Playing Blackjack in Mexico
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On a trip to Mexico City, I played my favorite casino game
for the first time in this city, at the second-floor
table games area of Gran Casino Frontón.Â
I bought chips in peso denominations at the cashier cage
and was issued a plastic gaming card. Apparently, this
enables the cage to keep track of my buy-ins and extract
a small tax on any winnings when I cash out.
A single blackjack table was open .. next to the only other
active table in the pit, a Texas hold'em poker variant.
The 21 limits were 50-1,000 pesos ($2.50 US to $50 US
if we round off the exchange to a 20:1 peso-to-dollar ratio).
I started in playing two adjacent spots at 50 pesos each.
Rules included double any two cards, double after split
allowed, naturals pay 3 to 2, insurance as usual,
late surrender allowed on any hand except versus
a dealer ace.
The dealers are mostly highly professional. One joker
played around with his hit cards to add a little drama,
rare in my South American experiences and usually
frowned upon in USA land casinos. Another dealer
made the only mistake I saw .. in my favor, as it happens,
paying a tie hand as a winner.
Supervisors appeared to rarely watch the game.
My bottle of agua potable was gratis.
While the game progressed, a shuffling machine at a
nearby vacant table was mixing the multiple decks for
the next shoe to come. No continuous shuffling machine
was attached to the blackjack table. Penetration
may have been about 70 percent. You could
defiinitely call this a no-heat situation.
Arriving around 9 p.m., I was the fourth player
at the lone 21 table. A male-female couple who
each had a hard time deciding whether to hit their stiffs
left about an hour after I started .. and a lone
die-hard was down to just a few chips half an hour
later when I departed, yet still in action.
The game runs 5 p.m. till shortly after 2 a.m.
seven nights a week. A supervisor told me they
open a second 21 table on weekends if there
is action for it. I was there on a Thursday night.
cccmedia in Ixtacalco, Mexico City
Security near the casino.
The Frontón casino is a few blocks down from
the fancy Le Meridien hotel, a Marriott property
in the Colonia Tabacalera district of the capital.
There are at least two presumably lower-priced
hotels within a short block of the entertainment
complex.
Threre were two police vehicles evident while I
was in the area .. and a guard outside the casino
was armed with a Mexican rifle or shotgun but
was not brandishing it.
There is a Metro rail stop less than a short block
from the casino. An iconic building illuminated
sofisticadamente --Â a taxi driver told me its name
which included the word Revolución --Â
is right across the street from the casino building.
cccmedia in CDMX
Royal Yak casino in Mexico City.
I didn't see any logo or signage picturing
the Tibetan oxlike beast known as a yak.
The logo in evidence at the casino near
a major racetrack has three cherries lined up
slot-machine style.
The racetrack is Hipódromo de las Américas
on Avenida Industrial Militar. It opened in
1943.
Perhaps in keeping with its roots, the
Royal Yak's blackjack game is a rarity in
my South American experience -- games are
shuffled manually and dealt from a shoe,
with no continuous shuffling machine at
either of the 21 tables that were open when
I played. For a card counter, this is probably
the best game I have encountered in
Latin America.
The rules are basically the same as at the
Frontón casino that I played at the night before.
Dealer takes a hole card and manually peeks at
it before play starts if her first card is a ten
or an ace and thus a potential natural 21.
Two Yak blackjack tables were open, with
50-1,000 and 100-2,000 peso limits respectively.
Dealers were slower and showed less dexterity
than the Frontón dealers. However, I saw no
dealer mistakes in the 75 minutes I was at the
Yak tables.
The dealer sells chips right at the table, unlike
the other casino where a cashier sold chips.
My agua potable once again was gratis.
Deck penetration was about 70 percent, with
no heat (and no advanced players) evident.
There was action when I arrived at 11 p.m. on
a Friday night, but the higher limit table was
dead and only one player remained in action
at the other 21 table when I left 75 minutes later.
This is unusual for a midsize casino on
a weekend night.
A supervisor told me the 21 games are open
starting at 3 p.m. Monday through Saturday ..
and close at 3 a.m. Sunday hours are
3 p.m. to 2 a.m.
Note that the casino may have moved as
it is located several hundred yards up from
major neon signage at the nearby
traffic circle, possibly a sign that the casino
was at the traffic-circle location previously.
cccmedia in Mexico City
Yak ambiance.
As I looked around the table-games pit,
I noticed an international flavor among the
punters.
Empty seats at my table were suddenly
filled by four young Chinese men gabbing
in Mandarin and doing a good job in
following the lead of the Spanish-speaking
dealer who was teaching the proper
hand signals.
One table over at a poker-variant game,
a 40-ish man wearing large dark
sunglasses was in action. He was wearing
a neon-yellow nylon jacket with a deep-red
hammer and sickle design on its front.
The outfit screamed:Â World War II
bomber pilot on his night off in Reno
or Monaco!
cccmedia in Mexico City
Double down?
Dealers at some Mexico City tables are
in the habit of dealing the card face down
when a player pushes out chips for an
obvious double.
When this occurs, I ask the dealer to
turn the card face up .. and they are
complying.
If I were to ask for another player's
double card to be turned face up,
I don't know if the dealer would
follow the instruction.
An obvious solution is to sit at
first base when that spot is
available unless there is some
compelling reason not to.
cccmedia in Mexico City
Re-splittin' Aces.
There's no such thing at Royal Yak casino
in Mexico City.
I split a pair of aces and the dealer hit the first
ace with another ace and put a deuce on the
second ace.
I immediately called to the supervisor who was
about 25 feet away in the pit. Two minutes later
he came to the table .. and then informed me
that at the Yak, split aces receive one card only
per ace, no re-splitting.
Another rule I discovered last night is that an
individual player may wager on a maximum of
three betting spots per round. The rookie dealer
I first encountered was unaware of the rule and
I played four spots during the first 20 minutes
of my session .. until a supervisor started
paying attention and backed me down
to three spots.
cccmedia
Paying tax on winnings in Mexico.
After breaking even on my first two CDMX
blackjack sessions, I had a winning session
last night at the Royal Yak. This meant
I would be paying a winners tax to Mexico.
When I approached the cashier cage to
cash out, I was shown a form to fill out
for tax purposes.
When I explained I was a first-time winner,
a casino 'empleado' filled out the form for me.
In response to my question, he said the
tax amounts to 6 percent of a player's profits.
They mathematically deduct this percentage
and then pay the balance of a player's winnings
in cash.
cccmedia in Mexico City
Late-night taxi from the casino area.
Unlike after my Friday night session at the Yak,
I saw there were no taxis at the casino taxi stand
at 12:20 a.m. This was not surprising since there
had been few players after my 11 p.m. arrival at
the casino and I was playing heads-up against the
dealer almost the whole time.
Putting common sense to work, I made the
five-minute walk from the casino to the
traffic circle. There, three taxis were lined up
and getting an ²¹±¹±ð²Ô³Ùó²Ô back to Ixtacalco
was a snap. Once again, the taxista required
a 100-peso surcharge for late-night transport.
The walk from the casino along Avenida
Industrial Militar to the traffic circle
seemed plenty safe due to being chock-a-block
with military buildings and the presence of
armed guards at the entrances to some of
the builidngs.
Several open-air booths were still operating at
the traffic circle -- a ³Ù²¹±ç³Ü±ð°ùò¹, a shop selling
tortas (cakes and tarts) and a ±è³Ü±ô±è±ð°ùò¹ selling
a variety of beverages and snacks.
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Yakkin' it up.
I love the blackjack game at Royal Yak. But
they've got some rookie dealers whose lack
of judgment and experience was on full
display at my 21 table last night.
Dealer X was doing OK until a round in which
he dealt to my three spots three pairs --
sixes, nines and deuces.
Then he noticed he had apparently made a
mistake in dealing to the other player who was
also in action. In any quality casino, a dealer
knows not to back up the cards or switch
around hands to correct such an error on
his own. But this dealer skipped the part
where he is supposed to alert his supervisor.
Acting on his own, he changed the cards
in all my hands -- and when he finished, I had
two stiffs and and an eight consisting of a deuce
and a six, a definite downgrade from my
origiinally-dealt hands.
I immediately stopped the game and asked
the dealer to call over his supervisor, Julio,
to look into what was going on. The dealer
gave an Julio an explanation I could not hear ..
and then I asked Julio to allow the players
to withdraw our bets and declare the round
invalid.
Julio made a phone call from his supervisor podium,
probably to surveillance, for at least five minutes.
He came back to the 21 table and allowed us all
to withdraw our wagers as I had requested.
The dealer was tapped out by his relief
and Julio spent several minutes with him privately
near the far end of the gaming pit,
probably reminding him that dealers do not
properly correct their own errors, They need to
have a superior supervise the situation and
direct the correction, checking with surveillance
if necessary to verify what had occurred.
cccmedia in Mexico City
Coloring up when the dealer can't count.
A second error occurred at the end of my session,
now with Dealer Y.
As is customary, I pushed my chips to the
Insurance line and asked that they be colored up
to higher-denomination chips to take to the
cashier cage.
What followed was the worst color-up job
by a dealer that I have ever seen. Not only
did he fail to add the incoming chips correctly,
but when I pointed out that the converted chips
totaled less than I had presented, he made the
cardinal sin of moving chips between the two
sides of the layout, making it nearly impossible
to ascertain the correct amount I would receive.
Again, Julio had to be called over. He did a
classic eye roll, having found that, inside
one hour, another of his dealers had messed up and
then further complicated the situation in the
absence of supervision,
Based on where the chips were now located
on the table, I don't think Julio could have
confirmed (without surveillance input) the
exact amount of high-value chips I deserved.
Since the discrepancy was only a few hundred
pesos, I think Julio did the right thing by
refraininig from making another call to surveillance,
instead taking my word for what I was due .. and
having the dealer give me the full amount.
cccmedia
A few observations...
Here are some other observations I have
made this week at the Royal Yak casino
in Mexico City.
There are five spots at each of the 21 tables,
not six or seven as is generally the case
in the USA and other Latin American cities
where i have played.
When I first played at the Yak on a weekend,
the minimum bet was 50 pesos at Table 1
and 100 pesos at Table 2. Although still
indicated that way on Thursday night,
the actual minimum at Table 2 was 50 pesos,
despite a posted electronic sign saying 100.
Both tables were full with players when I
arrived Thursday night around midnight.
I left the casino at 2 a.m. on Friday, and
the lone taxista at the taxi stand surcharged
me an additional 50 pesos, probably due to
the hour. For my various comings at goings from
Royal Yak to my hotel, I have paid either
250 or 300 pesos per trip. My trips from my
hotel to the Yak have ranged in price from
150 to 300 pesos.
The restaurant in the casino apparently operates
around the clock or close to it. Last night
I ordered a mushroom omelette around 1:30 a.m.
and they cooked it for me although the waiter
made it clear they don't usually cook breakfast
foods at such an hour .. and he had to ask
special permission.
cccmedia in Ixtacalco, Mexico City
Fruity find near casino Royal Yak.
After my Friday night session ended at 2 a.m.,
I walked down to the traffic circle near
Hospital Militar. As usual, nobody was about
except for a rifle-carrying guard at the
big parking facility.
At the circle, I found a booth I had missed before
where breakfast cereals, fresh-cut fruit including
piña y mango and juices squeezed and mixed
to order were available.
After picking out such merchandise, I walked a
few steps further to the waiting line of taxistas,
one of whom drove me back to the hotel for
the going price from there to Ixtacalco, 250 pesos.
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Taking charge when the dealer is clueless.
Don't get me wrong, several of the dealers at
Royal Yak have dexterity and know how to
deal blackjack well.
But, frankly, most of them are either novices
or just clueless.
Among the multiple mistakes I spotted on
Saturday night, one was committed by an
impatient dealer whose error I made sure
to point out to the supervisor.
Playing at third base, I hit my hand
to a three-card total of 14
against the dealer's high-value up-card.
Instead of waiting for my ensuing
hit/stand decision, the dealer rushed to
complete his hand, giving him a
two-card total of hard 18.
I immediately had the supervisor
come by and I explained, "Iba a
pedir más una carta, pero él no
esperó para mi señal."
I was going to hit my hand again,
but he didn't wait for my signal.
Then I tapped the layout to
emphasize that I still wanted a card
to potentially improve my 14.
The dealer delivered me a five, turning
my hand from a loser 14 into a
19-18 winner.
cccmedia in Mexico City
¡Blackie en la mesa!
The blackjack dealers at Gran Casino Frontón
in Mexico City are highly competent in their
jobs -- they move quickly through the rounds
and are not prone to make any mistakes.
One dealer suprised me in another way
last night when I was playing three hands
per round at the Frontón -- he dealt me
two blackjacks in one round, then dealt me
two more naturals in the ensuing round.
This casino has much less square footage
than Royal Yak .. and only opened one
21 table on each of the two nights
I have been there.
After the session, about 2 a.m. Monday
morning, it took me only a few minutes and
a two-block walk to flag down a taxi back to
Ixtacalco at a reasonable negotiated rate,
200 pesos. The Uber ride from my hotel
to Frontón earlier that night cost just
100 pesos.
cccmedia in Mexico City
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