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In the game of
blackjack, the final hand you hold can
only be one of the following - a
blackjack, 21, 20, 19, 18, 17, 16 or
less, or bust. If you bust, you have
lost, whereas if you hold blackjack the
worse case scenario is a tie with the
dealer with the best case scenario being
you get paid a bonus of 1.5 times your
stake. You probably realize that the
chances of winning if you stand on your
17 - 21 are very important, so what are
they? Not as good as you might like!
Here's an
example stand on 17 in a 6 deck game
(the dealer must stand on 17). You are
probably thinking that's a good hand and
are happy to happy to have 17. The
statistics prove though, that you will
lose more often than win if the dealer
shows any face card except a 6. The most
money is lost in this scenario when the
dealer shows a 9, the least when the
dealer shows a 4 or a 5. Make a mental
note - you only stand a fighting chance
when the dealer has a 6 showing. Only in
THIS case will you have a statistical
chance of winning money in the long run.
You will now be wondering how you can
make money, given these facts. You
can't. If you hit a hard 17 you will
experience mounting losses, so the wise
course of action is simply to stand. Of
course, often you can stand on 17 and
still win a hand but the numbers add up
inexorably - over time you will end up
losing more money than you win UNLESS
the dealer shows a 6. Standing on 17 is
not a good idea!
Now you know
that 17 is actually not a good hand, you
have probably already realized you
should never stand on soft 17 (instead
you should either hit or double down).
There is a further disadvantage too,
when the dealer hits soft 17, as
follows. Imagine you stand with 18. This
has GOT to be better than standing on
17, right? Yes, but the improvement in
your odds might surprise you. With an
18, and over the long run you are going
to make money when the dealer shows a 2
to 8 face card. You will still actually
LOSE money when the dealer's showing a
9, 10 or Ace. For this reason you should
never stand, but should always hit a
soft 18 if the dealer shows a 9, 10, or
Ace.
If we run
statistical 'Monte Carlo' analysis of
Black Jack, we find that in the
imaginary case of you ALWAYS having 18,
the surprising fact is that you would
LOSE an average of about 65 cents for
every $100 you bet. 18 ain't such a
great hand! Human psychology is what
makes us think the opposite - 18 is
'nearly 19', and 19, or course, is
'nearly 20'. An 18, in the subconscious
mind, is therefore 'nearly 21'!! What
about 19? Can we regularly stand on 19
and win money in the long run? 19 MUST
be a winning hand! The answer is... Yes,
except if the dealer shows a 10 or Ace.
If that is the case, your 19 will still
cause you to lose money in the long run.
Hard to believe, huh? When you get up to
20 you are basically in the money. This
hand will make you money in the long run
whatever the dealer holds, even
including an Ace. As 20 is such a
phenomenally strong hand, NEVER split it
10 10 (and likewise an Ace 9 should
never be doubled). It's a winning hand -
and if it ain't broke, don't fix it!
This brings us
to the statistical realization that over
2 thirds of your blackjack winnings at
will come from these 2 hands (Ace 10 and
10 10). Further down the chain, the bulk
of the rest of your winnings will come
from only 5 more hands - 11, 10 9, 10,
Ace 9, and Ace 8. That's why you must
burn in the strategies for these hands
because they are the ones that will make
you money. If we are talking multiple
decks always double down on 11 if the
dealer is showing 10 or less. The
general case - always double 10 if the
dealer is showing 9 or less. Always
stand on hard and soft 19. Always stand
on soft 18, except if the dealer is
showing a 3 through 6, where you should
double down. Always hit when the dealer
is showing a 9, 10 or Ace but stand on
2, 7, and 8.
Now the bad
news - the following hands are
responsible for the vast majority
(almost 85%!) of your losses. Beware of
hard 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, and 17. The
hard 12 through 16 hands are long term
losing hands whatever strategy you
adopt. The overall message? Gear the
basic playing strategy into your head so
you can play it without thinking - know
what to do when the winning hands
appear. Use money management to
supplement this - bet more when the deck
is still heavy in tens and Aces (card
counting per se is frowned on, of
course, but you should always have some
grasp on what's already been played!).
This is the simplest way to turn the
blackjack odds in your favour, and
ensure you leave the casino with more
money than you went in with! Good luck!
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