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Gaming Guru
A shuffle through the gaming mailbag1 March 2012
A. Given no previous incidents, an hour and a half wait and rude treatment strike me as way over the top. The casino is permitted to try to recover the money, but your offer to the return the money should have been enough to bring the incident to a close. In most jurisdictions, casinos are required to submit a document of internal controls to the state gaming board for approval. The internal controls will not be exactly the same from casino to casino, but they detail such things as how a casino will go about paying a hand-paid jackpot, how often cards will be changed at a blackjack table and the method of shuffle, what happens to credits left on a slot machine and much, much more. In theory, any money left on a machine belongs to the casino, and players other than those who left it there may not claim it. In practice, I've had attendants tell me, "Why don't you start over there? That machine has credits on it." It all depends on how the individual casino wants to enforce its rules. As a player, I'd have done exactly what you did. I'd put my own money in the game, and if there was extra on the machine, all the better. Since there was no arrest made, I doubt that you've been red-flagged beyond there being an incident report at that casino. If a pattern developed and the casino thought you were credit-scavenging on any kind of regular basis, action might be stronger. I agree that the casino did not handle this well. Like you, I would be wary of returning to a casino that made it into a bigger, more embarrassing incident than it needed to be.
A. Given that hand, the average return per five coins wagered is 2.41 coins if you hold K-Q-J. That drops to 2.17 coins if you hold Q-J, and 2.11 if you hold either K-J or K-Q. Holding all three consecutive high cards enhances your chances of drawing a straight as well as maximizing chances at a high pair. Chances of drawing four-of-a-kind by holding just two unpaired high cards are remote. Regardless of which two you hold, there are 16,125 possible three-card draws, and only two of them will bring four-of-a-kind. That 1-in-8,000-plus shot is nowhere near strong enough to justify discarding another high card. This article is provided by the Frank Scoblete Network. Melissa A. Kaplan is the network's managing editor. If you would like to use this article on your website, please contact Casino City Press, the exclusive web syndication outlet for the Frank Scoblete Network. To contact Frank, please e-mail him at fscobe@optonline.net. Recent Articles
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