Team, wanted to share this after two great weekends.
14-15 July
So this is my first time playing in the casino since the class in June. I have basically been practicing every day, I throw 100 times every other day and 25 times on the off days. My Lowest SRR was 8 and he highest was 11. Im getting consistent on shooting under 10 sevens out of 100 throws. I need to take more breaks instead of throwing one hundred straight.
I stayed at the table about 2-3 hours, a lot of shooters but only one table open. That five count is money, eliminated so many random shooters. I seven out on my first two throws after establishing a point, but my third throw was 24 and my fourth was 26. The damn table was 16 feet long so I had to adjust by bringing my back swing to my shoulder a little past my shoulder before I went into my release.
Started with $200 and left with $700, so it was a good night. I left because the table started to get crowded and there was too many eyes on me. I made bets for the dealers so no issues there, but the players kept coming up to me, thanking me for making them money. I’m pretty laid back so I just stayed focused on shooting. Thanks again for everything Dom.
22 July
Started with $300 on a crap less table with ten dollar minimum, first two throws were point and seven out. I had just came from outside and it was about 100 degrees in KC, so my body was not calm in the casino, should have climatized first because the AC was on high And giving me goose bumps. Grabbed a drink and changed tables and it helped me relax.
This table had a bonus bet, all tall so I went light, $2 on the tall, $2 small and $2 make me all. Stayed discipline with the bets and even did a 5 count on myself before I went with a second bet. I ended up making 5 points and shooting for 36 minutes. I knew this because one of the suits specifically asked how long I was shooting for and they kept track based on the dealers and stick man switching out. I ended up hitting every number on the table, but didn’t put more than two bets at any given time. My seven was a 6-1, so I was definitely off on this throw. Every thing you can imagine was happening at this table, poor etiquette with bets dropped while I had the dice, players arguing over payouts and the table was so packed. Didn’t really bother me and I just stayed focused. I wanted to shoot again, but wouldn’t have seen the dice for another twenty minutes. Walked away with over $1,300 and received tips from two players that put $25 across on the bonus.
Only concern is, I never seen the box man get questioned about how long a player was shooting for. I think it helped that I was making pass line bets for the dealers. Plus the stick man started flipping the dice on hard ten, I think the dealer bets helped with that. I’m basically mute at the table unless I’m thanking the dealers for payouts. Fun night but I’m calling it early. Thank you golden touch team
Quiet professional
Replies:
Posted by: Dominator on July 22, 2017, 12:20 pm
Dom
Posted by: Dr Crapology on July 22, 2017, 12:40 pm
Keep up the great work.
Rose and Doc
Posted by: SevenTimesSeven on July 27, 2017, 8:06 pm
Do you ignore the sevens that are not seven outs?
Posted by: NofieldFive on July 27, 2017, 9:14 pm
NFF
Posted by: Finisher on July 27, 2017, 10:48 pm
Good Rolling.
Posted by: SevenTimesSeven on July 28, 2017, 12:37 am
Was that right, Quiet Prof? And please don’t go quiet. 😆
Posted by: NofieldFive on August 1, 2017, 12:16 pm
"NofieldFive" wrote: As far as the SRR computation is concerned, all 7’s are counted. It does not matter if they are on come out rolls, they must be counted.
NFF
. If you always use a 7 avoidance set then all rolls count.
If you are setting for 7 on comeout rolls then those 7’s should not be counted toward the SRR.
That is why I never count real casino rolls toward SRR calculations. I do set for 7’s on the initial comeout roll, and if I take my come bets down with a comeout 7 between point cycles, I set for 7’s for the next roll or rolls until I establish a new point.
NFF