Reverse Labouchere Roulette System
The Reverse Labouchère roulette system was most famously used by an English casino buster by the name of Norman Leigh in 1966. Norman and a crack casino squad of twelve headed off to Nice in the South of France with the aim of breaking the bank at the casino there. They were eventually barred from every gaming establishment in France. (By the way, Norman Leigh also made alot of money from the sale of his book: Thirteen Against The Bank, so read into that what you will. It is not necessarily the system that made him rich!)
Play the Labouchere at UK Casino Club
Norman Leigh figured that if he took what he thought to be the easiest way to LOSE money in roulette: the Labouchere, and played the exact opposite, he would win a tidy sum.
Running through the Labouchere system briefly:
You write down a sequence of numbers:
Say 2, 3, 4,5
You bet the sum of the initial and last numbers, so taking the above sequence we would bet 7. If you win, you strike off the numbers at the end of the sequence, in bold below:
2, 3, 4, 5
On the next round, you add the remaining numbers and bet that (in this case 7 again)
After all the numbers have been deleted, you start with a fresh run of numbers. When you lose, you add the last bet to the end of the series. So in this example you have
2, 3, 4, 5, 7
Now you bet 9, and so on.
The Reverse Labouchere or Reverse Labby, adds numbers after you win, not after you lose. So you build on winning streaks and minimise losing streaks.