Gambler banned after claims of a ‘no-lose’ roulette system
AGAMBLER claims a Birmingham casino is the latest to ban him after he won £50,000 with a socalled ‘no-lose’ roulette system.
Balvinder Sambhi says Rainbow Casino, in Hagley Road, Edgbaston, is the latest venue to bar him after he won big using a ‘secret betting pattern’, which he claims he has spent years perfecting.
The Birmingham gambler said he was a regular at the casino but was recently barred – and given no explanation as to why.
Mr Sambhi, 46, said: ‘’I’ve never lost with my system and the casinos don’t like that.
‘‘They don’t want winners in their premises – just losers.
“I have taken around £50,000 off Rainbow in the last six months and they have now barred me. They won’t give me a reason just said it was a decision taken by the management.
“I even deliberately lose on some days to give the casino a little back so I am not seen as a constant winner. But they have decided enough is enough. I can’t believe it.”
Mr Sambhi has written a book about his system called Breaking The Roulette Wheel.
But he refused to disclose his secrets in detail, claiming: “Experts have always said that winning at roulette is just down to luck. But I’ve developed a system based on simple mathematics which helps me win every time I play.
“Some days I win a little and some days a lot. My biggest single daily win was just over £4,000.
‘‘But the fact is I was winning consistently and nobody has ever done that before with roulette.’’
Back in 2009 Grosvenor Casino, in Broad Street, also banned Mr Sambhi.
At the time a spokesman for the company, which has more than 30 UK casinos, declined to comment.
“If they thought I was cheating, or money laundering, then they would call the police, Mr Sambhi said.
‘‘But my system is not cheating – it’s all about the maths.”
Mr Sambhi claims he has made a “significant sum” of money since he started playing with his system back in 2006.
He even claims to have visited casinos in Amsterdam and Frankfurt to win big on highroller tables where large wins go undetected.
He added: “People have been playing roulette for hundreds of years, yet no-one’s ever come up with a system that consistently wins.
‘‘But I’ve proved that my system works and casinos don’t like it.”
Double Diamond Gaming Ltd, which owns Rainbow Casino, refused to comment.