Twenty Gambling Questions

Twenty Gambling Questions

Did you ever lose time from work or school due to gambling?
Has gambling ever made your home life unhappy?
Did gambling affect your reputation?
Have you ever felt remorse after gambling?
Did you ever gamble to get money with which to pay debts or otherwise solve financial difficulties?
Did gambling cause a decrease in your ambition or efficiency?
After losing did you feel you must return as soon as possible and win back your losses?
After a win did you have a strong urge to return and win more?
Did you often gamble until your last dollar was gone?
Did you ever borrow to finance your gambling?
Have you ever sold anything to finance gambling?
Were you reluctant to use gambling money for normal expenditures?
Did gambling make you careless of the welfare of yourself or your family?
Did you ever gamble longer than you had planned?
Have you ever gambled to escape worry, trouble, boredom or loneliness?
Have you ever committed, or considered committing, an illegal act to finance gambling?
Did gambling cause you to have difficulty in sleeping?
Do arguments, disappointments or frustrations create within you an urge to gamble?
Did you ever have an urge to celebrate any good fortune by a few hours of gambling?
Have you ever considered self destruction or suicide as a result of your gambling?

Most compulsive gamblers will answer yes to at least seven of these questions.

Poker Three Card

Three Card

Three card poker is a combination of poker and special hands. The player may bet on either one, both, and in different amounts. Both games are based on hands consisting of three cards. The special hands are a simple game in which you get three cards and are paid according to their value from a high pair to a straight flush.

Ante and Play is the form of Poker

Play begins with a wager on ante. After the poker player views his three cards he may either raise by putting an equal bet on play or fold and lose the ante bet. If the player folds he also loses the special bet if one was made, however this should not be any sacrifice because if the special bet paid anything the player shouldn't fold.

If the player does rise then he goes against the dealer's hand. The dealer needs at least a queen high to qualify. Below are the possible outcomes and their payoff:

Dealer does not qualify: Ante wins 1 to 1, play bet is returned

Dealer qualifies and player beats dealer: Both play and ante win 1 to 1

Dealer qualifies and dealer beats player: Both Play and ante lose

Dealer qualifies and dealer ties player: Both Play and ante push

In organized sports, point shaving is a type of match fixing where the perpetrators try to prevent a team from covering a published point spread. Unlike other forms of match fixing, sports betting invariably motivates point shaving. A point shaving scheme generally involves a sports gambler and one or more players of the sports team favored to win the game. In exchange for a bribe, the player or players agree to ensure that their team will not cover the point spread. The gambler then wagers against that team.

Basketball

Basketball is a particularly easy medium for shaving points because of the scoring tempo of the game and the ease by which one player can influence key events. By deliberately missing shots or committing well-timed turnovers or fouls, a corrupt player can covertly ensure that his team fails to cover the point spread, without causing them to lose the game or to lose so badly that suspicions are aroused. Although the NCAA has adopted a zero tolerance policy with respect to gambling activity by its players, some critics believe it unwittingly encourages point shaving due to its strict rules regarding amateurism, combined with the large amount of money wagered on its games. The NCAA has produced posters warning of this, the most notable being an athlete sitting alone on a bench with his face buried in his hands although this may also look like the athlete suffered a tremendous defeat with the caption DO NOT BET ON IT with warnings as to what could happen if they are involved in such a plan as well as an athlete being caught gambling himself .

Famous examples of this are the CCNY Point Shaving Scandal of the 1950-51 and the Boston College basketball point shaving scandal of 1978-79, which was perpetrated by gangsters Henry Hill and Jimmy Burke.

Sports Point Shaving

The technique has been used by both amateur and professional athletes in many other sports. The intention is to manipulate scoring so that the final score results in a predetermined outcome. A typical sports game should always tend to behave in a nondeterministic manner. In other words, the exact final score of a game exists in a set, which can contain more than a thousand possible combinations. Furthermore, nondeterminism suggests that the final score of a sports game is practically unpredictable.

Many variables can influence the outcome. Such variables include weather, fatigue, and human error. However, amateur and professional athletes who are very skilled in the technique of point shaving can consistently create unlikely outcomes in bad weather and other challenging conditions. These unlikely outcomes tend to create huge financial gains/losses in prediction markets.

The deviation from the mean, otherwise known as the expected value, is what makes these outcomes so unlikely. In most sports, the expected value is a mathematical prediction that can be expressed as a scoring differential. This scoring differential is also calculated by casinos; and, gamblers generally refer to it as a point spread. In many cases of point shaving, the final outcome deviates substantially from the expected value, or the point spread. Additionally, the deviation from the expected value can be quite large. Many times, the deviation is so large that athletes on opposing teams must cooperate in order to achieve the desired result. In this particular case, the final outcome is commonly referred to as a thrown game.

Gambling at Casinos


Acey Deucey
Acting career
Acting coaches
Acting Resume
Actor's auditions
Actors guild
Adrienne
American Quarter Horse
Ante
Attorney
Audition
Audition411
Auditions California
Auditions casting call
Auditions for actors
auditions los angeles
Bastra
Beijing
Betting Arbitrage
Betting Pool
Billabong
Blind
Blue note
Blues Brothers
Blues Music Festival
Bouillotte
Brand consultant
Brick and Mortar
Broadway auditions
Buenos Aires
California Card Rooms
Car Insurance
Card Game
Card Games Rules
Caribbean Stud Poker
Carlton
Casino Tokens
Chicago
Chicago Poker Card Game
Chocolate
City
Combinatorics
Comps
Compulsive Gambling
Contact Indiana Poker
Corporate lawyer
Costume Jewelry
Czech
Dance audition
Dead Mans Hand
Dead Money
Dealing
Delhi
Detroit
Diamond
Diamond Allotrope
Duplicate Poker
Financial betting
Frivolous litigation
Gambling
Gambling Disorders
Gambling Disorders Studies
Gambling Problems
Gemstone
Gold Investors
Gold Investors Undeterred
Health Insurance
Health Insurance Policy
History of Poker
Indian Poker
Home
Individual Karma
Instant Karma
Internet Casinos
Investor
Kill Game
Kuhn poker
Las Vegas Strip
Las Vegas Valley
Legal System
Loose Diamonds Los Angeles
Loose Stones
Los Angeles
Mahjong
Mexico City
motorcycle
Mult-Line Slot Machines
Odds
Online Bingo
Online Casinos
Online Poker
Open call auditions
Pachinko
Paradise Nevada
Pathological Gambling
Photograph
Playing Cards
Point Shaving
Poker Ante
Poker Blinds
Poker Chip
Poker Tournament
Pokerbots
Problem Gambling
Progressive Jackpot
Red Dog Poker
Responsible Gambling
Robbie Williams
Rules for Card Games
Russell Crowe
San Francisco
Sao Paulo
Shuffling
Silver Usage
Slahal
Slot Machine
Slot Machine History
Slot Machine Terminology
Sports Betting
Table Stakes Rules
Teaching
Thoroughbred Horse Racing
Tokyo
TV show auditions
Twenty Gambling Questions
United States Attorney General
Video Slot Machines
Voice over auditions
Wagering is Gambling
Wedding Rings
When the Stakes Turn Toxic
Wholesale
Yoga