Posts tagged Strategy:
Scratcher Lottery Ticket Secrets 101 – How to Win & Succeed is to Stop Your Bad Strategy!
Mar 13th
You see, you may love to play the scratchers lottery for fun but it is no longer fun when you keep playing and you keep losing. Chances are, you are NOT playing with an effective strategy.
Maybe you’re thinking how could there be a strategy. You thought you just buy a scratcher ticket and hope you win. Well guess what, that’s STILL a strategy but it’s a strategy to LOSE! 99% of people who play the scratcher lottery game play with this DESTRUCTIVE strategy!
And that is why they lose so many times. In order to PREVENT this from happening, you need to STOP and take a BREAK from all the scratchers lottery game and LEARN the game!
That’s it!
Just take some time to learn the scratchers lottery game.
After you learn, you will have a NEW and more EFFECTIVE strategy towards winning in the game!
You see, if you just repeat the old strategy over and over without taking a break, you’re bound to lose more and more every single day.
But if you take a day off, you’re NOT going to lose any money. Plus, you’ll invest time LEARNING about the strategy of the game (that 99% of people don’t know).
Afterwards, every time you go to the convenience store, you’ll double your chances of winning because now you will know exactly what to do and what not to do in the scratch off lottery game in your local convenience store.
So take this advice and take a BREAK and don’t play the scratcher tickets game for ONCE! Seriously, taking a break and instead investing that time to learn the INSIDE information about the game will produce HIGHER probability of you winning exponentially.
When you learn the scratcher strategies for success, you’ll get higher payoffs in the long run. For one, you will know the deadly mistakes 99% of people do and you will STOP doing them!
In addition, you will DO what 1% of the people who are the BEST are winning in the scratchers game! So all it takes for you to start winning MORE in the scratchers lottery game is to STUDY THE SCRATCHERS GAME!
Simple as that!
So how do you study about the scratcher games?
First, go to an expert. Second, go ask some big winning scratcher winners on how they won. Many of them will tell you.
Another tip is to go to the convenience store and a lot of the same people who play the scratchers on a regular daily basis will be there.
Those are the people you want to ask because they know the scratchers game more than the average Joe. Of course, you should ask when was the last time they got a big winner.
If they have found some winners in the past, ask them some questions about tips on how to win the scratcher lottery ticket games.
Another group of people you can ask are the convenience store owners or the clerks. Many times, the store owners may not want to tell you.
That is why you want to ask the store clerk (who is NOT the owner) because these store clerks are usually like high school kids and they don’t care about telling you.
The problem with asking convenience store owners is that they will be less likely to help you because if they help you win, they will lose their business.
The convenience stores are like casinos. They make their BIG money from seeing you lose.
The lottery agents are another group of people you can go ask. They usually go from convenience store to another store on a daily basis so you’ll find them in many convenience stores setting up lotto signs or working behind the counter.
If they are nice, you can strike up a conversation with them and ask them quick tips on how to win more in the scratchers game. You’ll be surprised how they can help you if you come off non-threatening.
So in essence, go to the people who know MORE about the scratcher lottery ticket games than you.
In short, they are:
1) Regular scratcher lottery player
2) Convenience store owner
3) Convenience store clerk
4) Lottery Agents
If you want to know how to win scratch off tickets, then get a lottery retailer’s insider secrets at http://www.HowToWinScratchers.com.
Poker Strategy Article: Managing Your Online Poker Bankroll
Mar 13th
My internet poker playing friend was out of town a few weeks ago, and couldn’t get his regular site to work well, so knowing I had extra cash in my Party Poker account he asked for a hundred bucks to play there during his visit. Sure fine. A few hours later he lets me know he lost 2, $20+2 SNG tourneys in a row, both by bad beats. His intention at that time was to go into a $30+3 to try and make it back. He is a good player so I wasn’t about to lecture him on his bankroll, but herein you will find exactly that.
The skills involved in managing your bankroll effectively are basic math, dedication to learning the game, the humility to drop down a level, and anger management. Seriously.
The above scenario is no doubt very common. In fact, poker sites love reload players like my friend. The players who know they are good, make that, “too good” to play within their own bankroll are the most profitable. Inevitably, not managing your bankroll, no matter how good you are, will result in failure. By the incontestable laws of probabilities and mathematics, this is undeniable. It doesn’t matter if you are playing with a hundred bucks or a million, the result is always the same. It has been widely reported that a certain multiple WPT champion has repeatedly played over his bankroll and blown his WPT winnings. It happens on any level, as the principle is the same.
You will need basic math skills to the tune of knowing what 2, 5, and 10 percent of your bankroll is. No matter what your game you should never be playing with more than 10% of your bankroll. For example, if you deposit 100 dollars into your account, you shouldn’t take more than $10 to any game. This is going to limit you to .50/1.00 limit hold’em, or $5 to $10 SNG’s. You could also play an MTT for that entry, but I don’t recommend that because it would be unlikely for you to place in the money. If you think you can lick this game right off and deposit $1000, then you can bring $100 bucks to any table for play. Still, this is not recommended. If you are learning, you should learn to move up to that level, rather than buy yourself into it. Trust me, you will want to avoid the painful strategy of buying yourself into a higher limit.
Enter humility.
Your humility should allow you to play at a level that forces you to become proficient and earn yourself a bankroll to move up. If that means .25/.50 hold’em, then that is your challenge. If you are going to learn, learn cheap, learn smart, and earn your way up to the next level. You will feel so much more confident when moving up a level in having conquered the level before it. Others will have paid to get in that level, and those opponents will be at your mercy.
On the other hand, once you move up a level and find yourself struggling, you need to go back down a level and refocus your efforts and education. When to do this exactly, is a question of math. If your bankroll has not increased at your new game level and comes perilously close to that 10% guideline, it’s time to back up. Don’t let it get below that level, because once you break the guideline once, it’s much easier the next time, and the next, and the next… This will lead to mismanagement, and reloading. Here is an example: You deposited $100 and started with the 5 buck sit and go circuit and skillfully built your bankroll up to $250, where you correctly decided to move up to the $10 SNG tables. You played 7 tournaments at that level and only placed once with a second place showing. This has dropped your bankroll down to $203. Although another $10 entry is well within 10%, it is more than 5%, and since you haven’t performed well, you should gather your humility and understand that there is more to learn. In this case, I would go back to the 5 buck SNG tables, and work my bankroll up to $300, before attempting your next move up. Once you reach that goal, and have proven yourself a better player, you will also have more bankroll room at the $10 level.
It is an invaluable experience to care for your bankroll in this way. I have done this several times when my bankroll needed it to the point now that when I sit a SNG table, I know that through my dedication of learning the game at each level, I am a favorite to place in that tournament. This may sound of a drastic move, but treating your bankroll with the utmost respect is the key to success.
To play is to dedicate.
It isn’t going to be easy to double your bankroll at this level. Your commitment and dedication to each stage involves learning, patience, and intense observation. and is a supreme test of your core personality. Think this is overboard? I have seen players losing it to the point of me stopping them from punching a wall or tossing a laptop. These are otherwise normal acquaintances.
And then there was anger management.
This is not a funny movie. This is about battling that desire to make up lost ground by moving up a level, not down. This is where you need to know the value of your cards before you shove an all-in play at that maniacal player who has raised you yet again. By the way, at that point, he is usually holding a monster and has trained you like a monkey to step right in. If you are playing within your bankroll, losing your temper is never really an issue, because losing a game or a hand to a bad beat or poor play is not going to cripple your account. Many of your opponents will play their entire bankroll at a table or a tournament and you can take advantage of this, because in that situation, they will NEVER be able to make optimal decisions. You can surely imagine though how they will be tilting the moment they lose a big hand, because that one hand may represent 75% of their whole bankroll. Tilting after you lose a big hand in such a scenario, is pretty much inescapable. Their mindset is already looking forward to another reload, as they mentally prepare themselves to exit the table with nothing. I have seen this literally thousands of times online.
It’s in the math.
When I say maximum 10%, I really try to play with 5% or less. For example, I usually have between $2,000 and $4,000 in my party poker account. When I have more I withdraw down to about $2,500 because I, personally, never want to be below $2,000 as that will restrict some of the tables/events I play at. Let’s say I have $2,500 now and want to play in the Sunday Million which has an entry fee of $215. Therefore, $215 divided into $2,500 = 8.6% which is within the 10% guideline. However, let me tell you why it’s STILL the wrong decision to pay for that tournament. If that is how you are investing your bankroll, you need to realize the likelihood of playing that circuit profitably. In other words, you have basically 10 chances to place that tourney. You may very well be able to do that however, it is not unusual to go through 10, 20 or even 40 tournaments without placing – even for the pros. If multi table tournaments are your game, you should be looking to have a bankroll of about 50 buy-ins. That is how dry tournaments can get. Using the 50 buy-in formula, you should have $10,000+ in your account to pay for the Sunday Million.
Think of it this way. If you are good enough to profit in this tournament, then you should easily be able to win a qualifier to get in it for about 5% to 10% of the entry fee. If you can’t win one of those tourneys, filled with rookies, then you have no justification for paying the big tourney entry fee outright.
Improving your game and learning strategies at each level are clearly imperative skills in managing your bankroll, but one depends on the other, so in essence you need to train yourself in both and reap the rewards as you advance.
Marty Smith is webmaster of http://www.PokerCalculatorReport.com where all the online poker calculators are tested and reviewed, including Sit and Go Shark, Calculatem Pro, and Poker Spy. He is also editor of http://www.PokerBookReport.com
Roulette Strategy: Learn How to Beat the Casinos
Mar 12th
Anyone who has ever had the chance to play roulette will know by now that roulette is purely a game of chance. There is no skill involved in the game at all. Although there are a number of different options for betting on roulette, the average payout is the same no matter what option you choose. However, there are a number of roulette betting strategies that people have employed over the years.
The most widely employed roulette betting strategies are variations on the Martingale betting strategy. In basic terms this strategy involves making even money bets and doubling your bet each time you lose. This way the next time you win you’ll recover all your losses and make a profit equal to the original bet. While you can make a short term profit, this system can only result in loss in the long term. After only five consecutive losses your bet would have to be 36 times your original bet. Lose again and it would be 72 times. As you can see you can quickly end up in deep water. Also the potential winnings are not high in this system. For instance, if your original bet was £10 and you lose five times in a row you’d have to bet £360 on the sixth spin of the wheel. If you win you’ve only made £10 profit. If you lose then you’ll have to bet £720 on the next spin and you’d still only make £10.
Another method, described by an editor of the New York Times, Andres Martinez, is to divide your bankroll in to 35 piles. Then make a ’straight up’ bet on the same number 35 consecutive times. If your number hits then you win back your original bankroll. If your number doesn’t come up then too bad. It can take a long time to spin the wheel 35 times and this method can be a lot of fun. You might get some odd looks at first but it won’t be long before other players are putting bets on your number. The cheer that will go up if the number hits will raise the roof. Unfortunately there is only about a 60% chance of any one particular number coming up in 35 spins of the roulette wheel. It’s a good way to have fun but a bad way to win money.
Albert Einstein apparently said, “You can’t beat a roulette table unless you steal money from it.” However, there have been a handful of roulette players throughout history that have beaten the game with a system that works regularly. The systems that they used are based on the fact that roulette tables are not perfect and minor deviations in the angle it tilts or if it becomes slightly unbalanced can effect where the ball lands. This means that on certain roulette tables the ball is slightly more likely to land in come pockets than others. If you can work out which numbers these are then you might have a slight edge. Unfortunately most casinos have wised up to this and re-balance their wheels frequently.
Perhaps the first person to do this successfully was an Englishman called Joseph Jagger who hired six people to secretly monitor the roulette wheels at the Beaux-Arts in Monte Carlo in 1873. They watched for about two years and discovered that one of the tables showed a clear bias in that some of the numbers came up more frequently than the rest. Jagger placed his bets accordingly and allegedly won US$300,000 in three days.
The casino tried to throw him by relocating the wheels, but when Jagger noticed that a telltale scratch on his favoured roulette wheel was not present on the table that now occupied its place he sought it out. He found it and began winning again. In the end the casino resorted to dismantling the wheels and rebuilding them every day. By this time Jagger had won an absolute fortune and left Monte Carlo for good. The story goes that Jagger invested his winnings in property and died a very wealthy man.
Jean De Plume also writes articles for Casino Lagoon, a casino gambling blog.