{"id":5193,"date":"2022-03-29T09:59:31","date_gmt":"2022-03-29T09:59:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.casino.com\/blog\/\/blog\/?p=5193"},"modified":"2023-10-18T03:49:43","modified_gmt":"2023-10-18T03:49:43","slug":"blackjack-legends","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.casino.com\/blog\/2022\/03\/29\/blackjack-legends\/","title":{"rendered":"Blackjack Legends"},"content":{"rendered":"\t\t
Blackjack is one of the simplest table games you\u2019ll find in a casino. The origins of \u201c21\u201d<\/a> may still be something of a mystery, but there\u2019s no doubt that the game owes much of its popularity and modern-day relevance\u00a0to a string of blackjack<\/a> legends who, over the years,\u00a0have truly pioneered it.<\/p>\n\n We spoke to Michael Kaplan, a journalist who has interviewed many of the most famous people on the gambling scene, including some who are included here. You can read his thoughts on how these people pioneered blackjack and how their legacies live on in the modern game.<\/p>\n\n Edward Oakley Thorp is one of the most famous mathematicians in the US, as well as the ground-breaking analyst of blackjack. Thorp has dedicated much of his life to mathematics and the application of \u2018probability theory\u2019 to all sorts of industries, including the casino<\/a> and financial investment sectors.<\/p>\n\n Kaplan recalls meeting Thorp:<\/p>\n\n \u201cI\u2019ve met Edward Thorp and I\u2019ve interviewed him. Thorp is incredibly interesting. The guy was a math professor who had access to big computer technology and became interested in blackjack as a theoretical problem. He wanted to work out how to beat the game. He knew basic strategy<\/a> and became convinced that there was a mathematical model for yielding profits from blackjack.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n \u201cHe spent a year laboring over computer calculations and worked out that if you bet higher when the deck is rich in 10-value cards and Aces, you\u2019re playing at an advantage. It almost seems obvious when you think about it: of course those cards will give winning hands to players. And they also give winning hands to the house. But the great thing is that those 10-value cards make the house more likely to bust with 12 through 16.<\/p>\n\n Thorp said something interesting to me. He said he came up with this system and he presented it at a 1961 math conference. He was teaching at MIT and felt proud to announce, \u2018Yeah, I figured out how to beat blackjack.\u2019 But casino executives heard this and replied, \u2018It\u2019s not possible, there\u2019s no way this game can be beaten.\u2019 Some news reporters even described Thorp\u2019s findings as a scam. Until then, he had no intention of going into the field and proving out his findings. But, in light of the backlash, he had to stand up for what he claimed.\u201d<\/p>\n\n Thorp did it. He hit the casinos and made serious bank. \u201cBut,\u201d continues Kaplan, \u201cThorp said he didn\u2019t enjoy grinding it out in the casinos. So he wrote a best-selling book about blackjack, Beat The Dealer,<\/em> which outlines his card-counting system. At that point, he lost all interest in actually playing the game. Instead, he turned to the world\u2019s largest casino \u2013 Wall Street \u2013 and devised a system for evaluating probabilities related to what happens in the marketplace. Essentially, he turned the stock market into a blackjack game and reportedly made 20-25% a year.\u201d<\/p>\n\n Aside from blackjack, Thorp also used his probability theory to find new ways of improving endgame positions in backgammon. This would soon become known as the \u2018Thorp count\u2019 within the backgammon community. His notoriety as a blackjack pioneer saw him inaugurated as the first inductee into the Blackjack Hall of Fame.<\/p>\n\n Roger Baldwin is one-quarter of the \u201cFour Horsemen of Aberdeen\u201d. Baldwin graduated from Columbia University with a master\u2019s degree in mathematics. During his time as a private in the US Army, Baldwin explored the maths behind the game of 21. He played with his fellow troops at the barracks of the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland.<\/p>\n\n Kaplan talks about how Baldwin came up with what is now known as basic blackjack strategy:<\/p>\n\n \u201cWhile in the army, Roger Baldwin became curious about blackjack. Back then, it was a randomly played game \u2013 nobody really thought that there was any sort of strategy that could be applied to it. The soldiers would fool around with it to kill time.<\/p>\n\n \u201cBaldwin heard the rules — that the dealer must stand on 17 and draw on 16 or less \u2013 and he wondered if he could calculate an optimal way for the player to play the game.<\/p>\n\n \u201cHe sat down with pad and paper and began figuring things out. Then he recruited these other three guys to work with him. Using primitive calculators, they developed what went on to be called basic strategy.\u201d<\/p>\n\n Sadly, Baldwin passed away in 2021 at the age of 91. As\u00a0the last surviving member of the Four Horsemen of Aberdeen, Baldwin has left\u00a0behind a legacy and will always be renowned as one of the true innovators of the game.<\/p>\n\n Wilbert Cantey is the second of the so-called \u201cFour Horsemen of Aberdeen\u201d who helped pioneer a new way of playing blackjack in the 1950s. Cantey initially sought a career as a priest. However, his penchant for card playing and pool hustling resulted in him being asked to leave the seminary midway through his training. Following this, Cantey was a sergeant at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland.<\/p>\n\n Like Baldwin, he too studied for a master\u2019s degree in mathematics. And he shared Baldwin\u2019s fascination with the game. Although Cantey and the rest of the Four Horsemen were happy to remain largely in the background, they rapidly gained notoriety within the blackjack community. A now-famous quote from Johnny Chang about Cantey and the Four Horsemen says that he \u201ccouldn\u2019t fathom how they had accomplished [their research] using desk calculators\u201d.<\/p>\n\n To honour his legacy, Cantey was inducted into the Blackjack Hall of Fame in 2008.<\/p>\n\n Herbert Maisel was a private in the US Army who would eventually go on to become a professor at Georgetown University. Like Cantey, Maisel was inducted into the Blackjack Hall of Fame in 2008. He was the third of the \u201cFour Horsemen\u201d, helping Cantey and Baldwin to dig deeper into the game theory of blackjack. Maisel, who would later go on to teach computer science, used pen and paper to help look at new ways of playing the game of 21.<\/p>\n\n The Four Horsemen also had the benefit of Maisel\u2019s \u201cadding machines\u201d, devices that we now know as calculators, to help look at probability calculations. Although Maisel and the rest of the Four Horsemen sought a positive-expectation strategy for blackjack, it\u2019s fair to say that chance still has a huge say on the outcome of any blackjack game today.<\/p>\n\n James McDermott was also a private in the US Army and served alongside Maisel, Baldwin and Cantey. The quartet discovered that both Maisel and McDermott had master\u2019s degrees in mathematics, and they soon worked with Baldwin to dig deeper into the ins and outs of blackjack strategy. McDermott was able to get his hands on the Army\u2019s most basic calculators and utilise his expert mathematical skills to get to grips with a methodical approach to playing 21.<\/p>\n\n As part of his research, McDermott discovered that players who split eights were statistically less likely to lose money than those who play their pair of eights as a hand worth 16. That golden nugget of information helped characterise the Four Horsemen as undisputed pioneers of blackjack, as Kaplan explains:<\/p>\n\n \u201cSome of what the Four Horsemen came up with is obvious, and some of it is not so obvious, like the idea that if you have two 8s, you should always split. I\u2019ve seen people refuse to split 8s against a 10. It\u2019s the mathematically sound play, but a little scary and not so obvious. And the idea of hitting against a 12 with a 2 or 3 is basic strategy, and that\u2019s not obvious either.<\/p>\n\n \u201cThey came up with a lot of really interesting theories that are mathematically correct, but you were still playing the game at a 2% disadvantage with basic strategy \u2013 nobody knew this until later. Without basic strategy, you\u2019re playing at an unlimited disadvantage, because who knows what you\u2019re going to do? So they figured out a way to at least make the game manageable, and that was the first time that someone had applied mathematics to blackjack. So it was a huge, huge breakthrough.\u201d<\/p>\n\n After concluding his service in the US Army, McDermott would go on to work as an executive for IBM.<\/p>\n\n Peter A. Griffin became an expert on blackjack during the 1970s. He first discovered the game of 21 in 1970, after attempting to lead a course on the mathematics involved in gambling games. Griffin, who was born in New Jersey, made the pilgrimage to Las Vegas to see how things were done in the glittering city notorious for casino culture. He then compared processes there with those employed for blackjack games spread in Atlantic City, back in his native state.<\/p>\n\n Following extensive data analysis, Griffin was the first mathematician to conclude that the \u201caverage\u201d blackjack player faces a disadvantage of 2% against the house \u2013 when deploying basic strategy. This house edge<\/a> remains today, despite the attempts of blackjack experts to try and steal a march on the game\u2019s rules. Griffin\u2019s book, titled The Theory of Blackjack<\/em>, is still considered a classic today, despite being over 40 years old.<\/p>\n\n \u201cPeter Griffin was like the genius guy,\u201d says Kaplan. \u201cHe was another academic, a math professor, and he was the one who figured out that you\u2019re playing at a 2% disadvantage with standard play. He also figured out what your odds are with certain hands and in certain situations; a lot of things that would be tricky to do at a table but prove where you\u2019re at in certain situations. Griffin also figured out edges to be found in rebate plays, or discounts as they are sometimes called. That was a lot of what Don Johnson, who I also spent some time with, did in Atlantic City and beyond.\u201d<\/p>\n\n In his later life, Griffin taught statistics, calculus and differential equations at the California State University in Sacramento between 1965 and his passing in October 1998.<\/p>\n\n The late Lawrence Revere<\/a> is the last, but by no means least, of the seven blackjack legends listed on this page. Revere, who passed away in April 1977, was not only an author and the pit boss of a casino floor, but also\u00a0a professional blackjack player in his time. Revere graduated from the University of Nebraska with a degree in mathematics and took a significant interest in blackjack game theory.<\/p>\n\n He penned a book titled Playing Blackjack as a Business<\/em>, which proved to be an eye-opening account of an individual with knowledge of both sides of the casino industry. Having worked as a pit boss and spent many years as a customer at the tables, Revere was well-placed to offer advice on how to approach in-game blackjack scenarios.<\/p>\n\n Within his book, Revere partnered with fellow statistician Julian Braun to devise new playing concepts for the game of 21. An employee of IBM, Braun had extensive expertise in data simulation, which helped Revere to test a host of blackjack theories and bring them to light. Braun\u2019s high-speed computer was able to crunch through a whopping nine billion hands of blackjack, which underpin the book\u2019s theories.<\/p>\n\n Previous:<\/strong> Biggest Winners<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n\nEdward O. Thorp<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n
Roger Baldwin<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n
The Legacy Lives On<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n
Wilbert Cantey<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n
When Two Great Minds Meet<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n
Herbert Maisel<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n
Among The First Calculators<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n
James McDermott<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n
New Insights<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n
Peter A. Griffin<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n
Passing The Torch<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n
Lawrence Revere<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n
Branching Out with Braun<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n
<\/figure>\n\n