One shoe came that was horribly negative. Game was a 6D shoe, h17, surrender, double after split, split 4 times (including aces, but only 1 card for the ace).
The running count was the following on a 9 spot table which was full: 0, -7, -18, -17, -21, -14, -3, -2, -6, -9. When the shoe jumped 11 points in the positive direction (-14 to -3) the other player increased his wager x10 units. I had all but given up on the shoe at that point. Even though the shoe was still negative on the running count, is it possible the True Count was positive? I have read other discussions where someone was corrected in thinking that a negative running count did not necessarily mean a negative true count. Any input?
brianparkes
- you made a mistake in keeping count
- he made a mistake in keeping count
- he was using a different system for counting
- he was not counting at all, and just increased his bet because he felt like it
- he was not counting, but noticed lots of small cards going out, and decided it was a good time for a large bet.
Quote: LonesomeGamblerDifferent counting systems have marginally different betting correlations, but there is no system that will have a player firing into a negative count.
No, but it might yield a positive count in a situation where another system's count would be negative.
Suppose, three fives are out and no aces, making ace-five count plus three. Suppose, six tens are also out, making the HiLo running count minus three.
Quote: weaselmanNo, but it might yield a positive count in a situation where another system's count would be negative.
Suppose, three fives are out and no aces, making ace-five count plus three. Suppose, six tens are also out, making the HiLo running count minus three.
Unbalanced counts will sometimes disagree with balanced counts right around the pivot (which is usually near a true count of 0), depending on which specific small cards have come out. E.g. using the Red Seven count, if for some reason the front half of a shoe was heavy in red sevens, you might have a count that indicates a slight advantage while someone using Hi-Lo and deck estimation will have true count indicating a slight disadvantage since they're not counting sevens at all.
The differences are slight though, nothing that would cause a 10x bet jump. I'm guessing he's either just a gambler or he was shuffle tracking/ace sequencing. Or one of you really screwed up :).
Quote: LonesomeGamblerDifferent counting systems have marginally different betting correlations, but there is no system that will have a player firing into a negative count. Unless you're a full-time player, it's unlikely that you'll ever have a card counter at your table. Card counters often suspect other players at the table of counting, but 99%+ of the time it's just a gambler playing on intuition.
AMEN
Quote: AcesAndEightsUnbalanced counts will sometimes disagree with balanced counts right around the pivot (which is usually near a true count of 0),
The examples I mentioned are both balanced.
Quote: weaselmanThe examples I mentioned are both balanced.
Well, the Wizard's Ace-Five is technically balanced, in that a full deck count-down equals 0. But it also doesn't require doing a true-count conversion, at least via the method documented here.
I don't really consider the ace-five a real counting system that a pro or even moderately serious amateur would use...more of a way for tourists to break even or milk comps. Besides, no one using the ace-five would suddenly increase their bet 10x as described by the OP, as it only calls for parlays.
Not trying to criticize you weasel, your example was quite apt for an example of a situation where one count would be positive and one negative. It's just nomenclature.