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Casino Las Vegas - New Players Receive $400 Free - Play more
than 60 Games!
Price of Comp Munchies and Kitchen Etiquette
Dear Mark,
You column last week was very interesting regarding RFID chips
tracking
your play. I'm with you, I too prefer playing anonymously, though
working over the pit boss for an occasional buffet pass (I'm a low
limit player, and that's usually the best I can do) is always my
goal.
You stated; "These days, the monitoring of your play at the table
games
is done via an educated guess from a pit boss, but his/her
guesstimate
is not always reliable". So, exactly how do they determine your
worth
to them as a player? Harold F.
Monitoring play, Harold, produces only an educated guess because a
single pit boss can’t hawk every player on every game. I was too
busy
monitoring other games, changing decks and dice, cleaning up
spilled
drinks on the roulette table, filling out football parlay cards
and
squinting to watch ESPN SportsCenter on the bar TV. That's why I
needed
my nifty little math formula to figure out what you're worth to
the
casino in the form of comps.
To acquire these goodies, a reward system for worthy play, you
have to
bet a decent chunk of change for a calculated duration to justify
the
casino's giving you a trip to the chow line. The mathematical
formula I
used considers your average bet, how many hours you play, speed of
the
game, and the casino advantage. This, in theory, computes
essentially
your expected loss to the casino over the period of time you play.
So, Harold, let’s get specific. Suppose you are betting $20 a hand
for
three hours, averaging 100 hands per hour, coupled with a house
advantage of five percent the casino holds over the average
blackjack
player, the casino can predict in advance that you should lose
$300
($20 X 3 hrs. X 100 hands X .05 = $300) of the $6,000 wagered over
that
time period.
Losing $300 bucks should certainly get you a trip to the buffet,
so
long as you ask to be rated. Regrettably, most players don't ask;
consequently, a free feeding frenzy is not in their offing.
Dear Mark,
During our basement games, I am attempting to get all the players
on
the same page as far as stacking your chips. I say you should not
be
able to conceal your chips by hiding $1000 in a $25 stack or
something
of that nature. Can you please explain if there are certain
criteria to
stacking your chips that all poker players should follow? Nothing
is
worse than when you think you put someone all in, and suddenly
they are
pulling out thousands and end up having more chips than you.
Andrew R.
Players involved in rat-holing, taking money off the table or
hiding
chips, make the whole activity of playing poker a lot less
pleasurable
for everyone else. And although many of the kitchen table or
basement
games don't have specific rules against it, camouflaging chips is
still
poor poker etiquette.
Luckily, Andrew, most card rooms enforce the rule that all chips
must
be in sight. All players are entitled to a clear view of their
opponents' chips, with the higher denominations made easily
observable,
usually by putting your larger chips in the front of your stacks
so all
players can know how much you have.
Gambling quote of the week: Going to the bathroom during a poker
or
dice game is a mistake. You might miss a hot hand worth a hundred
thousand, and nothing in the bathroom is worth that much. Nick
“The
Greek” Dandalos, quoted in Cy Rice, Nick the Greek, King of
Gamblers
(1969) |