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How You Can Win A Craps Tournament
The Crapshooter © 2000 by Larry Edell
If you are a regular Crapshooter, you might want to enter a craps
tournament soon. Some of these contests are free to enter, some cost a
few hundred dollars, and a few cost quite a bit more, depending on the
prize money. Several casinos also have weekly craps tournaments with no
entry fee and a low $50 buy-in, just to bring people in the door.
Some contests require expensive entry fees ($500 or more) and high
buy-ins ($1000). But for that $500 you usually will get a hotel room for
two nights, all meals, a cocktail party, and a nice gift. And, depending
on how many people enter, the grand prize could be as much as
$50,000.00! In tournaments like this, the top two players from each
round will advance to the next one, and there might be as many as ten
prize winners at the end of the tournament.
When you're playing in a tournament, you will make different bets
than you would in a normal craps game. You are no longer playing against
the house, but against all of your fellow contestants. Your goal is to
have the most money at the end of a certain number of rolls (usually
100) or a certain amount of time (usually one hour). This means you need
to keep an eagle eye on the chips in the racks of your fellow players,
and be aware of their bets. If everyone happens to lose money, then the
person with the least loss wins the tournament.
Sometimes, when a lot of people are competing, you'll be playing in
"rounds", which are like mini-tournaments. If you win the first round,
then you advance to the next one.
Before you play, familiarize yourself with the rules, because they are
different for every tournament and sometimes are different for each
round. For example, some casinos will require you to have a pass or
don't-pass bet on every play, in addition to any other bets you might
make. Others might not allow proposition bets over $25. And still others
might mandate that your chips are in full view and not covered up, so
everyone can see what you've won or lost.
Another important thing to understand is whether you can add money to
your play. This (and other aspects of unusual rules) will be explained
to you in an orientation meeting before the tournament, so pay
attention.
And, remember, each tournament is different! The smaller ones will let
you play with your own money, the way you normally do. You simply
purchase chips from the dealer. But once the prize money gets over $50,
the field must be leveled so everyone must buy in beforehand (usually
with $500), and you can not add more money to your play later. When you
hit zero, you are through, and you must leave the table.
Although the basic rules of craps is the same, the strategy is
different. You HAVE to look out for your fellow players and always pay
attention to what they are doing!
If, for example, if you have won $300 and your closest competitor has
won $200, and he bets $90 on the six and eight, what will happen if a
six or eight rolls? He'll jump ahead by $5 (enough to win) so you might
want to watch him and match his bets exactly to stay even.
Or what if you're in second place with $200 and the number one player
has $300? You've placed the six and eight for $90 each, and he matched
you. Maybe you might bet hard ways, or place the five and nine. You must
do something different in order to overtake the front-runner.
Some people who are close to last place resort to bets not normally
made - like betting the maximum on the two or twelve. In the last few
rolls of the game, they realize it's the only way they can win.
When you begin play, you'll see that there are conservative players,
playing pass or come with maximum odds, and aggressive players who bet
hard ways and proposition bets. If these aggressive players continue,
they'll usually (but not always) lose their money before the final
round. If you're in the group playing pass/come, you need some way of
breaking out of the pack - like waiting for two consecutive points to be
made and then jumping to the don't. You have to start doing something
the other players are not doing in order to win.
Let's say the leader has $100 on the pass line and the point is 4. He
takes $200 odds. You could then lay the 4 for $200. If a seven rolls,
you've suddenly managed to put yourself $400 ahead, as he would have
lost $300 and you won $100. You've got to try things, be inventive, and
make bets that the other players wouldn't think of making.
In the last few rolls of the game, you must become super aggressive,
especially if you are not in first place. Sometimes this means betting
all of your bankroll on one number. Say eight is the point and the
leader is $300 ahead and has $100 on the pass line with double odds.
You're in third place, and all you have left is $300. You might place
the whole $300 on the six, take it down after it hits once, and then
pray that a seven rolls before the eight does!
Tournaments are not for everyone, but they're fun to play, especially
the inexpensive or free ones. Give them a try - you're sure to learn a
lot and maybe even make some friends - and some money as well!
You can get a FREE issue of The Crapshooter, the only newsletter devoted
exclusively to craps, just by sending two first class stamps to The
Crapshooter, Dept. INT., PO Box 421440, San Diego CA 92142-1440. You'll
also receive a FREE catalog and a special FREE offer!
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