I was
interested in the tournament series for a couple of reasons. I did like the structure and the guarantees,
and the fact that you could win a seat in the $40K guaranteed Sunday event on
Friday (or Saturday). I also kind of
missed the M Resort. You see, back in my
2/4 days, I played there a lot. It’s a
nice room, the dealers and staff are all friendly and quite good, and as I said
in this post, the waitresses are all super
hot.
But in the
past year or so, I’ve hardly ever played there.
The room was definitely always more of a limit house (2/4 and 4/8) than
a NL house. As I started switching to
NL, I noticed that a NL game was a rarer and rarer thing to see there. Plus I’ve always preferred playing NL on the
Strip rather than a locals place, I want those tourist fish (it’s not as
important in 2/4, plus if you play 2/4 in a locals place, there’s always good
promos and jackpots to play for). And
then, just as I was making the switch, for reasons that aren’t at all clear to
me, the room starting losing business like crazy. In my last days of 2/4, I would sometimes go
over there in what used to be prime time for the room and see zero games going.
Even back in
my 2/4 days, I frequently found myself playing in their 6 PM tournament, and
even cashed once when they were running a 2PM tournament with a guarantee (see here). So
I really thought it would be nice to return there and play there for the first
time in a while. And I figured the
tournament event would bring out a big crowd, which would be fun. Nothing’s more depressing than to visit a
room that used to be super-busy and see it quiet as a morgue.
So on this
particular Friday I got there around 1PM.
Plenty of time, I thought, to register for the 2PM, Aside from some cameras set up to take
pictures (and perhaps video) of the event, things looked fairly normal when I
got there. There were just two cash
games going in the 14 table room, but that was busy for them based on the last
few times I was there at that time of day.
There were a
few more people than normal milling around the podium as I went over to sign
up. Before I got to the front, I
overheard one of the two women manning the podium (or should that be,
“womanning” the podium) tell another player that the tournament was sold out
and there was a long alternate list.
Huh? This room had been very quiet for a long
time. I thought there was a chance they
might sell out during the early levels, but the thought they’d already be full
by the time I got there—one hour early—never occurred to me. Damn, I thought, I shouldn’t have mentioned
the event in my Ante Up column, surely that was what caused the huge popularity
of this event!
One of those
two women up front recognized me, if not by name. We’ll call her Jessica, since that’s not her
real name. Jessica used to be a dealer
in the room but the last few times I’d been there I had noticed she was
working as a floor person. In fact last time I was in there, I chatted
with her and she told me she was mostly working floor now. Jessica is one of the really nice people I’ve
met in the Vegas poker world, and, as a bonus, she is extremely easy on the
eyes.
She asked if
I had already signed up and I told her no.
They had been taking registration in the room for at least a week and
they had actually sold out the day before.
Damn. I had been in town for a
week by now and could have easily swung by earlier to sign up. I just had no idea it would be this popular.
Jessica told
me that all 14 tables were full. They
even were planning on breaking the two cash games going on so they could have
as many players in the tournament as possible.
Wow. I’d never seen a poker room
break a cash game for a tournament before.
And then she told me that there were 91 players already on the alternate
list.
Ninety one?
Yes, 91. Just then, my fellow blogger –S came by and said hi. He is now the swing shift supervisor there
(used to work graveyard when I played the room regularly) and thus was super
busy himself. He asked if I was
registered, and I said no. He said I
should register for the Saturday tournament before it too sold out. Then he took off to do some work.
Jessica asked
if I wanted to register for Saturday, seats were going fast as her colleague
had just told me. I really hadn’t
planned on playing in a $225 tournament.
But I got swept up in the moment.
I realized I wasn’t going to play there this day, so I might as well get
it on it tomorrow. The thought of playing
in such a full, busy room that I had spent a lot of time in earlier appealed to
me. I saw a lot of dealers that I
recognized and had mostly good memories about (including Jessica, of course). I had come to Vegas with the intention of playing
at this tournament, and it looked like playing the next day in the $225 event
was going to be my only chance (unless I wanted to pay $335 to play in the
Sunday tournament, and I did not).
And besides,
when Jessica flashes her smile at me, it’s really hard to say no.
What the
hell. I dug into my wallet and gave her
my $225 for the tournament the next day.
That resolved, she then asked me if I wanted to get on the alternate
list for today’s tournament. They would
let alternates in for the first 90 minutes (plus the 10 minute break).
I said, “Oh,
I’ll never get in. There’s 91 people in
front of me.”
She replied,
“You could still get in. There could be
a lot of donkeys playing. We’re seating
alternates for the first three levels.”
I knew that I
was gonna hang around for awhile anyway, even if I wasn’t playing, just to soak
up the atmosphere and possibly have something to write about in my next Ante Up
column. And they weren’t accepting money
from the alternates until you actually got called for a seat. So it didn’t really hurt to get on the
list. So I became alternate #92.
And so I just
hung around for awhile and watched everyone work like crazy as they got ready
for the tournament. I was able to chat
off and on with –S as he went from one thing to another as they were setting
up. And of course I took credit for the
huge tournament, because of the Ante Up mention. He did point out that HPO took
out huge ads in all the poker magazines, including Ante Up, promoting the
event. Still, just between you and me, I
think it was my column.
I nodded hi
to the dealers that recognized me, and also saw a few regs I recognized. One guy I recognized was the player who
crippled me at the Red Rock/Ante Up tournament a couple of nights earlier—the
guy who busted out to my Aces, rebought, and then had AA to my JJ (see here). He
recognized me too and I asked how he ended up in that tournament.
I don’t
recall whether or not he said he cashed, but he did tell me a bad beat story
about how a guy who called his raise with garbage, hit his hand, and busted him
out.
Oddly enough,
I had zero sympathy for him.
Anyway, I
hung around as the tournament started. I
sat in the nearby sports book, or wandering around, occasionally chatting with
–S when he had a moment. I must admit
there is something exciting to me in being in a poker room this busy. All 14 tables going, the chatter, the chips clicking.
I was actually enjoying just being there.
And it didn’t take long for people to start busting out. The levels were 30 minutes, the starting
stacks were 10K (but the blinds started at 50/100). Soon it seem like a couple of minutes couldn’t go by without hearing a dealer cry
out, “seat open!”
But my name
was far down on the list, so they weren’t close to calling my name. After about a level and a half, I stood by
the podium for a bit. I didn’t dare
bother them to ask how far down thru the list they’d gotten, but I noticed
that, as time went on, a higher and higher percentage of names called didn’t
show up, having given up. There was enough turn over for me to start thinking I
might actually get called as an alternate.
Which left me
with another decision to make. Getting
in during the first two levels wouldn’t have been too bad. But antes started on the third level, making
that 10K starting a short stack (an “M” of just over 10). So, once the second level ended, I really
shouldn’t have considered taking a seat if they called me now. I stayed around just to see, out of curiosity,
if they would get to my name before the late entry period ended.
During that
third level though, as it appeared more and more likely I wasn’t going to get
called anyway, I started wavering. I
guess I was kind of excited by all the poker going on in this room that had
been so quiet lately. And a thought
flashed before….wouldn’t it be really cool if entered late, worked a short
stack strategy well, got a few breaks, and ended up cashing in this thing, even
winning a seat in the Sunday tournament?
Not only would be that be sweet in and of itself, but it would make for
a hell of a blog post.
I also
realized what a long shot that was. So,
honestly, during the third level, as I waited, I changed my mind basically
every minute about whether to enter the tournament if I was called. And then,
with about 10 minutes left, just as it was becoming clear to me I wasn’t going
to get called, I heard Jessica call a bunch of names—at least five—the last of
which was mine.
As I said, I
was going back in forth in my mind every minute, and I swear, if my name had
been called a minute earlier or a minute later, I would have passed. But at this particular instant, I decided to
play in the tournament, coming in very late in the 3rd level, short
stacked.
I quickly paid
my entry fee and was sent to the very back of the room, further delaying my
poker playing for the day. Then when I
took my seat, I was in the seat of the small blind, so I had to wait a hand to
play. Then when that hand was completed,
they changed the dealers, and then a player at the table made a big issue about
where the button should be, so they had to call the previous dealer over, and
at least a three minute discussion took place before they agreed the button was
in the right place all along. Which
meant I was denied the opportunity to play maybe 2-3 hands at those blind
levels. As if getting in that late wasn’t
bad enough! There was actually one hand
dealt to me before the break, I folded garbage, and thus, I had played exactly
one hand of poker and we were about
start the 4th level, where the blinds were 50/300/600 and I had 10K
in chips (less $25 for the one ante I’d put in). Not a good position.
After the
break, our table played exactly one more hand when they broke it. Seriously, ten players must have busted out
on the first hand in order for that to have happened! More bad luck for me, now a few more minutes
wasted, not playing, while getting situated at my new table, which was as far
from the first table as possible.
So a few
hands later at the new table, a guy with a few less chips to me shoved. I had King-Jack of hearts and thought I was
in desperate enough position to shove too.
I was hoping that in his position, he was shoving light. I was right.
He had Ace-9. I had 6 outs, plus
the heart draw. I lucked out and caught
a King, and got almost a double up.
That almost
gave me enough chips to actually play poker with. One more nice chip up would have been really
helpful. But I had time to wait a little.
I finally limped with pocket 6’s and when a short stack shoved, I
thought it was likely a desperation move so I shoved too to isolate. We were heads up but he had Ace-Jack and
caught a Jack. Damn.
Now I was
truly in shove or fold mold, and before the big blind came to me, I caught two
Jacks so of course I shoved. Ace-Queen
called me and hit his Ace. My tournament
lasted less than 90 minutes.
The good news
was that busting out there gave me enough time to have dinner and still make it
to the Venetian Survivor tournament at 7PM.
Of course, that tournament resulted in this post here and the two that followed it. There wasn’t much poker to talk about from that
tournament, it was all bad for me, but the last hand was particular
disgusting. First hand after the first
break, in desperate shape, I looked at two Jacks in late position. A guy with just a few more chips than I had
shoved, but for me there, it was an easy shove back. He had Ace Queen, and I was happy that I wasn’t
behind a bigger pocket pair.
Flop was
8-3-2, and I was pretty happy. The turn was
a four, which made me happy at first. Then
I realized he only needed a 5 to make a wheel.
So of course, that’s exactly what hit on the river, and I was done.
So it was
back to the M the next afternoon, and sadly, I didn’t play poker much longer on
this day than I had the day before. I
was totally card dead, and my efforts to steal chips met with very rare
success. Right before the break, I was
getting pretty close to desperate when I found Ace-King of clubs in late
position. Someone in early position made
a standard raise, another person called, so I shove. Small blind thinks a long, long time. His stack is about the same as mind. He finally calls. The others fold and we flip our cards. He has Ace-King, offsuit. Looks like a chop.
Except that
the flop had 2 clubs. One more and I’d
have a nice double up. Alas, no club hit
on the turn or the river, and I went to break just a few more chips than I had
before the hand.
Unlike the
day before, despite a pretty long alternate list, they actually run out of
alternates before the break. I guess
there was about 10 minutes left to go in the re-entry period. We heard Jessica announce over the
loudspeaker, “Attention players, we have run out of alternates, so if you do
bust out before the break, you can get back in right away. Remember, there’s no shame in re-entering.” We all got a nice chuckle out of that. It seemed everyone at the table knew Jessica
and knew what a doll she is.
First hand
after the break, I had pocket 10’s in the big blind. A guy in early position, with a few more
chips than I had, raised. Folded to
me. Easy shove for me there with my
stack. He takes a moment or two to call.
He has
Ace-King. I was satisfied with that, it
was a race, I was ahead. Very low flop,
good for me. 10 of diamonds on the
turn. Awesome, hit my set. Blank on the river. Yippee!
But
wait. I hadn’t noticed something. His AK was suited, diamonds. Two diamonds on the flop. So the card that gave me the set gave him the
nut flush. And thus my two day return to
M Resort had come to an abrupt end.
I looked
around for –S but he was in the back.
Jessica was there however, and not busy at the moment. I told her my tale of woe on the last hand,
and she seemed sympathetic. And then I
told her it was good to see her again, and she returned the favor. Truth is, despite the very bad run there, it
was nice to play at M again, and I hope they can get their room hopping
again. I seem to have a soft spot for
it.
I am surprised you entered the tournament so late. That seemed like an un-Rob-like move. If you are that desperate for a blog post perhaps you should do a ten part professional gambler interview with TBC. : o )
ReplyDeleteYes, Lightning, it was very un-Rob-like. Maybe I've become a poker degenerate?
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