Study the Charts
Any professional card counter could easily and quickly reproduce from memory a set of basic strategy charts. Study the charts one section at a time. Start with the hard Stand decisions: Look at the chart and observe the pattern of the decisions as they appear in the chart—close your eyes and visualize this pattern. Study the chart once more, then get out your pencil and paper. Reproduce the hard Stand chart. Do this for each section of the chart separately—hard Stand, soft Stand, hard Double Down, soft Double Down, Pair-splits, and Surrender. Keep doing it until you have mastered the charts.
Practice with Cards
Place an ace face up on a table to represent the dealer's upcard. Shuffle the rest of the cards, then deal two cards face up to yourself. Do not deal the dealer a downcard. Look at your two cards and the dealer's ace and make your basic strategy decision. Check the chart to see if you are correct, but do not complete your hand. If the decision is "hit," don't bother to take the hit card. After you've made and double-checked your decision, deal another two cards to yourself. Don't bother to pick up your first hand. Just drop your next, and all subsequent, cards face up on top of the last cards dealt. Go through the entire deck (25 hands), then change the dealer's upcard to a deuce, then to a 3, 4, 5, and so on. You should be able to run through a full deck of player hands for all ten dealer upcards in less than half an hour once you are able to make your decisions without consulting the charts. Once you start to get the hang of it, every decision should be instantaneous. Strive for perfection. If you have the slightest doubt about any decision, consult the chart.
To practice your pair-split decisions, which occur less frequently than other decisions, reverse the above exercise. Deal yourself a pair of aces, then run through the deck changing only the dealer's upcard. Then give yourself a pair of deuces, and all the cards that follow. Don't waste time with any exercise you don't need. Your basic strategy for splitting aces, for instance, is always to split them. You don't need to run through a whole deck of dealer up-cards every day to practice this decision. Likewise, basic strategy tells you to always split eights, and never to split fives or tens. You should concentrate mostly on learning when to split 2s, 3s, 6s, 7s, and 9s, which you'll master soon enough.
If you learn to play basic strategy without counting cards, most casinos will have only a 1/2% edge over you, meaning that in the long run, they will win about 500 for every $100 you bet. (In some games, the house advantage over basic strategy players amounts to slightly more or less.) If you play blackjack for high stakes, it is wise to learn basic strategy, even if you are not inclined to count cards, as using it accurately will greatly cut your losses.
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