This past Saturday, I took a wild ride
on a bike. No, check that. What I mean is, I took a wild ride at
the Bike. The Bike being the Southern
California casino in palatial Bell Gardens.
I went through a whole bunch of
emotions on this day, and it didn’t end when I got home. Just as I started writing this blog post, I
learned something that made me realize that something I should have been upset
about, that I was no longer upset about, was something that I had every right
to be upset about all along.
What the hell am I talking about? Well, it’s a long story. (Yeah, I know, nobody wants to see me write those words.)
I decided to spend one day of my
weekend playing some poker at the Bike.
I knew that they were finishing up their WSOP circuit event, meaning
that sometime soon the Noon tournament I sometimes play in would be coming back
(see here).
It was on temporary hiatus during the circuit event.
I got an email from the Bike with
their April calendar. It clearly showed
that on April 5, they were having their normal “Nooner” tournament with the $2K
guarantee ($55 buy-in, including add-on). I decided that that was my preferred choice,
the tournament over the cash game, at least on this day. Smaller investment for a bigger potential
payout, that’s what I wanted.
As usual when I schlep down to the
Bike, I was a tad late for the tournament.
Damn that car that ended up in the bushes on the Freeway. I had shoved a lousy baloney sandwich down my
throat on the way down there so I wouldn’t need to worry about lunch during the
tournament.
There was no line for the tournament,
a surprise. I found my seat with eight
minutes already elapsed in the tournament.
I got the last seat at this particular table, and was shocked to see
that only three tables were going (10-handed).
Well, ok. Either there would be a
lot latecomers or the Bike will be making a very nice overlay to make up the
$2K prize pool. I rather liked that.
From another table, I heard the dealer
ask the TD if there was a guarantee today.
I’m pretty sure I heard her say no, that the guarantees wouldn’t start
until tomorrow. This was the first day
they were running any regular, non-WSOP circuit tournaments.
Huh?
Well that really sucked. I had
zero interest in playing in a $50 tournament with around 35 players! That would make the prize pool about
$1,000. That wasn’t what I was looking
for at all. If I had realized that, I
would have waited until Sunday to go down there or….I would have taken my time,
gotten there at my leisure, left the baloney in the fridge and had a nice free
lunch while playing $2-$3.
I wanted to get up and go over and ask
the TD if I heard right. But I was sort
of stuck in my seat. I was in seat 5,
the tables were crammed together and there was no good way to get out…..people
on either side of me at the table behind me had food trays blocking me.
Besides, I wanted to do a little
research first. I checked my email. I downloaded the calendar to my smartphone to
see if I had made a mistake. No sense in
embarrassing myself (Yeah, I know, that sounds funny coming from the guy who
publishes this blog).
That took awhile and it prevented me
from paying much attention to the game.
Always a good plan. I finally saw
the calendar and sure enough, the calendar did indicate that on this very
Saturday, they were having the Nooner with a $2k guarantee. But I still couldn’t get out of my seat to
inquire about it. Besides, there was one
more thing I wanted to check. Perhaps
they had a sign by the registration area indicating no guarantee today. That would let them off the hook. In my haste to get started, since I had been
late, I might have missed it.
Meanwhile, the tournament was so
poorly attended that even before the first break, they had to take the big
blinds from our table twice to balance tables.
So finally I had the ability to get up.
I headed over to the reg area when the button passed me. Absolutely no sign at all saying anything
about a guarantee.
In the meantime, between being card
dead and being totally distracted by this, I was in danger of not even lasting in
the tournament to the first break. Which
made the question kind of moot. Except,
not really. I was blaming being
distracted by this for my poor showing. Besides, if they sent an email out saying they
had a guarantee this day, it was unfair to everyone who was playing if they
called it off without notice, not just me.
I pondered what to do. After all, I do work in the poker
industry. Should I throw that at
them? Probably not. I don’t think my employers would really
appreciate that. Could I even rant about
this in a blog post? Not sure I could do
that either.
I decided I was definitely going to
question it during the break, which was nearly upon us. See what they say. Show them the calendar they sent me. Maybe I could convince them that they had to
up the prize pool to $2K. I mean, it would be less than $1k to the Bike, what’s
that?
But I was playing less optimally
because I wanted to ask about it. I didn’t
want to bust out before I could ask, because if I was out, I didn’t want the
answer to be, “What does it matter to you, you’re out anyway, you’re not
getting any part of the prize pool.”
Right before the break, I looked at
the calendar again. What I hadn’t
noticed before was that, on the top of the calendar, it said, “DAILY
TOURNAMENTS RESUME ON APRIL 4TH WITHOUT GUARANTEES. THE REGULAR TOURNAMENT
SCHEDULE STARTS ON APRIL 5TH.”
Ugh.
There it was. I had screwed up.
The tournament guarantees didn’t start until Sunday. I was wrong.
Well, at least I saw it before I embarrassed myself.
Except that….it wasn’t until I got
home, looked at the pdf calendar again on the big monitor at home that I
realized that no, I was right all along.
The 5th was Saturday, not Sunday. There were now two listings on that calendar
indicating the tournament I played on Saturday should have had a $2K guarantee.
But because I misread it the last time
I looked at it while I was at the Bike (or rather, forgot what day it was), I
never actually asked about the guarantees myself. So I can’t even say for sure that they didn’t
have the guarantee. Maybe I
misheard. Maybe the woman was talking
about something else, some other tournament.
They have a lot of tournaments at the Bike.
So I can’t at this point blame anyone
but myself for the confusion—and for the fact that I was so distracted by this
whole thing that I blew any chance I had of cashing at the tournament—whatever
that cashing would be worth. Note: After all this, I sent a tweet to the Bike
about it and they responded that all the guarantees were on for this day. So it was, apparently, all a big
misunderstanding on my part. Yeesh.
I busted out soon after we returned from
the first break. I was the big blind
with Ace-5 and since it hadn’t been raised, I decided to see the flop before
shoving. I only caught a 5 and didn’t
bet. I only had to call the amount of
the big blind (200) on the flop so I did.
The turn was an Ace and put a possible wheel out there. No one could be playing 2-3, right? A guy bet and I shoved. He called with his wheel. No boat for me on the river and I was
done. Honestly, with all the consternation
I was having over this whole damn tournament, I was actually glad to get out of
there.
There was one hand not involving me
that I found a bit interesting. In a
limped pot with little betting, the board was AA8810. The order of the cards isn’t important. One guy flipped his hand and said, “I’m
playing the board” and flipped over pocket 7’s.
The other guy flipped over the other two sevens. I said, “You guys were destined to chop that
pot from the get-go.
I wasn’t in a very good mood and I
considered just going home. But the Bike
is such a trek for me (35–60 minutes, depending on traffic), I didn’t want to
have gone all that way for such a brief poker experience, and a bad one at
that. So after clearing my head, I got
into the $2-$3, buying in for $300 as usual.
Within the first few hands I was
looking at pocket Jacks. I had no feel
for the table. I was in early position
so I bet $12. Two players called. The flop was Jack-6-5, rainbow. I don’t usually slowplay sets, but this time
I did. I checked. My thinking was that my hand was more
disguised than usual. I usually c-bet
with 2 or 3 players and by checking, I may give away my hand (see the post here).
But since no one had ever seen me play before, it wouldn’t necessary be
that noteworthy that an old fart like me was not c-betting after he raised
preflop.
Sure enough, the last person to act
bet $25 and I just called (the other guy folded). I checked a blank turn and this time he put
out $50. So I went ahead and
check-raised to $100. He called. Another blank on the river and this time I
bet out $100, which looked close to (but a bit more) than the size of his
remaining stack. He called. He was really pot committed of course. He mucked when I showed my set.
That put be up around $200, give or
take. Not bad for being at the table
less than 10 minutes.
Just a few hands later I looked down
at pocket Queens. A guy with a huge
stack bet out $15. I three-bet QQ more
often than not these days, but since I was still trying to figure out the
players and the table, I just called. We were heads up the whole way. The flop,
turn and river were all undercards to my Queens. But the guy led out on every street
($25-$40-$60, I think) and I called every time.
Since this was the Bike, he could have been doing that with
Ace-King. But I figured he either had KK
or JJ. I was right, When I called, he
showed Jacks and my Queens were good. I
was now sitting behind a stack of around $600 or so and I still hadn’t played
an entire orbit.
It was beginning to look like that
screw up I made with the tournament was the best thing that could have happened
to me.
Then I raised to $15 with Ace-King and
had two callers. The flop missed me and
I bet $25. One guy called. When I still had nothing on the turn I
checked and folded to a bet.
I limped in with Ace-3 hearts in late
position. I flopped the flush draw and
no one bet. I made my flush on the turn
and someone led out for $10 and got a caller.
I made it $50 and the original bettor folded but the caller—the guy with
the biggest stack at the table—called.
The river was a blank and it checked to me. I bet $75 but he folded face up. He had one heart (a Queen) and a Jack (for a
pair of jacks). Unfortunately, with that,
he picked up his huge stack and left the game.
I had more than twice my buy-in front
of me. Yes, I was having a very good
session. Now, whenever I am doing this
well, I always worry about my tendency to get too protective of the win and thus
play too tight. I’ve written about this
many times, most notably here. Well, I had to start watching to see if I was
gonna be able to continue to play poker or not with that big stack in front of
me.
I have good news and bad news. Yes, yes, I was able to play poker. I didn’t get so caught up in trying to book
the win that I was afraid to put chips in play.
The bad news? Well, you’ll see.
I played a good while without anything
memorable happening. But I played enough
without winning to get below $600. No
problem, I wasn’t concerned. And then, I
came up against “Grandma.”
Grandma was this sweet, elderly woman
with white hair who had mentioned she had been playing poker for 30 years. Someone said, “Every day?” She laughed and said no….if she had been
playing poker every day, she’d be out on the street. In a hand I wasn’t in, the guy to my right
raised to $8 and five players called, including Grandma in the big blind. She called on every street, never raised or led
out. Her opponent, who was not the guy
who had raised preflop, showed King-something for top pair. Grandma turned over pocket Aces to win a
pretty good pot.
The loser said, among other things, “Beware
of Grandma.” The original raiser was
aghast. “You just called my $8 bet. With all those callers, how could you not
raise preflop?” We all wondered the same
thing. That was the perfect situation
for a big bet, and it was incredibly risky having all those players see the flop
with her Aces. But it worked out just
fine for her.
Now I was UTG+1 and UTG had limped
in. I looked down at Ace-Queen offsuit
and made it $15. Three players called,
including Grandma, who was the big blind again.
I thought I liked the flop, which was Ace-Jack-x. But Grandma led out with a $30 bet. Hmmm.
I can’t fold top pair, second best kicker, can I?
I looked at Grandma’s stack, which
wasn’t that much. A bit more than $100
after she made that bet. It folded to me
and I just decided that with her stack, I wasn’t going anywhere. If she had had more chips, I would have
reconsidered. I suppose I could have
raised there to see if she came back over the top, but I suspect if she had me
beat she would have been content to just call.
But maybe that would have prevented her from betting the turn. I dunno.
I called and called $30 again on the
turn. My hand didn’t improve on the
river and she put out $60. Oddly enough,
she still had about $15 behind that she didn’t bet.
Sigh.
It was hard to imagine her betting that way and not being able to beat
top pair. But I had come this far and
was pot committed. I called and waited for
Grandma to show me a set or Ace-Jack. It
was a set. Of Jacks. Jacks were hot at this table.
WTF was I thinking going up against
Grandma?
I was mad at myself. And I had to wonder if my early success had
led to a different problem than being too cautious. No, not thinking I was invincible. But instead, playing hands and staying in
hands just to prove to myself that I wasn’t being too cautious? Is that why I lost so much money to Grandma?
A few hands later I butchered pocket
10’s, only limping in with them and calling a bet on the flop when I thought
the bettor might be trying to steal a flop he missed. I called on the turn too. But I folded on the river and it turned out
he had 7-4 and had flopped two pair.
Think he would have called my preflop raise with that? Actually, this player might have.
So the next time I had pocket 10’s, I
raised to $15 and had two callers. The
flop was Jack-Jack-4. I dutifully put
out a $30 c-bet, the next guy called and then a guy check-raised to $130. This guy had been at the table the entire
time I was there and reminded me of my Vegas pal Abe,
similar height, similar face, but a little younger. Of course I folded. Abe’s look-a-like had pocket 4’s for a
flopped boat. The other guy had
Jack-crap for trips.
So that’s the bad news…..I had now
lost pretty much all of the profit for the session. Yeah, it was all gone. Then suddenly, as the players came and went,
the table became something really weird.
It became the tightest table in the history of the Bike. No one was limping, let along calling a
raise. Hand after hand the blinds were
chopped. This was like $2-$4 at the
nittiest locals joint in Vegas.
I actually picked up some chips by
stealing blinds. But it was petty theft
at best. When someone raised to $8
preflop, I was so excited at the thought of actually seeing a flop I went ahead
and called with King-5 of hearts from late position. Three of us saw a King high flop with one
heart. I called a $10 bet. There was a second heart on the turn so I
called a $15 bet. And then the Ace of
hearts hit the river, giving me the nuts.
This time the guy checked and my $20 bet wasn’t called.
I stuck around a little longer but
nothing was happening at the table. When
all was said in done, I had managed to eek out a $58 profit. That’s exactly $3 more than what the
tournament cost me. But I also got a
free dinner out of it. So maybe the
wild, bumpy ride was worth it.
Or not.
(I do want to explain the pic I’m
using for this post. The woman is, of
course Sophia Vergara, one of the stars of Modern Family. I was looking to find the hottest “Grandma” I
could find. In searching, I found a list
of hot Grandma’s that included Ms. Vergara.
Of course, that's a cheat. She is
not a grandmother. But on the show, she
does play a step-Grandmother because she is the trophy wife of Ed O’Neill’s
character, who has four grandkids on the show.
Needless to say, the Grandma who took my money looks nothing like Sophia
Vergara (very few women do). But hey,
any excuse to post a pic of a hot woman, right? It's my blog, after all. On your blog, you can post a pic of grandmother who looks like your actual grandmother. On my blog, I'll post of a real sexy "grandma" in a bikini.)
its NOT the length of the posts thats at issue. the issue is u update the blog so often, i cant keep up with updating it as often (mine that is).
ReplyDeleteThanks, Tony.
DeleteI guess you're referring to a comment I made in the comments section of my previous post.
tony here is a form letter 4 yr blog. i won/lost x amount at poker and/or dem machines,something stupid about god,obama,or a world event,then u ate at mcds,sockroll update,and then(NO AND THEN) u go to sleep. but sometimes u buy something or mention vince is drinking and bitch about how stuff like rent,etc,etc is too xpensive. rinse then repeat
Deleteanger, I think this should have been posted on Tony's blog, not mine.
DeleteHa ha. Right now at the top of your screen, you have one of those "THIS IS NOT A JOKE! YOU ARE THE 100,000TH VISITOR" ads. I'm looking at the 363,075 and saying, "No I'm not..." :)
ReplyDeleteIt's poker math, Coach.
DeleteI just read your previous post, and the comments (particularly TPM's) . . . like 4 times. Let me know how much I owe you two for the poker lesson! Seriously, great stuff.
ReplyDeleteThanks, PPP. I dunno about TPM, but I'll take 10% of all your future winnings (and be responsible for ZERO percent of all your future loses! :)
DeleteBTW, I didn't mention it in your post, but TPM and I did discuss you at the table, talking about you and he live fairly near each other and have somehow never met or figured out a way to get together for some poker. You should try playing with him, he'll give you a lot of free advice!
sexy grandmas?hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm. how about sarah palin? or did mimi rogers daughter ever get knocked up?
ReplyDeleteWhat happened was that I found an article on 10 sexiest grandmothers and as I was skimming through it, I saw that pic of Sophia and pretty much stopped in my tracks.
DeleteCase closed, I was running that pic.
oh i am not complaining. i was just trying to think of sexy older women that mayb grandmas
Delete