There were a
bunch of limpers and then a lady from Texas went all in—for all of $7. I made it $22. There were two callers, aside from the Texas
woman. The flop was King high, two
spades. Neither of my Queens was the
spade. I bet $55 and the other two
players folded. A second King came on
the turn, a blank on the river and the lady showed Ace-rag. My Queens held up—first time this trip they
actually won for me. The lady rebought,
and she comes back into the story lady.
Then I got two
ladies again and raised to $10. Three
callers. King high flop, I bet $30 and a
woman (not the Texas woman) called. Another
low card on the turn and I bet $80. This
time she folded. I guess the secret to
winning with pocket Queens is to play them only against women.
I lost $20
because of a string bet that maybe wasn’t. I can’t follow my notes precisely here, but
basically, on the river and I had top pair (Aces), mediocre kicker (Jack). But there were three spades on the board and
the way the hand had played out, I feared the flush. The guy who had been calling my bets every
street suddenly led out when the third spade hit. He wanted to bet $60 and that’s what I
thought he had done. I can’t recall
exactly his motion but the dealer insisted that he put out $20 first and then
put out $40 behind it. Now the guy was
right next to me and I remember thinking it looked like a $60 bet to me. I wasn’t at all sure what he did, but the
dealer insisted he could only bet $20.
He’s one of the best dealers in the room, so I assume he was right even
though I didn’t really see it that way.
And besides,
I would call a $20 bet with my hand. I
almost definitely would have folded if I had to call $60. I thought it was to my advantage. So I called the $20 and he showed 10-7 of
spades for the flush. Damn. Since I wouldn’t have called the $60, the
dealer’s ruling in essence cost be twenty bucks. It could have worked the other way, of
course. And besides, knowing he wanted
to bet $60 should have convinced me to save the $20 anyway. Unless he was angle shooting….
Then I got QQ
yet again. I raised to $10 and the Texas
woman called. The flop was 9-8-2 and she
led out with a $15 bet. My stack had
dwindled quite a bit so I just shoved, and she called. She had Jack-10 for the open-ender. Fortunately I didn’t get my set, which would
have completed her straight, and my Queens held for the third time this night. Always against female players.
Aces, on the
other hand, weren’t good this night. I
raised to $10 with them, and got one caller, the guy next to me who earlier had
wanted to bet $60 but was told it was a string bet. There were two clubs on the flop but both my
Aces were black. I bet the flop and he
called. Third club on the turn and I bet
again. He raised enough to put me all
in. I called because I had the Ace of
clubs. Could I get the fourth club this
one time?
Nope. It was a black 5, but spades, not clubs. The guy had King-6 of clubs. I guess I should start calling raises with
K-6 sooooted too.
The only
other really memorable thing for this session was the tattooed maniac. Suddenly at our table, we noticed there was
somewhat of a ruckus going on at the table next to us. Two floor people were summoned and heated
words were exchanged. Our dealer noted
that one of the players involved in the ruckus had been a trouble maker when he
was dealing there. I asked him which
one, but the answer was provided instantly.
The trouble-making player was asked (or perhaps, “ordered” would be more
accurate) to change tables and he took the just opened seat at our game.
You could
tell by his demeanor that he was still upset, and he was complaining to the
floor person about the guy he had gotten into it with. This guy was covered in tattoos. He really didn’t look like the type of guy you’d
want to mess with.
Actually, she looks nothing like the guy in the story |
He had a
stack of somewhat less than $100 when he came over. He open-shoved his first two hands and no one
called him. When he did it the third
time in a row, he got a caller—someone with a shorter stack than he had. The guy had a decent pocket pair, not sure
what it was. The maniac had deuce-four. The flop had a deuce on it, and then the turn
and the river were runner-runner deuces giving the maniac Quads.
He opened
shoved again the very next hand and a guy who had him covered called him with
Ace-King. There was an Ace on the flop. But a 3 on the turn and a 5 on the river gave
the guy a straight!
He had just
shoved preflop twice in a row with deuce-four and caught huge hands with both
times to win as the big underdog.
Well, deuce-four
is the most powerful hand in poker.
The very next
hand, he raised again preflop, this time not a shove (by now he had too many
chips for that). He flopped a pair and a
straight draw and played it aggressively, of course, and got it all in on the
flop or the turn. He did hit is straight
but ran into a full house and lost his entire stack. Guy should have known by then not to play
anything but deuce-four.
Actually, I
seriously doubt the guy knew the power of the mighty deuce-four. He didn’t look like much of a reader. I’d be surprised if he had ever heard of Poker Grump.
You write a post about Deuce-Four making the nuts? What's next--a post about how rain is wet?
ReplyDeleteWhat can I say? I'm all out of boobs stories.
DeleteMany of the tourist-type players aren't aware of the power of the mighty deuce-four. Perhaps fewer blog posts about it would be in order? Why educate the masses?
DeleteThose tourists don't read my blog, MOJO.
Deleteall out of boob stories? PLZ NO. THE HORROR. I didnt know tommy lee played poker?
ReplyDeleteI don't think it was Tommy Lee but now that you mention it, he'd be a pretty good source of boob stories, I'd imagine.
Delete