story in my local paper,lad on a Xmas night out,played the 1 pound sidebet with dealer,where if your dealt cards are ACE/KING of the same suit are turned over you win the ongoing pot,he won 47 grand, for the blackjack players out there is that such a rare occurrence ?
Chance of your first card being an Ace of any suit - 1 in 13 (4 in 52). Chance of your second card being the matching King - 1 in 51.
Chance of both happening 1 in 13 * 51 = 1 in 663
But it also works the other way around (King first then Ace).
So total odds 2 in 663 = about 0.3%
Sounds like the lad got good value?
Chance of your first card being an Ace of any suit - 1 in 13 (4 in 52).Chance of your second card being the matching King - 1 in 51.Chance of both happening 1 in 13 * 51 = 1 in 663But it also works the other way around (King first then Ace).So total
1st time poster28 Jan 25 11:03Joined: 25 Dec 05 | Topic/replies: 56,034 | Blogger: 1st time poster's blog story in my local paper
99.9% of all gambling/betting related stories are mis-reported by reporters that don't understand the topic.
As longbridge has pointed out - the winning hand (as reported) - would occur about once every few hours at a table with 6 players (assuming they were all stupid enough to place a side-bet on it).
I thought Three 7's (same suit) in a six-deck game is the side-bet of choice for the jackpot chasers. I seem to remember it pays 5,000/1 and causes a bit of a commotion when the player being dealt it hasn't bothered to do the side bet!
1st time poster28 Jan 25 11:03Joined: 25 Dec 05 | Topic/replies: 56,034 | Blogger: 1st time poster's blogstory in my local paper99.9% of all gambling/betting related stories are mis-reported by reporters that don't understand the topic.As longbridge
Longbridge is not remotely right TM, most Casinos use a 6 deck shoe and some use 8 so it would depend entirely on the number used as you pointed out i.e 6?
Longbridge is not remotely right TM, most Casinos use a 6 deck shoe and some use 8 so it would depend entirely on the number used as you pointed out i.e 6?
I think I am still remotely right - you could have 100 packs in the shoe and the odds would be very similar - unless you have different calculations to share?
(eg 6 decks/packs chances are 24 in 312 for the first card which is still 1 in 13, second card is 6 is 311, calculation still comes out to about 0.3%)
@CGI think I am still remotely right - you could have 100 packs in the shoe and the odds would be very similar - unless you have different calculations to share?(eg 6 decks/packs chances are 24 in 312 for the first card which is still 1 in 13, second
I don't think longbridges maths are far out for what the OP describes (being dealt Ace/King suited). And although there are some variables, I'm not sure (in that particular example) that the number of decks make a significant difference?
If there were 6 decks, your first card could be any one of 48 (any of the 24 aces or 24 kings) from 312 cards (6 decks) in the shoe. That would leave you with any 6 cards from the 311 that remain in the shoe to complete the win.
That's about the same ballpark as Longbridge stated imo.
I don't think longbridges maths are far out for what the OP describes (being dealt Ace/King suited). And although there are some variables, I'm not sure (in that particular example) that the number of decks make a significant difference?If there were
Cheers TM, it is the variables I meant, e.g four aces first out or last out etc must skew the percentages but in theory Longbridge would be fairly accurate if multiplying his calculation by the number of decks. Would love to find a game using only one deck tbh!!
Cheers TM, it is the variables I meant, e.g four aces first out or last out etc must skew the percentages but in theory Longbridge would be fairly accurate if multiplying his calculation by the number of decks. Would love to find a game using only on
Find the story hard to believe - a casino offering 47,000 to 1 on a 330/1 shot ?
No way would it roll up for that long ? - people would be queuing up to play.
6 players say 30 hands each an hour - that's 180 pops at the 330/1 shot in one hour alone.
Find the story hard to believe - a casino offering 47,000 to 1 on a 330/1 shot ?No way would it roll up for that long ? - people would be queuing up to play.6 players say 30 hands each an hour - that's 180 pops at the 330/1 shot in one hour alone.
I’m guessing the casino aren’t losing anything. It’s a sweepstake that keeps rolling over perhaps. If so it’s remarkable the AK was evaded for 47000 hands though.
I’m guessing the casino aren’t losing anything. It’s a sweepstake that keeps rolling over perhaps. If so it’s remarkable the AK was evaded for 47000 hands though.
Quixall, the last time I was in a Casino to play was 1988, the eve of the Scottish Cup, with Dave Bowman and the Dundee Utd lads, they got slaughtered and then lost to Celtic!!!
Quixall, the last time I was in a Casino to play was 1988, the eve of the Scottish Cup, with Dave Bowman and the Dundee Utd lads, they got slaughtered and then lost to Celtic!!!
The difference is that one of the bookmakers prices may be wrong, whatever the overround.
But, if you are going to guess, then there are far worse ways to guess than roulette - every bet is only marginally bad.
The difference is that one of the bookmakers prices may be wrong, whatever the overround. But, if you are going to guess, then there are far worse ways to guess than roulette - every bet is only marginally bad.