established. Payoffs mirror the odds against winning (hence the name). As a result, Odds give the house no edge.

As an example, say a craps buff plops $10 on Pass. A five shows on the come-out and becomes the point. The player then takes "double odds" -- backing up the original wager with twice the original bet, $20, for a total of $30 at risk. On a seven, all $30 is lost. On a five, the payoff is $40. This is $10 on the base bet (even money, hence "flat bet") plus $30 on the Odds (chances against winning are 3-to-2 so $20 pays $30).

Were the whole $30 bet on Pass at the getgo, the payoff would only be $30. For players comfortable with $30 at risk, though, the choice isn't quite the no-brainer it may seem. Here's why.

During the come-out, bettors have eight ways to win even money and four to lose; the remaining 24 ways neither win nor lose immediately but determine the point for subsequent throws. Solid citizens who start with $10 and add $20 Odds can win $10 while they're in the catbird seat but $10 plus $40 (2-to-1 on four or 10), $30 (3-to-2 on five or nine), or $24 (6-to-5 on six or eight) while they're battling uphill. Those who start with $30 and take no Odds can grab $30 when they're 2-to-1 favorites, offset by winning only $30 when they're the underdogs.

Overall, $10 plus $20 averages out more beneficially than $30 flat. This, because house edge is 1.4 percent on the flat bet and zero on the Odds. So $10 plus $20 is worth 1.4 percent of $10 or $0.14 to the bosses; $30 flat brings 1.4 percent of $30 or $0.42.

More starkly, at 10-times Odds, the alternatives might be $10 flat with $100 Odds versus $110 flat. The former still earns the house a theoretical $0.14; the latter squeezes $1.54 in juice.

Based on math alone, casinos shouldn't want high Odds multiples and players should. What establishment would settle for $0.14 rather than $1.54 from $110 action? Alternately, what gambler would be willing to pay $1.54 instead of $0.14 for a $110 bet?

On the first of these questions, anyone who's been around the rail knows that games offering Odds multiples over 5X are scarce. Most top out at 3X, some at only 2X. The establishments with higher Odds multiples generally use them as marketing incentives to increase the action. Not only more warm bodies, but gamblers who tend to bet higher and stay at the tables longer. The idea is to accept a smaller fraction of a larger handle, hoping the concession on the one is outweighed by the gain on the other.

For the second question, consider how few players put the maximum on Odds, as it is. The problem is the amount involved. A total of $110 is too much on one number for most $10 bettors' bankrolls. More, dice doyens typically like to cover several numbers at a time. A Pass and two Comes at $10 plus $100 each may prove profitable but $330 wiped out by a seven may be a disaster.

As a result, not many players can or should take maximum Odds. Folks may choose a casino offering high Odds because they've heard edge is lower in these games, but don't understand why. Or they figure they can start at 2X or 3X then raise this portion of their bets as a way to press without incurring a penalty from the edge. Not bad in theory; rarely put into practice.

Further, bets on Pass aren't necessarily followed by wagers on Come. More often, individuals start on the Pass line, take at least some Odds, then cover additional numbers using Place or Buy bets. In such cases, a generous joint could essentially give the Pass bet away and make its money on the high edge associated with the others. Consistent with this cunningly crafted couplet by the wily Wordsworth of the wagering world, Sumner A Ingmark:

Many a dollar is lost by mistaking,
Bets you can make with the bets you are making.

(c) 2005, ICON/Information Concepts Inc

To view more columns, click here




English Harbour is one of the finest casinos online. They offer you your own personalized start page, $35 free with a minimum first purchase of $35 and first rate software.The software must be downloaded, but the wait is well worth it.The largest slot machine jackpots on the internet.


Slot Land has added a new exciting game to their online gambling site : the WildHeart. This variation of a popular Double Joker video poker offers TRIPLE play giving you a chance of winning on THREE paylines at a time. Two wild cards that may be substituted for any card. The best hand, a Royal Flush, pays off up to the amount of our progressive jackpot. NO DOWNLOADS a webtv favorite.
The Sands of the Caribbean Online Casino and Sports Book

I feel as a website owner, one of my responsibilities is to search the internet and provide you, the gambler, with the very best online casinos the worldwide web has to offer.The Sands rates as one of these online casinos.
They offer over 40 games for online gambling, progressive jackpots, single and multiplayer games and sportsbetting.
The games include everyone's favorites: blackjack, slots, video poker and more. Their sportsbetting service is the one and only service I use when I want to bet online. The ongoing comp programs rate as one of the best the internet has to offer.
Download required, but definitely worth it!!


Internet Casinos

Internet casinos listed at gambling casinos online.com are for the players looking for reliable places to gamble online. I gamble for enjoyment.

Internet casinos or online sports betting casinos can ask to be listed, if the website visitors have any problems with your product you will be given an opportunity to solve the problem. Unsolved problems and your services will be removed from this website.

Internet Casinos-Gambling Online