A recognized authority on casino gambling, Pilarski survived 18 years in the casino trenches, working for seven different casinos. Mark now writes a nationally syndicated gambling column, is a university lecturer, reviewer and contributing editor for numerous gaming periodicals, and is the creator of the best-selling, award-winning audio cassette series on casino gambling, Hooked on Winning.


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Column 21 - "More Deal Me In" by Mark Pilarski

More Crap, trivia that is

Dear Mark,
You promised a follow-up column to the history of the word "craps." Will it be published soon? Tom F.

You are about to become an expert in the proper use of crap and craps, Tom-not that in the end you'll care-but for those of us who give a damn about such minutiae, your question opens an interesting door.

Back before the Middle Ages, the Arabs played a game using little numbered cubes, called az-zahr -- meaning the die. The game showed up across the Mediterranean in France, where it was named hasard, then jumped the English Channel to England some time before 1500 AD where it was given the English spelling of the same word, hazard. The roll of lowest value in that game was called crabs. The French, trying to be amiable, adopted that term from the English, but spelling it the French way as crabes. In the early 1700s, the game crossed the Atlantic to the French colony of Acadia, where a surprise awaited it and those who played it.

In 1755, the French lost their colony, Acadia, to the English who promptly renamed it Nova Scotia and chucked out the French-speaking Acadians, who roamed around a bit and finally relocated in Louisiana, where they were called (as they still are) Cajuns, and developed a language called Louisiana French. They still played the good old dice game, but dropped the title of hasard and called the game simply crebs or creps -- their spelling of the French crabes.

By 1843, the Cajun word came into American English as craps. People were apparently careful for a while not to omit the final "s" for fear of confusion with a vulgarism having a totally different meaning -- also derived from French, but that's another story.

By 1885, such expressions as crapsgame, crapstable, and crapsshooter were found to be just too finicky and used up too much spit, so the final "s" was dropped where it served no useful purpose as in composites like craptable, crapshooter, crapgame, etc., and retained where it refers only to the game (game of craps) or the losing roll (he craps out, he rolled craps) or where it would be too hard to pronounce (she crapped out, rather than she crapsed out).

Well fellow crapshooters, do you have a clearer picture yet? I asked a colleague of mine, whom I dealt craps with at Lake Tahoe, what she thought of the above, and she said; "I was then, and still am, full of crap."

Dear Mark,
Using a six-card poker ranking, which is higher, 3 pairs or 3-of-a-kind? Yes, we use all six cards. EL

Your question is one of many home-rule poker inquires that I often receive. My best guess is that no such game exists. Then again, I'm not the Hoyle of kitchen table play. This column covers games typically found in a casino poker room.

Though there are poker games that derive from six cards like six-card stud, the object of those games is to still make the best five-card hand possible.

Dear Mark,
What is a "Horn," a "Horn high," and a "World" bet in craps. Peter S.

A horn bet is a one-roll wager that combines the 2, 3, 11, and 12. A horn high wager is where one of the totals has one more unit riding on a specific number. Example: A $5 Horn high 11 is $1 on the 2, 3, 11, and 12 with the extra buck on the 11. A "World" bet is the horn wager and the 7 combined.

All three bets, Peter, are one-roll proposition wagers you will never find recommended in this column because they have a house advantage higher than 2%.







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