Heavy wrote:Personally, I like to toss the dice a time or two and see how my shot is looking before going in with the larger bet.
This makes perfect sense to me. An exception built into your standard play under specific conditions. First toss of the weekend is probably a great time to ease into the game with a one count. Of course you might toss a nice little hand right out of the gate and miss it. In the short term anything can happen. I remember one session where we decided to just toss a few hands to see how the dice were behaving and keep the pressure off. We tossed mid teen hands, twice each, with only a PL bet. Third hand comes around and now I feel confident and warmed up. Set a point. Place 6&8 and odds. PSO. Crap. As long as you except that anything can happen short term, intentionally choosing to bet lighter at the start of a trip/session is a reasonable way to protect the bankroll and the nerves.
What I've been trying to share on this topic is my realization that sometimes a play that is a good idea in one circumstance does not make it a good play to use consistently. If you are shooting with an advantage, missing the first profitable roll and first step towards pressing will hurt your long term profits.
For example...I used to place a craps check on every come out roll. I wasn't doing it to control volatility, I believed that I was making more money by placing that bet. I thought that my timing of only betting it on the CO cause it to be a finantially sound decision. When I started tracking rolls and analyzing my data I realized I would actually make more profit if I DID NOT place the craps check. Seeing this first hand I finally realized what the experts meant when they said that hedges don't work in the long run. It's fun to get paid $28 on a CO 2, and another $56 when it's followed by a 12, but at the end of the weekend those constant $3 bets cost me more than the occasional win. So I decided to stop the slow drain of the craps check and just take my lumps and trust it would all work out in the end. It stings now when I roll craps three times in a row on a CO, but I'm content knowing that overall I'll have more money at the end of the weekend if I don't place a CO craps check.
I do still make an occasional craps check under a specific condition. When my bankroll is approaching loss-limit I'm in a short-term position where I can't afford to lose $30 on a bad CO series. So I'll make an exception and place a craps check. At this point I have to control volatility if I hope to save this session. It's worth $3 to be sure I can keep playing. The same play that I know is bad long term becomes an important tool for the short term under this condition.
I think there is a parallel here to the one-count. Like any play, it could win or lose on this next roll. But overall, it is not a "winning" play. I think we tend to notice the extremes of a session. The PSO is really noticeable for obvious reasons. Our brain tries to problem-solve. "If I miss PSOs I make more money!!" Winning on the first roll after establishing the point is not so noticeable. Unless we actually do the math we don't notice that for a DI, all those first roll wins add up to MORE than PSO losses. If we only react to the extremes we can be fooled into believing something that is not true. What I see in the math is this: If you toss a winning session you will win more if you do not use the one-count. If you toss a losing session, you will lose less if you use the one count. In the short term, the one-count could have no effect or push results significantly in one direction or the other. So, are you playing to win or to not lose? Or do you play aggressively at first and then defensively once ahead?
All I'm trying to point out is I think it's important for DIs to be in touch with the REASON we do the things we do at the table. If you feel uncomfortable to leave your bets on after the dice go off the table, then turn off. If it makes you feel more comfortable to use the one-count a few times a night or every single hand then do it. Just be in touch with the fact that the underlying reason is mental attitude, not gross profitability. The one-count doesn't prevent a big quick loss, it just moves the potential for that to happen one roll further into the hand. Play in your own comfort zone. Just know that if you have a proven edge, that edge will show more profit over the long run without any one, two or three-counts.
I wanna see the dust...