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$25 at LVA:
https://www.lasvegasadvisor.com/shop...kers-cookbook/
Dog Hand
I bought the book about 2 months ago after Ole mentioned it along with Norms shuffle tracking add-on. The book is worth the cost, Snyder does a great job teaching you how to break down the mechanics of a shuffle step by step and laying out training routines. He is also very honest about how difficult the skill is to learn and how some people no matter how hard they try probably can't learn it.
Last edited by UncleChoo; 05-05-2023 at 08:28 AM.
A plug or block of interesting cards (such as one rich in High Cards, rich in Low Cards, or rich in Aces) may be identified in the discard tray. Understanding or observing the type of shuffle allows one to estimate where the plug will end up and how it will be transmuted. The new shoe may then be cut for advantage.
I used this more often in past decades than lately.
Hope that helps.
Ole
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Yes, in the same vein that one would count a CSM.
One must change their method of shuffle tracking when confronting a CSM. For example, I'd switch from purely tactical techniques to a grand-strategic approach.
When my recon spots a CSM in action, then I won't even sit down at that table.
I may even boycott the whole casino, and tell all my friends to do the same.
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Not that it matters. Canada. Now, an ASM joint - this one dealer on every riffle would retain quarter deck slugs unshuffled - but that can happen anywhere. It was the top quarter deck if every riffle. I would concentrate on 1 specific riffle - pos or neg. I never got around to training myself to track 2 slugs.
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