On this night, I guess I should be
grateful to the jerk who pissed me off enough to get me to change tables. The second table was a lot of fun, and was
also profitable. Who knows what the
result would have been if I had stayed at my original table.
It was a Slut Parade nite, and by dumb-ass luck (honest), I was sent to the
best seat in the house to view the parade.
However, even before an annoying jerk showed up to ruin the game. I considered giving up this seat, seat 1 at
one of the tables right up against the rail that separates the room from the
pedestrian traffic. For some reason, the
player at the table behind me was sitting far enough away from his table so
that every time someone walked between our tables, they bumped my chair. It was very annoying. And never, ever, ever did someone have the
courtesy to say, “Excuse me.”
But I won some small, unmemorable pots
and was up a bit, so I was reluctant to move.
All poker players have their own set of superstitions, right? Plus, as I said, it was a good seat to view
the traffic that was about to hit the casino.
But then the jerk showed up to take
seat 8. At first, he was fine. He had less than $100 when he came and he was
quiet. But he won a few pots, built up
his stack a bit, and turned into a maniac.
And a chatty one at that. I don’t
know what was worse, the non-stop flow of words coming out of his mouth (and
loudly too, since I could hear them from the other side of the table) or his
tendency to make ridiculously large raises preflop more and more often. I mean like, first into a pot, he’d make it
$15, $20, $25.
I know the way to play against a guy
like that—lower my preflop calling standards a bit (since he’s obviously raising
with marginal hands—and then wait to make a hand. Not a monster, just a hand. And collect an inflated pot because of this
guy’s ridiculous raises.
Of course that’s high variance. And I really didn’t want to go through more
than two buy-ins this evening trying to catch a big hand. But I stayed for awhile, called a few raises
with playable hands and whiffed.
Then things got even worse. Another player joined in seat 6 that wouldn’t
shut up either. I don’t mind talking at
the table at all—hell, it’s how I get most of my blog posts—but it was just
non-stop, and neither one of them was saying anything interesting, plus it was
loud enough so I couldn’t tune it out.
Then to make matters worse, the guy
next to me, who had been a rather normal player before the jerk showed up,
suddenly started playing back at the jerk.
They started re-raising each other, and trying hard to out-bluff each
other. It wasn’t nasty, it was all in
good cheer. They were actually admiring
each other’s audacity. Still, I was
basically in the middle of a dick-measuring contest and it became harder and
harder (pun not intended) to every play a hand.
The final straw came on a hand when
the jerk was the big blind. In early
position I limped in with Jack-10 offsuit.
In hindsight, I should have raised, but at the time I was thinking
either the guy to my left or the jerk would three-bet me anyway, and that maybe
I could call a single raise with that hand but not a three-bet. To my surprise, the guy to my left folded and
the jerk just checked. So six of us saw
the flop, which was Ace-Queen-9 two clubs.
I didn’t have a club.
The jerk led out with a bet of
$25. Typical of him, as the pot was $12
before the rake. I clearly wasn’t
getting good odds with my open-ender, but there were players behind me who
might call if I did. And I thought I had
pretty good implied odds from the jerk if I hit my straight.
I was tanking and then the jerk spoke
up, “He never plays a hand. If he calls,
I’m folding.”
I laughed and for some reason, that
encouraged me to call. I actually
thought that based on his comment, I might be able to bluff him on the
turn. Actually though, a much better
play would have been to raise him right there—put out $75. I wish I had, but I just put out $25 and said
to the dealer, loudly enough for everyone at the table to hear, “Verbal is
binding, right?” The dealer just
chuckled. Guess not.
But then the next player moved all in
for $86. Damn. This is a regular I’ve played with a zillion
times before—a very nitty player. It was
only the third or fourth hand he’d received since he was at this table, but I
was very familiar with him.
It folded to the jerk who folded
instantly. Back to me. I was pretty sure that the shove meant he had
a set or two pair at a minimum. But he
also could have done that with a draw, especially since his stack was so low. I had him covered. I figured he might have the same straight
draw I had—meaning I’d be calling just to get a chop—or he had the flush draw,
which would obviously beat my straight.
That meant I might only have 6 real outs, not 8.
I thought for a long time. It was a real close call. I would have called
if it wasn’t for those two clubs. But with the flush draw out there, I
reluctantly folded.
That was it for me at this table. The excessive, boring chatter, the
chair-bumping, the dick-measuring contest, the jerk and his oversized bets, ….and
then I had probably made a bad lay-down to the table’s nit. I knew I would never be able to concentrate
well enough going forward to play my best at this table. I got up and looked for a better table.
All the other 1/2 games looked pretty
good save one (that one had only short stacks at it). So I asked to move to any table but that
one. And in a few minutes I moved to
another table.
This table was one row away from the
rail, so even though it was still facing the pedestrian traffic, it was farther
away from it. Keep that in mind.
I took seat 1 and there was a kid in
seat 2. I mean it when I say “kid.” He didn’t look familiar to me but I swear, he
looked too young to be in a casino. He
looked more like he should be preparing for his Bar Mitzvah than playing poker.
Not long after I arrived at the new
game, my pal Abe showed up. He had just
arrived in the room and been sent over to the same table. Seat 3 was open, but as Abe was about to take
it—and before he and I had had a chance to say hi to each other—the kid in seat
2 said he was going to move to seat 3 and Abe could have seat 2. He explained, “Friends should sit next to
each other.” Though surprised, I
immediately shot back, “I’ve never seen this guy before in my life.” You can’t believe everything said at a poker
table, right?
As I said, I didn’t recognize the kid—and
he hadn’t acknowledged me at all when I arrived at the table—but he clearly
knew me—and Abe. I asked Abe about him
when the kid left and sure enough Abe knew his name. I don’t know how I didn’t remember him.
Not long after Abe joined the game,
our mutual buddy Mike pushed in to deal.
“Oh look at this, the gang’s all here,” he said referring to Abe and me. He had seen me at the “prime” viewing table
earlier (recall that Mike loves to comment about how I always seem to get one
of the best seats in the room on “Slut Parade” nights). So he asked why I gave up such a valuable
piece of real estate on such a night. “One
too many assholes at that table,” was my answer. He responded, “Then one of the moved to here.” Heh heh.
All in good fun.
Abe won some big pots and had a nice
stack of chips in front of him. A couple
of those pots were when he raised preflop and I called his raised, and let it
go on the flop. I don’t recall the
hands, since I didn’t win them and didn’t lose much, I didn’t make a note of
them. But it meant that in theory, a
little bit of Abe’s winnings came from me, a fact that comes into play later.
One of the hands that increased Abe’s
winnings was when he flopped quad 10’s while Mike was dealing. The pot he won wasn’t very big, but at this
point in May, they still had high hand bonuses (since discontinued). Abe got to draw an envelope and could have
won $1K, although the likeliest prize was $50.
He beat the odds a little by grabbing an envelope worth $100.
Monte was working the floor. For what may be the most recent post I’ve
mentioned him, see here. When Monte came by with Abe’s $100 (and with
the paperwork he had to sign to get it), he went over to Abe’s stack and just
knocked all of his chips over for fun. I’ve
seen Monte do that to regulars a number of times. I’m pretty sure he’s even done that to me,
although it might have been when he was playing and not dealing or flooring.
Abe laughed I guess, but the kid who
had recognized me had a great comment the instant the chips went flying. “Excuse me, dealer, is he allowed to keep his
chips like that?”
As I was laughing I said, “Yeah, kick
him out.” Then I went on, “You know,
that’s a good way to get someone kicked out….keep knocking over his chips.” Of course, one little problem….if a player were
to knock over another player’s chips, the person touching another person’s
chips could be asked to leave. (For
those who might not know, in a poker game, particular a No Limit game, a player
is obligated to keep his chips stacked in a way so that other players are able
to estimate the size of his stack).
Mike was pushed by Michelle, aka the
dealer who never pushes me a pot, aka the dealer who famously wanted to be “Jack-Balled”
(see here).
For some reason, she and Abe got into right away. Of course they’re pals, and I don’t know what
started it, but Abe said early on that he wasn’t going to tip her for any pots
he won. Later, Abe said something to
Michelle and she didn’t respond. “I’m
not talking to you. You said something
terrible to me.” Asked what, she replied,
“You’re not going to take care of me.”
That only egged Abe on. He won a bunch of pots from her and would
stack his chips deliberately. And he’d
say to her, “I’m stacking my chips. See,
I’m stacking my chips.” And then when he was finished, he’d say, “See, I’m all
finished stacking my chips.” And of
course, he wouldn’t throw any chips Michelle’s way. I’m not sure what Michelle said in response,
but she was acted displeased. Now, there
was no doubt in my mind—and I seriously doubt there was any doubt in her mind—that
Abe would throw some money Michelle’s way when she was pushed out. So it was almost like a little skit they were
performing.
A little while later, I actually won a
pot while Michelle was dealing—I think I may have won more than one, in
fact. It wasn’t a big one, but still, it
wasn’t lost on Abe that it was Michelle sending the chips my way. Before I had a chance to comment on this
unlikely turn of events myself, Abe said, “Oh, look at this. She’s pushing you a pot. I should take a
picture of this.”
Michelle said, “Well, just take a
picture of him not me.” I asked, “You
don’t want your picture taken?” She
responded, “No…..I’m famous. I’m on the
cover of magazines.”
So I had to ask what magazines. Now, I actually wanted to say, “Playboy?” but
I thought better of it. “What
magazines? People Magazine?”
“No.
Asshole Magazine.”
Abe and I both cracked up at
this. While we were still laughing, she
corrected herself. Pointed directly at Abe, she said, “Actually, You're on
the cover of Asshole Magazine.” That was
just awesome. The two of us were now in
complete hysterics.
Shortly thereafter there was some
discussion about who was the biggest asshole in the room and of course Michelle
said, “The guy in seat 2.” That would be
Abe, of course.
When Michelle left, of course Abe
threw her some chips and said, “That’s with interest. I’m giving you interest” She
said, “You should give me interest for making me wait.”
I think it was the next dealer that turned
things around for me. Down to about $160,
I was in the big blind with Ace-10 of clubs.
Abe, under-the-gun, made it $10.
Four other players called by the time it got back to me, so I put in
another $8 and six of us saw the flop.
It was Ace-high, no draws. I checked and so did Abe. A guy who was down to $58 bet $16. Pretty small bet for the size of the
pot. One player called, as did I. Abe mucked and got up from the table. “Let me know how it turns out,” he said as he
walked away.
The turn put a low pair on the
board. I checked, the same guy bet
another $16 and we both called. The
river was a blank and the guy put his last $26 in. The other guy folded but it was an easy call
for me, even though I thought there was an excellent chance I was out-kicked.
When I called the other guy said, “You
got an Ace?” I both said yes and showed
him my Ace. And what did he have? Would you believe two Kings?
Wow.
If I started playing pocket Kings that badly, I’d probably start a blog
and call them “the dreaded pocket Kings.” Hmm…..
Seriously, that was poorly played on
his part. He of course should have
three-bet Abe before the flop. In fact,
with only $68, he probably should have just shoved preflop. I mean, if he’s willing to get it all in with
his dreaded hand even if with an Ace on the board, why not put it all in when
you’re likely ahead? Alternatively, a
shove on the flop might have gotten a weak Ace to fold. Probably weaker than a 10, tho. As it was, his small flop and turn bets made
it too easy for someone with even Ace-deuce to call.
I was originally planning on calling
this post, “How not to play Pocket Kings.”
But you know, I just had to put “Asshole Magazine” in the title.
I was just about done stacking my
chips when Abe returned. “So what
happened with the hand?” he asked. I pointed
to my now much larger stack. “Oh, you
got them.” Another player told him that
the guy who bet—who took off immediately after the hand—had pocket Kings. “And didn’t re-raise with them preflop?” Yes, that’s what he did. Or didn’t do.
One of our mutual pals asked if any of
the big stack in front of Abe had come from me.
I said no, but Abe corrected me and pointed out that I had put in $26
calling his preflop raises on hands he eventually won. So later, when Abe got a massage, he made it
very clear to me—and the masseuse—that he was paying for the massage with the
chips that he had won from me. I said, “Okay, good.”
A bit later I had Aces in early
position, and my $8 bet was called by three players, including Abe. The flop
was Queen high, two hearts, and I did have the Ace of hearts. I bet $25 and Abe was the only caller. The turn was an Ace (there goes my backdoor
flush draw) and I put out $50. Abe
tanked for a long time but finally folded. Guess Abe ended up paying for that
massage with someone else’s money.
With some profit in front of me, in
the small blind I was dealt the dreaded hand myself. There were a bunch of limpers, so I made it
$15 and got two callers. The flop was Ace high.
I bet $30. Does anyone have a
better suggestion for what to do there?
Kings with an Ace on the flop?
You have to bet there, right? The
first guy folded immediately but the second guy tanked for quite a long time
before folding. I’m guessing he had a
weak Ace and put me on a stronger one.
And that was it. I ended up over $150 up for the night. And just missed out being on the cover of
Asshole Magazine.