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Blackjack Hall of Fame - Edward O. Thorp |
Edward O. Thorp - The Father of Blackjack Card CountingEdward O. Thorp, an American mathematics professor, was the creator of the card-counting technique in blackjack. His groundbreaking 1962 book, Beat the Dealer, was the first to prove mathematically that card counting could be successfully employed to beat the house in blackjack.
The book also had the side effect of bringing blackjack to the attention of the gambling public. Thousands of readers flocked to the tables as blackjack, which had theretofore been considered a side game, became one of the most popular games in the casinos. The Academic Study of BlackjackEdward O. Thorp was born in 1933. He received a Master's degree in physics and a doctorate in mathematics from UCLA, and went on to become a mathematics professor at MIT, UCLA, NMSU, and UC Irvine.
Blackjack in Real Casinos
Thorp published his ideas, which he called the Ten-Count System, in his book Beat the Dealer in 1962. The book sold over 700,000 copies and made the New York Times bestseller list. The problem with the Ten-Count System, however, was that although it was mathematically accurate, it was difficult to learn and difficult to apply in real-life casino situations, and therefore impractical for most blackjack players. This defect was rectified in the second edition of Beat the Dealer, published in 1966, in which Thorp, with the assistance of Julian Braun, presented a more practical version of the Ten-Count System as well as Braun's own High-Low System. Success on Wall StreetFrom the Las Vegas blackjack tables, Thorp moved on the world's greatest casino: Wall Street. Using his expertise in probabilities and statistics, Thorp was able to discover and exploit a number of pricing anomalies in the securities market. With co-author J. Regan, he published Beat the Market in 1967. He created a hedge fund called Princeton/Newport Partners, and is now president of Edward O. Thorp & Associates. As with his blackjack system, his stock-market system has been a resounding success: as of May 1998, Thorp reported that his personal investments had yielded an annualized 20 percent rate of return averaged over 28.5 years.
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