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Reason #4 why the Wizard likes Bodog:
One-stop shopping
Bodog offers the triple crown of gambling: casino, poker, and sports. Many other casinos have tacked on poker as an afterthought, and many poker rooms have tacked on a casino as an afterthought, and the lack of attention shows, sometimes painfully. And very few of these sites let you make sports wagers.
But Bodog doesn't just offer all three, they do each one well, and everything's integrated. It's easy to play all three off one deposit, off just one account.
Another nice thing about Bodog is that you don't need a separate account to play casino games with fake money. In fact you do not even need an account for that at all, you can just click over there and play. Finally, Bodog usernames are only six or seven characters long making them possible to remember. By contrast some competitors' usernames are extremely long and cumbersome. (Visit Bodog)
Try Bodog's blackjack game. One click and you're in:
 No popups, no download, no registration, no B.S., just the game.
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I'm
giving away $100
Before I tell you about my success in betting on
the Academy Awards, Bluejay insists that I first tell you
about the $100 drawing we're having, to make sure you
didn't miss it since it's at the bottom of the
newsletter.
My
bets on the Academy Awards
In my March
13, 2004 newsletter I lamented betting against the
favorites in the academy awards. In the two Academy
Awards since then I have done the opposite and bet only
on the favorites. In 2005 I did well, winning
everything except a small bet on The Aviator.
Million Dollar Baby and Best Director were too close to
call for both Best Director and Best Picture.
My bets were profitable this year as well. After
my victories betting the favorites in both 2005 and the
2006 Golden Globes I was confident going into the 2006
Academy Awards. Although I saw few of the movies I
went up and down the list at the Bodog,
Pinnacle, and Olympic sport books, betting the
favorites.
The big night started badly with Paul Giamatti, the
favorite for best supporting actor, losing. However
that was a close category and I only bet $163.
Still I was 0 for 1 and my confidence was shaky.
Then I hit win after win on the awards for director,
actors, actress, supporting actress, documentary,
original screenplay, visual effects, and art
direction. Towards the end of the evening I was up
$2202 and feeling good.
However I was a bit nervous about the very last award
on best picture. The newspaper that morning and the
pre-award show commentator mentioned that Crash was
getting a lot of last minute hype, and Brokeback Mountain
was far from a sure thing. Then Jack Nicholson came
to the stage. Just two words away from sealing a
very nice evening. I've been a Jack Nicholson fan
from Five Easy Pieces to About Schmidt and was hoping one
of my favorite actors wouldn't let me down, after decades
of support. Then he did that thing with his
eyebrows and a surprised look came over his face that
only Jack could do. I knew I lost before he spoke a
word. Then he said it. My winnings for night
crashed.
I still had a win for the night of $827, or a profit
of 5.04%. However had Brokeback Mountain won it
would have been a win of $2502 and a 15.27% profit.
The following table shows how I did overall on each
bet.
|
Category
|
Bet
|
Risked
|
Avg.
Odds
|
Win/Loss
|
Win
|
|
Best picture
|
Brokeback Mountain
|
$1,375
|
-458
|
L
|
-$1,375
|
|
Best director
|
Ang Lee
|
$3,186
|
-715
|
W
|
$445
|
|
Best actor
|
Philip S Hoffman
|
$4,254
|
-592
|
W
|
$719
|
|
Best actress
|
Reese Witherspoon
|
$2,421
|
-484
|
W
|
$500
|
|
Best supporting actor
|
Paul Giamatti
|
$163
|
-163
|
L
|
-$163
|
|
Best supporting actress
|
Rachel Weisz
|
$237
|
-237
|
W
|
$100
|
|
Best documentary
|
March of the Penguins
|
$1,500
|
-1500
|
W
|
$100
|
|
Best Original Screenplay
|
Crash
|
$1,600
|
-800
|
W
|
$200
|
|
Best visual effects
|
King Kong
|
$1,200
|
-600
|
W
|
$200
|
|
Art direction
|
Memoirs of a Geisha
|
$450
|
-450
|
W
|
$100
|
|
Total
|
|
$16,386
|
|
|
$827
|
When I told this story after the fact most everybody
commented, "I could have told you Crash would win."
However none of these experts took advantage of the
roughly 4 to 1 odds they could have had. Next year
I plan to stay the course and keep betting the
favorites.
Ask
the Wizard!
Here's an excerpt from the newest
Ask
the Wizard, column #164.
In your
April
5, 2006 column you state
that if there are only two cases left in Deal or no
Deal and the million dollars is still in play then the
probability my case has the million is 50-50. I
disagree. Isn't this just a variation of the Monty
Hall problem? That is, the million is more likely to
be on the stage than in his case?
-- Jason from
Pasadena, CA
No.
Im getting lots of people arguing with me
about this one. Many writers claim that
probabilities can not change if additional
information is introduced. So if the probability
starts at 1 in 26 then it must stay there. Contrary
to what betting system salesmen say, probabilities
indeed can change as additional information is
introduced. I don't want to try to teach basic
probability here but any college level math book on
conditional probability or Bayes'
Theorem should cover this topic nicely.
The Monty Hall problem does not apply to Deal or
No Deal. On "Lets Make a Deal" Monty Hall
knew where the top prize was. On Deal or no Deal,
Howie Mandell does not. The fact that Monty was
predestined to open a curtain with a goat does not
add any information about your curtain, thus the
probability that the chosen curtain has the car
remains at 1/3. In Deal or No Deal nothing is
predestined, thus every suitcase that is opened
changes the odds of every remaining case equally.
For more on the Monty Hall problem visit my other
web site mathproblems.info,
problem 186.
(Read more Ask
the Wizard.)
What's
new on the site
Here are the new pages on the site for you:
- Ask
the Wizard -- Columns #162,
#163,
and #164.
- Blackjack
House Edge Calculator -- A new and improved to
include many more rule variations.
- World
Series of Poker (Final Table Bonus) -- This is
a new video poker game featuring a Texas Hold'em based
bonus round. The analysis took me weeks to do and is
one of my prouder achievements so please have a
look.
- English
Harbour issue -- From April 13 to May 2, 2006
there was a software bug affecting double-up bets in
video poker on casinos using Odds On software. Here is
my analysis and report about the issue.
- Joker
Poker -- My joker poker game is new and
improved. Added are an advice button and eligibility
for the Royal Flush Club. The graphics were also
improved.
- Crap
side bets -- Sam's Town has added four new
side bets to their game.
- Emperor's
Challenge -- A new pai gow poker side bet seen
at Hooter's.
Until next time, set
your expectations high.
From
Michael Bluejay....
Website
makeover, and $100 drawing
The Wizard wanted a simpler design for the
website, and wanted me to get rid of that red beveled
background we've had on top of the page and in the
sidebar for several years. So I did it, and you can see
how the site looks now.
I knew that some readers wouldn't like the brilliant
white that the Wizard wanted for the background, but I
also knew that no one color would please everyone, so I
came up with a nifty solution: Pick your own background
color! On the top of every page there's a color palette
where you can choose your favorite. But uh-oh, the
Wizard's not keen on that feature and thinks we should
remove it, though he said he'll reserve judgement pending
the responses we get from our readers.
Speaking of that, here's the deal: Share your opinion
about the new design with us, and we'll enter you in a
drawing to win $100. Critical comments are fine, but if
there's something you don't like, then let us know
what you'd prefer instead. If you don't like the
new pull-down menus, then what do you want instead? If
you don't like the colors, then what colors do you want?
Be specific. Also be sure to compare the new design to
our old
design. For a couple of days we had a feedback form
on the front page asking what people thought of the new
design, and they invariably said "I like the new
three-column layout" or "I hate the new three-column
layout", which is crazy because the number of columns
didn't change. Three columns before, three columns now.
Someone also complained about the new smaller type size,
even though the type is the exact same size as it was
before. It's pretty baffling because we had a link to the
old design, and made specific mention that to enter the
drawing your comments had to be specific enough that we
could tell you were familiar with the old design.
Note that fewer than 700 people entered the last
contest, so your chances of winning this contest are
about 375 times better than winning the top jackpot on a
slot machine on one spin. But don't register a bunch of
different email addresses to enter multiple times. This
contest is limited to people who are already
subscribed as of right now (and the few people who
filled out the form while it was on the home page).
Okay, let 'er rip:
Bluejay's
Internet Tip of the Month:
Getting your site ranked
well search engines
In my
last article I told you how to get your
website listed in the search engines. I mentioned
that there's a big difference between getting
listed and ranking well. We saw last time
that to get listed all you have to do is get another site
to link to yours. This time we'll cover how to get your
site to rank well.
If
the phrase(s) you're trying to rank well for aren't
competitive (that is, few other sites are using the same
phrase) then it's pretty easy: Just put the phrase(s) you
want to rank well for in the <title></title>
tag and in at least one other area on the page. Yeah,
this may be obvious, but it's not obvious to everyone: I
can't remember how many times someone has sought my
advice about how to rank well for some phrase, and I
check out their page and that phrase is nowhere to be
found! A friend asked me a while back how to get her
homepage to rank well for her name, which was unusual
enough that it should have been easy to rank for. After I
checked out her page I felt like asking her, "And it
didn't occur to you to put your name somewhere on that
page?!" Actually, her name was on her page,
but in a graphic. Google can't read that, they
have no idea what words are contained in an image. And
her <title> tag just said "Home". How is Google
supposed to know that her page was about Sally
Thunderpizza? (Not her real name.)
So anyway, for non-competitive phrases, just put the
phrases you want to rank for in the <title> and in
the body copy of your page. For example, you should be
able to get to #1 in Google within a month for the phrase
martian pudding headache. Go ahead, try it.
Okay, but what if your phrase is competitive?
Let's say you want to rank well on terms such as these,
for which there are lots ands lots of other pages that
use those same terms:
|
baccarat odds
|
caribbean stud
|
joker poker
|
sic bo
|
|
betting systems
|
casino war
|
pai gow poker
|
spanish 21
|
|
blackjack odds chart
|
four card poker
|
roulette odds
|
three card poker
|
|
blackjack switch
|
jacks or better
|
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It just so happens that WizardOfOdds.com is #1 in
Google for all those searches. Not just on the front
page, but on the front page and in the #1 position. And
how did we get to #1 for all those terms? Listen
carefully, I'll tell you exactly how we did it:
We built a good website.
I'm not kidding, that's how you get to the top of the
search engines: You build quality. The engines are pretty
good at figuring out what's quality and what's crap, and
the cream rises to the top. And it makes sense: If you
want to be at the top of the search engines, then you
need to deserve to be at the top of the search
engines. And if you deserve to be, you probably will
be.
Right away I know that some of you are thinking that
the key is to figure out how Google evaluates the quality
of a website, so you can try to make Google "think" you
have a good site. But if you're thinking that then you're
missing the point. It's like when scientists
discovered that people who ate more fruits and vegetables
and less meat and dairy were healthier and lived longer,
partly because they were eating less fat. The proper
response is obviously to eat more fruits and vegetables
and less meat and dairy. But instead people responded by
eating all those new processed "low-fat" snacks, which
didn't do them any good. It's the same way on the web.
You shouldn't be trying to figure how to outsmart the
search engines, you should just eat your vegetables -- in
web terms, you should build a quality site.
So while I'm not going to tell you how the engines
determine quality, I will tell you what constitutes
quality to people, which is what matters. Take
WizardOfOdds.com. We feature:
- Really, really, really good content
- Exclusive content, not available anywhere
else
- Lots of content
- A high content-to-advertising ratio
- A layout that doesn't waste space, so you can see
a lot of content at once without scrolling
- Interactive content (i.e. "Ask the Wizard")
- Fast-loading pages
- No annoying animated ads
- Free-play games, which play right away without
popups or registration
- No popup windows
Do the search engines consider those items? No, not
specifically, at least not for most of them. But the
Wizard didn't create his site for the search engines, he
created it for people. He didn't think, "I'll write
articles about lots of casino games in order to impress
Google." Instead, he wrote his articles to share
information, and Google wound up being impressed that he
created something that others consider useful. There's a
saying, show me your friends and I'll tell you what kind
of person you are. If you make friends on the web by
offering quality, then Google will know what kind of site
you are.
Let's say you want our #1 spot for spanish 21
for your own page. Instead of asking yourself, What
tricks can I employ on my page to get it to rank
higher? the proper question you should be asking is,
How can I make my Spanish 21 page better than the
Wizard's? Build a better mousetrap, and you'll be
rewarded.
The Wizard's site isn't a fluke, either. I personally
have #1 rankings for my own sites for highly competitive
searches like cheapest airfare, buy a
house, saving electricity, and, of course,
martian pudding headache. (Okay, that last one
isn't competitive, but I couldn't resist.)
Sure, there are some more details about getting to the
top of the search engines, but that's most of it in a
nutshell. For more details you can read my
article on the subject now. Good luck!
Visit
WizardOfOdds.com
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