I visited the
venue twice during its run, and got the “business” portion of things
accomplished on the first day, a Monday.
That included meeting one of the publishers of the magazine, Scott Long.
Scott was sponsoring the event, covering it for Ante Up, and playing in many of
the events. A triple threat! Most of our business took place while he was
playing in the 3:00PM tournament—which he cashed in, I might add. I sat behind him and we talked. Very nice
guy.
The business
details aren’t relatable, but I did want to mention the dealer who was at Scott’s
table for most of the time I was there.
He looked awfully familiar. But I
was mostly sitting behind him and didn’t get a good look at him. He turned his head to look at me, and I
thought there was some recognition in his eyes.
I eventually
figured out who he looked like. Yes, it
was a character I’ve blogged about—twice, in fact, and once very recently (see here).
It was the “Italian Guy” I spoke of in that post and also originally
mentioned here. My first encounter with was a bit unpleasant,
but he seemed like a nice guy when I played with him at Aria in December. I was surprised to see him dealing.
I actually
had a chance to talk to him later when he was on a break, I just wanted to be
sure it was the same guy. I confirmed
it, he remembered me from the Aria and he definitely knew Stump (jeez, lately Stump’s been getting a lot more mention on my blog than his
own). I asked him if he regularly dealt
at Red Rock. Nope, in fact, he’s not a
regular dealer at all. He said he was a
professional grinder and was only dealing for this special event. I know poker rooms bring in outside help when
they have these special events, but I figured there were enough unemployed and
underemployed dealers around town that they didn’t have to tap non-dealers for
help. Guess not. The fact that Red Rock brought in non-dealers
to deal plays a big part later in this post.
But although I wasn’t paying that much attention since I wasn’t in the
tournament, from what I could recall, Italian Guy performed his dealer duties
flawlessly.
Anyway, Italian
Guy really seemed like a nice guy, and we had a very pleasant chat. If he remembered our less pleasant meeting at
the Orleans tournament, he sure didn’t bring it up; nor did I. I guess I caught him on a bad night that
first time. Getting lucky with an all-in
call with King-10 will do that to a guy, I suppose.
I didn’t play
one of their special event tournaments that night, but returned two nights
later to play in the 6PM tournament. To
be honest, I was less than thrilled with the structure the tournaments for this
event. I can say this because Ante Up
really had nothing to do with the structures, it was all on Red Rock. Some of the tournaments in the Ante Up tour
are run by the magazine, others they do little more than lend their name to and
promote, and some are in the middle.
This one was completely Red Rock run.
But I wanted
to make sure I played in at least one event there, and the $100 tournament this
night seemed the best bet. Although
previous 6PM events at the same price had been better attended, this one only
had 23 runners. I went with my newly
acquired “chip up big early or bust out early” strategy, even though this was
hardly a deep stack event (7K in starting chips, 20 minute levels). I chipped up some early with pocket Jacks. Got a couple of callers with my preflop raise
and nobody called my flop bet.
Very next
hand, I had Ace-9 clubs, in late position, limped to me. I decided to raise there and see if I could
steal the limpers money. Nope, I got a
few callers. The flop missed me
completely, but it folded to me and I made a continuation bet. No one called. Nice.
That set up a
nice situation not too much later. I got
a couple of Aces and one guy called my preflop raise. I don’t remember the board, but I didn’t
catch my set, nor did it look too scary for my hand. I bet the flop, the turn and the river and
got called every time. The last time the
guy said to me, “I’m calling, I just want to see your hand. You didn’t have to show before, so I want to
see your hand.”
Is it always
that easy? I showed my rockets and he
mucked without showing, repeating that he just wanted to see my hand. And then I said, “I had Aces those other
times too. I only play Aces.” Surprisingly, no one believed me. Not long after, the same guy busted out, but
it was within the re-entry period and he re-entered and took the exact same
seat he’d busted out of. Keep this guy
in mind.
Soon, one of
the more unusual things I’ve seen in a tournament occurred. I mentioned I wasn’t thrilled with the
structure. One of the reasons was, the
antes started with the second level.
Yeah, the second level. I’d never
seen that before. I knew this from when
they sent me the details of the tournament (for my job with AVP).
So when the second level started and the dealer didn’t request antes, I
was a little confused.
A couple of
things here. There were actually three
tournaments going on at once in the tournament room. The 12PM and the 3PM tournaments were still
going on when the 6PM started. So the
tournament director and floor people were spread kind of thin. Our tournament clock was a tiny hand timer
that one of the two dealers for our tournament had. The dealer had a little sheet in front of him
to tell him what the antes were, and it was obvious he didn’t know this from
having dealt this tournament before. He
was clearly one of the non-dealers (or part time dealers) who was bought in
just for this week long event. He didn’t
make any dealing mistakes, but he looked confused as he was calling for the
blinds to be increased. He tried to find
someone to ask about the blinds but there was no one around when it was time to
increase them, so he just kind of winged it.
He asked for
the proper blinds but didn’t say anything about the antes. I know I should have said something. The structure sheet, which I had folded up in
my pocket, indicated that there should be antes now, as odd and as odorous as
that seemed. But I suddenly flashed back
to high school. Saying something about
the antes would make me feel like that guy who reminds the teacher that she
hadn’t given the class homework yet. So
I said nothing. I tried to see the other
table and see if they were collecting antes, but could never look at the right
time.
But somewhere
along the line, the dealer figured out there were antes. I have no idea how he
figured it out, and he didn’t do anything about it until the third level
though. When the third level started, he
referred again to the sheet in front of him and said that he had made an error,
and he should have been asking for $25 antes all through that level. Too late to do anything about it, but now
there were $50 antes for this level.
It seemed to
me he should have told somebody in authority about his goof, but he did
not. But now he was asking us for $50
antes before each hand. There was some
grumbling about that but no one really said anything.
About ¾’s of
the way through the level, a floor person finally came by and noticed that we
were putting antes in. There was some
discussion, the tournament director was called over, and the dealer was
informed that there were no antes at this level.Huh?
The
tournament director advised the entire table that there was an error and he was
extremely apologetic. Apparently, after
the first day of the series, they had so many complaints about the antes
starting at the second level, they changed the structure for the rest of the
event. So there were no antes until the
4th level (pretty normal, of course). He took the blame himself for not making sure
all the dealers were advised.
That’s fine,
but I still blame the dealer, who was likely not a regular dealer. The moment he notice his “error”, he should
have called someone over and explained.
In other words, he should have told the floor that he had erroneously
failed to collect antes through level 2, so that the floor could decide what,
if anything, could be done about that. Had
he done that, he would have been informed that his error wasn’t really an error
at all, that the sheet he had in front of him was wrong, and that the antes
didn’t start until the 4th level.
And no harm would have been done, and no error would have been made.
Instead, we
had played most of a level paying antes that should not have been paid. Meanwhile, the tournament director said there
was nothing to do but apologize, he understood that the erroneous antes may
have affected chip counts but there was no way to go back and correct the
mistake. There was a lot of grumbling
now. The guy next to me said he even saw
a sign at the front, where you pay to enter, that the antes started at the 4th
level, not the 2nd. Why he
didn’t say anything, I don’t know.
The reality
is, at that level, and with the antes only $50, it may not have affected
anything. But how can you know for sure? It’s possible those antes in a pot might have
changed someone’s action preflop.
Someone might have tried to steal when they wouldn’t without the
antes. Or resisted a steal when they
wouldn’t have otherwise. And who’s to
say that someone with some extra money from a pot they would have won either
way wouldn’t affect things down the road?
You know, the blinds at that level were 100/200, so the $50 was a pretty
significant percentage of the pot, preflop.
It indeed could have affected things.
I was kind of
shocked that something like this could happen, but you know, I try to look on
the bright side at times like these. I
have something to blog about!
A few minutes
later, some dealers came around and handed out Red Rock Challenge/Ante Up Poker
Tour t-shirts. I thought they were
giving these to everyone in the tournament, but no, it was just our table. It was apparently a make-up to us for the
ante error.
The trouble
is, even though the antes were only erroneously charged at our table, the other
table was certainly affected. Even if no
hand would have played out differently at our table, the chip amounts we all
had were affected. Again, that different
chip count as the tournament progress could have totally changed the complexion
of the tournament, could have totally changed who won, who cashed, who busted
out when. But we’ll never know.
Back to the
tournament. I was doing pretty good
until I got pocket Jacks again. I made a
decent raise and it folded to the guy who had busted out earlier and
re-entered. You know, the guy who paid
to see my Aces. He acted hesitant at
first, then said, “OK, I’ll go,” and shoved.
He was short stacked and it didn’t cost me much more to call so I
did. He was Hollywooding. He flipped over two Aces. I would have called even without the
act. I didn’t catch a miracle and
suddenly I was crippled.
After the
break—and I’ll get to the break in a minute—I was now in desperation mode. An older gentleman raised, and the guy who
had crippled me shoved. I was in the
small blind with pocket 7’s. I suppose I
should have folded, but in my situation, desperate for a double up, I decided
to gamble. I would be out soon enough if
I didn’t hit something soon. The first
guy folded (Ace Queen, he told us later) and the shover had Ace-King. I was happy with that, I figured he had high
cards, so I was ahead. But of course he
caught a King and my tournament was over.
In my car
onto the next stop, I wasn’t thinking about the tournament too much. Well, the whole ante fiasco some, but mostly
I was thinking about the bathrooms.
Yeah, the bathrooms.
Before the
break, I heard some guys talking about them.
I should point out that this tournament series was held in an unusual
venue. It was not in the Red Rock poker
room. Instead, they used a nightclub
that apparently had closed. The club is
called the Cherry Nightclub. They had to
bring a ton of extra lighting so you could play poker in there.
Anyway,
someone called the restrooms inside the club “see-through bathrooms,” I couldn’t quite figure out what he meant,
but during the break, I found out. I
went over to the where the bathrooms were, a single entry way that led to two
rooms. The first thing I noticed was
that it was very difficult to figure out which room was which. I stood there for a few seconds, and finally,
very low, not at sight level as you’d expect, were two not very prominent
letters, “W” and “M”. Ok, took me a
second but I got that.
The Men's room
was unlikely anything I’d ever seen. First,
there were the urinals, which, as you can see from the pictures below that I
got off the internet, they are shaped and decorated to look like, well, a woman’s
mouth. A
woman’s mouth covered with bright red lipstick.
Yeah.
Also, I now
understood what was meant by “see-through bathrooms.” There was glass, and I guess mirrors, all
around. When I was using the urinals, I
could see out into the nightclub. Could people see in from outside while I was
relieving myself? I can’t tell you for
certain they could not. Also note that,
unlike most Men's rooms, there are no dividers between the urinals.
But by far
the most interesting things about the restroom were the stalls. You know, where you would go if you had to
sit, not stand.
Both stalls
were surrounded completely by glass.
Totally see-through glass. There
was no privacy whatsoever. If a guy goes
in there, drops trou and has to squeeze one out, he is completely exposed to
anyone in the Mens room (at least).
Seriously, anyone and everyone could see you doing your business. For that matter, they could see your business.
While I was in
there, guys were going into the stalls, but only to urinate, so their backs
were too us. But as one guy said, “I’d
hate to have to take a shit in this place.”
Indeed.
Then someone
pointed out that you could see the glass enclosed thrones in the Ladies room
from outside, as you were walking into the Mens room. I hadn’t noticed. But I had to check it out.
There were no
women around. I don’t think there was a
single female playing in any of the tournaments that night. I could tell the Ladies room was empty. I exited and turned around and walked back
toward the two rest rooms. Sure enough,
without any effort whatsoever, as I was seeing the “M” and “W” signs, I could
very clearly see at least one of the glass enclosed thrones of the Ladies
room. If a gal was using it, if she was
just sitting down to pee, any guy walking into the Mens room that moment would
see her on the toilet. And if she went
in there for a wardrobe adjustment, forget it!
And again I point out, with the poor signage; it would be real easy to
enter the wrong rest room, not that you’d need to see a show.
Now, I’ve
talked about bathrooms before (see here).
But what this sorta reminded me off is the exhibitionist bathrooms at the
Rio. In their guest rooms, there’s a
little window in the shower, so that the person showering can look out into the
bedroom, and someone in the bedroom can look into the shower.
I suppose
that’s fine for a couple but the first time I encountered it, my buddy Norm and
I were sharing it, and it was a little disconcerting. He was in Vegas on a business trip, and since
he had a free room, I joined him on vacation.
Trust me, neither one of us had any interest in watching the other one
showering.
But these
Cherry Nightclub restrooms were way, way beyond that. These were public restrooms. Very, very public. Pubic too, now that I think of it.
Definitely exhibitionist
bathrooms.
I left
thinking the erroneous antes were a pisser. And that I had pissed into….well, you
know.
(Note, speaking of Ante Up, Scott talked about me in a recent Ante Up pokercast. Since I'm telling you about, he must have said good things. You can go here to hear it. Scroll down to the 1/24/13 episode titled :"Ante Up Poker Tour at Red Rock.:" He starts talking about me at around 52 minutes in. A little bit before, he talks about the Cherry restrooms, has a bit different take on them).
my title is Las Vegas Ambassador, although I do not have diplomatic immunity.
ReplyDeleteSo, you can't murder anybody and get away with it?
I was really thinking more like parking tickets, MOJO, but.....ok.
DeleteI haven't seen those restrooms, but I have seen others like you're describing. In them, although it LOOKS like what you described would happen, the glass is actually polarized or something, and when you shut or lock the door, the glass turns from transparent to opaque, so you get your usual privacy. It's the designers messing with you, making you think you won't.
ReplyDeleteBut who knows--maybe Red Rock really went all the way with plain glass.
Thanks, Grump. You know, I saw guys in those stalls, with their backs to us, urinating in the bowls, and I could clearly see their backs. However, I suppose they didn't close the door completely, and maybe that would make a difference.
DeleteOTOH, maybe the Ladies stalls were as you say, even if the men's wasn't. But then.....well, when I peaked in the Ladies room, the door seemed to be completely closed and I could easily see the toilet. Unless there's a sensor that could tell that there was actually someone in there.....I don't know.
No diplomatic immunity? I suppose they did not even give you license to kill either.
ReplyDeleteNeo, I'd settle for a license to win a hand with pocket kings....
DeletePolarizing glass. Electrical current.
ReplyDeletehttp://youtu.be/fFm-tE1osK0
Thanks, WillYum, I suppose you've got it. I saw guys in there, but they probably hadn't locked the door.
DeleteI guess the word gets out, so people know to lock it.
Cool.
Still, the lip-shaped urinals are pretty kinky.