Man bets all on roulette and wins Now the subject of TV show LAS VEGAS, Nevada (Reuters) -- A British man who sold all his possessions, including his clothes, stood in a rented tuxedo on Sunday surrounded by family and friends and bet everything on a single spin of the roulette wheel. He won't go home empty handed. Ashley Revell, a 32-year-old Londoner, sold all his possessions in March, took $135,300 to the Plaza Hotel in Las Vegas, did some low stakes gambling and then placed everything he had left on "Red." The wheel was spun, a crowd of supporters including his Mum and Dad from London went wild, the ball bobbled over the slots and landed on Red '7' -- and Revell walked away with $270,600. "It all happened so quickly, it was spinning before I knew it," Revell said, adding he did not intend to try to double it again. He gave a $600 tip to the croupier and plans to party -- and buy some clothes. "It's really down to my friends and family and Mum and Dad," he told Reuters Television. "I knew even if I lost I'd always have a home to go to." "I'm still against it," said his Dad. "He shouldn't have done it. He's a naughty boy. I tell my kids they shouldn't gamble. I've got four others and they're all going to want to go the same way." "It's just brilliant," said Ashley Hames, a friend from London in Las Vegas for the occasion. "He's put his neck on the line and got away with it. It's absolutely great." "It bobbled for a second and I just thought, 'Oh no, it's not going to do it,'" said another friend, James Frederick. "But it did and I'm made up for him. It couldn't happen to a nicer guy." Asked if he wanted to try his luck again, Revell said: "No that's it for me. I think he'd like me to do it again, but no that's it," gesturing to a casino host. "I don't want to ride my luck," he said as the champagne began to flow. This week, the gambling spirits had seemed against him. He put in a week gambling about $3,000 in a bid to raise his pot. Revell, recently a professional gambler, said he decided to take a big plunge while he was still young and had raised the stakes as high as possible, including selling his clothes. "I like to do things properly," he said. Revell said he had planned to have a friend videotape his bet-it-all spin, but Britain's Sky One television decided it was worth a short reality series, called "Double or Nothing." Sky will not pay him, he says, but a crew from Dai4 Films has followed his preparations and covered the spin at the Plaza Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. It also plans to follow him for a month afterward. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright 2004 Reuters. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. CNN Report
In casinos it's different. You roll and: 1. If you get a 7 or 11 on the first roll you win, if you bet on the Pass Line, and if you roll a 2, 3, or 12 you lose, it's the opposite if you bet on the Don't Pass Line but there are dozens of other bets on a craps table that I won't even go into but if you are the roller you must have at least one bet on the Pass or Don't Pass Line. 2. If you get any other number except the ones mentioned above on your first roll you keep rolling until you either get that number again and win or roll a 7 in which case you lose.
I can't believe, 10 years later, I misspoke on the same subject again. Particularly since when I go to a casino, I only play craps now. Man, honestly, maybe all that drinking has affected me....
But when Guido sells him back all his crap that egg is going to cost him a lot more money than he sold it for.