As for the article itself, long time readers of mine will be familiar with Alicia, the subject of the piece. Those of you who are new to the blog and coming here thanks to the link on ADANAI may want to read more about Alicia and the story of how I first met her and was amazed at her poker skills. You can find that blog post (“I Lost to A Girl!) here, but please note, in that original post, I gave Alicia the pseudonym of “Veronica” because I almost always use pseudonyms here. But the following year, when Alicia played in the Main Event at the WSOP, I virtual-railed for on the blog and she gave me permission to use her real name. Alicia was most recently discussed in my blog post here when I ran into her again as this year’s WSOP was getting underway.
Please let me know what you think. This is obvious a departure from both my normal blog posts and my Ante Up columns)
Ever wonder
what it’s like to be a professional poker player in Vegas? Not one of those
pros you see on TV, but someone trying to make a living playing low stakes cash
games and tournaments; the kind tourists come from around the world to glimpse
and dabble. Thousands of young men—and some not so young—live this no frills
existence. They are called “grinders.”
Quite a few less women attempt it.
Alicia
Spencer is one of those rare female grinders who succeeded at the trade for
several years. She learned the game in Minnesota where she grew up, initially
playing tournaments in bars and achieving some great results, including winning
the first tournament she ever played.
When a job
landed her in Washington, D.C., she sought out home games and continued to do
well. She remembers that first night
playing $1/$2 No Limit when she won a big pot. “It was pocket Aces vs. pocket
Kings vs. pocket Queens vs. pocket Jacks. I had the Aces, and although a Jack
did hit the board, the player with the Jacks was short stacked and I took most
of the money. I left over $800 ahead,
and they invited me back,” Spencer says. She continued to take their money.
The first two
times she went to Atlantic City, she finished first in both tournaments she
played. The third time she had to settle
for fourth place, but that was in a WSOP circuit event.
After that,
she started entertaining the crazy idea of moving to Las Vegas to play poker
for a living. She was good at the game and wanted to see if she could pull it
off. “I was young and thought this would
be a good time in my life to do something crazy.”
So, in May
2009 she packed up her SUV with everything she could fit into it and drove all
the way to Vegas. Spencer played poker
every day once there. It didn’t start
too well. “I lost $2,000 in the first
two weeks. I didn’t know anyone in
town. I wondered if I made a big
mistake,” she says.
But she
started making friends and started having some better results at the
table. Although she preferred
tournament poker, she had to play cash games in order to make a living. “It was too risky to invest hours in a
tournament that could too often result in leaving empty-handed. Those hours were better spent at a cash game
where I could make money more regularly.”
Even in the
cash games, she’d win a little more than half the time. She had to be disciplined and learn to
minimize her losses. “I would say, ‘I’m
going to do two or three buy-ins. If I’m
done with two or three buy-ins, I’m done for the night.’” Playing $1/$2 NL on the Strip, she’d
frequently leave with an $800-$900 profit, and when she played $2/$5 she would
often take away in excess of $1,500.
Playing on
the Strip meant encountering a few good local players and plenty of
tourists. And the latter’s where she
made her money. “I divided tourists into
two groups. Really bad players and
really, really bad players. I preferred
to play against only the really bad players.
The really, really bad players were too unpredictable.”
She was in
Vegas for the 2009 WSOP and played in a few events without cashing. The next year, she decided to play in the
Deuce to Seven Triple Draw bracelet event.
“It was an unusual move since I had virtually no real experience playing
that game. I had learned it watching a
friend play. Despite that, I cashed,
placing 21st.” For that, she got a
$6,000 payday. She cashed the next year
in the WSOP No Limit Hold’em Shoot-Out event.
Her skills
started impressing a few people willing to back her in these events. Professional poker player Bill Chen – who won
two bracelets at the 2006 WSOP – was one of them. He not only became Alicia’s
backer, but her mentor too.
Alicia never
read poker books; she was a natural and learned by playing. Her specialty was the psychological,
emotional aspect of the game. She could
read the players well, not only to determine what they were likely to be
holding but also how they would react to any move she made. And she was real good at it.
She didn’t
really pay much attention to the mathematics of poker until Chen worked with
her. Chen has a Ph.D in mathematics. He
gave Alicia a better understanding of the odds.
Once she added that to her game, her results got even better.
She stood out
in the very much male-oriented sport and took advantage of her table
image. Male players usually have
pre-conceived notions of the average woman they see at a table especially if,
as in Alicia’s case, she is young, pretty and blonde. They automatically assume she lacks skill and
plays timid and tight. She’ll only bet a
hand that is really good…they assume.
Alicia took
full advantage of that stereotype. She
bluffed like crazy. She was a ruthless,
take no prisoners type of player. “I
rarely got called down because I was aggressive and confident. I would
three-barrel with air over and over again.” (i.e. bet the flop, the turn and
the river heavily with absolutely nothing).
A few times,
Alicia experimented with more overt ways to exploit her femininity at the poker
table. She’d put on a dress – instead of her usual comfortable jeans and
sweatshirt – and act like she’d never played before. For someone so comfortable at a poker table,
it was a difficult ruse to pull off; she had trouble stopping herself from
handling her chips and cards like a pro.
She did find that it was even easier to bluff when she tried this, but
ultimately, it wasn’t necessary. She
went back to dressing like a poker player and not a girl heading off to a club.
Many female
players report sexist, hostile comments directed at them from the men at the
table. “I never encountered anything like that—or if I did, it didn’t really
register. Oh, I was hit on constantly
while playing, but that was it. I think
the male players were upset with me because I was an aggressive, successful
player, and not because I was female.”
Although it’s likely the fact that they were “losing to a girl” might
have made it easier for some guys to go on tilt.
The guys she
met away from poker were all fascinated to learn what she did for a living;
most of them thought it was great. They
wanted to play poker with her. A few
even wanted her to teach them to play.
She actually charged them for lessons.
If being a
professional poker player sounds glamorous, Alicia will tell you
otherwise. “It was a tough
existence. I was ever mindful of my
bankroll, and I knew that a few bad sessions in a row could be devastating to
it. The pressure to play and win was
overwhelming.” She played 50-60 hours a
week, mostly on the Strip. Most often
she would start early afternoon and finished a little before midnight.
Unlike some
grinders she knew, Alicia never found herself playing just because she had a
bill coming due. Her bankroll was never that low. Instead, she sometimes found
herself buying in when she shouldn’t have.
She’d walk by the poker room after doing something else and decide to
play for a little while. She wouldn’t really be in the right frame of mind. “I remember one time when I walked right past
a poker room coming out of a club. I
decided to play for just a little while.
I lost $500 in 15 minutes. I had
to learn the discipline to avoid that type of situation.”
The lifestyle
of Vegas was a culture shock for her.
She hung around with other poker players and gamblers, and they didn’t
seem to value money the way she did—or at least the way she did when she first
moved to Vegas. Eventually she started to realize that money was meaning less
and less to her, too. Everyone she knew
seemed to be just looking out for themselves, and she was beginning to include
herself in that category.
After a
little over year living in Vegas, she had had enough. “I realized I didn’t like
the person I had become. Playing because
you have to rather than because you want to was taking the fun out of the game
for me.” So she decided to move away from Vegas and get a real job. She still visits Vegas frequently, and enjoys
poker a lot more now that she’s back playing it for fun. And yes, she’s still very good at it. In May she cashed in a Bracelet event at the
WSOP. But then she flew home and went
back to work.
Thanks, MOJO!
ReplyDeleteOne of the first blogs I ever read was about Veronica who beat a bunch of men in a tournament. This article brings the story full circle! Well done Rob!
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, x!
DeleteNice write up Rob. She sounds like a very good poker player, but this, I can not agree with at all:
ReplyDelete“I divided tourists into two groups. Really bad players and really, really bad players."
One does not have to live in Vegas to be a "good" poker player. I personally know many poker players that are very good poker players who are tourists to Las Vegas.
Just my .02 cents
-grouse
Thanks, grouse!
DeleteI think Alicia was exaggerating a bit and trying to be funny when she made that comment. Or perhaps a different definition of "tourist". Right now she's a tourist who comes to Vegas office and clearly doesn't fit that definition.
Actually, I had enough material to do an article at least four times longer than what I turned in. Fortunately I am known for my ability to be concise! She mentioned another mentor, her boyfriend, who she met at a Vegas poker table. He does not live in Vegas--never has--and he helped her a lot with her game, especially her cash game. So she didn't really mean everyone who doesn't live in Vegas is a bad player!