Can Caro's Roulette System Really Kill the House Edge?

Roulette is created as entertainment and is meant to be played solely for the amusement it brings. Regardless, there are so many who view it as a source of quick profit. These people are in constant search of ways on how to win roulette. The closest most got to the ultimate solution of winning the casino game is with roulette strategies, but even the best of these have glaring flaws and heavily dependent on luck.
Meanwhile, there are some people who claimed to have created the solution to this gambling dilemma. One of these is professional gambler, poker expert and casino executive Mike Caro. He created a "secret" roulette strategy, dubbed Caro's Roulette System # 1, which he claimed can cut down the house edge to absolutely nothing, so long as his instructions are carefully followed. He revealed this system online in the newsgroup rec.gambling.poker, circa 1997.
To start with, keep in mind that Caro's system is meant for American roulette, as it is the version the instructions for the system consistently refers to. In other strategies, you first decide on the amount you are going to gamble. This is not the case with Caro's. The player has to start by eliminating the "bad bets" or those Caro claimed will lose no matter what.
The first to be discarded are the even-money bets due to them being "poor wagers" according to Caro. Next should be the zeroes, for the well-known reason that it simply isn't wise to bet on one. This is followed by the elimination of odd red and even black bets, as they perform badly on Caro's two trillion computer trials. Even red and odd black bets would naturally remain, from which you have to exclude 30 and all numbers starting from 11 going clockwise to 14. Now you may bet on the remaining numbers without worrying about losing.
Unfortunately, there's a big catch to this. Consider this: if you remove the 0, 00, all odd red, and all even black bets, you'll be left with the numbers 30 followed by 11 and ending in 14 if you go through the wheel clockwise - exactly the last numbers Caro tells you to eliminate. That should therefore mean that you'll be betting on nothing. Now that technically eliminates the house edge!
Mike Caro himself revealed in a Poker1 article that his system removes the house edge by not letting the player place a bet at all. The article implies that this prank is no more than a way to teach people that there are some casino games that can never be beaten - with or without a system involved - and roulette is listed in the latter category. Strange enough though, some top mathematicians have endorsed this system - whether they are genuinely fooled or just pushed themselves into the joke is up to debate.
In the sense that roulette can never be beaten, Caro isn't wrong since roulette is a game that's based on pure chance. Don't let this fact turn you off the game however. You can still play and enjoy it with or without a system, treating it as you ought to in the first place - as a mere source of amusement.

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