Dealers call these players ...
Dear Mark,
I hate gambling with my cousin. Not only is he irritating to
other players on the table, he is very abusive to the dealer.
You have no idea how many times the dealer has to tell him, could
you please do this, don't do that. How about some written table
manners I can pass his way? Janie T.
A front-line employee of a casino, Janie, must obey two rules
when it comes to customers-even your cousin. One, the player is
always right, and two, if the player is wrong, see rule number
one. Not easy when a decent percentage of players are running
on high octane drinks and losing money. And though Bozo players
(what we would call your cousin) get their fair share of negative
commentary in the employee breakroom, a dealer who lashes out
at any customer would be severely reprimanded-fired!
But me, I've been paroled from my 18-year casino sentence, so
I can dole out some table etiquette without repercussion. Here
goes.
Know the proper hit/stand signals for the blackjack game you're
playing.
In baseball, it's two hands for beginners; on a live blackjack
game, the opposite. Some casinos are real touchy-feely (throw
you out) about you doing anything funny to the cards.
Once you've placed your wager, don't touch your bet until you
get paid.
If the cards are running against you, don't keep asking for a
new deck. If you don't like your cards, move to another table.
Expect with abusive language an early departure from the casino.
Don't ask the dealer what her hole card is. Dealers won't risk
their job over your wager. There's nothing wrong with asking for
advice, but not after the dealer looks under her face/ace.
If you lose several hands in a row, don't accuse the dealer of
cheating. Most (99.999%) don't. It's most likely a bad run of
cards plus let's not discount poor play. Also, abusing "the
messenger" for crummy cards lacks any form of civility.
If you're using a basic strategy card (recommended), don't refer
to it each and every hand. You should have a basic understanding
on how to play most of your hands well before you sit down on
a game.
Using these lines? "Are you going to be nice to me?"
Question is, are you going to be nice to them. "Where are
you from?" It's most likely on their nametag. "Do you
live here?" Yes, we're not Martians commuting from Mars.
Try some other light conversation. Note: About every recipe I
know, from avocado dip to chicken wings, came from some customer.
Don't walk up to a dealer and tell him he looks bored, make him
shuffle a 6-deck shoe just to play one $5 bet, lose, then walk.
When betting for the dealer (worth at least three separate columns),
keep the ratio a reasonable one. I once had a professional baseball
player betting three hands at $500 a whack, with just a 50¢
bet for me, the dealer, every third shuffle. One month earlier
he signed a multi-million-dollar, 5-year contract. His initials
are. I better not.
Once the hand has been completed, don't turn your cards over to
help the dealer. Dealers have a routine and you're just slowing
them down. Besides, dealers need to spread the cards a certain
way so the cameras can read them.
Finally, dealers really don't care if the sign outside their
casino says "certified friendly dealers." They just
want to be treated like you would want to be treated.