My final conclusion on card-counting

blackchipjim

Well-Known Member
#21
Reasons to play ap bj

There may be different reasons to be a counter over just playing the game like everyone else at the bj table. The number one reason should be is that you know what the real score during the game. I for one fit the profile of a counter because I want the inside info on whats going on with the game. We all have had tough sessions that to seem rattle our very sense of what we are suppose to be about.

This is a game of nerves and sometimes we are tested beyond our limits.This is when we need to take a break and review the past and plan for the future our break or breaks may be short or long but a break is needed. If it is a job for you then you have a achieved a level of playing some of us could only imagine.

I'm glad you came back to playing and hope your're enjoying the game more now than before. It seems we enjoy something more if we take a break then go back to it after a break. blackchipjim
 

Katweezel

Well-Known Member
#22
Mitch Hedberg quote

tribute said:
On this, I concur. Sometimes I ask myself, "What is the reason I am willing to drive 5.5 hours for an opportunity to play a few hours at a simple game with high variance, sit next to cigar smokin', intoxicated, sometimes rude beings, and hope to be able to take a little more cash away than what I brought?" It must be due to:
1) Pure enjoyment of the game.
2) The challenge and satisfaction of beating the house, at their game, on their own playing field, where the odds are tilted toward them.
3) To escape from the weekly "routine"
4) My compulsive nature (Maybe I'm just hopelessly addicted)
5) Win or no win, the house still pays for my room and food, sometimes extra cash.

What better form of entertainment could be found?
I could not resist posting this Mitch Hedberg quote after reading your #4.

"I like to play blackjack. I'm not addicted to gambling. I'm addicted to sitting in a semi-circle." :cat:
 

matt21

Well-Known Member
#23
blackchipjim said:
This is a game of nerves and sometimes we are tested beyond our limits.This is when we need to take a break and review the past and plan for the future our break or breaks may be short or long but a break is needed. If it is a job for you then you have a achieved a level of playing some of us could only imagine.

I'm glad you came back to playing and hope your're enjoying the game more now than before. It seems we enjoy something more if we take a break then go back to it after a break. blackchipjim
I'm enjoying the game when playing it and when i think i am not getting too much heat. What I am not enjoying is the essential double-life that I am leading - the silence (or lying?) to friends and family as to how and where i spend my time, and trying to organize my playing schedule from day to day and week to week. And the loneliness of it all. At least my actual playing results are pretty close to my EV and not two standard deviations below it.

Anyways I am putting together some medium term plans now to ensure that i dont become a dinosaur too quickly (and trying to simultaneously get another business started).
 

sagefr0g

Well-Known Member
#24
to be or not to be, that is the question

matt21 said:
I'm enjoying the game when playing it and when i think i am not getting too much heat. What I am not enjoying is the essential double-life that I am leading - the silence (or lying?) to friends and family as to how and where i spend my time, and trying to organize my playing schedule from day to day and week to week. And the loneliness of it all. At least my actual playing results are pretty close to my EV and not two standard deviations below it.

Anyways I am putting together some medium term plans now to ensure that i dont become a dinosaur too quickly (and trying to simultaneously get another business started).
the great thing is that the intelligent, savvy and chic magnet gentleman that you are, well you just are not the type to become mired in any sort of self destructive addiction. so you can and i'm sure will decide and determine how AP stuff is going to fit into your life.

just a note on the 'double-life' sort of thing, i would just say i know what you mean. it can be an uncomfortable sort of way to have to conduct one's self. it was my observation at the bj-bash that leads me to believe imho us AP's have a tendency to lend to much import to the the prospects of heat and that doesn't mean we should be careless and rub the casinos noses in our business, lmao. just it's a battle and we are warriors and warriors don't let spies infiltrate their ranks, lol. so what ever, to me it's just a long way of saying, much like anything else in life there are things we say and do and things we don't.
so lmao, i must be pretty good because do you remember having to ask if that little incident at the table between Y and me was an act or not?:devil:
the answer is, it was and it wasn't. it was her really upset with me, but it was me using the incident for the viewing and listening pleasure of the dealer and the pit. did you and the dealer have a good laugh over that?
point being, an 'act' can be real, we just as we take advantage of the nature of the game of blackjack, we take advantage of the game of life.
what ever, lol, but just a bit more on this 'double-life' sort of stuff. have you ever watched the gamblers in the casino? you know like at the craps, roulette tables or slot machines. they haven't a care in the world other than maybe losing or winning, they are for the most part gambling and having fun. i just want to say this about that, at some point in my blackjack AP endeavors i realized my discomfort that you allude to and i saw that the gamblers in the casino don't suffer from that. then i had a horrific losing streak where i lost one seventh of my meager bankroll. there upon i took a blackjack sabbatical and considered it all with a bit of self reflection. i concluded that AP in the very least is gambling in the short run, and infact due to the nature of our AP play being dependent on probability in the long term is really still a gamble. the point being, there is really no reason that i shouldn't be just as happy and carefree as the rest of the gamblers in the house.

so anyway, where ever or what ever you decide about your AP endeavors, i'll just say it was a pleasure sharing the tables with you.:celebrate
 

matt21

Well-Known Member
#25
Bump…
Another five months have gone by since my “final conclusion” post! I have again come to some kind of decision-making point. But before I explain why a decision is needed here are some of the things that have happened in the last 5 months:

- After doubling my allocated investment to this venture I ramped up my standard unit from $25 to $50 – allowing me profitable access to $25min tables and consequently mostly heads-up play as well as ability to request dealer changes, table openings and re-shuffles.
- Session swings have increased dramatically (naturally!). Both biggest loss biggest gain are above $6k – and there are regularly shoes with swings of several thousand dollars.
- The first 170 hours were superb - my ‘career’ profit+loss went from $7k to $40k in three months, running 10-15k above expectation most times.
- Next I got very paranoid about heat (since I was winning a lot), even though to date there have been no back-off’s or warnings.
- So I made several changes to my game – further statistical analysis and simulating, experimenting with various betting ramps, increased accuracy in assessing playing conditions, reduced session lengths, hunted for new venues and increased cover.
- Recently I have lost about $12k (some 240 units) over 35 hours of play. For the first time (in the $50 unit zone) my actual return is below EV. Incidentally the start of the losses has coincided perfectly with the time that I changed my ‘better cover’ betting approach (i.e. Burning Tables in Las Vegas).
- This last losing streak is only halfway to my losing streak from 2008 where I dropped about 440 units over 126 hours, although that one was 'worth' only $3k (in the $10 unit zone) and I was playing at most half as many hands per hour as I am playing now.

So now I am hurting. Even though my return is pretty close to the expected return I am obviously feeling as if I am giving my hard earned money back to the casino’s coffers. And I feel that negative variance. All the worst possible card combinations are coming to the dealer’s hand and the black chips are quickly making their way back into the dealer’s rack!

I am suddenly realizing that the $27k of remaining profits could realistically (and statistically) evaporate if I just happen to continue to have negative variance fall my way. Fear has come into the equation. Even though, I am just actually now getting the swings that I statistically should be getting.

I have thought of several actions to take:

- Carry on fearlessly, objectively and aggressively and simply accept these variations as part of this profession
- Reduce my bet ramp for some time until I regain my confidence at the table and actually mentally believe that I am able to win
- Carefully review all the simulations and calculations I have completed to check whether my expected rate of returns are indeed correct (according to them I could still make money if the penetration in shoe games falls into the low 60’s!)
- Stop playing altogether/color up for good – take the $27k cash and put it into the bank and/or the next business opportunity
- Move beyond counting – and focus on advanced techniques
- Other suggestions?

I have made some experiences in the sporting world this year where I have learned that I need to be very persistent in order to achieve success and to work very hard. Tasting failure in this was a very valuable lesson. I generally also believe that one needs to decide what they want to achieve and then stick to that decision! Is it foolish to apply this lesson here in the realm of professional gambling?

I would really welcome some advice/suggestions from like-minded folk here...

Matt :joker:
 
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UK-21

Well-Known Member
#26
I have read through your most recent post several times - it touches on some profound stuff re winning, long term returns, EVs and so on.

For my two bob's worth, I think you should take your $27K of profit and do something with it that will remain with you always; undertake a world tour, build a school in some out of the way place in Africa where the expectations of the kids are poor from the day they draw their first breath; spend it on something that will change the lives of an under-priviliged person for the better (pay for a scholarship of some kind?) etc etc etc. Don't just give most of it, and maybe more, back to the casino (as the maths suggest you will).

Do this and you'll forever be a winner. By all means continue to play BJ but reduce your mins down and use the surplus over the adequate capitalisation mark for something useful. Carry on playing at higher stakes ($50) and the maths suggest a big chunk of it will go back from where it came. Allow this to happen, and it'll mean that, AP or not, you'll be just another one of the punters who regularly visit the houses of chance, albeit to play with a marginal edge over the house in the longer term.

Money's a wonderful thing if it's used for some good - you have the opportunity to be part of that, or you can just carry on playing as before.

Your call . . . .

Best wishes.

Newb99
 

3aces

Active Member
#27
retirement?

Matt, excellent thread, with lots of things to contemplate for those of us who are thinking of retirement from counting. I noticed over on bj21.com that MathProf is at that point after a couple of down years.

Also, thanks for your help in another thread calculating the probability of losing $15K with a win rate of $128 and SD of $1808 in 15 hrs. of play. As you figured, the probability of that happening is once in every 128 trips. I had over-estimated my actual number of trips (seemed like 50 but it is actually 29 in 2.5 years with 500 hrs. of play).

So my -$15K trip from hell hit me a bit hard. As you figured, I should win $10K or more once every 8 trips and I have done so once overy 14. And you nailed my actual career win of $47K, though your calculations would have been a bit different with the lower trip total.

As you did, I have tried to assess the pros and cons of continuing. My track record:

-Starting with blissful ignorance and a hail mary bankroll of 5K, I played fearlessly at DD with a spread of 50x400, with some wonging in and lots of "breaks" in high counts. It was a strong game and I won pretty big. Got backed off twice. Bankroll went to $40K.

-Realized I wanted to protect longevity so I switched to a slightly weaker, but still profitable, strategy of agressive 6D wonging, in and out. Some good wins.

-As you mentioned, the lonely grind began to take its toll. And THEN, I met a tall blond who became my partner. And it made the travel and grind much more bearable. Had some great times, wonderfully fun "drunk couple" cover opportunities. And many other benefits:)

-Of course, I shared some winnings with Blondie. And expenses mounted. And I began to fear back offs and play more conservatively, since I did not want the expense-paid fun with Blondie to end. And my trips began to show little net profit.

-And then the market crashed and my 40K bankroll and $400 max bet started to worry me. I vowed to quit if I ever fell to a point where I had zero net profit from the whole counting experience.

-And then the trip from hell - lost $15K, also lost $3K at slots (overall I have some lucky profit from slots and roulette, using them as cover - I know that is a marginal idea). AND, the night before Blondie was to arrive, I chanced upon another young filly - was not a hooker, wanted no $, got naked and ****ed me all over the suite. And stole $4800 from my stash. I confronted her but she got out of the hotel before I could alert security. So it was a
-$24K trip and I now have zero bottom line profit from 2.5 years of hard work.

Headed to Blondie's town soon. Will scale back max bet. May try to continue to finance free trips with modest wins. May bag it. Been a great ride.
 

kewljason

Well-Known Member
#28
If you lost 5K to a "philly who wasn't a hooker" but releived you of 5K. :confused: (what's the differnce) and 3k to slot play. It sounds like you may have a bit of a discipline problem to me. Sounds like on more than one occasion, you have forgotten the purpose of your trip. Discipline is the number one rule to long term success. You are supposed to kept your blackjack bankroll seperate from all other funds, including slot and roulette "gambling money's", and especially out of reach of "playmates". Since you are not being disciplined in these areas, I am wondering how disciplined you are being with your actual play? Am wondering how much additional of your bankroll has been lost to slots and roulette over the years that you didn't mention. You need to decide if your goal is to break even, while enjoying expense paid vacations or to make money. If you opt to continue, I suggest you get much more serious about your play. Seperating your vacations and play time from your blackjack play might be a good start.
 
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3aces

Active Member
#29
Kewljason,

Of course the gal turned out to be a criminal/scam artist and probably just a plain hooker in her spare time. But when she did not want $ up front, it appeared I might have just gotten lucky. She had a long, detailed cover story, was quite an actress, a total hammer, and devoted a lot of time to the scam - drinks, dancing, long intelligent converstion. A real pro and fooled this guy.

Long story related to check in, but I failed to secure my $ in the room safe as I always do. And when the thong came off, I got a bit distracted:)

I started the slot/roulettte cover strategy to try to flesh out my rather obvious player's card record of BJ grinding, hit and run wonging, very brief sessions, lifetime win history. I devote 1 or 2 BJ max bets per trip to this attempted slot/roulette cover. But I had won a 15K slot jackpot on my previous trip, so I pissed away 3K of it during the trip from hell. And I have no reason to fib, over my career I have won some money at slots (3 jackpots over 8K) and roulette. Dumb luck. I went into it just planning for the slot/roulette bets to be an expense item.

You raise a good point. I think lots of APs have a gambling problem just under the surface and it rears its ugly head at times. I did not gamble before counting and would be horrified at the idea of gambling on sports or in casinos, after learning how to play BJ with an edge.

I just try to use slots/roulette as a way to show the pit I am a typical degenrate customer and it gets me out of the surveillance eye when I have done some obvious wonging, but am not quite ready to head to the next casino. Take a break and get in one more shoe after a bit of slots.

You mentioned forgetting the "purpose of my trip". Well, for a good while, I was very focused only on BJ grinding. And I think my actual BJ play is highly disciplined, with skillfull counting, betting, departures, heat avoidance, game selection, and use of sims.

That single minded purpose/focus may work for you and many others. But the appeal of that process for me ran its course. If not for the limos, suites, pools, spas and women, I don't think I would be interested in continuing the grinding chase of BJ profit. It just would not be a way I would want to spend my time. Maybe that's a lack of discipline or maybe it's just good free fun. Sure would like to have that $4800 back, though:)

You suggest separation of vacations and AP play. That may be best for you and some others, but for me, it has become attractive to combine the two.

Anyway, sorry for the long posts, but my purpose was to try to contribue to Matt21's musings about the pros and cons and trials and tribulations that lead one to continue or give it up.
 

kewljason

Well-Known Member
#30
bj42 said:
Kewljason,

Of course the gal turned out to be a criminal/scam artist and probably just a plain hooker in her spare time. But when she did not want $ up front, it appeared I might have just gotten lucky.

You suggest separation of vacations and AP play. That may be best for you and some others, but for me, it has become attractive to combine the two.

Anyway, sorry for the long posts, but my purpose was to try to contribue to Matt21's musings about the pros and cons and trials and tribulations that lead one to continue or give it up.
Well the appeal to combine the two has cost you $4800. You apparently were willing to take that risk for the reward of getting laid, so I don't think it proper to bitch about it after the fact, especially since you seem unwilling to learn by the mistake.

As far as Matt goes, he has reached this crossroad before. We all occasionally question where we are at during those times when variance rears it's ugly head in the most negative of swings. I have complete confidence that Matt will once again come to the conclusion that the mathematics are on his side. :)
 

3aces

Active Member
#31
Oh Kewljason, I surely will learn from my error. Those room safes are there for a reason. But, regardless of my mistake, I still suggest that taking time to enjoy the ride is one way to avoid burnout.

Who's bitching? My reason for sharing the embarrassing story is to warn others that one thing that can derail your career is becoming a victim of crime, whether you are always on perfect alert or not. We carry lots of cash and should be very aware of people watching us at the table or cashier or in parking lots, etc. There have been hundreds of times when someone could have stuck a gun in my back leaving a casino and taken me for $10K - $15K if they insisted on emptying all pockets.

I had an earlier experience where my car was briefly in a parking lot before I left for the airport for a BJ trip. Dude grabbed my briefcase, but did not get $6500 I had stashed in the car.

I prefer to avoid lots of bank activity and - to avoid the rare chance of a house fire claiming my $, I use safety deposit boxes or actually bury some cash in the yard for short periods.

And my other point regarding the "trip from hell" - variance is a bitch and that 1 in 128 trip/35-40 max bet fiasco looms for many of us who play a lot, so be sure you can handle that.
 

Brock Windsor

Well-Known Member
#32
matt21 said:
Bump…
- Reduce my bet ramp for some time until I regain my confidence at the table and actually mentally believe that I am able to win
- Carefully review all the simulations and calculations I have completed to check whether my expected rate of returns are indeed correct (according to them I could still make money if the penetration in shoe games falls into the low 60’s!)
- Move beyond counting – and focus on advanced techniques
- Other suggestions?

Matt :joker:
Get barred. Just once. you have to push your boundaries to know where they are. Scale back your bet when you BR shrinks, never overbet. It is a bitter pill to go from green to red but necessary to survive. You should be using more advanced techniques already, do so...NOW. using some capital to buy a small business may enhance your social acceptability, it was the right move for me, it takes little time from me and I can tell people what I do. but it's a personal decision. (don't buy something that will suck up time and money, easier said I suppose.) Twice in my career I dumped a lot of units as soon as I increased my unit size (once from 10 to 15, then again from 15 to 25. Luckily when I went from 25 to 100 I went on an upswing). We play for the long run, but if you dislike what you are doing, it is probably time to leave. At least for a while.
Good variance,
-Brock
 

matt21

Well-Known Member
#33
Thanks for all the replies on this thread in the last few days (newb99, bj42, kewljason, brockwindsor). Some very exciting reading (primarily thanks to bj42!!!). But thanks for all your comments – it’s great to have some different views when facing a situation. I have mulled things over in my head quite a bit the last few days.

For some forum users, BJ appears to be a great and exciting hobby (and rightly so!!) – as always I am looking at this as a business opportunity, so it is a lot more black and white for me. Every successful businessman has stared risk in the face and kept going at least once but probably many times (the advantage with BJ is that the risks can actually be statistically modeled to a large extent) – I would hate to look back one day and say ‘I wonder what would have happened if I had kept on counting cards all those years ago – I wonder what potential doors it may have opened’. In the words of Lance Armstrong – ‘Pain is temporary, quitting last forever’. I must be willing to go through the pain of ‘negative variance’ for the sake of what I am trying to achieve – making good levels of profits playing BJ! If I lose my $27k of current winnings then this will have no material impact on my living circumstances. I will be prepared to say that I was ‘unlucky’ with the variance but that I had done the best in seeking out good theoretical returns and had developed great skills.

The game has big pros and some big cons (one of these being natural standard deviation) – but so does every business venture!

So, as kewljason has already predicted, I shall keep playing…..

Stats Snapshot:

Career:
Unit P+L: +971
Peak Unit P+L: +1,228
Units/Hour: +1.45
Hours played: 669
Hands played (approx): 88,000

2009 YTD:
Units: +349
Hours played: 237
Units/Hour: +1.47
Hands played (approx): 45,000
 

kewljason

Well-Known Member
#35
matt21 said:
bump. 23 hours, 4000 hands, 347 units. :joker:
that's the $12k all back plus more....

truly amazing this game...
Who would have thought! ;) Congrats matt, way to hang in there. Sometimes ya gotta hang on tight to that rollercoaster.
 

daddybo

Well-Known Member
#36
matt21 said:
bump. 23 hours, 4000 hands, 347 units. :joker:
that's the $12k all back plus more....

truly amazing this game...
That's always cool!... congrats... A good lesson on why you need an adequate bankroll and patience. lol
 
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bjsim

Active Member
#37
BJSIM - I use card couting for fun

I agree that card counting is profitable. However very little and unpredictable.
It better to spend the time somewhere else.
That why I am using card counting only to get even while enjoying the comp , Free room free vacation etc . I basically get free vacation once a month.
A simulation of 3,000,000 hands showed profit of $3,449,923 which translate to about 0.6% edge. Assuming average bet is $50 the profit per hour will be
60 hands * 0.006 * 50 = $18 per hour.
(Dead link: http://www.bjsim.com/sample/BJSIC121.5N3RMD2.htm)

BJSIM ADMIN - Ely
http://www.bjsim.com
 

johndoe

Well-Known Member
#38
bjsim said:
I agree that card counting is profitable. However very little and unpredictable.
It better to spend the time somewhere else.
That why I am using card counting only to get even while enjoying the comp , Free room free vacation etc . I basically get free vacation once a month.
A simulation of 3,000,000 hands showed profit of $3,449,923 which translate to about 0.6% edge. Assuming average bet is $50 the profit per hour will be
60 hands * 0.006 * 50 = $18 per hour.
(Dead link: http://www.bjsim.com/sample/BJSIC121.5N3RMD2.htm)
If you're only making $18 per hour I'd agree to do something else. But your sim is either wrong, has too few rounds, or you're using a terrible betting ramp/spread.

You should expect 1-2 units an hour, ballpark, so for common $25 units that's $25-$50/hr.
 

matt21

Well-Known Member
#39
sometimes there are so many blackjack stories to tell.... but there's no one to really tell them to....

:joker:

good luck at the tables everyone...
 
#40
bj42

bj42 said:
Matt, excellent thread, with lots of things to contemplate for those of us who are thinking of retirement from counting. I noticed over on bj21.com that MathProf is at that point after a couple of down years.

Also, thanks for your help in another thread calculating the probability of losing $15K with a win rate of $128 and SD of $1808 in 15 hrs. of play. As you figured, the probability of that happening is once in every 128 trips. I had over-estimated my actual number of trips (seemed like 50 but it is actually 29 in 2.5 years with 500 hrs. of play).

So my -$15K trip from hell hit me a bit hard. As you figured, I should win $10K or more once every 8 trips and I have done so once overy 14. And you nailed my actual career win of $47K, though your calculations would have been a bit different with the lower trip total.

As you did, I have tried to assess the pros and cons of continuing. My track record:

-Starting with blissful ignorance and a hail mary bankroll of 5K, I played fearlessly at DD with a spread of 50x400, with some wonging in and lots of "breaks" in high counts. It was a strong game and I won pretty big. Got backed off twice. Bankroll went to $40K.

-Realized I wanted to protect longevity so I switched to a slightly weaker, but still profitable, strategy of agressive 6D wonging, in and out. Some good wins.

-As you mentioned, the lonely grind began to take its toll. And THEN, I met a tall blond who became my partner. And it made the travel and grind much more bearable. Had some great times, wonderfully fun "drunk couple" cover opportunities. And many other benefits:)

-Of course, I shared some winnings with Blondie. And expenses mounted. And I began to fear back offs and play more conservatively, since I did not want the expense-paid fun with Blondie to end. And my trips began to show little net profit.

-And then the market crashed and my 40K bankroll and $400 max bet started to worry me. I vowed to quit if I ever fell to a point where I had zero net profit from the whole counting experience.

-And then the trip from hell - lost $15K, also lost $3K at slots (overall I have some lucky profit from slots and roulette, using them as cover - I know that is a marginal idea). AND, the night before Blondie was to arrive, I chanced upon another young filly - was not a hooker, wanted no $, got naked and ****ed me all over the suite. And stole $4800 from my stash. I confronted her but she got out of the hotel before I could alert security. So it was a
-$24K trip and I now have zero bottom line profit from 2.5 years of hard work.

Headed to Blondie's town soon. Will scale back max bet. May try to continue to finance free trips with modest wins. May bag it. Been a great ride.
Just read your post, you are not alone...been there....done that....I was a real James Bond for some time....our stories are soooo similar.

Never again will I allow myself, or be allowed, to get that into the lifestyle. :eek:

CP
 
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