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Anyone can walk into a casino
and make the right bets and know how to play them, but
without sound money management techniques, you can still end
up going home broke.
Money management is your
life-line to getting home with some semblance of your
starting bankroll. Otherwise, you'll be hanging out in the
lounge, tapped out, trying to score free drinks. Therefore,
below are money management rules I live by when I'm out
trying to procure a little from the big guys. They will work
if you rigorously apply them.
- First, never bring your
entire bankroll with you to one gambling session. You need
to have a daily gambling budget. Start by dividing your
bankroll by the number of days you'll be gambling. Then
divide your daily bankroll into the number of sessions you
will be playing each day. This is now your single-session
bankroll. Don't bet tomorrow's money until tomorrow comes.
- Set a goal of winning
between 50 to 100% of a single-session bankroll. Then set
aside your original bankroll plus half your winnings. Now
play with the remainder and continue to set aside additional
winnings.
- Use a winning progressive
method of betting by setting a predetermined percentage
increase for each winning bet and sticking to it. For
example, I increase my winning bets by 50% after the second
win: $5, $5, $7, $10, $15, $22, etc. I continuously flat bet
(table minimum) when losing.
- The casino's goal is to
create a fantasyland experience for its patrons. One wily
way is to devalue your money by having you bet chips instead
of legal tender. Think of the deceptive nicknames chips
have. A $5 chip is a "nickel" and a $25 chip a "quarter."
Your best self-defense is to continue to bet with your own
greenback. This way you'll always realize its genuine value.
- If you do turn your
bankroll into chips, take a moment and carefully think about
the exchange. You must always treat chips as hard-earned
cash-like the money you save for your child's college
tuition, mortgage payments or your retirement.
- Never increase your bet
when losing. A double-up-to-catch-up strategy simulates a
lamb being led to slaughter.
- Discipline is not only a
significant part of being a successful gambler but probably
the most important element of money management. You must set
loss limits and win goals. Example: When losing half your
session bankroll (loss limits) you walk, and when doubling
your money (win goals), consider doing the same.
- Identify the profitable
opportunities in gambling by shopping for the best odds,
rules and playing conditions for the casino games you will
be playing. Don't waste your time on games in which the
casino has more than a 2% house advantage.
- Never gamble with money
you can't afford to lose. Need I say more?
- Credit card gambling is
nothing more than a desperate measure to stay in action.
Leave your credit and bank teller cards at home so you won't
be tempted with the easy convenience of getting cash.
- Never quit a hand when
you're on a winning streak. Why tempt fate? You could be
walking around lucky and not even know it. Magical gambling
moments do happen. Fifteen, 18, even 20 hands in a row is
possible. When it ends on a loss, make a mad dash to the
cashier's cage.
- Finally, money management
will not affect the house advantage nor guarantee that you
will win more money. If the house has an advantage before
money management, it still has that same advantage even
after you apply money management techniques. What good money
management principals will do is minimize your losses and in
most cases protect your winnings.
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