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Craps

Craps Basics
In casino craps, the players place their bets and the casino bank "covers" them.
In addition to covering every player's bet, the casino-banked craps game offers
many other types of proposition bets. These bets, along with the basic "pass"
and "don't pass" bets, will be explained.
There are four people actively
running the game. The boxman, who sits behind the middle of the table, is the
boss. He keeps a constant watch over the game. The two dealers on each side of
him pay off the winners and "rake" in the losers' chips. Each dealer handles all
the players on his side. The table is divided by the center box of proposition
bets and also by the stickman, who stands on the players' side of the
table.
The stickman controls the action of the dice and the pace of the
game. After seeing all bets are down, the stickman pushes a few sets of dice to
the shooter. That players selects a pair of dice and is ready to roll them
across the table so that they hit the wall at the opposite end. If, on the first
roll, you make a 7 or 11, you've rolled a "natural" and you win. What you win is
the equivalent amount of chips you have bet on the pass line.
If you roll
a 2, 3 or 12 on your first throw, that is called "craps" and you lose. The
dealer picks up your pass-line bet. However, the shooter does not relinquish the
dice. He continues to roll until he "sevens out."
If, on the first roll,
you shoot a 4, 5, 6, 8, 9 or 10, that is your established "box point." The
object then is to keep rolling the dice until you make that number again. You
lose, however, if you roll a seven before making your box point.
Our
advice is to play the line and the come, either pass or don't pass. These are
the two best areas to bet, offering the best possible odds to the player. If
you're betting the pass line, always take you full odds in back of your pass
line bet. Some casinos offer double odds or higher; if so, take advantage of
this option. One last piece of advice: increase your bets on wins, do not double
up on losses.
SEVEN This one-rol l bet pays odds of 4 to 1,
correct odds are 5 to 1 with the difference giving the house a 16,66%
edge.<
ELEVEN This is another one-roll bet. It pays 14 to 1,
but the true odds are 17 to 1 with a house percentage of 16.66%...bad
bet!
PLACE BETS The 4 and 10 pay 9-5, true odds 10-5, yielding
a house edge of 6.66%. The 5 and 9 pay 7-5, true odds are 7.5-5 (house edge 4%).
The 6 and 8 pay 7-6, true odds are 6-5 (house edge 1.51%.
BUY
BETS Player pays 5% "vigorish" to get true odds on all numbers. Only the
4 and 10 make buy bets worthwhile. They reduce the house edge to
4.76%.
HARD WAYS This bet can be made on the 4, 6, 8 and 10.
Payoff is 9 to 1 on the 6 or 8 and 7 to 1 on the 4 or 10. The house edge is
9.09% and 11.11%, respectively. Another bad bet.
COME BETS & DON'T
COME Even money bet with the exact same house percentages of 1.414% and
1.402%, as the pass line bets.
PASS LINE Pays even money (house
edge is small, 1.414%). One of the best bets on the table.
DON'T
PASS Pays even money (house edge 1.402%). Slightly better odds than pass
line bet odds.
THE FIELD A one-roll bet that pays even money or
2 to 1 on 2 or 12. House edge is 5.55%.
ANY CRAPS This is a
one-roll bet. if a 2, 3 or 12 hits, you'll get 7 to 1 odds. House edge is
11.11%, which makes this a bad bet.
BIG 6 & 8: Player bets
in boxes marked as such as receives even money instead of 6 to 5 true odds.
House has a 9.09% edge.
HORN BET: Although the 2, 3, 12 and 11
may be bet separately, this area is also known as the "horn." A player makes a
horn bet by handing the bet to the dealer, calling out, for example, "$4 horn
bet." This would give him $1 on each of the four one-roll propositions. Payoff
is 30 for 1 on a 2 or 12, A 3 or 11 pay 15-for-1. True odds are 35 to 1 (2 &
12) and 17 to 1 (3 & 11). The house edge on all four bets is a whopping
16.66%. Obviously a bad bad bet. Not recommended!
ODDS: When a
point is made (either the shooter's point on his first roll, or a come point on
a succeeding roll), a player can take the odds. He will receive 2 to 1 on 4 and
10; 3 to 2 on 5 and 9; 6 to 5 on 6 and 8. He lays the same odds when he bets
against the point.
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