In my latest column for Ante Up (see here) I devoted a lot of space to the new
poker room at the LVH. Actually, my
piece was about the fact that they now had a poker room, as opposed to a
poker pit, which is what they had when they first started spreading
poker this past July. After a few months
in the blackjack/craps pit, the poker tables were doing well enough to be moved
to an actual room. I thought that was
worthy of some space in Ante Up. Besides,
Mark, the poker room manager over there, is a heckuva nice guy and it was the
least I could do for him. And never let
it be said that I failed to do the least I could do. So I did an email
interview with Mark for Ante Up. And
yes, Mark is his real name—as far as I know.
I first ran into Mark when he was
managing the room at the Riviera. He was
running it when the first of the (two) TBC “Meet
& Greets” was held there last year.
For more details about that historic event, you can see the post here—but be warned, I believe that one is my
second longest post ever, just so you know.
Then, earlier this year, I did a big piece for Ante Up about a big promo
the Riv was having. I eventually played
at the Riv to try out that new promo, and you can find that story here.
Sadly, the Riv closed its poker room
not long after my column appeared. I’m sure
my column had nothing to do with its demise. OTOH, if anything negative happens
to the room at the LVH, I’d have to consider the possibility that my Ante Up
column is sort of the “Sports Illustrated Jinx” of poker.
Anyway, when I wrote the new column, I
had visited the LVH poker pit a few times but hadn’t played there, and I had
not seen the new room. So I was eager to
finally see it, and if at all possible, actually play in the new room.
So, last Sunday, I went over there to
check it out with my own two, baby-blue eyes.
Mark greeted me warmly, shook my hand, and immediately gave me the grand
tour of the bathroom.
I’m serious. No less an expert than TBC himself had made
it clear that he felt the most distinguishing feature of the LVH poker room was
the bathroom. I knew this from reading
one of his posts. written after he played there the first time. He said, “i wonder what RobVegasPokers (sic) report
will say about the room, it might be a little nicer, although it wouldve been
nice had he mentioned the bathroom.” The post can be found here,
but I should warn you the title of the post is rather crude and offensive, to
say the least.
I was surprised at being mentioned in
that context, since Tony’s post appeared before my column on the room did, and
also before anyone even knew I was going to write about the room for Ante Up.
The only thing I knew about bathrooms
at the LVH was that the main casino’s Men’s Room had pictures of hot girls posted
over the urinals, appearing to be reacting (both positively and negatively) to
the penises of the guys relieving themselves.
So I assumed Tony was referring to that, and I took the opportunity to tell
him and his readers that I’d already discussed the Men’s Room at the LVH, and
kindly provided a link to that post (which you can find here).
Tony responded by saying that that wasn’t
what he meant at all. In fact, there was
a separate bathroom inside the poker room which, according to Tony, was worth
the trip to LVH all by itself.
And then, in our business dealings,
Mark himself indicated the bathroom inside the poker room was quite
impressive.
So, within a minute or two of arriving
at the new LVH poker room, Mark insisted on taking me on a guided tour of the
poker room’s private bathroom. That was
fine with me, because if he hadn’t suggested it himself, I was definitely going
to ask him to show me the bathroom first thing, before showing me the rest of
the poker room.
And it is indeed an impressive
bathroom. It is unisex and private—one person
at a time only. It is very plush and it
is huge, I mean really big. It’s bigger
than most bathrooms I’ve seen in private homes—even though it doesn’t have a
tub or a shower. Just a commode and a
sink. I think there might be room enough
for a full size poker table in there.
Mark did point out that one of the
faucets on the sink would not completely shut off at the moment (something I
assume has been fixed by now). He made
me promise not to mention that.
Did I just break that promise? No, I don’t think so. In my mind, I was only promising not to
mention that little fact in Ante Up, not on my silly little blog. I mean, I wouldn’t mention penis jokes in
Ante Up, either.
The bathroom is so big that I’m guessing
that at one time, that whole area was the private office of some bigwig, and
that was said bigwig’s private toilet. Just guessing there. I can’t recall seeing a public bathroom in
any other casino anything like this.
And there were no pictures of hot
girls anywhere to be seen. I guess,
being a unisex bathroom, there couldn’t be, it wouldn’t be fair. Besides, what’s the female equivalent of mocking
the size of a dick?
After the bathroom tour, Mark showed
me the rest of the poker room. It is
very, very nice. It is a big room, very comfortable,
the tables are well spaced. I’m sure
they could probably add another table or two if needed, but right now five
tables are enough. Actually, the one
issue they would have adding tables is that there are a few really huge pillars
in the room, which I assume keep the roof from collapsing. They’d have to work around that.
There are several really comfy easy
chairs in the room so people waiting for a seat have a nice place to sit and
relax, and watch a good number of TV’s that surround the room.
The room is right next to the LVH’s
main showroom, so it’s a great location.
Mark tells me the action really picks up at night after the show gets
out. Since this was an NFL Sunday, the
showroom was being used as a viewing venue for the football action. There’s a wagering station there so gamblers
don’t have to make the trek to the actual sports book to blow their money
make their bets.
Overall, it’s a very nice place to
play poker. Some of the dealers are a
bit new to dealing, but Mark has them well-trained. He is a bit of a fanatic about making sure
his staff provides great customer service, and that’s a very good thing. I’d been there quite some time without having
seen a cocktail waitress. So I teased
Mark that they needed to work on the cocktail service, knowing full well a
poker room manager has absolutely no control over that. But Mark made a call and within minutes a
waitress showed up to take my order.
Nice work!
This visit, I made sure I played some
poker there. Can’t really asses the room
without playing, right? So after a long
chat with Mark, I grabbed a seat in the 1/3 NL game and bought in for $300. At the time, that was the only game they had,
but Mark told me he was getting that game daily and recently had been able to
spread a 4/8 limit game daily as well.
I guess I should mention the one thing
I was less than thrilled about. The room
allows the button straddle. Long-time
readers will remember my beefs with the button straddle. For the rest of you, you can read my post
about it here. At least they do it the “right way”—if you
have to have the button straddle—in that first action is on UTG, not the small
blind.
The game had a few open seats when I
joined it but within an hour it was full and there was a small list. The table was well run by both dealers and
the players were friendly, but not overly so.
It really is a nice place to poker.
Of course, one of the things they will have to overcome is the
location. It’s pretty far north, quite a
bit north of the Wynn, and it’s not on the Strip, about a ½ mile away. And for me personally, well, I’m going to
have to figure out how to exit the place without either getting lost or being
stuck driving all the way to Sahara, and then having to either get on the I-15
or the Strip (ugh) to head back south.
There were a few pretty big stacks at
the table, including the one belonging to an older gentleman who bragged about
being a professional poker player for many years and having played against
every well-known pro—and never having been intimidated by anyone. I didn’t really see any interesting or
brilliant play from him while I was there.
There’s the standard $300 max buy-in, so he must have won those chips
somehow, but I didn’t see it.
Interestingly, they let you buy in for only $60, which is a very small
amount for a 1/3 game. No wonder Tony
likes to play here.
My biggest complaint about the session
is that, for most of it, I was totally, totally card dead. I went an hour and a half without dragging a
single pot. I was down to my last orbit
or two with a remaining stack of about $220.
At least I was so card dead that I hadn’t lost any significant amounts
with the second best hand. I think I had
the 8th best hand every single time.
Then finally came the only hand worth
talking about. I had pocket 6’s. A guy
wearing a Riviera hat raised to $10. I
called, as did three others. The flop
was 8-6-x, can’t recall the third card but the important thing was there were two
clubs. I don’t slow-play sets anyway and
I’m sure not going to with a flush draw out there. Riv Hat led out with a $20 bet, which was
kind of small for the size of the pot, I thought. I made it $60. It folded back to Riv Hat who called.
I didn’t want to see a club on the
turn, and I didn’t. Instead, it was
another 8, which I didn’t mind at all, now no longer worrying about a
flush. He checked. I suppose I should have thought more about
checking behind him there. But he only
had about $70 left and I felt fairly certainly he would call my bet,
considering the size of the pot and his remaining stack.
Sure enough, after I put out about $80
he put the rest of his chips in. I don’t recall the river card, but when it was
on the board I showed my boat and he mucked, saying he needed a club.
Not after the turn he didn’t.
I played a few more orbits and went
back to being card dead. That one hand was
a fluke. I left with a nice little
profit. Not bad for winning only one pot
in almost two hours.
The LVH is a nice little poker room,
and Mark is doing a great job with it.
And there are no penis jokes in the
poker room’s private, luxurious bathroom.
The picture below is from the main Men’s Room in the casino, not the
very noteworthy poker room water closet.
Glad to see you added a little class to your blog by posting pictures of urinals, discussing penises, and mentioning TBC several times. : o )
ReplyDeleteMy previous post was about enormous, unattractive tits. So I see what you mean.
DeleteWhats the rake and is there also a jackpot rake?
ReplyDeleteDo they have a 9 or 10 seated table?
$4 rake, $2 jackpot, 2nd dollar taken at $30 on jackpot. 10 handed i think, could be wrong, but thats not an issue that matters.
Deletenice to see Rob agrees with the correct way to do the straddle as far as the order of the action, unlike all them guys including pokerkat and ironmike on RTP
DeleteIt's 10 handed, Nappy. And I'm pretty sure it's only a $1 jackpot drop, not $2, Nappy & Tony. I'll double check today. It is a $4 max rake.
DeleteI don't understand the argument for making first action the small blind when there's a button straddle. Small blind is a terrible position anyway, and then, thru no fault of his or her own, you penalize them even further? Very unfair.
DeleteJust confirmed, I was right. They only take a buck for the jackpot, not two. So it's 4+1 like most Vegas rooms that aren't part of CET.
DeleteAnother one to add to the Xmas trip List. Glad I've got a car for some of the trip !
ReplyDeleteCool, Ben. Hope you have a great trip. Remember to drive on the right side of the road! Mark is from England, by the way so you'll feel right at home there.
DeleteThanks for the info Rob.
Delete