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Craps
Winning Tips |
Our Craps
Rules contains a full rules breakdown for this great
casino game. We also bring you a full Craps
Terminology beneath the strategy, so if you have
always wanted to know what "Little Joe from Kokomo" means,
now you can find out, Craps has the best gambling terminology
of any modern game!
Introduction
Trying to
give a brief strategy guide to Craps is like trying to
teach calculus quickly: 99% of the time it ain't gonna
happen. Tough! Let's give it a shot anyway.
Let me give you my strategy for just about everything: take the
best odds you can get, nudge them in your favor as much as you
possibly can and play smart. In Craps the best odds on the table
are Pass, Don't Pass, Come, and Don't Come because they give
the house the smallest edge. Everything else is for the impatient,
the imprudent or the "gifted" -- rubes one and all if you ask
me.
The Best Bets
The numbers people say that a Pass bet gives the house a 1.41%
edge. And a Don't Pass yields slightly less than 1.40% to the house.
These are the Line Bets and they're the heart of a winner's strategy
because everything else gives too much away. For example:
· The Field gives away 5.6%.
· Big 6/Big 8 gives 9.1%.
· Horn: 12.5%.
· Craps 2/Craps 12: 13.9%
· Any 7: 16.7%.
See what I mean? Craps is about dice and dice are about percentages.
The smart money gives as little away as possible and that means
Pass/Don't Pass at around 1.4%. Those bets and how to improve
them is what this article is about.
While we're at it, it's worth keeping in mind that Come/Don't Come
bets follow the same odds and logic. The only thing different
about them is the timing as to when they're placed.
Improve Your
Bets
Okay, so the smart bets are Pass/Don't Pass (and Come/Don't Come).
Now how can we improve the best bets in Craps? The Odds, that's
how -- either by Buying Odds when you play "right" (Pass) or Laying
Odds when you play "wrong" (Don't Pass).
These are placed in addition
to your initial bet after the Come Out roll and the reason
they improve your initial bet is that the house takes
no edge on Odds. That's right, zero house. All you're
betting against is the straight dice. But you could spend
a long time looking at the felt trying to find where
the Odds bets are supposed to go. The truth is they're
not marked. It's a "hidden" bet, so to speak.
The word is that in Vegas the big houses simply take the position
that it's not their responsibility to inform the players of all
their betting options, so the Odds stay unmarked. Needless to
say, our online friends are not in the business of correcting
Vegas so they take the same approach: no Odds to be seen. No
biggie, it's an easy bet to make and it will improve your original
Line bet by almost halving the house edge or better, if the house
let's you do it.
Placing an Odds Bet
An Odds bet is made by supplementing your original Pass/Don't Pass
bet by an additional amount after you've made it past the Come
Out roll. The bets are placed right beside your initial bet on
the Pass/Don't Pass line. In Vegas it's typical for the house to
restrict these bets to Single Odds, meaning you can match your
Come Out bet with an equal amount. And as I said, that'll about
half the house edge on your initial bet.
The good news is that the online casinos I've sampled let you bet
double your initial Line bet. This is called Double Odds and
it cuts their edge even further, to a little more than 40% of
their initial edge. So that 1.4% they originally had is now down
to about 0.6%. It's a smart play. Generally speaking, and assuming
you can handle the gaff, buy the biggest Odds you can find because
the larger the Odds bet, the more you shave off the house edge
on your initial bet.
Buying Odds
When you play "right" and Buy Odds, you're supplementing a Pass
bet and if you win you'll get your winnings based on the Point.
So assuming a Pass Bet of $5:
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I'm just showing your Odds win
here, not the total. In other words, on a right bet of $5,
where the Come Out roll sets a Point of 10, your total take
on the win will be $40: your original $5 bet back plus a
winning on that of $5, plus your Odds bet back ($10) and
the winnings from that ($20).
Laying Odds
Conversely, when you Lay Odds you're supplementing a Don't Pass
Bet and win as follows (assume an initial $5 Don't Pass bet):
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So to follow the Buy example
above, an initial wrong bet of $5 on a Come Out roll of 10
will yield a total win of $25: your initial $5 back plus
its win of $5, your $10 Odds bet back plus its win of $5.
Now here's another little trick. Most casinos only
pay in denominations as small as $1. In other words,
you lose any fraction of a dollar that you would
otherwise have coming.
Because of the Odds your Laying, 3-2 and 6-5 in
particular, you're losing fractions if you bet as
given above because most multiples of 10 are not
wholly divisible by 3 or 6. On the 5/9 Point you
lose $0.67, and on the 6/8 Point you lose $0.33.
Nothing much, you say? But we're talking about not
giving the house anything more than they already
have, right? So let's look at another scenario.
Now let's say you place a wrong bet of $6 instead
of $5. In that case your Double Odds bet can be $12.
And as you'll see from the following table, you lose
no fractions on this bet. You keep all the win you
have coming because all multiples of 12 are wholly
divisible by 3 (as in the 3-2 odds) and by 6 (as in
the 6-5 Odds).
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So basically what I'm saying
is if you're going to Lay Odds, make your initial Don't Pass
bet a multiple of $6, and bet full on your Double Odds for
a multiple of $12.
The same logic applies, by the way, with Buying
Odds. Make your Pass bet a multiple of $5 so your
Double Odds will be in multiples of $10. This is
optimal because your divisions are going to be by
1, 2, and 5.
Testing the Strategy
Most players are going to prefer playing right and Buy the Odds
because the payouts look larger, but then you're playing against
slightly higher odds. If you're hardcore about playing to win
you'd be well advised to look seriously at playing wrong, taking
the smaller house edge, and grinding it out. The gurus sum it
up by saying that playing right and Buying Odds is the more popular
and a bit riskier. Playing wrong and Laying Odds is considerably
less popular with the Craps crowds, shaves the house edge to
a minimum and is for players with a large roll and the patience
to grind out the winnings over extended play.
So I tested the strategy on a number of online casinos.
What I found was the playing wrong and Laying Odds
was definitely to my tastes, which is no surprise
because I have always preferred the Don't Pass bets.
Now when it comes to kicking out for the Double Odds
I have to say that I found it better for my peace
of mind, if not strictly for the best edge, to not
Lay Double on every round.
If you look at the Point frequencies you'll see
that there are three ways to roll a 4 or 10, four
ways to roll a 5 or 9, and five ways to roll a 6
or 8 and, finally, six ways to roll an Out 7. In
other words, when betting wrong and always placing
Double Odds, those 6's and 8's are gonna turn up
fairly frequently and you're going to lose your bets.
In short, it's a game of nerves to play that way
and, speaking for myself, I don't like it. So what
I've done is Double Odds on the 4 and 10 and let
the rest ride. What I'm doing, of course, is betting
exceptionally conservatively since the 4/10 Points
are the least likely to show and are therefore the
safest wrong bets to Double up on. It makes for a
slow game but I was almost always able to better
my holdings if I stuck with it. It might not be everyone's
cup of tea, but I like it when the chips pile up
and I don't like it when they drain away. It's basically
a style of play that suits my temperament.
Conclusion
So there it is: Pass/Don't Pass (or Come/Don't Come) only, while
playing the highest Odds you can get will help you shave the
house edge to a minimum. Modify to suit your tastes, as I did
in standing on every wrong bet save the 4/10 Points. And finally,
don't give the house your fractions. Shooters up!
This Craps Strategy is brought to you courtesy of Winneronline and is written by the world
reknowned gambling expert, Max Drayman.
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| TWO: "Craps," "two
aces," "rats eyes," "snake eyes," "push
the don't," "eleven in a shoe store," "twice
in the rice," "two craps two, two bad boys from
Illinois."
THREE: "Craps," "ace-deuce," "ace
caught a deuce," "winner on the dark side," "three
craps three, the indicator," "small ace
deuce, can't produce," "the other side
of eleven's tummy."
FOUR: "Little Joe," "little Joe from
Kokomo," "hit us in the tu tu," "ace
trey, the country way."
FIVE: "After five, the field's alive," "thirty-two
juice roll" (OJ's jersey number), "little
Phoebe," "fiver, fiver, racetrack driver," "we
got the fever."
SIX: "Big Red, catch'em in the corner," "like
a blue chip stock," "pair-o-treys, waiter's
roll," "the national average," "sixie
from Dixie."
SEVEN: "Seven out, line away," "grab
the money," "five two, you're all through," "six
ace, end of the race," "front line winner,
back line skinner," "six one, you're all
done," "seven's a bruiser, the front line's
a loser," "up pops the devil," "Benny
Blue, you're all through."
EIGHT: "A square pair, like mom and dad," "Ozzie
and Harriet," "the windows," "eighter
from Decatur."
NINE: "Center field," "center of
the garden," "ocean liner niner," "Nina
from Pasadena," "What shot Jesse James?
A forty-five."
TEN: "Puppy paws," "pair-a-roses," "pair
of sunflowers," "the big one on the end."
ELEVEN: "Yo leven," "yo levine the
dancing queen," "six five, no jive."
TWELVE: "Craps," "boxcars," "atomic
craps," "all the spots we got," "outstanding
in your field," "triple dipple, in the
lucky ducky," "double saw on boxcars."
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