Lucky Devils
The True Story of Three Rebel Gamblers Who Beat the Odds and Changed the Game
-
- Pre-Order
-
- Expected Apr 14, 2026
-
- $14.99
Publisher Description
The rollicking true story of a trio of gamblers hell-bent on beating the house, who used their ingenuity to rake in hundreds of millions of dollars, transforming the way betting games are played.
In the late 1970s, three men declared war on the casino. They were card counters and misfits who arrived in Las Vegas determined to make their fortune. When blackjack got too easy—and they got kicked out of too many casinos—they aimed for bigger prey. Could they predict a roulette wheel’s outcome by sight alone? Use computers to “solve” poker? Anticipate game-day outcomes better than veteran bookies? Crunch enough numbers to predict which horse would come in first?
Using innovative strategies and technology that was decades ahead of its time, they did all that and more. They became pioneers of “advantage play.” Their pursuit of an edge would take them from the Las Vegas Strip to the grand casinos of Northern Europe to the sprawling, 85,000-capacity racetracks of Hong Kong. For more than thirty years they faced down angry pit bosses, violent mafiosos, bankruptcies, nights in foreign jails, lawsuits, and personal betrayals. They learned that the only thing harder than reaching the pinnacle of gambling is staying there.
Drawing from exclusive interviews with the three players and their associates, award-winning Bloomberg journalist Kit Chellel delivers a cinematic and often uproarious account of fortunes gained, lost, and gained again. Scrupulously reported and irresistibly told, Lucky Devils reveals how these players did more than simply amass wealth; they revolutionized the game itself.
Along the way, they defied gambling’s oldest rule. The house doesn’t always win.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Bloomberg journalist Chellel (Dead in the Water) sheds light on advantage gambling, or using math and technology to beat the house, through the stories of three of its pioneers in this fascinating history. In the 1970s, gamblers Bill Nelson, Rob Reitzen, and Bill Benter arrived in Las Vegas obsessed with beating the house, and went on to redefine what that meant. Nelson's success with a computer-driven sports betting syndicate drew FBI scrutiny before he resurfaced with a lucrative roulette operation. Reitzen went from playing poker in casinos to founding online poker sites where human players competed against algorithmic bots, with fortunes won and lost at dizzying speed. The most spectacular arc belongs to Benter, who became a legend in Hong Kong and U.S. horse racing by combining massive betting syndicates with sophisticated statistical modeling, and later parlayed his winnings into the Benter Foundation, which supports causes including the arts, Alzheimer's research, and financial education. Chellel balances technical explanations with vivid character portraits, making complicated systems accessible to the layperson. With its colorful cast and levelheaded look at the arms race between gamblers and casinos, this is an addictive profile of the rule breakers who anticipated gambling's data-driven future. Readers will be thrilled.