Come One, Come All
July 16,
2010
Dear Mark: I
walked up to a crap table with a free play
$80 coupon and told the dealer that I wanted
to make a Pass Line bet. He informed me that
I would have to wait until the point was
made (which I did) but also said you can
still make the same bet now. I’m new to
craps, but what did he mean by I have to
wait, but I could still make it now. I’m
confused. Scooter T.
The dealer, Scooter, was speaking of a wager
akin to a Pass Line bet called a Come bet,
which allows you to make a wager while a
round is in progress and after the Pass line
point has been established.
To make a Come bet, you place your wager in
the Come box, and the next roll becomes your
come bet's "come out roll.” The next point
that the shooter rolls becomes your personal
point. If the shooter repeats your point
number, you win, and if the shooter rolls a
seven before your point shows again, you
lose. The rules of Pass line
bets apply as well to the Come bet.
Once your bet is in the Come box, and
before your personal point has been
established, if the shooter rolls a natural
(7 or 11), the Come bet wins. If the shooter
rolls craps (2, 3 or 12), the bet is lost.
Also, just as in a Pass line bet, once
placed, your bet cannot be removed. The Come
bet pays even money. In
addition, Scooter, once a number becomes a
Come bet point, you are allowed to add odds
to your bet. The dealer will place the odds
on top of the come bet, slightly off center
so it makes a distinction between your
original bet and the odds.
Come bettors can find themselves in a
situation where they have a come bet
(possibly with odds on it), and the next
roll is a come-out roll. With this scenario,
the odds bets on the Come wagers are
presumed to be NOT working for the come-out
roll. In such a case -- where
the shooter rolls a 7 on the come-out roll
-- any players with active Come bets waiting
for their personal come-point would lose
their initial wager but would have their
odds money returned to them.
If your point is rolled, the Come bet wins
and the odds are returned. You can inform
the dealer that you want your odds working
so they can also win if the shooter rolls
your come point. Obviously, if a seven is
rolled first, cinco dos, adios, they both
lose. Dear Mark: How
does the casino get its edge at Pai Gow
Poker, and what is that edge? Mike H.
Pai Gow poker begins with each
player being dealt seven cards. Without a
draw, you skillfully arrange your cards into
two poker hands, one of five cards and the
other of two. To win, both your five-card
hand and your two-card hand must beat the
banker’s corresponding hands. Winning one
hand and losing the other is a push or tie,
where you neither win, nor lose.
These same rules apply to the banker. His or
her five-card hand and two-card hand must
beat both your five and two-card hands,
respectively. The one exception, and one
rule where the house gets its edge, is when
the dealer has a “copy.” A copy is where the
player and banker have identical two-card or
five-card hands. For instance, if both you
and the dealer each have a Jack/six as your
two-card hands, it’s a copy, and it always
goes to the dealer. That’s the first
drawback, Mike, but a further stumbling
block is that the casino improves its edge
by taking a five percent commission from
each winning bet. For example, if you win a
$20 wager, you are paid $20 (1 to 1 odds),
but then you must fork over to the dealer a
5% “tax” ($1) on your winnings.
As for that house edge, Mike, if you
play your cards right, tooling that perfect
basic strategy like the pro your friends all
think you are, you can grind the casino
advantage down to 2.5%.
Gambling Wisdom of the Week: I
agree that gambling is anti-social, but at
least it keeps people away from television.
- Anonymous US Clergyman to Author Bernard
Newman reported in his 1960s book, Mr.
Kennedy’s America
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