Superbowl Weekend In Vegas

MadJack

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Also I'm damn determined to hit 4 hardways in a row.

$25 hit and let it ride. Hit again and let $500 ride. Hit again and let $1000 ride.
If all that ever happens, and I've seen it happen, I would just keep letting $1000 ride on every hit until I lose it.

I know there's no shot but I can dream. They owe me, plus I'll have Bart there. :00hour
 

MadJack

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Every morning I pull up a flight to head out on Tuesday instead of Thursday, but I can't make myself hit the PURCHASE button.

I've done that every day for about a week now.

:mj07:
 

MadJack

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The plan would be to stay the extra 2 nights at The Orleans at $35 a night. Maybe play a couple small poker tournaments, one on Tuesday and one on Wednesday, eat some junk food and spend the extra time on here working. :D
 

MadJack

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Here's another interesting system.

The Squeeze Box - Heavy's Outside-In Power Press Progression
The number of ways to attack the game of craps is unlimited, but some plays attract more attention than others do - particularly from dealers who think they have seen it all. Here is a play I make from time to time that always piques their interest. I call it the Squeeze Box - or Heavy's Outside-In Power Press Progression.
Let's assume we're down at my favorite gambling hall, the Perfect World Casino. It's called that because - unlike the Real World Casino - these types of plays always seem to work out there.
The strategy is simple. Place all the numbers. Whenever one of your numbers rolls you take down the bet and parlay the bet and winnings to the next inside number. Once all bets have migrated to the six and eight you take one hit and down - or one hit and regress.
In a $10 game, by-pass the come-out roll of a qualified shooter then place $64 across including the point. Now let's say the shooter tosses the nine next. The $10 wager on the nine pays $14. Tell the dealer to take you down on the nine, then slide the $10 plus the $14 win back to him and instruct him to press the eight to $36.
Suppose the 8 rolls next. The dealer pays you $42 for your $36 wager and you say "same bet." In this strategy we'll say "same bet" when the six or eight roll until all of the other wagers have progressed to the six and eight.
Let's say the four rolls next. The dealer pays you $18 for the $10 place bet on the four. Tell the dealer to take you down on the four, then slide the $10 place bet plus $15 of the $18 payoff back to the dealer and instruct him to press the five to $35. As an option off that - you could drop $2 on the table with the payoff and power press the five to $40. But in this case let's use $35 as our number.
Next toss the five rolls. The payoff is $49. You tell the dealer to "take me down on the five." Then you slide the $35 plus the $49 payoff back to the dealer and tell him to "make my six look like $96.
Next toss the eight repeats. You lock up another $42 and say "same bet" again. At this point you've taken a total of $87 off the table and have a $23 profit locked up. But look at all the action you have out there. There's a $96 six, a $36 eight, and a $10 ten on the table - a total of $142 action.
Now, if you're playing in the "Real World Casino" this is the point where many of us start scratching our heads and counting on our fingers. You could easily regress to $30 each on the six and eight, lock up another $82 and have a guaranteed $105 win. But what the heck - we're playing in the "Perfect World," so let's let the strategy run its course.
A miracle occurs and the shooter tosses the ten. The dealer pays you an additional $18. You take down the wager on the ten, then slide that wager plus $15 of the payoff back to the dealer and instruct him to "place the nine for $25." Then, as often happens in the Perfect World - the shooter tosses the nine. The dealer cuts out $35. You tell him to "take down the nine and give me $60 pressure on the eight."
Now you have $96 each on the six and eight - a total of $192 action. Next toss - eight hard. The dealer pays you $112 and you say the magic words, "Bring me down on the six and eight. You rack your chips, tally them, net out the original $64 wager, and discover you have just won $330.
For those of you who want a simpler play without spreading $64 across, the squeeze box strategy can easily be scaled down to play inside numbers only. On a budget? Start with $22 inside instead of $44. If you get a hit on the five or nine you take that number down, add the payoff to the original bet and press the adjacent inside number. That gets you to three units on the six or eight, where you take one hit and down.
A power-press parlay move is a beautiful thing when it works, and I've had fair success with several variations of this play on long hands by random rollers. But in the Real World Casino the seven is always lurking out there. If you find yourself out of your comfort zone with the size of the bet, just remember that you never lose when you take money off the table.
 

smurphy

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Hey guys, I haven't ventured into this thread because I don't have any plans to go to Vegas for the Super Bowl, so please excuse the fact that I haven't read through any of this 11 page long thread. It's become a tradition of mine (at least for the last 4-5 yrs) to go to Vegas the weekend before - when everything pretty quiet, rooms are dirt cheap - to shop for prop bets from book to book around town. What I was wondering was, is there anybody going to be going early to this little get together that might be there this weekend and maybe would want to meet up? If so, let me know in a separate thread in General. I probably won't look back in this thread since I don't want to rain on the parade of funness that I will be missing the next weekend.
Hope all you gents and ladies have tons 'o fun for the Super Bowl! :toast:

Jack, do you have Deezy on ignore or something? The man reaches out to the Super Bowl community and gets no response from management at all. :shrug:
 

MadJack

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Jack, do you have Deezy on ignore or something? The man reaches out to the Super Bowl community and gets no response from management at all. :shrug:
He said he wouldn't be back to this thread and I have nothing to tell him at this point. :shrug:

Should I start a thread is General like this?

Deezy >>>>>>>>>>

I won't be in Vegas this weekend.
 

smurphy

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He said he wouldn't be back to this thread and I have nothing to tell him at this point. :shrug:

Should I start a thread is General like this?

Deezy >>>>>>>>>>

I won't be in Vegas this weekend.

I would add a couple cute emoticons to it, but yeah that would suffice.
 

smurphy

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Here's another interesting system.

The Squeeze Box - Heavy's Outside-In Power Press Progression
The number of ways to attack the game of craps is unlimited, but some plays attract more attention than others do - particularly from dealers who think they have seen it all. Here is a play I make from time to time that always piques their interest. I call it the Squeeze Box - or Heavy's Outside-In Power Press Progression.
Let's assume we're down at my favorite gambling hall, the Perfect World Casino. It's called that because - unlike the Real World Casino - these types of plays always seem to work out there.
The strategy is simple. Place all the numbers. Whenever one of your numbers rolls you take down the bet and parlay the bet and winnings to the next inside number. Once all bets have migrated to the six and eight you take one hit and down - or one hit and regress.
In a $10 game, by-pass the come-out roll of a qualified shooter then place $64 across including the point. Now let's say the shooter tosses the nine next. The $10 wager on the nine pays $14. Tell the dealer to take you down on the nine, then slide the $10 plus the $14 win back to him and instruct him to press the eight to $36.
Suppose the 8 rolls next. The dealer pays you $42 for your $36 wager and you say "same bet." In this strategy we'll say "same bet" when the six or eight roll until all of the other wagers have progressed to the six and eight.
Let's say the four rolls next. The dealer pays you $18 for the $10 place bet on the four. Tell the dealer to take you down on the four, then slide the $10 place bet plus $15 of the $18 payoff back to the dealer and instruct him to press the five to $35. As an option off that - you could drop $2 on the table with the payoff and power press the five to $40. But in this case let's use $35 as our number.
Next toss the five rolls. The payoff is $49. You tell the dealer to "take me down on the five." Then you slide the $35 plus the $49 payoff back to the dealer and tell him to "make my six look like $96.
Next toss the eight repeats. You lock up another $42 and say "same bet" again. At this point you've taken a total of $87 off the table and have a $23 profit locked up. But look at all the action you have out there. There's a $96 six, a $36 eight, and a $10 ten on the table - a total of $142 action.
Now, if you're playing in the "Real World Casino" this is the point where many of us start scratching our heads and counting on our fingers. You could easily regress to $30 each on the six and eight, lock up another $82 and have a guaranteed $105 win. But what the heck - we're playing in the "Perfect World," so let's let the strategy run its course.
A miracle occurs and the shooter tosses the ten. The dealer pays you an additional $18. You take down the wager on the ten, then slide that wager plus $15 of the payoff back to the dealer and instruct him to "place the nine for $25." Then, as often happens in the Perfect World - the shooter tosses the nine. The dealer cuts out $35. You tell him to "take down the nine and give me $60 pressure on the eight."
Now you have $96 each on the six and eight - a total of $192 action. Next toss - eight hard. The dealer pays you $112 and you say the magic words, "Bring me down on the six and eight. You rack your chips, tally them, net out the original $64 wager, and discover you have just won $330.
For those of you who want a simpler play without spreading $64 across, the squeeze box strategy can easily be scaled down to play inside numbers only. On a budget? Start with $22 inside instead of $44. If you get a hit on the five or nine you take that number down, add the payoff to the original bet and press the adjacent inside number. That gets you to three units on the six or eight, where you take one hit and down.
A power-press parlay move is a beautiful thing when it works, and I've had fair success with several variations of this play on long hands by random rollers. But in the Real World Casino the seven is always lurking out there. If you find yourself out of your comfort zone with the size of the bet, just remember that you never lose when you take money off the table.

On other side, but good luck with your play!
 

MadJack

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No, I'm a team player. I'm just worried about you having 2 days on your own with a "system" before everyone else arrives.

I think I have that cleared from my mind now. :toast:
 

MadJack

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All I really need is for one of you guys to roll 4 or 5 hard 8's in a row. That's all I ask.
 

MadJack

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Sounds like a job for Bart. I'll do my best to be in another building.
I'm counting on Bart for this. Even you or I can't stop Bart's magic so we don't have to leave the building.. :00hour
 

yyz

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All I really need is for one of you guys to roll 4 or 5 hard 8's in a row. That's all I ask.



I've managed 4 one time. 3 on several occasions.

I turn $5 into $50.......$50 into $100 (pocket $400) $100 into $300 (pocket $700) $300 becomes $500 (pocket $2500)

Never punched the $5000 payday.
 

Wineguy

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I think I'm going to try this, only start off with $30 each on the 6 and 8. I'll decide on my options after the 4th hit when/if I get there, depending on how I feel about my luck.
----------------------------------------------

By-pass the come-out roll, then begin by placing $6 each on the six and eight. On the first hit on either number drop $5 on the table with the $7 pay off and tell the dealer to PRESS both the six and the eight. You now have a total of $24 action with $17 at risk. This is the most you will have at risk during this progression and is the highest point of risk in the play.

The second hit on either the six or eight will pay $14. Tell the dealer, "SAME BET" and put the $14 in your back chip rail. You now have $24 action with only $3 at risk.

The third hit on either the six or eight will pay an additional $14. Tell the dealer to PRESS the six and eight to $18 each and add the $2 change to the back chip rail. You now have $36 action with only $1 at risk.

The fourth hit on either the six or eight will pay $21. At this point you have five options. Let's look at them in order of preference, with Option 1 being the first choice.

Option 1: Bring me down. You will take down the $36 action and add it and the $21 payoff to your back chip rail, locking up a net $56 win for the series.

Option 2: Make my six and eight look like $6 each. You lock up $24 action and the $21 payoff. No matter what happens, you are guaranteed a $44 win for the series.

Option 3: Same Bet. You lock up the $21 payoff and have a guaranteed $20 win for the series.

Option 4: Up a unit on the six and eight. You lock up $9 and press the six and eight to $24 each. You have $48 action with an $8 profit in the rack.

Option 5: Make the six and eight look like $30 each. Drop $3 on the table with the $21 payoff and press the six and eight to $30 each. You now have $60 action with $4 at risk.

The smart money says the three most powerful words at the craps table. "Take me down."
Heavy​


Jack, I am going to try tjhis with you. I know nothing about Craps but want to learn this trip, even if I don't fare well. But with our Mojo, and Bart or Eric rolling, we are destined.


:0069
 

MadJack

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Jack, I am going to try tjhis with you. I know nothing about Craps but want to learn this trip, even if I don't fare well. But with our Mojo, and Bart or Eric rolling, we are destined.


:0069
Yeah, let's do this.
 

MadJack

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I've managed 4 one time. 3 on several occasions.

I turn $5 into $50.......$50 into $100 (pocket $400) $100 into $300 (pocket $700) $300 becomes $500 (pocket $2500)

Never punched the $5000 payday.
So where's dinner Saturday night? Or was that Friday?

If it's a decent place we need reservations.
 
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