ihate17
Well-Known Member
He is a dealer, he knows no better
Now if they removed all of one of these 2-9 from the stack and there were 12 denominations of cards with 4 of them being 10's, then insurance would be an even money proposition off the top. Since we have 13 it is poor.
But when the big bet theory is thrown out there:
The counter knows the count means take even money.
The basic strategy player may take even money because he wants to get paid on the big bet, it may be wrong but it is understandible.
ihate17
The vast majority of dealers learned how to play blackjack from the poor players they deal too. Insurance (or even money) becomes a good bet when the count is over +3 but a poor bet at a count under. Since most players do not count and since basic strategy is not based upon a count, insuring a blackjack is a very poor bet.eps6724 said:So, should we assume that the original poster was just trying to lead us astray? Or just giving another opinion?
Now if they removed all of one of these 2-9 from the stack and there were 12 denominations of cards with 4 of them being 10's, then insurance would be an even money proposition off the top. Since we have 13 it is poor.
But when the big bet theory is thrown out there:
The counter knows the count means take even money.
The basic strategy player may take even money because he wants to get paid on the big bet, it may be wrong but it is understandible.
ihate17