Joseph Jagger - Story of a Massive Roulette Payout

Published by Joe Simpson on 2010-06-29 15:07:12
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The popularity of roulette, is certainly partly due to it's rich and varied history. The game itself has been around for nearly three hundred years and it's no surprise that it has developed systems, stories and legends. The name Joseph Jagger may not be that familiar but in the history of roulette and roulette systems, he plays an important role. 

His background was certainly a distance from the fabulous casinos of Monte Carlo, he was in fact a lowly engineer from a small Yorkshire town. Josephs interest in engineering led him to study the roulette wheel itself and he became convinced that many of these wheels would have imperfections that could create a bias in the numbers that were spun. In the European casinos, the house advantage is so slight that any small bias could lead to huge winnings for a clever gambler.

For the majority of people, the dream would have stopped just there - but Joseph Jagger was made of more determined stuff! In 1873 he hired a group of 6 clerks and set off for Monte carlo, a daunting journey from a small mill town in Yorkshire. The clerks were hired to record and analyse every spin on as many roulette wheels as possible in the casino, their aim to spot any bias however small. It was like nothing the casinos had ever seen, so in the end they simply let the clockers do their work.

After some time the clockers beleived they had identified a specific wheel that appeared to favour a certain group of numbers. Joseph didn't wait around, the next day he started playing the identified table betting in line with the bias. On his very first day at the tables he won the pricely sum of $70,000 which was an enormous amount in 1875. The bias of course was not as obvious so that it guaranteed winning consistently but the edge it represented meant they were bound to win in the long run. The next day, Jagger won even more - approximately $300,000 and people following his bets won too !

By this time Joseph Jagger had become a serious problem to the casinos who were losing vast amounts of money. The casinos weren't completely sure how he was winning but they suspected, it was due to the roulette wheel itself. That night the casinos switched the positions of all the roulette wheels and the next day Jagger was unware he was using a different wheel. He began to lose heavily before he noticed his mistake, noticing that the wheel was missing some familiar scratch marks. He went looking for his biased wheel and when he found it started winning again. This was enough for the casinos though, they'd figured out the problem and identified that the wheel had a problem with the frets dividing the numbers. They replaced the offending equipment and removed the bias on that particular roulette wheel. With Jaggers advantage removed he started to lose heavily, but he was no mug and soon stopped gambling and cashed in his winnings. His profit was something equal to about 5 million dollars today, he paid up his associates and returned to Yorkshire to quit his job and invest his winnings.

This phenomenal man was often touted as being the 'man who broke the bank at Monte Carlo' although this isn't quite true he achieved amazing success. He certainly engineered one of the biggest roulette payouts ever and the engineer from Yorkshire certainly caused a stir.

We hope you enjoyed reading this story from the play online roulette team. If you want to play around with a real random roulette wheel - try this one here - live roulette wheel. It's great for helping to pick your lottery numbers although we can't guarantee success.

 

 

 

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