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Rain Man
09-30-2013, 09:59 AM
I'm not a gambler, but I know some people around here are into poker, so I'm curious how you think he might have been marking cards. It seems like such a thing would be very difficult to do in modern casinos. And could he have been cheating at the poker as well?

http://www.cnn.com/2013/09/29/justice/legendary-gambler-arrested/index.html?hpt=hp_inthenews

Legendary gambler Archie Karas accused of marking cards in San Diego casino

By Emma Lacey-Bordeaux, CNN
updated 11:03 PM EDT, Sun September 29, 2013

(CNN) -- His was a rags-to-riches tale. A Greek immigrant who came to the United States and made it big. A waiter who gambled in his spare time. A poker prodigy who turned $50 into $40 million in just three years.

Archie Karas has described himself the "king of the gamblers," but authorities in San Diego are now calling him a cheater.

On Friday, police arrested the 62-year-old Karas, whose legal name is Anargyros Karabourniotis, at his home in Las Vegas, on allegations he marked cards during a blackjack game in San Diego in July. The alleged cheating was also caught on camera, according to authorities.

The alleged incident occurred at San Diego's Barona Casino. Karas won $8,000 playing blackjack, but San Diego District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis says video shows the gambler cheated with a technique known as marking cards.

Marking cards allows a player to identify the value of cards. If done correctly, neither the dealer nor other players notice the marks -- only the player who is in on the scheme.

"This defendant's luck ran out thanks to extraordinary cooperation between several different law enforcement agencies who worked together to investigate and prosecute this case," Dumanis said.

Karas is being held in Las Vegas without bail. He faces charges of burglary, winning by fraudulent means and cheating. He is expected to appear in court Monday for an extradition hearing.

It was not immediately clear if Karas has legal representation.

Karas' exploits are legendary in the poker world.

In 1992, he went to Las Vegas with just $50. He got a $10,000 loan from a poker buddy at Binion's Horseshoe, according to Poker.org. Karas tripled the loan in one game.

From there he went on to bet and win at pool, then poker.

"I was the best," Karas told ESPN in an interview broadcast in 2008. "Anybody who'd come to town I'd play them, I didn't care who they were and I'd win, too."

But he had a problem, he recounted to ESPN. No one would play him anymore; he had simply won too much.

He didn't quit. Instead, he changed the game.

"I had to play dice," he told ESPN. He said lines of people used to show up to watch him bet $1 million on each roll. "I ran it up to $40 million," he recalled. "It was a lot of money."

But as quickly as it came, the money left Karas. He said he lost $20 million in 10 days. Soon, it was all gone.

It took him three years to win the $40 million and only three weeks to lose it.

If the loss hurt Karas, he didn't show it in his 2008 interview.

"I consider myself the king of gamblers," he said, chuckling. "I made it, I lost it and like Frank Sinatra says, I stood tall and I took the punches and I did it my way."

Third Eye
09-30-2013, 10:43 AM
There are countless ways to mark cards. More than likely he was probably doing something simple like nicking 10-valued cards with his fingernail. This could pay dividends in blackjack. It's doubtful that he was cheating at poker though. You would need a much more robust method that would not only identify the value of the card but also the suit to really be effective.

For what it's worth, there really is no such thing as a good gambler. Rather there are good cheaters and lucky gamblers. Cheaters get caught though, and the law of large numbers usually limits how lucky people are in the long run.

Edit: I'm editing this because everyone seems to be missing my point. If you know what you are doing poker is not gambling, and sports books are not gambling either. They both require skill to be successful in the long run. Black jack, craps, roulette, any table game with a specific probability of winning that is never in your favor is gambling.

Ace Gunner
09-30-2013, 10:46 AM
There are countless ways to mark cards. More than likely he was probably doing something simple like nicking 10-valued cards with his fingernail. This could pay dividends in blackjack. It's doubtful that he was cheating at poker though. You would need a much more robust method that would not only identify the value of the card but also the suit to really be effective.

For what it's worth, there really is no such thing as a good gambler. Rather there are good cheaters and lucky gamblers. Cheaters get caught though, and the law of large numbers usually limits how lucky people are in the long run.

yep

Iowanian
09-30-2013, 10:49 AM
I read another article that said he had a hollow chip and was marking them with dye.
My guess is he was wearing "sun glasses" that let him see the marks.

I've been in poker games at a Casino where someone was marking the A's with corner scratches with a thumbnail.

GloryDayz
09-30-2013, 10:50 AM
I think I know...

http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7125/7671635748_a455640481_z.jpg

Saul Good
09-30-2013, 10:54 AM
There are countless ways to mark cards. More than likely he was probably doing something simple like nicking 10-valued cards with his fingernail. This could pay dividends in blackjack. It's doubtful that he was cheating at poker though. You would need a much more robust method that would not only identify the value of the card but also the suit to really be effective.

For what it's worth, there really is no such thing as a good gambler. Rather there are good cheaters and lucky gamblers. Cheaters get caught though, and the law of large numbers usually limits how lucky people are in the long run.

There are absolutely good gamblers. That is why some games are games of skill and others are games of chance.

Third Eye
09-30-2013, 10:54 AM
I read another article that said he had a hollow chip and was marking them with dye.
My guess is he was wearing "sun glasses" that let him see the marks.

I've been in poker games at a Casino where someone was marking the A's with corner scratches with a thumbnail.

That's a pretty old technique though, and I would think anyone wearing sunglasses at a blackjack table would send up an immediate red flag.

Third Eye
09-30-2013, 10:55 AM
There are absolutely good gamblers. That is why some games are games of skill and others are games of chance.

If it's a game of skill, it isn't gambling.

AndChiefs
09-30-2013, 10:55 AM
I first read this as "making" cards as opposed to "marking". Imagine my disappointment when it was just a regular marking scheme.

cosmo20002
09-30-2013, 10:58 AM
There are countless ways to mark cards. More than likely he was probably doing something simple like nicking 10-valued cards with his fingernail. This could pay dividends in blackjack. It's doubtful that he was cheating at poker though. You would need a much more robust method that would not only identify the value of the card but also the suit to really be effective.

For what it's worth, there really is no such thing as a good gambler. Rather there are good cheaters and lucky gamblers. Cheaters get caught though, and the law of large numbers usually limits how lucky people are in the long run.

You can definitely be "good" at poker, and someone with a sophisticated card counting system can actually turn blackjack odds slightly in their favor. But generally, yeah.

Rain Man
09-30-2013, 11:03 AM
I think I know...

http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7125/7671635748_a455640481_z.jpg



Once they advance the technology to see through underwear, the market for those glasses is going to explode.

Third Eye
09-30-2013, 11:03 AM
You can definitely be "good" at poker, and someone with a sophisticated card counting system can actually turn blackjack odds slightly in their favor. But generally, yeah.

Again, poker is not gambling when played correctly, and card counting is cheating according to the rules set forth by the casino, so my comment still stands.

Rain Man
09-30-2013, 11:08 AM
Again, poker is not gambling when played correctly, and card counting is cheating according to the rules set forth by the casino, so my comment still stands.

I've never figured out the fun of poker. It seems like it's reasonably easy to assess one's odds and draw cards accordingly, but if you get a terrible hand there's not much you can do. And the luck in drawing a hand is about 100 times more powerful than your skill in assessing the odds and drawing cards (which themselves will be luck).

So it seems like a really good player can occasionally know the odds and get lucky to turn a bad hand into a good hand, but luck still is the predominant factor by a large margin.

BlackHelicopters
09-30-2013, 11:10 AM
I thought card counting was only frowned upon, like masturbating on an airplane.

mr. tegu
09-30-2013, 11:14 AM
I've never figured out the fun of poker. It seems like it's reasonably easy to assess one's odds and draw cards accordingly, but if you get a terrible hand there's not much you can do. And the luck in drawing a hand is about 100 times more powerful than your skill in assessing the odds and drawing cards (which themselves will be luck).

So it seems like a really good player can occasionally know the odds and get lucky to turn a bad hand into a good hand, but luck still is the predominant factor by a large margin.

You don't have to have a good hand to win. Conversely, the best hand doesn't always win.

mr. tegu
09-30-2013, 11:15 AM
There are countless ways to mark cards. More than likely he was probably doing something simple like nicking 10-valued cards with his fingernail. This could pay dividends in blackjack. It's doubtful that he was cheating at poker though. You would need a much more robust method that would not only identify the value of the card but also the suit to really be effective.

For what it's worth, there really is no such thing as a good gambler. Rather there are good cheaters and lucky gamblers. Cheaters get caught though, and the law of large numbers usually limits how lucky people are in the long run.

That is silly. There are plenty of good sports bettors.

BlackHelicopters
09-30-2013, 11:17 AM
That is silly. There are plenty of good sports bettors.

10 star lock free on recorded message.

Rain Man
09-30-2013, 11:18 AM
You don't have to have a good hand to win. Conversely, the best hand doesn't always win.

How often does the best hand not win? I presume you're talking about someone bluffing and getting a good hand to fold, which seems like it would be exceedingly rare. If I have a good hand, I'm playing it to the end.

Note that I don't play poker, so maybe I don't know what I'm talking about.

Dartgod
09-30-2013, 11:19 AM
Again, poker is not gambling when played correctly, and card counting is cheating according to the rules set forth by the casino, so my comment still stands.

This is incorrect.

Garcia Bronco
09-30-2013, 11:20 AM
Gamblers and Casino's get exactly what they deserve.

Chief Gump
09-30-2013, 11:21 AM
I thought you just disappeared when you did crap like this in Vegas.

Easy 6
09-30-2013, 11:25 AM
I thought you just disappeared when you did crap like this in Vegas.

Cattle prod time.

mr. tegu
09-30-2013, 11:27 AM
How often does the best hand not win? I presume you're talking about someone bluffing and getting a good hand to fold, which seems like it would be exceedingly rare. If I have a good hand, I'm playing it to the end.

Note that I don't play poker, so maybe I don't know what I'm talking about.

That is essentially what I am talking about. But the best hand not winning no doubt occurs more often than you might think, especially among amateur players.

For instance if the board reads Ace, 8, 3, K, J and you are holding a King/Queen, how comfortable are you that you are going to win? Especially if the other player has been betting hard and representing an Ace even though they just have a pair of 8s. Or if the flush possibility is also out there, you are even more uncomfortable. Obviously the decision to call or fold to a final bet in front of you depends on the amount of the bet, how much you have already committed to the pot, and how the action played out, but you can never be too sure. In this case, you will probably be playing your pair of kings to the end. But imagine you only have a pair of Jacks. Now you are really uneasy about your hand even though you have had the other player dominated since the turn card. The intricacies that go into the game are a large part of what makes it enjoyable.

Bugeater
09-30-2013, 11:31 AM
I thought you just disappeared when you did crap like this in Vegas.
He didn't get caught in Vegas.

GloryDayz
09-30-2013, 11:31 AM
I've never figured out the fun of poker. It seems like it's reasonably easy to assess one's odds and draw cards accordingly, but if you get a terrible hand there's not much you can do. And the luck in drawing a hand is about 100 times more powerful than your skill in assessing the odds and drawing cards (which themselves will be luck).

So it seems like a really good player can occasionally know the odds and get lucky to turn a bad hand into a good hand, but luck still is the predominant factor by a large margin.

I'm with you... I've been to many a gambling facility to include Monaco (just to sya I was there!!), and I don't get it. I see the allure of the high-stakes places like Monaco and the places where the truly wealthy and skilled ply, but when I go to "the boats" it's just kind of sad. From the elderly folks dragging o2 bottles from slot machine to slot machine, to the others who are sitting at tables and just don't look like they're having fun (by the looks on their faces). And it's not a poker face deal, it's just the look like they're there because it's a little better than being at home watching infomercials.

So I could be wrong, but more than 20 minutes at a blackjack table and I'm kind of bored.

But alas, if that's what they want to do, have fun, I'll go to the comedy shows or watch some little oriental folks fly through the air. After all, I love NASCAR and most folks find that to me tantamount to watching cars on the highway. So obviously I'm just missing something when it comes to cards and board ("bored" as I say) games..

Lex Luthor
09-30-2013, 11:36 AM
There are countless ways to mark cards. More than likely he was probably doing something simple like nicking 10-valued cards with his fingernail. This could pay dividends in blackjack. It's doubtful that he was cheating at poker though. You would need a much more robust method that would not only identify the value of the card but also the suit to really be effective.

For what it's worth, there really is no such thing as a good gambler. Rather there are good cheaters and lucky gamblers. Cheaters get caught though, and the law of large numbers usually limits how lucky people are in the long run.

That's not really correct. Just take the game of Texas Hold'em for example. A skilled player can greatly improve his odds of winning, a skilled player can win some hands by bluffing, and a skilled player can minimize his losses by correctly reading the other players and folding when he should fold. However, Texas Hold'Em is a game that combines skill and luck.

Phil Helmuth has won more World Series of Poker bracelets than anyone else, yet he often finishes out of the money. I suppose you can argue that he simply plays better in some tournaments than others. After all, Tiger Woods misses the cut on the PGA tour sometimes, and nobody says that golf is gambling.

However, you can also make a pretty convincing argument that a run of bad cards knocks Phil Hellmuth out of tournaments on a regular basis, even when he plays his hands perfectly. That's just part of the game, and that's the gambling aspect of it. There's a degree of luck involved because the player has absolutely no control over the cards that are dealt. A player can make a horrible bet or a horrible call, and then get lucky because against all odds, he got the exact card he needed. That's luck. That doesn't happen in sports where the winners and losers are determined strictly by who plays the best.

If you don't have the requisite skill you can't depend on good luck to carry you in poker. You can be the best player in the world and lose to a lesser player, not because he outplayed you, but because the cards fell in his favor.

To say that there is no such thing as a good gambler is just silly. Ask the best poker players in the world whether or not they are gamblers and whether or not an element of luck is involved. They will tell you that they are, and that there is. They'll also tell you that an element of skill is involved, and they are the best at it.

Lex Luthor
09-30-2013, 11:40 AM
And yes, I've seen Rounders many times. I've seen Matt Damon make the claim that poker is a game of skill and that luck has no bearing on it. I've seen him talk about the World Series of Poker, make the claim that the same guys are at the final table every year, and ask "are they the luckiest guys in the world?".

The problem with that argument is that the same guys DON'T make it to the final table every year. It's rare for anyone to make it to the final table two years in a row.

cabletech94
09-30-2013, 11:40 AM
I thought card counting was only frowned upon, like masturbating on an airplane.

only if you finish........

cosmo20002
09-30-2013, 11:45 AM
I've never figured out the fun of poker. It seems like it's reasonably easy to assess one's odds and draw cards accordingly, but if you get a terrible hand there's not much you can do. And the luck in drawing a hand is about 100 times more powerful than your skill in assessing the odds and drawing cards (which themselves will be luck).

So it seems like a really good player can occasionally know the odds and get lucky to turn a bad hand into a good hand, but luck still is the predominant factor by a large margin.

The skill is not just knowing your odds and the chances of improving your hand, but winning despite not having the best hand.

cosmo20002
09-30-2013, 11:49 AM
I thought card counting was only frowned upon, like masturbating on an airplane.

It's not illegal--card counting, that is. But the casino can basically tell you to leave for any reason. And if you are winning too much money from them, they can tell you to leave.

Lex Luthor
09-30-2013, 11:51 AM
I've never figured out the fun of poker. It seems like it's reasonably easy to assess one's odds and draw cards accordingly, but if you get a terrible hand there's not much you can do. And the luck in drawing a hand is about 100 times more powerful than your skill in assessing the odds and drawing cards (which themselves will be luck).

So it seems like a really good player can occasionally know the odds and get lucky to turn a bad hand into a good hand, but luck still is the predominant factor by a large margin.

The fun part is learning how to read the other players and make your decisions based upon the cues they provide. If you get good enough at doing that, you can be competitive without ever looking at your own cards.

cosmo20002
09-30-2013, 11:55 AM
How often does the best hand not win? I presume you're talking about someone bluffing and getting a good hand to fold, which seems like it would be exceedingly rare. If I have a good hand, I'm playing it to the end.

Note that I don't play poker, so maybe I don't know what I'm talking about.

It's not just a straight-out bluff and the end of the hand. There are several betting rounds, with cards dealt after each round. You might have a decent but not great hand, and you bet with the intention of getting others to fold so they don't improve their hand and beat you. Most poker hands don't even make it to the end. They are folded in the middle betting rounds.

cosmo20002
09-30-2013, 11:59 AM
And yes, I've seen Rounders many times. I've seen Matt Damon make the claim that poker is a game of skill and that luck has no bearing on it. I've seen him talk about the World Series of Poker, make the claim that the same guys are at the final table every year, and ask "are they the luckiest guys in the world?".

The problem with that argument is that the same guys DON'T make it to the final table every year. It's rare for anyone to make it to the final table two years in a row.

Especially now that entries are in the thousands. Used to be in the hundreds, and in the early days even less.

Saul Good
09-30-2013, 12:01 PM
The fun part is learning how to read the other players and make your decisions based upon the cues they provide. If you get good enough at doing that, you can be competitive without ever looking at your own cards.

Spoken like someone who reads the books and never plays. Reading people is a tiny part of poker. Nobody can ever be competitive without looking at his cards...except Matt Damon in Rounders. You can pick up tendencies, betting patterns, etc., but even that is only a very small piece of things. Want to be better at poker? Fold before the flop more often.

Sorce
09-30-2013, 12:14 PM
Poker is more about luck the closer you get to a single card draw. The further you pull away to a career it gets more about skill.

If you need a single card to give you the winning hand, that is all luck. The skill comes over the long run by maximizing your wins and limiting your losses. I consider myself a fairly good player but I won't win every hand or every tourney or even be up after a session but if you look at the big picture I've won more money than I lost.

Tournaments are an even bigger crap shoot since the increasing blinds force action. If you can just sit there forever waiting for a good start hand you can greatly increase your odds.

Third Eye
09-30-2013, 12:14 PM
I've never figured out the fun of poker. It seems like it's reasonably easy to assess one's odds and draw cards accordingly, but if you get a terrible hand there's not much you can do. And the luck in drawing a hand is about 100 times more powerful than your skill in assessing the odds and drawing cards (which themselves will be luck).

So it seems like a really good player can occasionally know the odds and get lucky to turn a bad hand into a good hand, but luck still is the predominant factor by a large margin.

Given what I've picked up from you over the years, this sentiment really surprises me. I think it would be right up your alley.

You hit on two points above: profitability and fun.

As far as profitability goes, keep this in mind: there is a really wide gap in the skill level and intelligence of any given player at the table. As you pointed out, probability dictates a lot of what happens. Well, a lot of people don't understand probability, at all. That can be exploited. Think of it in terms of financial management. Based on the pot and the relative size of the bets one can overvalue and undervalue their hand. Your goal then is simply to maximize value. Now this is just a basic part of the overall strategy, but it's essential to understand and is key to consistently beating bad players. Hell, in the day a number of people made a lot of money just being math players and you can still be fairly successful at lower levels.

Since the poker boom of a decade ago, there are a lot more people that understand the math of it, at least fundamentally, and this is where the fun comes in for me. There used to be, and this is a simple generalization, math players and feel players. These days you have to be both to be consistently successful at higher levels. If you play strictly by the rules of probability then other players are going to recognize nice that and adjust their play to manipulate that. So sometimes you have to make decisions that are incorrect according to the math. Once you start getting deeper and deeper into the meta game, it becomes really fun. It is really quite deep.

Third Eye
09-30-2013, 12:17 PM
That is silly. There are plenty of good sports bettors.

I really should edit that original post I guess. Sports books are skill based, it isn't gambling if you understand value.

mr. tegu
09-30-2013, 01:17 PM
I really should edit that original post I guess. Sports books are skill based, it isn't gambling if you understand value.

So in your opinion the only activites that count as gambling are those that are purely based on luck? And it ceases to become gambling when you can utilize a skill to win?

Rain Man
09-30-2013, 01:24 PM
Given what I've picked up from you over the years, this sentiment really surprises me. I think it would be right up your alley.

You hit on two points above: profitability and fun.

As far as profitability goes, keep this in mind: there is a really wide gap in the skill level and intelligence of any given player at the table. As you pointed out, probability dictates a lot of what happens. Well, a lot of people don't understand probability, at all. That can be exploited. Think of it in terms of financial management. Based on the pot and the relative size of the bets one can overvalue and undervalue their hand. Your goal then is simply to maximize value. Now this is just a basic part of the overall strategy, but it's essential to understand and is key to consistently beating bad players. Hell, in the day a number of people made a lot of money just being math players and you can still be fairly successful at lower levels.

Since the poker boom of a decade ago, there are a lot more people that understand the math of it, at least fundamentally, and this is where the fun comes in for me. There used to be, and this is a simple generalization, math players and feel players. These days you have to be both to be consistently successful at higher levels. If you play strictly by the rules of probability then other players are going to recognize nice that and adjust their play to manipulate that. So sometimes you have to make decisions that are incorrect according to the math. Once you start getting deeper and deeper into the meta game, it becomes really fun. It is really quite deep.


I feel like it should interest me, but it doesn't. I don't see the justification to invest time so I can influence the 1% of the equation that I can influence.

With blackjack I lost interest as soon as I learned the "double your bet" trick. If you do that and you have an iron gut, you win every time. But big deal, you win a small amount. It's not worth the effort.

Third Eye
09-30-2013, 01:24 PM
So in your opinion the only activites that count as gambling are those that are purely based on luck? And it ceases to become gambling when you can utilize a skill to win?

Well, I don't really like the word luck. If you were to say gambling is playing any game where your expected winnings are negative, then I would say yes.

GloryDayz
09-30-2013, 01:47 PM
If you're not cheating you're not trying... And "the house" better hope I never end up on they jury. I think it's pussy as all get out to not having to play the game within the game... LOL, THAT group looking for the law to protect them is kinda funny.

Anyway, I'm on the card-counter's side! Scroo the "house"!!!

Saul Good
09-30-2013, 01:55 PM
I really should edit that original post I guess. Sports books are skill based, it isn't gambling if you understand value.

Actual skill games are still a gamble. If you want to argue that perfectly played blackjack (minus cheating, card counting, etc.) isn't gambling, I'll listen. In that case, you're talking about an opponent (the dealer) that plays by a fixed set of rules. Over the long run, you will hit an exact level of (slightly negative) return.

Playing poker is always gambling, as opponents aren't forced to abide by if/then actions.

Third Eye
09-30-2013, 02:00 PM
Actual skill games are still a gamble. If you want to argue that perfectly played blackjack (minus cheating, card counting, etc.) isn't gambling, I'll listen. In that case, you're talking about an opponent (the dealer) that plays by a fixed set of rules. Over the long run, you will hit an exact level of (slightly negative) return.

Playing poker is always gambling, as opponents aren't forced to abide by if/then actions.

An individual hand may be a gamble, but consistently getting your money in with >50% isn't.

Saul Good
09-30-2013, 02:21 PM
An individual hand may be a gamble, but consistently getting your money in with >50% isn't.

Unfortunately, you don't know when you're >50%...at least not consistently. I mean, you can have the nuts every once in a while, but that's the exception.

Lex Luthor
09-30-2013, 02:26 PM
Spoken like someone who reads the books and never plays. Reading people is a tiny part of poker. Nobody can ever be competitive without looking at his cards...except Matt Damon in Rounders. You can pick up tendencies, betting patterns, etc., but even that is only a very small piece of things. Want to be better at poker? Fold before the flop more often.
I've read a couple of books and played in hundreds of tournaments, so you would be wrong about that.

"Nobody can ever be competitive without looking at his cards"? Are you sure about that?

http://www.pokerlistings.com/poker-player_annette-obrestad

Annette Obrestad is a nice, quiet, unassuming girl - until you meet her at the poker table.

Known as Annette_15 online, Obrestad has played thousands upon thousands of hands online. While doing so she developed a highly effective poker game that is reminiscent of that of other famously aggressive Scandinavians. In 2007 Obrestad shook the poker world by winning the inaugural World Series of Poker Europe Main Event. By doing so, Obrestad broke several records, including youngest player ever to win a bracelet and largest single-event payout to a female.

Obrestad grew up in the small Norwegian town of Sandness. She was only 15 years old when a friend shipped her some money on an online poker site. The idea of a 15-year-old playing poker online created controversy and is exactly why many governments have attempted to ban online poker. It's worth noting that Obrestad never actually deposited any of her own money.

After winning a few freerolls and slowly moving up the online poker ranks Obrestad got good. Really good. She was so good, in fact, that she didn't even need to see hole cards. During one legendary online tournament Obrestad put tape over her computer monitor so she couldn't see her own hand. By using superior bluffing techniques and reading her opponents perfectly she outlasted 180 opponents and went on to win the tournament.

By 2006 Obrestad had elevated her online game so high that she was dominating the online world. She won countless $100 buy-in tournaments on both Full Tilt Poker and PokerStars, garnering around $10,000 to $20,000 for every victory. Annette_15 had built her bankroll to such a size that she could afford to compete at the highest levels.

Tombstone RJ
09-30-2013, 02:28 PM
I'm not a gambler, but I know some people around here are into poker, so I'm curious how you think he might have been marking cards. It seems like such a thing would be very difficult to do in modern casinos. And could he have been cheating at the poker as well?

http://www.cnn.com/2013/09/29/justice/legendary-gambler-arrested/index.html?hpt=hp_inthenews

Legendary gambler Archie Karas accused of marking cards in San Diego casino

By Emma Lacey-Bordeaux, CNN
updated 11:03 PM EDT, Sun September 29, 2013

(CNN) -- His was a rags-to-riches tale. A Greek immigrant who came to the United States and made it big. A waiter who gambled in his spare time. A poker prodigy who turned $50 into $40 million in just three years.

Archie Karas has described himself the "king of the gamblers," but authorities in San Diego are now calling him a cheater.

On Friday, police arrested the 62-year-old Karas, whose legal name is Anargyros Karabourniotis, at his home in Las Vegas, on allegations he marked cards during a blackjack game in San Diego in July. The alleged cheating was also caught on camera, according to authorities.

The alleged incident occurred at San Diego's Barona Casino. Karas won $8,000 playing blackjack, but San Diego District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis says video shows the gambler cheated with a technique known as marking cards.

Marking cards allows a player to identify the value of cards. If done correctly, neither the dealer nor other players notice the marks -- only the player who is in on the scheme.

"This defendant's luck ran out thanks to extraordinary cooperation between several different law enforcement agencies who worked together to investigate and prosecute this case," Dumanis said.

Karas is being held in Las Vegas without bail. He faces charges of burglary, winning by fraudulent means and cheating. He is expected to appear in court Monday for an extradition hearing.

It was not immediately clear if Karas has legal representation.

Karas' exploits are legendary in the poker world.

In 1992, he went to Las Vegas with just $50. He got a $10,000 loan from a poker buddy at Binion's Horseshoe, according to Poker.org. Karas tripled the loan in one game.

From there he went on to bet and win at pool, then poker.

"I was the best," Karas told ESPN in an interview broadcast in 2008. "Anybody who'd come to town I'd play them, I didn't care who they were and I'd win, too."

But he had a problem, he recounted to ESPN. No one would play him anymore; he had simply won too much.

He didn't quit. Instead, he changed the game.

"I had to play dice," he told ESPN. He said lines of people used to show up to watch him bet $1 million on each roll. "I ran it up to $40 million," he recalled. "It was a lot of money."

But as quickly as it came, the money left Karas. He said he lost $20 million in 10 days. Soon, it was all gone.

It took him three years to win the $40 million and only three weeks to lose it.

If the loss hurt Karas, he didn't show it in his 2008 interview.

"I consider myself the king of gamblers," he said, chuckling. "I made it, I lost it and like Frank Sinatra says, I stood tall and I took the punches and I did it my way."

call me stupid but doesn't the house provide the deck of cards? How can someone mark house cards?

Tombstone RJ
09-30-2013, 02:29 PM
There are countless ways to mark cards. More than likely he was probably doing something simple like nicking 10-valued cards with his fingernail. This could pay dividends in blackjack. It's doubtful that he was cheating at poker though. You would need a much more robust method that would not only identify the value of the card but also the suit to really be effective.

For what it's worth, there really is no such thing as a good gambler. Rather there are good cheaters and lucky gamblers. Cheaters get caught though, and the law of large numbers usually limits how lucky people are in the long run.

Edit: I'm editing this because everyone seems to be missing my point. If you know what you are doing poker is not gambling, and sports books are not gambling either. They both require skill to be successful in the long run. Black jack, craps, roulette, any table game with a specific probability of winning that is never in your favor is gambling.

Yah but fresh decks are used all the time, right? The house doesn't keep using the same decks over and over, does it?

Tombstone RJ
09-30-2013, 02:37 PM
also, even if Karas was "marking" the cards, you gotta have extraordinary eyes to see that. I watched a program on tv a while back that explained how old time gamblers (back in the wild wild west days of yore) marked cards and I was thinking to myself, "damn, how does a gambler in a relatively dark room even see that tiny little mark/descrepency on the card, it's soo damn small!?!?"

Lee Majors and the bionic eye??

Lex Luthor
09-30-2013, 02:39 PM
I feel like it should interest me, but it doesn't. I don't see the justification to invest time so I can influence the 1% of the equation that I can influence.

With blackjack I lost interest as soon as I learned the "double your bet" trick. If you do that and you have an iron gut, you win every time. But big deal, you win a small amount. It's not worth the effort.
http://i500.listal.com/image/3170273/500full.jpg

OMG Rainman, I can't believe you said that.

The "double your bet" trick is a fallacy. You CAN'T win that way, because in addition to an iron gut, you have to have a bankroll that's almost infinitely large, and you put huge amounts of money at risk to win a tiny amount.

Think about it. It's not uncommon at all for a Blackjack player to lose 5 hands in a row. If you're playing a $5 minimum table, and you lose 5 hands in a row, you just lost $155 (5 + 10 +20 + 40 +80). If you win 5 hands in a row (which very rarely happens), you just won a grand total of $25.

The "double your bet" trick is talked about only by people who have no idea what they are talking about and have never tried it. Try playing free online Blackjack and see how well it works. You will lose all of your money every single time, usually within 5 minutes.

Lex Luthor
09-30-2013, 02:42 PM
call me stupid but doesn't the house provide the deck of cards? How can someone mark house cards?
The player can mark the cards when he picks them up and looks at them.

Dartgod
09-30-2013, 02:46 PM
http://i500.listal.com/image/3170273/500full.jpg

OMG Rainman, I can't believe you said that.

The "double your bet" trick is a fallacy. You CAN'T win that way, because in addition to an iron gut, you have to have a bankroll that's almost infinitely large, and you put huge amounts of money at risk to win a tiny amount.

Think about it. It's not uncommon at all for a Blackjack player to lose 5 hands in a row. If you're playing a $5 minimum table, and you lose 5 hands in a row, you just lost $155 (5 + 10 +20 + 40 +80). If you win 5 hands in a row (which very rarely happens), you just won a grand total of $25.

The "double your bet" trick is talked about only by people who have no idea what they are talking about and have never tried it. Try playing free online Blackjack and see how well it works. You will lose all of your money every single time, usually within 5 minutes.

Ah, the old Martingale System. It's a great system for losing all of your money very quickly.

Lex Luthor
09-30-2013, 02:50 PM
Ah, the old Martingale System. It's a great system for losing all of your money very quickly.
I read in a book a long time ago that it would actually be a better strategy to double your bet every time you win rather than every time you lose. That way you only risk the minimum bet with each hand, but you have the chance to win amounts if you win several hands in a row.

Sounds good. Tried it online with play money. Lost all of the my money every time. That's the nice thing about these online sites that let you play casino games for free. You can easily test all of these simple strategies and see whether or not they work.

mcaj22
09-30-2013, 02:54 PM
And yes, I've seen Rounders many times. I've seen Matt Damon make the claim that poker is a game of skill and that luck has no bearing on it. I've seen him talk about the World Series of Poker, make the claim that the same guys are at the final table every year, and ask "are they the luckiest guys in the world?".

The problem with that argument is that the same guys DON'T make it to the final table every year. It's rare for anyone to make it to the final table two years in a row.

pay da man his monies

ct
09-30-2013, 03:07 PM
strange game, the only winning move is not to play

Lex Luthor
09-30-2013, 03:14 PM
strange game, the only winning move is not to play

How about a nice game of tic-tac-toe?