I had pocket
Aces in early position. I raised to
$10. Then there was a long delay as the
next player to act noticed that one of his two cards was ripped. A player after him—a regular in the room who’ve
I’ve played with a ton of times—questioned whether the entire hand should be
declared dead and the hand redealt. His
argument was that one of the other players might have known about the ripped
card and been able to identify it. The
dealer said no, the card was in play and would be replaced after this hand, but
there was enough question (not sure if it was from the player who had the card
or the player who first questioned it) that they called the floor over. So with my $10 sitting out there, action was
held up while the floor ruled.
The ruling
was exactly what the dealer said, that the hand was live and to continue. Two people called my raise, one was a fairly
new player who was quite chatty and could be called a “character” and the other
was a woman who was a good player who had been running incredibly hot, and was
up like $600. The new player hadn’t made
any kind of impression on me as a player, but he was definitely in love with
the sound of his own voice.
The flop came
Jack-5-3 rainbow, a pretty good flop for my Aces. I bet out $20 and the new guy hesitated a
bit, thinking it over. Finally he
shrugged his shoulders and said, “The math works” and called. The woman folded.
The turn was
a 6 matching one of the suits already on the board. I bet out $40 and this time the guy shoved.
He had me
covered. After my $40 bet I had about
$70-$80 more, and his shove was about $20-$30 more than I had.
With his
comment before he called on the flop, and this move, he was selling the story
that he had a draw and the turn hit it.
Hmm. I suppose he could have been slowplaying a
set (two pair unlikely; he was in the cut-off seat) but it seemed like he
wanted me to believe he had completed a straight.
Of course,
the only way that 6 made him a straight was if he had played the mighty deuce-four, also known as the “Grump,”
also known as “the most powerful hand in poker.” I now had to consider whether this clown was
smart enough to have known about the power of the deuce-four. Had he really called my preflop raise with
deuce-four? Was he that good, was he
that smart?
I came close
to folding, thinking that I didn’t want to fall victim to this powerful hand
with my puny pocket Aces.
Then I thought
some more. I starting thinking about his
comment when he called me on the flop, after much hesitation, “The math works.”
He was trying
to plant the thought in my head that he had a draw. The six on the turn was perfect for his
plan.
I said to
him, “You played deuce-four?”
He smiled,
which I didn’t know how to interpret.
I decided it
was much more likely that he was full of crap than that he had the straight.
I
called. The river was a 10 which didn’t
put a third flush card out there.
As I’m
writing this, I realize I then screwed up.
Since I called his shove, I should have insisted that he show his hand
first, but before I knew it, I showed my Aces and he looked at them for a
second and mucked his cards without showing his bluff.
Oh well, the
important thing was that I called and won a nice pot. I caught his bluff and had figured out he
wasn’t good enough to play the mighty deuce-four.
When I left
the table awhile later, I starting talking to Lightning in the poker room. He had just gotten
into town and it was my turn to use my comps for our dinner. While talking to him, the player who had
initially questioned whether the hand should be declared dead came over to
apologize for almost screwing up my big hand.
No problem, I told him. We briefly
discussed his thought process. It was
all good.
Earlier, while
Lightning and I were waiting to be seated at Wolfgang Puck’s, we saw one of those
incidents that seem custom made for this here blog.
A girl in a
tight red dress left the restaurant, ahead of a gaggle of girls who were
apparently in Vegas for a bachelorette party (based on the fact that one of the
gals was wearing a sash that said “bachelorette”). The girl in the red dress had huge tits. I know my readers will be shocked that I
noticed this, but somehow, I did. I don’t
really recall how much cleavage was exposed, but the gal’s chest answered the
question, “Why is ‘rack’ a slang term for a woman’s bosom?” It really looked like a rack and it extended
far away from her body. I think she
could have hit someone in the poker room with her breasts from right there at
the restaurant entrance.
The second
girl coming out of the eatery with her, a much more normally constructed woman,
immediately went over to her friend and proceeded to feel up the girl in the
red dress. She grabbed the massive mammaries
from underneath and gave them a nice feel. I suspect she wasn’t the only person
whose ever seen the gal in the red dress who had thought of doing this to her,
by the way. The girl in the red dress
laughed, and so did all the girls in this group, as they exited the restaurant. The girl in the red dress then proceeded to
grab her own tits and lift them up, just as her friend had.
I said to
Lightning, “And I was there to see that.”
Lightning
replied something to the effect, “Of course you were.”
I was kind of
hoping that we were about to see yet another female-on-female motor-boating
incident (see here), but alas, it didn’t
go that far….at least in our presence.
Sigh.
Great story on "woman-on-woman" copping a feel. Gee, do you suppose there was alcohol involved?!!!!!
ReplyDeleteIn Vegas? Highly doubtful.
DeleteThanks.
"Of course, the only way that 6 made him a straight was if he had played the mighty deuce-four"
ReplyDeleteOr he could have had the 7-4 to complete his gut shot, no?
-grouse
Thanks, grouse but seriously man....what self respecting poker player would be playing 7-4? :)
DeleteCute hand.
ReplyDeleteThanks, MOJO. Looking forward to getting together here in Vegas soon.
DeleteI will repeat once again:
ReplyDeleteWhy TF does this "bi-curious" variety of female activity keep happening in your presence?
I will also repeat once again:
Before I die, I want to hear Prudence utter the "dreaded V word".
Cheers. Good story. Woody
Heh heh. Maybe these things happen in front of everyone and I'm just the only one who notices it?
DeleteThanks, Woody.
Yeah, just be glad that you won the hand. I've heard of it (and seen it) happen several times where someone asked to see the hand, and then when shown, the "losing hand" was actually better, and then you have chaos...
ReplyDeleteThanks Coach. I actually got some criticism from some readers awhile back when I talked about exposing my (winning) hand before waiting for the other player to show his hand. That's why I noted in the post. I guess I lost some valuable information, but to me, the fact that he couldn't beat an overpair was information enough.
Delete