A Really Crappy Day at The Bike, Part 1
This past Saturday I played at the Bike, in exquisite Bell Gardens, CA. And all the things that bother me when playing there were out in full force, re-enforced by some new things that were unique to this day. But dear reader, I did it all for you—remember that.
For awhile now, I’d been thinking
about giving the “Quantum Reload” tournament they run at the Bike a whirl. You can see the unusual structure here.
You can read my pal (and former fellow Ante Up Ambassador) Dave Palm’s
take on it here. Dave’s write up is a few years old and I
believe the tournament has gone thru a few iterations and changes since then. By the way, the Tournament Director for the
Bike has copyrighted the format and would like to sell it to other poker
rooms. I don’t think anyone else is
running it now, but if I’m wrong, please let me know. You can see him promoting it here.
The key feature is that there are
three different entry points to a single tournament, with three different
buy-in amounts. It’s like a tournament
where you can buy-in for six levels, except that every two levels, the amount
of the buy-in jumps—but so does the chipstack you start with. The add-ons jump too. You can re-enter a subsequent session but not
the same one you busted from. You could enter until the start of level 7 for
$145 (if you took both the add-on and the $5 bonus for the staff), but you’d be
starting with a tournament “M” of exactly 10.
When I first heard of this format, I
didn’t really understand it and just dismissed this as too weird and too
complicated. I mean, I honestly didn’t
quite understand it and the weirdness of it made me not want to try to figure
it out. I figured, just ignore it and
play normal tournaments, or cash.
But every now and then, while at the
Bike, or perhaps working for PokerAtlas or Ante Up, I’d think about it and
wonder if maybe I should give it a look-see one time. They run them daily but the Saturday one—the
one I would most likely play—has a $30K guarantee. For a tournament that has a buy-in as small
as $40 (though obviously, could be more), that’s quite a handsome figure. I started giving it more and more thought.
Another factor I considered was, if I
played, I could almost surely get a blog post out of it. Perhaps a two or three parter about how I had
a huge four-digit cash after 10 hours of poker.
Or, a Robvegaspoker rant about how it is pure evil and should be made illegal
after a five minute bustout. Or more
likely, something in between. Not that
I’m running out of material, mind you.
But if I can come up with something a little different to write about,
while still doing something I enjoy (ie, playing poker), why not try something
new? The price of admission was cheap enough.
I mean, I’m not about to buy my way into the main event of the WSOP at
$10K just to get a different kind of blog post.
But $40 (ok, $75, to be more realistic) seemed reasonable. I could easily pay that to play in a regular
tournament and not be assured of anything to write about if it didn’t go well.
So as this past weekend approached, I
decided to give this Quantum Reload thing a try.
There was a problem. I had an appointment at 10AM Saturday morning
in a part of town that is closer to the Bike than where I live—a considerable
amount closer. The business would be
done by 10:30 or so, but it would make no sense to go back home and then leave
from my house to the Bike an hour or two later to make the tournament’s 2PM
starting time. And I had nothing to do anywhere near either the appointment or
the Bike to kill the time.
Now, I might have decided to hold off
trying the Quantum Reload a one week, right?
Play in it the next Saturday when I could sleep late and get to the Bike
on my own terms at 2PM. But that
wouldn’t work. You see, this Friday, the
WSOP circuit comes to the Bike. All
their regular tournaments are cancelled for a month. So it was this week or wait at least a month
to give this thing a try.
OK, new plan. Head for the Bike immediately after my
business was finished. Play 2-2½ hours of cash before the tournament. That
way I could actually get a free lunch. This
plan was flexible. If the cash game was real juicy and I was doing well, I
could decide to skip the tournament and keep playing cash. If the cash game really sucked, I could leave
as soon as I’d gotten my free lunch and just hang out waiting for the tournament
to start. I knew there was a chance
that, if I played deep into the tournament, this would be a really, really long
day for me but I was willing to take my chances.
So what could go wrong? Short answer: Everything.
I got to the Bike a bit after 11. Once inside, I noticed a few things were
different. Late last year, the Bike
started a major improvement project.
They are building a hotel on the property. Last time I was there, the
only major change had been to close one of the entrances and to move the valet
parking. This time there was a lot of
changes.
The first thing I noticed was that the
gift shop was completely gone. This is
always my first stop because I want to see if they have the new issue of Ante
Up. And usually it’s my last stop as
I’ll pick up a soda for the drive home. It
had disappeared completely, replaced by a construction wall. I looked around to see where they had moved
it. I was sure there was no way they
could not have a little shop like this, selling drinks, candy, snacks,
magazines, newspapers, drugs, poker books and even Bike memorabilia. But I was wrong. I toured the whole friggin’ casino and such a
place no longer existed. I did find
where they had moved to magazine rack to at least, but the new issue of Ante Up
wasn’t there.
I got into a cash game (2/3 NL as
usual, $300 buy-in, the max) and was able to order my lunch almost immediately.
It was while I was eating that the most significant hand of the cash game
occurred. In middle position, I had
pocket Jacks, several limpers. I guess
because I was distracted by my lunch, I didn’t raise enough, only to $15. Should have been at least $20 or $25. Five of us saw a flop of 10-8-5, two clubs (I
didn’t have the Jack of clubs). I bet
$50, one guy called, a player who liked to play a lot of hands but always had
the goods when he showed—usually a crappy starting hand that he got lucky with. The turn was the worst card I could possibly
have seen—the Ace of clubs. Ugh. There
was no so many ways I could be beat.
I checked and the villain went all-in
for about $170. He could have easily
flopped a crummy two pair. He could have
easily played two crummy clubs and caught a flush. I could have easily folded to his bet—and I
did.
It was after I was done with lunch
that I started remembering things that bother me about playing there. I pushed
my food tray out of the way and salvaged the two Diet Cokes and the two bottles
of water the waitress had brought me, and put them on one of the smaller
beverage trays they have (no cup holders at the Bike, you’re not supposed to
keep any drinks on the poker table). The
food servers always bring you a couple of bottles of water with your meal,
whether you ask for them or not. I
sometimes drink the water while there, but usually I take the bottles home with
me (where I actually drink bottled water, and I buy the exact size they give
you at the Bike). I sure don’t feel
guilty about taking those bottles of water to go when I think about the rake at
the Bike (see here).
The guy to my immediate right had been
a total non-entity to this point. He
nursed a short stack the whole day, rarely played a hand. At one point I saw him drinking out of a
bottle of water. I turned to grab a sip
of my soda and noticed one of my bottles of water was gone. My neighbor finished a few gulps of water and
returned the bottle to the tray between us, in the spot where my water had
been. He had just helped himself to my
bottle of water.
Seriously, dude, seriously? Just help yourself to someone else’s drink? I should point that he could have easily
asked a waitress for a bottle of water or two and he could have gotten it for
free. Of course, he might have been felt obligated to tip, which I suppose is
the point. I had tipped my server
generously for my meal and felt that I had tipped her for the water in addition
to everything else.
I recognized the guy who took the seat
to this thief’s right. He was the old
bastard I complained about in this post here,
the guy who stopped playing as soon as he ordered a meal and then never played
a hand even when he was finished eating before picking up. I see him every time I play there.
Based on the conversation they were
having—and the fact that they looked somewhat alike—I began to think that my
water-thief and the old bastard were related. Cousins, brothers, whatever. Maybe not.
But at one point I saw something I don’t think I’ve seen before, and I
wondered if this should have been allowed.
Water thief had posted his $2 small blind and had nothing but four or
five $5 chips left. No one raised, so
water thief needed another buck to complete his bet. Instead of putting in one of his $5 chips, he
asked his neighbor, the old bastard, who had folded, for a dollar chip. And he gave it to him! Is that allowed? It’s only a buck I know, but I don’t think
that’s right. I have seen players throw
small amounts of chips back and forth from time to time, but never have I seen
anyone given a chip while facing a bet that he used to bet with. The dealer said nothing. I was shocked. What do you think? Can this be ok?
Then the old bastard ordered lunch,
and right on cue, just like the time I’ve already written about, he immediately
passed on the blind while waiting for his food.
More aggravation for yours truly.
Why can’t he at least play until they, you know, bring him his
food? But then something interesting
happened. Instead of the standard
“missed big blind” button, the dealer placed a card in front of him that said,
“Missed 1 time.” I wondered if they were
starting to keep track of this and were cracking down?
Perhaps so. Because when he was about to miss the blind
again the next orbit, the dealer turned over the card and it said “Missed 2
times.” I should have asked what that
was all about but didn’t. Maybe they now
had a “three strikes and you’re our rule”? Then, even stranger, the guy
accepted the big blind anyway, and actually played while he was eating his damn
lunch. However, to further irritate me,
he was so involved with his meal that the dealer practically had to pound the
table to get his attention so he would look at his cards and act when it was on
him. Maybe we would have been better off
if he had sat out totally.
But here’s the biggest irony. We were short-handed for a short while,
waiting for new players or walkers to
return. And he complained about it and
demanded that they either reduce the rake even further than their policy
dictates, or he was going to sit out until more players showed. Putz. This
guy is the poster-child for why games at the Bike so often play short-handed.
Pot? Kettle?
Then, the water thief pissed me off
some more by yelling at the dealer for not putting the cards right in front of
him. The dealer was off by about half an
inch. He made such a big deal out of it,
and it was so minor. What a jerk.
There was another older guy at the
other end of the table who twice got sucked out on by the guy who shoved
against my Jacks. One time he had Aces
and the guy called a raise with King-4 and flopped two pair. I don’t remember the other time, but the old
guy just started cussing up a storm, “Can you f***ing believe it? Can you f***ing believe it? Plays that shit, calls a raise with that
shit, and catches it?” Stuff like that. Look, I certainly understand your feelings,
but show a little self control. Act your
age. It was just unpleasant to be around
such negativity.
While playing, I overheard an interesting bit of dialog from the table behind me. I guy stood up and shouted, "Why do they even have Kings in the deck. They should take the damn Kings out! You can't win with pocket Kings." Hey, you're preaching to choir, fella.
While playing, I overheard an interesting bit of dialog from the table behind me. I guy stood up and shouted, "Why do they even have Kings in the deck. They should take the damn Kings out! You can't win with pocket Kings." Hey, you're preaching to choir, fella.
After some totally boring poker, I was
down $90. It was about half hour before
the tournament and I just cashed out. I
honestly couldn’t wait to get away from that table. If I had been committed to playing cash all
day, I would have long ago asked for a table change. But instead, I now had no reason not to play
in the Quantum Reload tournament I’d really come for.
I needed some fresh air to cool off
anyway, so I went out to my car and dropped my one remaining bottle of
water. Didn’t want anyone to steal that
one. Especially since, with no place to
buy a bottle of soda, I probably would need it for the drive home.
The line for the tournament was quite
long. There was a friendly looking older
fellow behind me and I asked if he had played in this tournament before, he
said yes like he plays every week (if not every day). I asked him a whole bunch
of questions about it. Most players
don’t take the add on right away but do so during the first two levels. The bubble doesn’t usually break before 11-12
pm (ugh). It ends around 2-3 in the
morning depending on if or when they make a deal. He knows of one time when it ended at 7:30
Sunday morning. Yikes!
I was having second thoughts about possibly
playing so long, but stayed in line and got my entry. The line had moved so slowly that by the time
I got my receipt it was damn near the 2PM starting time. When I had scoped out this latest version of
the Bike I noticed that the tournament was being held in the less preferred
area. They have an “Event Center” where
they usually have them on the other side of the casino. But it was closed. I suspect they were gussying it up for the
circuit event that started in less than a week.
So they had it on the other side of
the casino in an area that’s not as nice.
Also, I was surprised and disappointed that they didn’t have a snack bar
in the area. They usually have a little
snack bar in the tournament area (wherever they have them). I was sort of counting on that because I was
gonna need some dinner if I lasted long enough. Also surprising not to have one there because
you couldn’t even buy some junky snacks at the gift shop right now! Now my options
were limited to ordering food service at the poker table (not something I like
to do in a tournament setting) or hitting the little deli they have—which is
located right next to the Event Center far away from this current tournament
area. Another option? Bust out early and eat at home. Note: If you
looked at the structure sheet, you see they have a 20 minute break after level
6, enough time for a really fast dinner if you eat fast (and I do) and if you
can get the food quickly (unknown).
If they had the snack bar I would have
been able to walk up to it and get a soda.
Now I had to try to flag down a server (whose main job is to bring food)
and ask for one. Figuring that might
take some time (the tournament area was packed), I got some water out of one of
the several water coolers they have in the area (they also have self serve
coffee available, but as a soda drinker, I’m screwed).
There happened to be one of those
drink trays right between my seat and the fellow on my right. There was an empty cup in the tray’s cup
holder farthest from me but the one near me was empty. I put my cup in the empty slot and got up to
try to find a structure sheet. When I
returned and went to reach for my water, the damn tray—with my water—was
gone! Yeah, for the second time in the
day, someone had stolen my water. In
this case, I think it was more that someone wanted the tray and assumed because
one of the cups was empty, the other one—which was full to the top with
water—wasn’t needed either.
Unbelievable.
Just then, a waitress brought a bottle
of water to the guy to my right that he ordered….and charged him $1 for
it! Seriously? Last time I played in a tournament—or played
a cash game smaller than 2/3 where they
charge for food—it was free, just like the soda. WTF? Anyway, I asked the server for a soda and
wondered if I would get charged a buck—or more—for it. But when she brought it, she didn’t charge
me. So they charge a buck for a bottle
of water but the soda is free? Now
that’s just plain weird. Anyway, the waitress
had rounded up another tray that the guy next to me and I could share.
I wasn’t sure if I was gonna take the
add-on right away or wait (I did take the $5 dealer bonus for $1K in
chips). I remembered something MOJO said in a comment on one of my old
posts. In that situation, he sees what other folks are doing. If they take the add-on right away, he takes
it too. Otherwise, he waits. I didn’t
see anyone at my table take the add-one right away, So I didn’t either, which
turned out to be a good decision, for reasons that I couldn’t have imagined at
the time.
Early in the first level I raised with
to $350 with King-Jack of hearts. Two players
called. The flop was Queen-10-x,
rainbow, and a guy donked out $1K. I
called, it was heads up. A brick on the
turn but it was the second club. We both
checked. The Ace of clubs gave me the
nut straight but there were now three clubs on the board. He led out for $1,800. This guy had been pretty active already even
though it was early and I couldn’t put him on a runner-runner flush. I made it $4K and he folded.
I lost a few chips calling small
raises on the flop and turn chasing a flush when I had Queen-4 of diamonds in
the small blind. And won some chips when
my pocket Queens held against a guy chasing a straight. Also when I rivered a wheel with Jack-4 off
in the big blind.
And I’ll leave part 1 there, as the
things were about to go from bad to worse in a very personal way. Part 2 can be found here, it’s not for squeamish.
In the meantime, let me explain the pic above. The title of this chapter is of course based
on the old TV show, Quantum Leap. I figured I’d find a pic from the show, with
star Scott Bakula and some (in)appropriately dressed female guest star. But I had a helluva time finding anything
close to what I was looking for. The
best I could come up with this shot of a pre-Friends Jennifer Anniston guest
starring with Bakula on the show. If you
ask me, the wrong one of them has their shirt off.
D---- borderline F. but Jenn looks sooooooo cute in that sweater. didnt think she had those big ole tttays. i would save that water too. DROUGHT BIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIITCHES!!!!!!! plus the CRV too. also here is an idea change the title from " crappy whatever" to "girls pouring water over their big hooters and Bike casino sucked today"
ReplyDeleteBorderline F? I'm crushed. I mean you said Jenn looks soooooo cute AND she has big ole tittays, that's gotta be better than D. Yeesh.
DeleteI remember reading when Friends starting that Jenn had to lose a bunch of weight in order to get better roles. I guess this must have been before she ditched the Taco Bell, Mountain Dew and Deep Fried Oreos.
tru ,sir Jenn looks great but the dude is topless .now if the dude was wear a shirt/gown then solid C
DeleteLooks like two Ds to me....
Delete@anger: The thing is, I found him with Jen not having his shirt off. I went with the bare-chested version of him so I could make the joke about the wrong one being bare-chested. Is a man's chest really that nightmarish for you?
Delete@Greg Double Di's???
not nitemarish, sir. i understand . u have female and Mets Fans to cater too.
DeleteThis particular episode of Quantum Leap was very good, for those of you who actually watched the show.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tip NerveEnding. Do you remember seeing star potential in Jennifer?
Delete"thx 4 the tip"????????? ok i get the pic, now
Deletei am thinking a guest post with the Trooper is coming in the future
ReplyDeleteI was kind of thinking the same thing. Seems logical.
DeleteI LIKE IT !!!!!!!!! bcuz i wont here an bs excuses about no Boobies pic. i am sure there a hot chicks wearing storm trooper helmets or Iron Maiden t-shirts
DeleteHmm...the Storm Trooper Slut Parade.....
DeleteDespite all the kidding I have given you the past few years regarding the length of your posts, I will say that this post, albeit lengthy, was one of your best. Please DO NOT sell out and post boobie pictures just to satisfy the lower rung of your readers.
ReplyDeleteJust said this to see if angerisagift would die from thinking you might never post boobie pictures again!
911: caller , what is yr emergency?
Deleteme: i think i am having a heart attack or something bcuz Rob (i am sure u read his blog/articles in Ante Up mag . it is to poker publication. what Beaver Hunt is to adult magazines) has started posting male dudes instead of hot chicks on his blog.
911: i understand, sir. just KCCO . help is on the way
me: ty. u have a sexy voice. do u partake in the MJ?? or like bacon?
911: ty but we cant partake in that but i love bacon and oveweight( ok ok obese) stoners that like the Raiders,Mtn Dew,firearms,str8 to video movies with from A list actors and sheeeeeeeit
me: really??
911: no, this is yr roomies wife. u cockdialed me. just remember to put out the fire in the firepit and take out the garbage bcuz thurs in garbage pick up
@Lighning, thanks very much for the kudos. Now, I hate to tell you this but part 2 is actually a little bit longer! And a certain commenter will be happy to learn that there is a boobie pic in it. Speaking of...
Delete@anger: Wow, your comment is almost as long as some of my posts! Very funny tho! Come back tonite for boobies!
@rob u r starting to influence me LOL that is y i am concerned about the pics, u see. i dont want to start watching Brokeback mtn or the rape scene from American History X on a loop
DeleteI've never read so much play-by-play about drinks... :) Going straight to Part II - brother said he was laughing non-stop reading it...
ReplyDeleteha ha...glad your brother liked it!
Delete