The Great Blackjack Myth Part2
What many people—including most card counters, system sellers, dealers, pit bosses, and the media at large—fail to comprehend is that being a successful professional card counter takes no less ability, study, dedication, time, and luck than any other profession. Card counters attempt to inconspicuously, legally, and consistently siphon large sums of money from a multi-billion dollar industry, which utilizes the most advanced surveillance techniques this side of the Pentagon.
Most card counters believe in the Great Blackjack Myth that flatly states that a card counter can beat the game of casino blackjack. The truth is that some card counting strategies can beat some blackjack games, depending on the number of decks being shuffled together, the number of players at the table, the number of cards being dealt out prior to reshuffling, the rule variations, the betting spread being employed, the size of the counter's bankroll, the actual skill of the player at applying the system, and so on. In casinos outside of New Jersey, the threat of being barred causes many counters to kill their own chances of winning. In Atlantic City, despite the no-barring law, card counters must still hide their skill because the casinos may enforce other betting restrictions on suspected counters, which eliminate the potential profits from counting cards. So, counters seek out more crowded, less conspicuous tables. They hold down their betting spreads, and they make occasional "dumb" playing decisions. All of these camouflage tactics cut into, and often kill, the counter's small potential edge.
Card counters, as a subculture, have developed a unique jargon. One term that all counters understand is "heat," which means that a pit boss is sweating your action, dealers shuffle the cards any time you raise your bet, or, worst of all, a floorman reads you your rights: "You may play any of the casino games except blackjack; if you attempt to place a bet at any blackjack table, you may be arrested for trespassing."
Many counters think they're getting away with murder when they don't get heat from casinos. The truth is that the casinos are swarming with counters, and most are easily detectable. By standing behind crowded blackjack tables, and counting down the cards as they are dealt, I can spot many obvious card counters in the course of a few hours. If I can spot them so easily, you can be sure the casino counter-catchers can spot them. Most counters follow obvious betting schemes, and to be sure, most counters are likely to get heat at one point or another in their playing careers, especially if they don't camouflage their play, although most of the time counters are not bothered by casino personnel. If the casinos actually gave heat to all the card counters at their tables, they would lose hundreds of customers, and their money, every busy night.
I'm not trying to give the impression that dealers and pit bosses are talented con artists who can act like they're afraid of card counters while knowing most counters are losers. Lower-level casino employees, such as dealers and pit bosses, know very little about card counting, and even those few who are trained to count cards in order to recognize their adversaries, often believe that all card counters pose a real threat to their profits.
There is no reason for the upper management of the casinos to educate dealers and pit bosses about the realities of card counting. Dealers and pit bosses, like many in the gambling subculture, are often highly superstitious, and ignorant of the mathematics of any of the games themselves. Counters love to share stories about superstitious pit bosses, and to most, casino management is dumb. This reminds me of Lenny Bruce's "Religions, Inc." bit where the fire-and-brimstone preacher is accused of being dumb. "Yeah, Tm a big dummy," he responds to his detractors. "I've got two Lincoln Continentals, that's how damn dumb I am!"
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