Black Jack Estadisticas
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- BLACKJACK STATISTICS. I often look up statistics for blackjack games, such as dealer bust rate. I also regularly get contacted by players about blackjack stats. The data below contains this type of information and can be used as a reference. For house edge and standard deviation stats, see the house edge calc.
- The game is 21 and you can expect to get a blackjack once in every 21 hands. This brings me to the point why I harp that you should never play any blackjack game that pays 6-5, instead of 3-2, for a winning blackjack. Suppose you play two hours worth of blackjack on one of the heavily advertised, $10 minimum, 6-5 single deck games.
Blackjack is a popular casino-gambling card game.
Black Jack or Blackjack may also refer to:
Places[edit]
Australia[edit]
- Black Jack, Queensland, a locality in Queensland
- Black Jack, a civil parish of Pottinger County, New South Wales
- Black Jack Hill, near Gunnedah, New South Wales
United States[edit]
- Black Jack (Red Oak, North Carolina), a historic plantation house
- Black Jack, Kansas, an unincorporated community
- Black Jack, Kentucky, an unincorporated community
- Black Jack, Missouri, a city
- Blackjack, Cherokee County, Texas, an unincorporated community
- Blackjack, Smith County, Texas, an unincorporated community
People[edit]
- Ada Blackjack (1898–1983), Inuit woman
- Roddy Blackjack (c. 1920–2013), Canadian elder and former Chief of the Little Salmon/Carmacks First Nation of the Yukon Territory
- Blackjack Lanza (born 1935), ring name of former professional wrestler John Lanza
- Blackjack Mulligan (1942–2016), ring name of former professional wrestler Robert Jack Windham
- 'Blackjack' Hoss Taylor, a professional wrestler from All-Star Wrestling
Arts and entertainment[edit]
Fictional characters[edit]
- Black Jack (manga character), the main character of the 1973 manga series of the same name
- Blackjack (Transformers), a fictional character in the Transformers universe
Films[edit]
- Black Jack (1927 film), an American silent Western film
- Black Jack (1950 film), written and directed by Julien Duvivier
- Black Jack (1968 film), a Spaghetti Western directed by Gianfranco Baldanello
- Black Jack (1979 film), by Ken Loach
- Blackjack (1978 film), an American crime drama film
- Blackjack (1990 film), directed by Colin Nutley
- Blackjack (1998 film), a TV movie directed by John Woo
- BlackJack (film series) (2003–2007), a series of Australian seven TV movies starring Colin Friels
Games and cards[edit]
- Black Jack (Hearts), a variant of Hearts
- Black Jack (Switch), also known as Switch, a name given to some variations of Crazy Eights in United Kingdom
- A jack (playing card) from a black suit, a jack of clubs or jack of spades
- Blackjack (Atari 2600 video game), a video game cartridge developed by Atari
- Blackjack, an NES video game developed by Odyssey Software; See American Video Entertainment
Literature[edit]
- 'Black Jack', a short story by Rudyard Kipling in the collection Soldiers Three
- Black Jack, a 2003 novel by Finnish writer Reijo Mäki
Music[edit]
- Blackjack, a 21-note scale in the miracle temperament
Groups[edit]
- Black Jack (Chilean band), a Chilean rock band
- Black Jack (Australian band), an Australian heavy metal band
- Blackjack (American band), an American rock band
- BlackJack (Swedish band), a Swedish dansband
Albums[edit]
- Blackjack (Blackjack album), by the American band, 1979
- Blackjack (Donald Byrd album), 1968
Songs[edit]
- 'Black Jack', by The Hives from Barely Legal
- 'Black Jack', by Junkie XL from Big Sounds of the Drags
- 'Black Jacks', by Girls Aloud from Tangled Up
- 'Blackjack', by Airbourne from Runnin' Wild
- 'Blackjack', by Aminé from OnePointFive
- 'Blackjack', by Death Grips from The Money Store
- 'Blackjack', by Everclear from Slow Motion Daydream
- 'Blackjack', by Ray Charles from Yes Indeed!
Television[edit]
- 'Black Jack' (Jericho episode), a 2007 episode of the television series Jericho
- 'Blackjack', season 4, episode 12 of Fear the Walking Dead
- 'BlackJack', an episode of SpongeBob SquarePants
- 'Blackjack', an episode of the TV series The Adventures of Ellery Queen
Other uses in arts and entertainment[edit]
- Black Jack (manga), a 1973 manga and anime series
Brands and enterprises[edit]
- Black Jack (confectionery), aniseed flavour chews
- Black Jack (gum), a brand of chewing gum
- BlackJack (phone), a mobile phone made by Samsung
- BlackJack II (phone), a mobile phone made by Samsung
- Blackjack Pizza, a chain of pizza delivery restaurants in Colorado, US
Military and law enforcement[edit]
- Blackjack (weapon), a type of baton for law enforcement
- RQ-21 Blackjack, a small tactical unmanned air system
- Black Jack Brigade, nickname of the U.S. 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division
- Tupolev Tu-160 (NATO reporting name: Blackjack), a Russian bomber
- VMF-441, nicknamed The Blackjacks, a United States Marine Corps fighter squadron
- Battle of Black Jack, a battle in Kansas preceding the American Civil War
- National Society of Blackjacks, a High School Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps leadership program
Science[edit]
- Black jack (fish), a gamefish
- Blackjack oak or Quercus marilandica, a small tree
- Black jack, a common fig cultivar
- Black jack, often weedy species of the genus Bidens from the family of Asteraceae
- Sphalerite, a mineral sometimes called black-jack by miners
Other uses[edit]
- Black Jack (horse) (1947–1976), a horse used in U.S. Armed Forces full honors funerals
- Black Jack (stamp), a United States postage stamp
- STV Black Jack, a 1904 Canadian brigantine sailing ship
- The Blackjacks, a professional wrestling tag team
See also[edit]
Search for 'black jack' or 'blackjack' on Wikipedia. |
- Blak Jak (born 1983), American rapper
- Blk Jks, signifying Black Jacks, South African rock band
- John Gotti (1940-2002), nicknamed 'Black John', U.S. mobster
Numbers Dont Lie
By Henry Tamburin
Dominator, who is my good friend and fellow blackjack instructor, will probably kill me when he reads this article. Hes always preaching to me that blackjack players 'dont want to know how the clock works, they just want to know what time it is, so dont bore them with a lot of numbers.' But Ive decided to risk life and limb and discuss some of the more important blackjack statistics in my column this month, because I believe it helps players better understand the fundamentals of winning blackjack strategies. Ive got to admit, however, that numbers are boring to most folks, so I crafted this article as a fun quiz (at least I hope you find it entertaining, as well as informative). So lets get going, and Dom, if you are reading this have mercy on me.
1.Ignoring ties, the percentage of hands that you can expect to win when you play blackjack is about:
a. 45 percent
b. 48 percent
c. 50 percent
Answer: b. When you ignore the 9 percent of the hands that tie, you can expect to win 48 percent of the hands dealt to you, and lose 52 percent. Notice that you will lose significantly more hands than you win. So how do you win money playing blackjack? For starters, the average amount of money that you win on the winning hands is slightly greater than a single betting unit because the latter are sometimes hands where you get a blackjack and are paid at 3-2, or you double down and win double the amount of your bet. Losing hands, on the other hand, often lose only a single betting unit. The result is that monetarily you will be close to, but not quite even when you play (this assumes that you use the basic playing strategy for all your hands). If you want to go a step further and win much more money on winning hands compared to the amount you will lose on losing hands, so that overall you show a gain, then youve got to learn card counting.
2.If you are dealt three consecutive hands, what is the chance that they will all lose, excluding ties?
a. 1 percent
b. 14 percent
c. 30 percent
Answer: b. You have about a 14 percent chance of losing three hands in a row when you play blackjack. Surprised? Most players probably guess 1 percent because they figure the chance of this happening is very low. Well it isnt, so dont panic and abandon the basic playing strategy when it happens.
3.How frequently does a player get a blackjack?
a. Once every 15 hands
b. Once every 21 hands
Blackjack Estadisticas De La
c. Once every 30 hands
Answer: b. The game is 21 and you can expect to get a blackjack once in every 21 hands. This brings me to the point why I harp that you should never play any blackjack game that pays 6-5, instead of 3-2, for a winning blackjack. Suppose you play two hours worth of blackjack on one of the heavily advertised, $10 minimum, 6-5 single deck games. Lets assume you are dealt 100 hands per hour, so over the course of two hours you played 200 hands of blackjack. Getting a blackjack once every 21 hands means that you should theoretically have gotten about 10 blackjacks. Sometimes youll get more blackjacks in two hours of play, sometimes less, but on average youll get 10. Each of those blackjack hands cost you $3 on a 6-5 game (the difference between getting paid 3-2 vs. 6-5, or $12 instead of $15, for your $10 wager). So you forked over $30 to the casino for the privilege of playing a single deck game (yeah, right). Save your money and avoid playing any 6-5 single deck games.
4.How frequently does a basic strategy player bust?
a. Once every six hands
b. Once every eight hands
c. Once every ten hands
Answer. a. A basic strategy player can expect to bust about 16 percent of the time or once every six hands. When a player busts, he always loses. Not so with the dealer (see next question).
5.How frequently does the dealer bust?
a. One time out of every seven hands
b. Two times out of every seven hands
c. Three times out of every seven hands.
Answer: b. The dealer busts about 28 percent of the time, or about two times out of every seven hands. Unlike a player bust, the dealer often wins when she busts, because players who act first and bust automatically lose (this is how the house has a built-in edge in blackjack). The 28 percent is an average over all possible dealer upcards. In fact, the dealer will bust significantly more times when she shows a 2-6 upcard (about 42 percent with a 5 or 6 upcard), and much less with a 7 through Ace upcard (with an Ace, its only 17 percent after checking for a natural). Because the dealers chance of busting is higher when she shows a small upcard, you should not risk busting a 12-16 stiff hand and should always stand (with two exceptions - its slightly better to hit a 12 against a dealers 2 or 3). However, when the dealer shows a strong upcard from 7 though Ace and has a much lower risk of busting, you should be more aggressive and hit your stiff hands until your hand totals 17 or more (even if it means you risk busting).
6.You can expect your initial two-card hand to be a hard 12-17 about:
a. 30 percent of the time
b. 35 per cent of the time
c. 43 percent of the time
Answer: c. About 43 percent of the time youll be holding a 12 through 17, and the only way you can win is if the dealer busts, or you improve your hand. So any time you hold a 12 through 17 its bad news and you should expect to lose. In fact, approximately 85 percent of your financial losses occur with these hands. The best you can do when you are holding a 12 through 17 is to play your hand optimally using the basic playing strategy to minimize your losses.
7.The dealer has an Ace upcard. What is the chance she has a 10 in the hole for blackjack?
a. 15 percent
b. 24 percent
c. 31 percent
Answer: c. The dealer will have a ten four times out of 13, or roughly 31 percent of the time. The remaining 9 out of 13, or 69 percent of the time, the dealer wont have a 10 in the hole. When you make the insurance bet, you are betting that the dealer has a ten in the hole when she shows an Ace. Assume you make a $10 insurance wager. Four times youll win $20 on the insurance bet (2 to 1 payoff odds) for a total win of $80. The other nine times you will lose $10 on your insurance bet for a total loss of $90. In other words, you lost more than you won. Therefore, its wise to never make the insurance bet.
8.The edge that card counters have over the casino is approximately:
a. 1 percent
b. 10 percent
c. 50 percent
Answer: a. Most players are surprised at the tiny one percent edge that card counters have over the house. Oftentimes, depending upon the game and the card counting system being used, the card counters edge is even less. With an edge this small, it means in the short run, luck will play a great role in the fortunes of a card counter, even though he will show a profit in the long-run.
So how did you do on the questions? It really doesnt matter how many you got right or wrong, but whether or not I motivated you to play better. And I hope I did.
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Henry Tamburin is the Lead Instructor in the Golden Touch™ Blackjack course (www.goldentouchblackjack.com) and editor of the Blackjack Insider newsletter. For a free 3-month subscription to his blackjack newsletter with full membership privileges, visit www.bjinsider.com/free.