But this one
centers around a gentleman, a very colorful older guy who entertained me and my
fellow poker players one night in early May.
As it happens, this particular day was a bonanza for blogging
material. I’ve already posted three
entries from this particular day. This
happened the same day that I met Tara Rice (picture directly below and earlier
blog post here), that I found out Doogie
Howser is a terrible tipper (see here),
and that I had that three way pot where it was Aces vs. Kings. vs. Queens (see here).
For context,
this tale takes place at the MGM soon after the nightclub that I made famous
with my “Slut Parade” post (see here)
had opened. It was before they moved the
poker back away from the night club, so the “sluts”* were literally—yes literally--parading
right through the poker room.
When I got
seated, it was late afternoon and I took seat 9 right next to the dealer. On my immediate right was an older gentleman
who we are gonna call “Kent.” Kent is
definitely a “character.” Kent is a
Vegas local and works in another hotel on the Strip, but not in the casino, in
the back office. He doesn’t deal with
the public. When I got there, Kent was
involved in a very detailed discussion with a younger player two seats to his
right. I was immediately annoyed by Kent. The conversation he was having was all about
his profession, which I won’t reveal here, and was of no interest to me. I certainly enjoy the social aspect of poker,
but when you have a conversation that is essentially non-stop—and this really
was non-stop—about a topic I have no interest in, it gets to be off
putting. Or perhaps I should say,
“maddening.” I mean, if it’s some hot
gal talking about her boobies or even more intimate body parts, that’s fine, that’s
what I live for. But two guys
talking about their work? Well, unless
it’s a particularly fascinating line of work, no thanks. I play poker to get away from work. OK, in my case, that’s not quite true, since
these days I work in poker. But you get
the idea.
The other
thing that was a little annoying about Kent was he swore like a
longshoreman. I may owe an apology to
longshoremen for that. It was surprising
to hear so many f-bombs and so many “shits” coming from a man his age. Everything was “f’ning” this and “f’ning”
that and he kept complaining about his phone being a piece of shit. I’m not normally offended by that , but it
was just so excessive, so pervasive, so non-stop that it was pretty offensive. Frankly,
I came pretty close to asking for a table change. But fortunately I didn’t.
He was
actually trying to recruit the younger player to be his apprentice, they were
in the same line of work. They exchanged business cards as the kid left to go about
his evening. That was a great relief. Amazingly enough, once he stopped talking
about work, his language cleaned up quite a bit.
When I
arrived at the table Kent had about $500-$600 in front of him. He played a lot of hands—most of them,
really. He didn’t raise a lot, at least
not initially. But he saw most flops. And
he was drinking a lot. Scotch and
something or other. I’m sure I saw Kent
down at least a dozen Scotches while I was there, if not a lot more. Not to mention the Kamikazes—which I’ll
mention in a moment.
I soon
learned Kent’s name (not really “Kent” of course) and that he was nearly 70. That
seemed about right. He mentioned a wife
multiple times, but that didn’t stop him from flirting with and hitting on all
the ladies.
Kent started
out as a calling station who played a lot of hands, called a lot of raises, and
hit a lot of his hands. But a few hours
into the game, when he was really drunk, he suddenly started raising a lot
preflop, which he hadn’t done before.
Then after awhile, he started showing his hands when he didn’t get
called, especially when he raised preflop.
Sometimes he’d show a big hand, but he also started showing junk hands
like Jack-4 and Queen-6, stuff like that.
He also started talking about his cards a lot, like he’d say, “no one
would call with this hand,” as he called.
Or he’d say as the dealer was about to put out the flop, “I need two
cards just like these two.” Oddly
enough, he started reminding me of Natalee a bit.
I started out
doing well, not too many big hands, but I was able to build up my stack by
making preflop raises that either weren’t called or put me in a position to
take the pot with a c-bet on the flop.
Not long
after I sat down, I heard a guy make what turned out to be a really dumb
comment about a hand I wasn’t in. He
faced an all in raise on the flop, which was Queen-4-3. As he was thinking of making the call, he
said, “There are only two hands that beat me.”
So he called. And both players
showed their hands.
Now the
all-in was a couple of hundred dollars so I was expecting to see some big
hands, right? The other guy had raised
preflop but a set of Queens was unlikely, ordinarily you wouldn’t shove on the
flop with such a big hand that deep. But
maybe he knew the other player well enough to know he would call? I had just gotten to the table.
The guy
flipped over Ace-Queen? Huh? Only two hands beat you, sir? Really?
I was expecting him to flip over pocket 3’s, which was apparently one of
the hands that beat him that he didn’t consider. Anyway, the other guy had the dreaded pocket Kings and they held up (only
because I wasn’t the one with the Kings).
I didn’t think either player had been smart there, risking a couple of
hundred bucks on overpair/top pair hands.
Soon after, I
had pocket Aces in late position and the A-Q guy raised to $6 in front of
me. I made it $20 and he called. The flop was 10-10-4. The original raiser moves all in for
$50. Gulp. Did he just have a big pocket pair or did
that flop hit him? Did he have a
10? Well, it just wasn’t enough to get
me to fold my rockets, so I called. I
had to consider the possibility that he thought Ace-4 there was the second best
hand! Turns out he had pocket 7’s and my
Aces held. Sadly, he left the table.
Not long
after his young, future apprentice left, a woman walked by that got Kent’s
attention. She was middle aged (so,
young, by Kent’s standards) and fairly ordinary looking. She apparently was looking for a table change
and wanted to join us. I had played with
this woman briefly the night before. But
Kent treated her like they were old friends and waived her over. The more the evening wore on, the more I
realized Kent didn’t know this lady from Adam (or Eve, I guess) but that this
was his schtick, reacting to women as if they were long lost friends.
He started
flirting with her before she even was moved to the table, and then when
she did join us, he kept up at it even though they were on opposite sides of
the table. And then a man came to sit
down next to the lady, who we’ll call Sarah, who she introduced to Kent as one
of her three husbands. It seems Sarah
and her husband were from Utah and she was making a Mormon joke.
The fact that
Sarah’s husband was there didn’t stop Kent from flirting with her. The husband didn’t mind and it all seemed in
good fun.
Kent was
talking pretty much non-stop, but now that he was no longer intently focused on
his job, it wasn’t nearly so tedious; in fact it was fun. Kent was telling us all about his life, and
it was frankly hard to tell what was real and what was total bullshit. But he became more and more entertaining as
the night wore on (and as he downed more and more Scotch).
As he started
interacting with more and more women, I realized that his bit was to say to
them, “Hello again, I remember you from _____” and then he’d come up with a
city or a country. So I guess that’s
what he’d done with Sarah before I had caught on. When Rita was dealing and she pushed him a
nice pot, he tossed her a $5 chip and said, “That’s not for the pot, that’s for
New Orleans.”
As the
session wore on, the three of them were becoming fast friends, and one of them
brought up Kamikazes. Kent agreed to switch
from Scotch one time if the Utah couple would join him in a round of
Kamikazes. The guy from Utah explained
to the younger players that Kamikazes were the earlier generation’s equivalent
of Jager Bombs. In case you hadn’t
figured it out, the Utah couple were not Mormons.
So they order
rounds of Kamikazes several times and Kent had those between his frequent
Scotches. If nothing else, he exhibited
an amazing constitution.
Kent talked
to me about my AVP card protector and my note-taking. I explained a bit about AVP but he got too
distracted by a hand for me to finish the story. About the notes he saw me taking, I was basically
honest, without mentioning the blog. I
told him I like to make notes of hands to study later. He thought that was interesting and then asked,
“You got my name in there yet?”
That was
pretty funny, I thought. I said, “No, Kent,
but I know it.” By this time, I was pretty sure that Kent was going to make it
into the blog. I introduced myself as
Rob. Hmm, I almost gave myself a
pseudonym there, but that would be silly.
As Kent was
telling us all about his past experiences, he mentioned he went to Jacksonville
University when they had a great college basketball team and went all the way
to the NCAA final game. The team they
lost to in the finals was UCLA, my future alma mater. But even before I had even stepped onto the
campus, I was a huge fan of John Wooden and the UCLA basketball teams of that
era. UCLA that year was led by Sidney
Wicks, who had attended my high school and in fact was a classmate and friend
of my sister’s. That team was one of my
favorite UCLA teams and I remembered the team they played in the finals that
year pretty well.
So here was Kent,
talking about the two 7-footers that led Jacksonville’s team. One was Artis Gilmore, who went on to have a
long and successful career in the NBA. The
other 7 footer is now totally forgotten, about as obscure as you can get.
“Jacksonville
had these two 7 footers,” Kent was saying, “Artis Gilmore and…..”
“Pembrook
Burrows,” I said. Actually we said it
simultaneously, as if it had been rehearsed.
For the first and only time that night, Kent was shocked. He had never run into anyone before who
remembered Pembrook Burrows, as many times as he had told that story. He was almost speechless (something
impossible for him) trying to figure out how I could know that.
I explained
my UCLA connection and even why that year stood out for me. As it happens, as soon as he started talking
about Jacksonville, I thought of Gilmore and Burrows, and even though Burrows
never made it in the NBA and was soon forgotten, I’ve never forgotten him or
the way Wicks took both of them apart in the final game. As I recall, he
blocked Gilmore’s first two shots and Gilmore meekly disappeared from the
game. Burrows was even less of a factor.
I think the fact that Burrows has such
an usual name made it easy for me to remember it.
Then Kent
couldn’t help notice that Russ Hamilton came to our table. Actually, it wasn’t really Russ Hamilton, the
disgraced WSOP bracelet holder of the notorious Ultimate Bet scandal. But there was an older gentleman who came to
the table and Kent nudged me and said that guy looked just like Russ
Hamilton. I only had the faintest
familiarity with Hamilton, never having been much of an online player even
before Black Friday. And I had no idea
what he looked liked. But Kent was
pretty familiar with the scandal and so I looked him up on my celphone. From the pictures I was able to find, I can
say that the guy at our table sure did look an awful lot like Hamilton.
Maybe it was
Hamilton. He built up a huge stack
fairly quickly (he flopped set over set which turned into boat over boat) and
then took off for the 2/5 game. I heard
them page a “Melody” for our table (I think it was a table change). A rather average looking woman came by and
found her seat. She was younger than
Sarah but not in the age category of the club-goers that had started to
gather before us.
Kent
immediately said hello to her as if they were long lost friends but by now I
realized that this was his schtick. He
said, “Hi, how you doing? Good to see
you again.” Well, it turns out Melody
was more than willing to play along.
Even though I’m quite certain she had never seen Kent before in her
life, she volleyed back with him. “Oh yes, you too. It’s been a long time.”
Kent was only
too happy to keep going. “Let’s see,
where did we meet? Was it New
Orleans? Israel? Dubai?”
Melody
responded that she’d actually been to Dubai.
And Kent wasn’t kidding, he’d been there too. Suddenly they started comparing notes on
places in Dubai! And Kent mentioned a
place on the beach that sold pizza.
Maybe she was kidding, but from his description, she said she knew the
place he meant. There was this place on
the beach in Dubai that sold pizza out of a hut. But neither one of them could think of the
name of it.
So I said,
“Pizza Hut!” It seemed obvious to me but
the cute lady dealer really liked that line.
But Kent had
a problem remembering Melody’s name. He
kept calling her “Melanie.” I corrected
him a few times but it was a futile effort.
I thought of giving him the old song lyric, “A pretty girl is like a
melody,” a song I’m sure he would remember, but I didn’t get around to it. Melody didn’t seem to mind being called
Melanie.
Kent was of
course flirting and hitting on Melody while still doing the same thing with
Sarah. Melody revealed that she had a
boyfriend playing at another table and somehow mentioned that her boyfriend was
tall. That deterred him from flirting
with her for a few minutes, but he went back to it not much later.
And then, out
of the clear blue, he shouted across the table, “Melody, what’s your shoe
size?”
....and that's where I'll leave it for now, folks. Yes, this is a two parter. Melody's response and a whole lot more can be found right here.
*-“slut” is
Rob’s Vegas & Poker Blog’s euphemism for "Prim & Proper Lady"
How do you ever concentrate on poker?
ReplyDeleteI think you just figured out why I don't do better at that silly game.
DeleteRob..this may interest you. Florida HP but probably retired by now.
ReplyDeletehttp://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1991-06-23/news/9103050340_1_burrows-dolphins-jacksonville-university
Thanks Big-O, I do remember hearing years ago he was a cop. A 7 foot tall HP officer? Don't want to mess with him!
DeleteIn thinking about your handle, I am wondering the reference. Now that I'm so into poker, the first thing that came to mind was the poker game, Big O (variation of Omaha). But since you came up with the basketball reference, I'm thinking of the great basketball player nicknamed "The Big O", the great Oscar Robertson.
Or is neither the right reference?
"O" is the first letter of my first name.
DeleteI'm a small sized man (shoe size 7.5 if Kent's reading), and in keeping with the norm of never telling the truth about oneself on the internet, I chose not to go with honesty, so I discarded Little-O.
LOL. So it's like the big, strong man at the Circus being called "Tiny."
DeleteI get it.
Kent was only interested in women's shoe sizes. OTOH, the ladies he talked to seemed to be interested in men's shoe sizes!
As if this post wasn't long enough...you have to make it a 2 parter! Can't wait!
ReplyDeleteThanks Mark, glad you managed to make it all the way through. I'm impressed!
DeleteThe 2nd part is much better, and a lot dirtier.