Craps Strategies: Charting a Craps Table

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  • čas přidán 24. 06. 2024
  • Charting Pads available on my website: www.thecrapscoach.com
    Charting a craps table is a technique used to track the outcomes of rolls in order to identify patterns and make more informed betting decisions. Charting can help players feel more in control and potentially increase their enjoyment of the game.
    I'm a big proponent of this often overlooked technique. Charting the table is synonymous with qualifying a table.
    They essentially mean the same thing. Have you seen anybody charting a table recently? By the time most players
    get to the casino they are so eager to find the table buy-in and start planning. If this is your normal impulse, stop.
    Wait. Resist the urge. Did I mention that playing any system requires discipline? (I did). By charting the table
    you'll be able to figure out a few critical things about how the rolls are going and you'll insert a ”pause” into your
    strong urge to just lay your money down and start playing. Some great tidbits of information that can be used to
    your advantage will come from charting a table. And oh, by the way, nobody cares that you brought a pad and pen
    to the table and you are patiently and diligently recording the roll results. You may get some looks, you may get a
    question or two about what you're doing, you'll probably even get a few questions about how many sevens have
    come up lately. And more often than not, I get the “that's a great idea. I've thought about doing that before but
    just never have” comment. Ever wonder why they never have? Why they think about it but never act upon the
    desire to chart a table? Discipline. Plain and simple. By charting a table you are actually following through on
    your desire to play the session well.
    Here’s a comprehensive guide on how to chart a craps table effectively.
    Charting Pads available on my website: www.thecrapscoach.com
    Identifying Hot and Cold Tables
    A hot table is one where shooters are frequently hitting points and rolling numbers without sevening out too quickly. If your charting data shows a series of successful points and rolls, you might consider increasing your bets. Conversely, a cold table, characterized by quick sevens and short rolls, suggests a more conservative betting approach.
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Komentáře • 23

  • @jdf237
    @jdf237 Před 16 hodinami

    Long Long Post…
    I am gonna let off some comments and I know I am gonna get grilled about it, and I may not be able to respond right away because I am so busy, however, writing the game down is vital. And, though, I am not sure what you do with your information, but your approach is limited, and some of the calculations are not really helping, but at least a concept is in play and that is vital, and I like what you are trying to do so much this is the right correct approach to craps. This post and my other comments might start a fire. But you and the few that write the game down are the only ones who really know things about the game. However, what I do from what you do has over the years grown into a big crunch of important concepts that are starting to get so powerful and sort of too many ideas working at the same time to keep up, that I think I am at the point of needing a computer program that I want to write to process my concepts faster better more accurate. I have found that in the right moments with accurate data I can predict numbers. Maybe sometime off by one throw. And even way easier, I have found I can predict periods of time that certain betting will work. My biggest problem is I HATE CIGARETTES … I HATE THAT SHIT !! SO ITS HARD FOR ME TO BE IN A CASINO. so, winning: let’s take the 50% coin concept. If at 90 throws of the coin, and it’s way heavy on one side then the last 10 throws has a greater chance of being the other side by the pure physics. And it doesn’t have to be all 10 times. This can not be disputed. I am a strait A in physics, and this can not change. Yes, it could not roll the number at all for another 10 throws, but we all got good at physics when we got older if you know what to think about, we all get it. The possibilities are greater that it might roll the other side finally, damnit. We all know this. Don’t one side me, > all you people that may read this, not the owner of the sight < don’t one side me of the coin real heavy on the tails side, you know it’s gonna roll heads sometime. Yes, extremes happen, but they don’t happen over and over again.
    Let’s say 25 times we roll a coin 100 times, and how many times is it gonna be heavy on the tails side….after 90 rolls that it just wouldn’t roll another heads within the last 10 rolls???? See, this can’t go on over an over again. It’s gonna roll heads most of the time if this happens. The dice are the same way. When the probabilities get really outta whack, how do you know on 4 beers, non-stop cigarettes, pot, coke, pain killers, bad diet, lots of soda pop, life issues, time crunch, big loss yesterday, cocktail waitress, jam band or other bad music, been playin’ for the last 5 strait hours tryin’ to catch up, and if you got one >the wife just called, how does anyone know if the game probabilities are really actually getting stacked in your favor IF YOU COULD JUST KNOW…..????? It’s about to get good in one area IF YOU COULD JUST KNOW. So, I found a way. Your idea is at least an attempt to get some control over the game and the possibilities in probabilities. I made that concept up for myself, but it is one of the best ways to approach the game, possibilities in probabilities. In knowing what is probable, what is possible? Don’t let anyone discourage you on this idea, even me. Maybe you got the one that wins all the time and we just don’t know yet.
    So, I wanna address comments that the dice have no memory, and that’s a lie. This is hard to put on a post, but the dice are in fact not perfect, and take on personality. This is why they are changed at the table. Bubble is a much better possible way to see dice with a personality. And, I have demonstrated at the table the real ways dice can be manipulated, I have been banned from being the shooter at a few places. If a person does it correctly, the dice can be made to roll numbers you want in a higher outcome rate than just a > whatever throw > and I have done this over and over again.
    I also have every game on paper I have played for the last 22 years. So, I got all my games, I know what happened what I bet etc… So, if I got a concept, I just apply it to the real play data I have, and if it works, I would go to the table. Well, nothing worked. I worked on this for years. Finally, I got a break through, and I started being able to apply my new concepts to my data to see if I would have lost or won. This way I didn’t have to go and loose to find out whatever I was tryin’ wasn’t cutting the mustard. And finally I started getting into concepts that showed winning. I tried them at the table and they all win, but I have no money for bigger bets that would win amounts that were worth it. I was just trying to see if it worked in real time. Sometimes I lost at bubble because I couldn’t get enough buy in back in the machine before it rolled and so I lost. Also, my game works because there is no dealer, this helps a lot. Without a bigger bank roll it’s hard to win anything that would sustain the game. And I mean, being able to live on it. No less than $60,000 maybe $40,000 a year winning. If that could happen and bank roll could stabilize, then bigger money could happen. My best roll at a table, on paper all of it, 42 rolls 10 points, 7’s on the come out, multiple hard ways. Two 4’s Two 10’s for points, never a 9. Two 4’s Two 5’s Two 6’s Two 8’s Two 10’s ….no 9 for a point. Rolled every number once. I think it was three HARD10’s and some guy gave me $25. And I have rolled close to this several times with many points. And, I can short roll the game to, set up a don’t and 7 out by setting the dice. Sometimes, it’s like changing a tire, I just do it. Set the dice, easy throw, they do what I attempted. However, getting these skills took years at the table. It did not come cheap. So, I am hoping to get square with the table some how. It’s gonna happen. But bubble is the best game. Boulder Station was the best .25cent game. The real old craps game may be gone for good. Johnathan

  • @rognkidder7413
    @rognkidder7413 Před 22 dny +1

    Great video! Looks like a sound practice. Thank you for sharing all of this good information and keep up the good work.

    • @thecrapscoach
      @thecrapscoach  Před 22 dny

      🎲 thanks for taking the time to watch your videos and comment. We always appreciate your feedback! 🎲

  • @kennethjohnson359
    @kennethjohnson359 Před 22 dny

    Always good to figure out what’s going on at the table. Thanks for the vids !!

  • @jeffmitchell7743
    @jeffmitchell7743 Před 20 dny +2

    Past performance does not predict future outcomes

    • @thecrapscoach
      @thecrapscoach  Před 19 dny

      🎲🎲. Thank you so much for watching our video and for your comments!! It is true that the dice have no memory. However, when you start to look at the statistics of the rolls, Especially with random rollers or with the random Craps bubbles machines, The results do fall in line with the statistical probabilities.

  • @oldschoolcraps
    @oldschoolcraps Před 22 dny

    Information is always a commodity in gamming The more you have the better decision you can make especially when it comes to probability

    • @thecrapscoach
      @thecrapscoach  Před 22 dny

      Could not agree more with you. Hence, the idea of actually charting a craps table and recording a history of the role results! 🎲🎲

  • @KG-Punk
    @KG-Punk Před 22 dny

    It would be good to see how you use your information of the history of the rolls and apply it to your upcoming bets.

    • @thecrapscoach
      @thecrapscoach  Před 22 dny

      Great suggestion! 🎲. I’ll have to capture some of this information. The next time I play a craps bubble machine.

  • @thogar1
    @thogar1 Před 14 dny

    finally! anything can happen on any given roll but numbers balance out all of the time. Thanks for the video. Any issue with charting at a live table in the casino? I would hope not.

    • @thecrapscoach
      @thecrapscoach  Před 13 dny

      🎲. I've never had an issue with pen and paper at the table. Usually I get some quizzical looks that turn into questions, and then questions like "When was the last time a Hard 10 hit?"

    • @thogar1
      @thogar1 Před 13 dny

      Ha! Yeah I believe that. Crazy looks at first and then hundreds of questions.

  • @hubolds1946
    @hubolds1946 Před 17 dny

    Have you seen a chart where you end up a roll distribution visually? Kind of like in Crapsee

    • @thecrapscoach
      @thecrapscoach  Před 17 dny

      🎲🎲. Thanks for watching our video. I’ve never seen what you describe. You would probably need a electronic version, but openly having electronic devices while playing a game are frowned upon. This is why the manual tracking of rules with pen and paper are allowed. 🎲

  • @REPSDirect
    @REPSDirect Před 17 dny

    Charting is more predictive with dice setters than random rollers because setters can balance their body's energy centers/chakras, vs random rollers betting on pure luck and probability variables.

    • @blacklight4460
      @blacklight4460 Před 12 dny

      you're missing out on recording the actual combinations

    • @thecrapscoach
      @thecrapscoach  Před 11 dny

      🎲. Thanks for watching our video. Charting is about collecting data and then decision-making based upon that data.

  • @bruceeigsti5274
    @bruceeigsti5274 Před 13 dny

    No difference in random rollers or dice setters .. the dice doesn't care it's random every time

    • @thecrapscoach
      @thecrapscoach  Před 12 dny

      🎲. We appreciate you watching our videos and we welcome your comments. Charting a table certainly helps track the distribution of the roles to see if they are falling in line with the statistical probabilities. 🎲🎲

  • @franktiller7591
    @franktiller7591 Před 9 dny

    Complete lunacy. The dice have no memory and past rolls have no influence on future rolls.

    • @thecrapscoach
      @thecrapscoach  Před 9 dny

      🎲. Thank you for watching the video. We appreciate your comments. I do agree with your statement that the dice have no memory. However, probability tells us a different story, and to simply say the dice have no memory is one dimensional thinking. Let's take flipping a coin as an example. You have 50% chance that a heads or tails will show up. Now let's flip that coin 100 times. The coin, just like the dice, has no memory. Therefore, every single flip of the coin you have a 50% chance of getting heads or tails. In theory, you could flip the coin 100 times and get heads 100 times. In theory. Probability tells us that the likelihood of that occurring is highly improbable. It's conceivable that 100 flips of a coin, heads could show up 100 times. However, it's highly improbable. That's where probability and statistics will tell us a different story. After your 100 flips of the coin, the distribution may not be exactly 50-50, but it's going to be somewhere within one standard deviation of that. And that's the same theory that is being applied when recording the results at the craps table. We thank you for watching the video! 🎲