The Field bet covers the Two, Three, Four, Nine, Ten, Eleven, and Twelve. You make Place bets on the Five, Six, and Eight plus a bet in the Field. It’s been marketed as the 87% System, the Anything but Sevens System, the Fremont Street Grind, and under at least a dozen more names – many of which I won’t mention here because they were the names the players came up with for this play after investing hundreds of dollars in it and losing thousands more. Barstow used to call a similar strategy the Treadmill, which in itself should tell you what he thought of it. These days a popular variant is called the Iron Cross. Sold in magazines, bookstores, and on-line under dozens of different names for sixty years or more, the Field-Place System is one of the oldest strategies around. ![]() For that reason, in this article we’re going to focus on none other than with the infamous Field-Place System. ![]() ![]() Regardless of the fact that no system out there will beat a negative expectation game over the long run, articles about betting systems and strategies seem to get far more positive comments from readers than any other articles we publish.
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