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Reverse Labouchere System
In 1966, an innovative Roulette player
named Norman Leigh broke the Casino
Municapale in Nice using this system. He
arranged for a group of 13 roulette
players to use the Reverse Labouchere
strategy and managed to walk away with
hundreds of dollars in winnings! Of
course, the best part was beating the
minimum 3x Labouchere System, 2x
Labouchere Roulette System, but all
the money they won, and the deep
satisfaction they got from breaking the
bank all but compensated for being
banned from all French casinos, and
deported out of the country.
You can try to go down in history too
with huge earning by learning and
mastering the minimum 3x Labouchere
System, 2x Labouchere Roulette System
or the Reverse Labouchere roulette
system. It’s quite easy to understand,
after which, you just need to practice
to perfect it.
The minimum 3x Labouchere System, 2x
Labouchere Roulette System
works by adding winnings to your line.
To give you an example, if your line is:
Using this system, all you have to do is
add to your line until you get to the
maximum or the limit of the table.
What happens if you lose your on your
spin? Just delete the number (s) at the
end the of the line first. If you
continue losing and end up with no more
line, just start a new line.
You can also put a twist to your
minimum 3x Labouchere System, 2x
Labouchere Roulette System line by
blowing up the end number. For instance,
if your end number is 6, instead of
using 6, you can use the addends of six
or a combination of the addends of 6.
Addends are the number that if you add
them up will equal 6. Thus, the addends
of 6 are, 1, 2, and 3.
1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 = 6
or
2 + 2 + 2 = 6
or
3 + 3 = 6
You use this twist when you are starting
to feel uneasy about your numbers
getting bigger. Naturally the bigger the
number, the larger the loss. If you want
to keep playing conservatively and have
bigger chances of winning, then blowing
up your end number, or splitting it up
might just be the winning combination
for you.
Although the minimum 3x Labouchere
System, 2x Labouchere Roulette System
can be a little confusing in the
beginning, with enough practice you can
start playing aggressively and winning
more than you expect.
(START OF
NONUNIQUE CONTENT)
The reverse labouchere
system involves adding winnings to the line
instead of deleting winnings. For example:

You continue adding
winnings to your line until you hit the
table maximum.
If you lose, you delete
the numbers at the end of your labouchere
line. In the previous example we would
delete the 1 and 6 if we lost the next spin.
If you lose the line, you start a new line.
The reverse
labouchere system was most famously used by
Norman Leigh. He set up a "cartel" of 13
players who used the reverse labouchere
system to break the Casino Municipale in
Nice in 1966. They were banned from all
French casinos and deported, but with a huge
bankroll of winnings!!
Labouchere Trick:
Blowing Up the Numbers
Splitting the labouchere line can
sometimes be confusing and time
consuming, sometimes it is easier to
just blow the numbers up across a single
labouchere line. As an example, we have
the line:
2 3 4 6
Our next
bet is 8 units, which we are starting to
get uncomfortable with, so we are
beginning to considering splitting the
line. But instead of writing a new sub
line we can just blow up the 6 side ways
into smaller numbers that add up to 6.
For example, we can could rewrite the
line to:
2 3 4
3 3
or
2 3 4
2 2 2
or
2 3 4
1 1 1 1 1 1
In all
cases it has reduced the size of the
next bet but there is still room to keep
the line aggressive or conservative.
This
is often much faster and you should
learn to use it as one of your regular
labouchere manouveres.
My
personal preference is to wait until you
lose a key spin, then spread the line
conservatively. So in the above example,
I would have bet the 8 units considering
a key spin in this labouchere battle. If
I won, then it would go a great way
towards the coup but if I lost then I
would blow the 8 into a very
conservative series and settle in for a
long guerilla battle.
Good
Luck! (END NONUNIQUE CONTENT)
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