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Professionals will tell you that to become successful in games of chance, you must
learn, have, and practice the four following ingredients:
1. A Sufficient Bankroll
2. Money Management
3. Knowledge of the Game
4. Discipline
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      You may not believe it, but gambling is in the top three of entertainment activities.
Although, deemed a "vice" governments have sponsored lotteries to build infrastructure,
fund armies, and bankroll debt. Today, federal, state, and local governments use gaming
revenue to pay for education, healthcare, and state solvency. I find it ironic that these
same governments deem gaming to be immoral.
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      The chances to gamble are as diversified as the gamblers who take them. Some play casinos,
others buy scratch tickets, there are the lottoers, dog and horse trackers, jai-lai trifecters,
poker players, and of course grandma bingo. Gambling knows no age, race, or ethnic group.
Once the rules are learned, fellow players can play together without knowing how to say
"good bet" to each other. Gambling knows no time limit or specific year or place. It
happens everywhere, all the time, with all peoples of the world. As with most games of
chance, mathematically speaking, gambling is a negative expectation activity. The odds are
against all who gamble. Taken out in the houses "vig". If you expect to win, you are
amongst the minority of gamblers.
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      Your first step is to assume that you can win. Next, you must learn about the games you
are going to play, the chances of success or failure are at each game, and plan and play
accordingly.People lose because they don't know how to win. Winning at gambling is a bitch.
If it was not, then we would all be professional gamblers. Professional
gamblers all have one thing in common. These people make a living doing nothing but
gambling. Whatever the game that they gamble at, they are experts. They have
taken the time to learn and practice every facet of their particular game. They know all
the odds and probabilities as well as all the rules of the game and of the gaming house in
which they are playing.
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      Basically, The amateur gambler's most notorious downfall is greed. Next comes stupidity.
The professional gambler has eliminated greed from his game and replaced it with
the above items, and he has eliminated stupidity by learning the rules, odds, etc.
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The 2004 US Open - Odds To Win
Jun 18, 2004 - 08:00 am ET
Tiger Woods 4-1
Ernie Els 7-1
Phil Mickelson 8-1
Vijay Singh 8-1
Sergio Garcia 16-1
Davis Love III 20-1
Padraig Harrington 20-1
Chad Campbell 25-1
DHL 400 - Odds to Win
Jun 20, 2004 - 01:30 pm ET
Jimmie Johnson 7-1
Jeff Gordon 8-1
Ryan Newman 8-1
Tony Stewart 8-1
Dale Earnhardt Jr 10-1
Matt Kenseth 10-1
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