Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 The Making of a Gambler
- 2 What Is Jai Alai?
- 3 Monte Carlo on the Tundra
- 4 The Impact of the Internet
- 5 Is This Bum Any Good?
- 6 Modeling the Payoffs
- 7 Engineering the System
- 8 Putting My Money Where My Mouth Is
- 9 How Should You Bet?
- 10 Projects to Ponder
- Glossary
- For Further Reading
- Index
1 - The Making of a Gambler
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 The Making of a Gambler
- 2 What Is Jai Alai?
- 3 Monte Carlo on the Tundra
- 4 The Impact of the Internet
- 5 Is This Bum Any Good?
- 6 Modeling the Payoffs
- 7 Engineering the System
- 8 Putting My Money Where My Mouth Is
- 9 How Should You Bet?
- 10 Projects to Ponder
- Glossary
- For Further Reading
- Index
Summary
My interest in jai alai began during my parents' annual escape from the cold of a New Jersey winter to the promised land of Florida. They stuffed the kids into a Ford station wagon and drove a thousand miles in 2 days each way. Florida held many attractions for a kid: the sun and the beach, Disney World, Grampa, Aunt Fanny, and Uncle Sam. But the biggest draw came to be the one night each trip when we went to a fronton, or jai alai stadium, and watched them play.
Mom was the biggest jai alai fan in the family and the real motivation behind our excursions. We loaded up the station wagon and drove to the Dania Jai-Alai fronton located midway between Miami and Fort Lauderdale. In the interests of preserving capital for later investment, my father carefully avoided the valet parking in favor of the do-it-yourself lot. We followed a trail of palm trees past the cashiers' windows into the fronton.
Walking into the fronton was an exciting experience. The playing court sat in a vast open space, three stories tall, surrounded by several tiers of stadium seating. To my eyes, at least, this was big-league, big-time sport. Particularly “cool” was the sign saying that no minors would be admitted without a parent. This was a very big deal when I was only 12 years old.
We followed the usher who led us to our seats. The first game had already started.
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- Information
- Calculated BetsComputers, Gambling, and Mathematical Modeling to Win, pp. 1 - 5Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001