Playing Blackjack in North Dakota
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I detoured from my usual blackjack cities
in Colombia and Lima, Peru .. to spend time
this summer in Fargo, which has its own
brand of blackjack. Fargo is the largest
metro in the state and its downtown abuts
a city in the adjoining state to the East --
Moorhead, Minnesota.
Instead of waiting for my take-out order of
Asian food at The Drunken Noodle restaurant
in downtown Fargo (recommended), I played
blackjack at Dempsey's taverm a block away
on Broadway. There is one blackjack table
at Dempsey's with a 3-dollar minimum bet
and maximum of two hands played per round
by any individual. The tavern is named for
world-class boxer Jack Dempsey, who was the
heavyweight champion one century ago.
This a four-deck game manually shuffled by the
dealer and dealt from the traditional black
dealing shoe.
The rules are generally liberal although there is
no surrender allowed. Double any first two cards,
double after split, re-split aces. Penetration
seemed to be about 80 percent.
Each of the four decks was spread Ace-to-King
face-up casino style when I walked in at about
6:45 p.m. The dealer shuffled with good dexterity,
one deck at a time, no strip-shuffle .. and then placed
the four decks into the shoe .. to start the play.
cccmedia in Fargo
A fair game.
The game was obviously on the up-and-up
as I was winning and the dealer was breaking
frequently most of the session.
There is no blackjack supervisor. The dealer
acts as cashier for buy-ins and cash-outs.
Only one other player was in action during
my session. He may be the world's worst
blackjack player, or perhaps just the unluckiest.
He played for little more than five minutes
and lost every hand before departing for a
speech he said he was going to give somewhere
in the city.
The game is offered seven days a week and I
was told the Dempsey game goes until 2 a.m.
regardless of the number of players.
cccmedia in Fargo
Low limit 21 in N.D.
The maximum bet at non-tribal casinos
is $25 in North Dakota.
Tribal casinos may take wagers up to $100
per spot.
--
The low minimum of $3 is allowed
through a state law that permits
charitable gaming. From my research,
it is my understanding that the charity
or "public spirited" non-profit that benefits
from the house winnings changes from one
organization to another from night to night
to comply with this law.
---
I stopped in at the Radisson Blu hotel,
a classy building in downtown Fargo.
Most of the day shift staff didn't seem
to know if the Radisson offered blackjack.
Eventually, someone on the staff came along,
telling me they used to offer blackjack nightly,
now it's just on weekend nights.
I was told the dealer had been out sick for
two weekends, so there has been no 21 play
for a while at Radisson Blu.
cccmedia in Fargo
Rooters on Broadway.
This Irish-themed bar offers one 21 table
and the usual Fargo rules.
The dealer came over from the bar.
"Are you dealing blackjack?" I asked.
"Maybe," he said.Â
And then he did.
 -- cccmedia in Fargo
Blu is dark.
I called Radisson Blu on Friday to find out
whether their blackjack game was returning
after two weekends off.
The team member told me there was no game
Friday night .. and he said he was told the
Radisson had closed down its game for
the summer.
--
Instead, I found a game at Cowboy Jack's on
Broadway. One table, with two dealers who
relieve each other. The dealers were friendlier
than at other places in Fargo where I had
played. One dealer got super-hot on one
shoe .. and whereas four players were in action
at the start of the shoe, all four had departed
amid a dealer hot streak near the end.
Like all games I have played, the limits at
Jack's are $3-25, maximum two hands
per player.
cccmedia in Fargo
World's surliest dealer.
I returned to Cowboy Jack's on Broadway and
played an abbreviated session of blackjack tonight.
In about 15 minutes, I had several dust-ups with
a rude dealer, the rudest I have ever observed
from either side of the table.
I'd call him a sore loser too, as he was busting the
dealer's hand consistently as I went up ten units
versus the House in the short time I was playing.
The last hand he dealt put the dealer in the
House-favorable position of having an Ace up,
normally an opportunity for a player to put up
an insurance bet.
However, the nervous dealer started to check
for his hole card without giving me time to
decide on insurance. I held my hands up in
a hold-it-right-there pose, but too late -- he
checked for his potential blackjack without
giving me a chance to put up my insurance bets.
This abrupt move actually saved me from the
loss of two potential insurance bets I was about
to place.
Then he scolded me for not verbally telling him
to stop. Whereupon I pointed to a sign posted
at the table that said Use Hand Signals.
Without discussion, he swept the six dealt
cards from the table and placed them face-down
in the discard rack.
He defended his position by furthering the
argument, to which I said he was being too
legalistic. To which he said I didn't have to
play. To which I said fine, cash me out.
There were no other players present when
I had arrived at the table .. and none was
there as soon as I left.
I will play blackjack at Cowboy Jack's again,
but probably not when the rude dealer
is running the game.
cccmedia in Fargo
Molasses slow.
I went later than usual, about 11 p.m., to the
Cowboy Jack's game. The table was mostly
full during the session.
The players were mostly recreational punters
who knew little to nothing about 21 basic strategy.
They were doubling (and mostly busting) on
two-card 12's. They needed guidance on most
stiffs versus a dealer face card. The dealer was
glad to give advice, which usually didn't comport
with basic strategy and thus won money for
the House.
The continual need to discuss and debate whether
to hit 16 against a face card slowed the game down
at times to a molasses-slow crawl though the dealer
did her best to keep things moving.
The dealer was competent at distributing
the cards and much more pleasant than the
super-surly dealer I encountered at Cowboy's
last Sunday.
cccmedia in Fargo
Eye in the sky?
My most recent blackjack session in Fargo
got off to a rough start. I had walked up to
a dead table to play two hands and
the dealer gave herself an ace for the first round.
Then she slammed the table with her right hand.
Before playing my hands, I asked her why she
did that, mentioning that I had seen another
dealer slam in a similar manner at another
blackjack game in town.
She pointed upward and said she was alerting
the camera that she had an ace up
(which explanation I didn't follow).
I asked her if she could signal the camera without
slamming so loudly, and she didn't like that question.
She said she had been dealing this way for about
30 years and she didn't think should could change
her loud slamming habit.
However, she then proceeded to deal professionally
for the rest of the session, and when she had an ace up,
she made the motion but with no audible slamming.
At midnight, she closed the game and cashed me out,
pleasantly explaining that she was closing the game
early because she knew it would take her a long time
to count or sort the chips (another explanation I didn't
understand).
I intend to find out why the dealers apparently
need to signal or slam when they have an ace up .. and
will report on it here if I find out more.
cccmedia in Fargo
Thanks CCCmedia, did not really need another reason to avoid Fargo.
I strolled into Rooters at 11:35 p.m. on
Monday night only to find the blackjack
table covered and not in play.
The dealer was hanging around and said
she never opened (no players) and
"closed" the table at 11:30 p.m.
I found a busy -- though molasses slow --
game about a block away at Dempsey's.
The dealer was openly rooting for the
players to win, although you know she
makes money only when they lose or
tip and toke.
cccmedia in Fargo
Marcus gets started in Grand Forks.
GF is one of thelarger cities in North Dakota,
about an hour north of Fargo on the East side
of the state as I saw it mapped.
Marcus is a German Expat who has had just
two sessions of blackjack in Grand Forks
before alterting me to his presence in the state
this weekend. Apparently, he is thinking of
heading to Fargo, where I am stationed through
August. He is naturally curious about 21 conditions
here in Fargo, NoDak's largest city.
Among the few dealers he has encounted
so far, Marcus has found them generally
"abrasive."
--
My take on the Fargo dealers is that they
run the gamut, from laconic robots to
gabby dealers with at least some sense
of customer service. As mentioned, the
surly dealer from late July at Cowboy Jack's
was the most obnoxious dealer
I've every encountered.
The Downtown Fargo games are typically
four decks in a shoe with moderate
penetration. Dealer stands on soft 17.
Don't expect to resplit Aces.
The games seem to start around 6 p.m.
seven days a week. The manual shuffle
does not include any card
stripping. All games I've played
allow one or two hands at a time
per player, $3 to $25 limits on the
iniital bet per hand.
Some dealers work in pairs, taking
turns dealing the cards. Others work
alone and process cash-outs and the
occasional sale of pull-tabs. The only
pull-tab sale I have seen was to a bride
dressed in white who wanted to try her luck
on her wedding day.
cccmedia in Fargo
      Just saw a mass shooting in Fargo, police said they have no idea of the motive. Perhaps it was a disgruntled card player.
One officer was killed, two seriously injured and
the police shot the alleged gunman dead,
according to news reports. The victims were not
immediatelly identified by the police pending
notification of kin.
This is big news in Fargo, where an annual street fair
was held this weekend .. and where shootouts
like this rarely happen -- it's not Chicago.
cccmedia in Fargo
Fargo PD have identified Jake Wallin as the
young officer who was shot and killed
late Friday when responding to a car crash
that apparently was unrelated to the
ensuing shootout. Jake Wallin was 23.
The police chief called Friday one of the
worst days in his department's history.
He said the slain suspect -- Mohamad Barakat,
37, of Fargo -- started shooting at police
for no known reason.
The two other officers who were shot are
reported in stable but still critical condition.
Barakat also fired shots at Fargo firemen
responding to the scene, according to
police. They say the firemen were not hit
although a bullet struck a 25-year-old
Fargo woman. The still-unidentified
woman has been treated at a Fargo
health facility.
cccmedia in Fargo
Statement from Fargo chief of police
Dave Zibolski.
"This was a heinous and unthinkable act
of agression against our officers and the
entire metro community. As we all
try to comprehend what has transpired
and mourn the impact on our team
and the entire community, we are bracing
for extremely difficult days ahead.
We know that we are joined by the
entire metro community and this
brings comfort to all of us....
"We can profoundly feel the fabric
of this community in your actions,
words of encouragement and
acts of kindness. Together, we are
and will remain guardians of
our Fargo community."
       Unfortunately this is the new normal.
Moving up the Interstate.}
Charlie Brown's Pub and Casino is located in
Grand Forks, a city 67 miles North of Fargo
via Interstate highway.
The place was almost deserted on a Thursday night
when I came by, although two dealers were available
for blackjack. One of Charlie Brown's two 21 tables
was open. No other players were in evidence.
The game has the same rules and same limits as at
the Fargo casinos -- bets from $3 to $25, maximum
two spots per player.
The dealers dealt flawlessly and rapidly, except for
occasionally making the classic North Dakota mistake ..
checking for a possible blackjack on insurance hands
without giving the player time to make the
insurance decision.
I was told the CB game is open at 3 p.m. daily, until
midnight most nights and 1 a.m. on Friday and
Saturday nights. On Thursday at quarter past 11 p.m.,
the dealer announced the final shoe of the night,
meaning the game can end not at midnight but
around half an hour beforehand.
cccmedia in metro Grand Forks, North Dakota
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