The GameMaster's Blackjack School
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Lesson 9: Money
Management - Part 3
Expectation and Standard Deviation
If you flip a coin 100 times, your
expectation is to receive 50 heads and 50 tails. But the
reality may well be different; the measurement of that reality
is called "standard deviation".
Standard deviation is a mathematical
term used to predict the outcome of a situation. In our coin-flipping
exercise, we expect 50 heads and 50 tails to occur, but two-thirds
of the time the actual result will be somewhere between 45
and 55 either way. That is, a result of 55 heads and 45 tails
or something in between is not unusual; it will happen 68.3%
of the time. That measurement is for 1 standard deviation
from the expectation and if we were to run hundreds of 'trials'
of 100 flips, we could plot our results on a bell curve and
the vast majority of results would fall between 55 and 45
either way. What would be unusual would be to have a lot of
trials where the result was actually 50-50! Got that concept
in your mind? Good. You'll need to understand this in order
to survive the mental turmoil caused by the losses which are
inevitable in this game.
Nothing has caused counters to give up
Blackjack more than a lack of understanding about normal,
everyday standard deviation. Counters who have trained hard
unrealistically expect to win each time they play, so when
they have several losing sessions, they forget what they've
learned. Next thing you know, they're over betting their bankroll
and fail to play their hands properly and when they wake from
the daze, their money is gone.
PATIENCE AND SKILL WIN -- HUNCHES AND WISHING WILL NOT
WIN. PRAYER DOES NOT WORK AT BLACKJACK.
So, what can you expect -- what's the
worst which can happen? Well, you can lose all your money,
but if you establish a bankroll of at least 50 'top' bets,
play proper basic strategy at all times and don't over bet,
you stand a good chance of making some $$$ at Blackjack --
if the game at your local casino is a game which can be beaten.
Did I ever say this was easy?
The table below illustrates the possible
results from varying hours of play at a fairly typical game.
Shown with the expectation are the possible dollar results
as measured by 1 standard deviation (68.3% of the time) and
2 standard deviations which covers what will happen 95% of
the time. Three standard deviations cover what will happen
99.7% of the time. .
Expected Win / Standard Deviation
Assumptions: $12 average bet, 50 hands per hour, 1.25% average
advantage.
|
|
Results |
|
| Time |
Expected Win |
68.3% of the time |
95% of the
time |
| 3 hours |
$22.50 |
+$240 to -$168 |
+$435 to -$373 |
| 12 hours |
$144.00 |
+$552 to - $264 |
+$961 to -$673 |
| 48 hours |
$360.00 |
+$1393 to -$242 |
+2,212 to -$1,059 |
| 90 hours |
$1,080.00 |
+$2,300 to -$40 |
+$3,320 to -$1,160 |
Let's talk about this a bit. If you were
to play several hundred 'sessions' of 3 hours each, the average
win for those sessions would be about $22.50. (This comes
from using a $5 to $60 betting spread which we discussed in
previous lessons). But few sessions would result in a win
of exactly $22.50; about two-thirds would be somewhere between
a win of $240 and a loss of $168. Most of the other sessions
could see you winning as much as $435 or losing as much as
$373 and a few would see wins or losses even bigger than that!
Do you see now why it takes a bankroll of $3000 to support
a $5 to $60 betting spread? In order to be successful, you
must be able to absorb losses which are many times that of
your 'expectation'. These fluctuations are real; they will
happen to you at one time or another and if you're not prepared
for them, you'll either get frustrated and quit or lose your
cool and blow your bankroll.
Now look at the results for 90 hours
of play. Most of you will be -- at worst -- about breakeven
after that many hours. A few might be up by $2300, but some
of you could be down by $1160 or more. Boy, I'd hate to hear
the names you'll be calling the old GameMaster then! But it
can happen and it won't be unusual if it does, so ask yourself
right now if you can deal with playing a disciplined game
for 90 hours, still be at a loss and continue playing and
betting as I've shown you. It's sad, but most of you won't
be able to deal with that and you'll be another victim of
standard deviation. That's why I'm not afraid of the casinos
going out of business, even if every player in the world learns
how to count cards -- few have the patience to stick it out.
I don't want to be overly-negative, but that's the reality.
However, if you do stick it out, the percentages will eventually
begin working in your favor. As I tell all my students, "the
money comes in 'chunks' at Blackjack". This is not a slow,
consistent way to make money; your bankroll will, at times,
resemble a roller coaster and it's difficult to deal with
that from an emotional point of view.
Just try to understand the concept
of standard deviation and continue 'calibrating' your eyes
by doing deck estimation exercises with six decks. As I've
said before, you need to be accurate within a half-deck for
computing the true count.
Homework
Go to this site, Blackjack
Math (http://www.bjmath.com/main.htm) and poke around
a bit. It'll be worth your time.
As always, if you have any questions, e-mail
me at
aceten1@mindspring.com
and Ill get back to you ASAP.
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