On this night, I thought I ran into
the biggest asshole of all time, but the next night, I found out I was wrong.
Oh, he was definitely an asshole, I
just found out that wasn’t quite as big of one as I had originally thought.
But as usual, it will take me awhile
to get to him.
Before that, I was playing poker with
Jeff Bridges, a guy who couldn’t keep his hands off me, and a couple of
well-dressed drunks.
It wasn’t really Jeff Bridges, of
course. The guy didn’t even look like him.
Except he did. Sorta. Imagine Jeff Bridges with long black hair and
a baseball cap (worn the right way). But
mostly the guy sounded like Jeff Bridges.
At least, he sounded like I recalled Jeff Bridges’ voice sounding. His voice definitely made me think of Jeff
Bridgers. Alert readers (do I have any?) will recall I once almost played poker
with Jeff’s brother Beau (see here). Except he wasn’t playing poker, he was
playing blackjack just a few feet away from my poker table. But that was really Beau Bridges.
“Jeff Bridges” really wasn’t Jeff
Bridges, but he was a funny guy, an amusing guy, a bit of an odd duck. But entertainingly so. He was very friendly
and said hello to every player as they came to the table. There were no ladies at the table for most of
the evening, and that was true when a guy sat down and Jeff said, “Welcome to
the table. We’re all male strippers here.”
I can assure you, looking over this
table, no one, male or female, would be hoping anyone there was going to take
their clothes off.
The Jeff added, “Except me. I’m a whore.”
And then, pointing to me, he said, “He’s my pimp.”
I just cracked up. Other than saying hello when he welcomed me
to the table, we had had virtually no communication up to that point. I guess I was oldest person at the table, which
was likely the reason he chose me for this, um, honor.
Then he added, “I would totally bend
over for him.”
Gee, thanks, “Jeff.” No chance of that happening, ever.
The guy to my immediate left was
getting on my nerves. Aside from the
fact that he was a rather aggressive with his preflop raising, and the fact
that he was wearing a baseball cap backwards (see here),
he couldn’t keep his hands to himself.
I don’t think he was into me. He just was in a hurry. The first time I noticed it, it was preflop,
the last guy in front of me just checked and I was looking at my hand to see
what I wanted to do. I guess I took all
of two seconds before I felt a slight tap on my left arm. Huh?
Was it him? Was I imagining
it? I let it go.
But a bit later, I had pocket 8’s
preflop and was deciding if I wanted to raise, and if so, how much. Suddenly this clown tapped my arm again and
said, “It’s on you.”
Now I was pissed. I don’t have a thing about people touching
me, but if someone’s gonna touch me, I’d prefer it to be a hot girl instead of
some chubby guy wearing his baseball cap backwards. I said, in a harsh tone, “I know!” He said, “sorry” and I hoped he had gotten
the message.
But it only lasted so long. It was an hour or so later. By this time, he was now straddling my big
blind every damn time. He hadn’t been
doing that when I started, but now he was doing it religiously. You all know how I love straddles (see here).
Even though this wasn’t the button straddle, it was maybe worse because
he was to my immediate left, and his UTG straddle was taking away the possibility
of my ever seeing a flop for free. Putz.
I should have gotten a seat change or
a table change, but for a good while I was doing pretty good at the table and I
am loathe to move when I’m doing well.
It’s not like I’m the first poker player to be superstitious. So I stayed and hoped he’d either leave or
stop doing it since it never paid off for him.
But he kept at it.
Anyway, this one time, the dealer was
just about to start dealing when he did it again. He tapped my arm, this time to remind me to
put out my big blind, which was on me.
Why was it so important for him to remind me to post my blind, when
that’s the dealer’s job? Because he
wanted to make sure I posted it so he could put out his straddle. And for that he had to touch me?
What made this time worse was that he
distracted me from a particularly pleasant view. You see this was a Friday night, a Slut Parade night, and I had the best seat
in the house to watch the fine young ladies making their way to the club (OK,
so I guess that may possibly have been another reason I didn’t ask for a seat
or table change). And just as he tapped
my arm, a couple of young ladies wearing the shortest, tightest and low-cut-est
(did I just coin a word?) dresses I’d ever seen had come into my view. I was just about to focus on them when I felt
the jerk tap me. I looked to him to see what was going on and by the time I
looked back, the girls were hidden from view by some fat guys. For that alone, I should have killed him.
Then there were two very well dressed
young guys who made it clear they had tickets to the club that evening and
planned on—what’s the polite way to say this?—making new friends. For at least the night, that is.
But these guys knew that the price of
drinks at the club was steep, so they were getting pre-drunk on the free booze
that they could get while playing poker.
They got drunker and drunker and although it didn’t affect their play,
it did affect their language—and the volume of their voices. They had to be repeatedly warned about using
the “f-bomb” and they made some rather tacky jokes whenever the cocktail
waitress came by to refill their cup holders.
She was a good sport about it.
One of the guys kept telling us that if he lost his money playing poker,
his two kids would have to go without milk.
Like that would be our fault.
As I said, I was doing pretty well for
awhile. Without getting any particular noteworthy hands, I had worked my $200
starting stack up to just about $300.
And then…..well, I had Ace-Queen offsuit, under-the-gun and I raised to
$8. Two players called, one of the
well-dressed guys who had less than $100 and a totally unmemorable fellow who
had about $200. The flop was Q-Q-X, two
spades (I didn’t have a spade). I led
out for $15 and they both called.
The turn was a red King and I bet
$50. Well-dressed guy with short stack
shoved….it’s not all that much more than my bet. Unmemorable guy with about 2/3’s my stack
shoved as well!
WTF?
Did the second guy have King-Queen?
Or had he slow played pocket Kings?
Was he shoving with just the flush draw?
On the turn?
I snap shoved. The pot was two big relative to the bet I was
facing to fold now.
I knew I didn’t want to see a spade on
the river, but the King of clubs that actually hit the board didn’t appeal to
me much either.
Ugh.
Short stack had Queen-Jack. I was
ahead when he shoved, but now he was in the same boat I was in (so-to-speak). Queens
full of Kings. Which was no good. Bigger stack had King-10, both spades. He flopped the flush draw, picked up a pair
of Kings on the turn (to go along with the pair of Queens on the board), and
sucked out on me by catching another King on the damn river. Runner runner. True, he had a lot of outs. And he friggin’ hit one of them.
That left me with about $100. A definite cooler. I did something I should do more often when
that happens—I took a break. I hit the
Men’s room, walked around the casino, sat down by a slot machine and just tried
to relax. That’s poker, I told myself.
I didn’t think about this at the time,
but now that I’m writing this up—how do you feel about his play? Was it the right move to shove on the
turn? Should he have just called?
When I got back to the table I added
another $100. And soon thereafter I got
into a hand against Jeff Bridges. The
dealer was Michelle, the one who never pushes me a pot. I had Ace-9 of
spades in the big blind. Jeff opened for
$11 and a couple of people called behind him.
I would close the preflop action so I decided to call.
The flop was good, if you consider flopping the nuts good. It was
Queen-high, all spades. I couldn’t
decide between completely slowplaying it and betting out. There was a good chance that Jeff wouldn’t
c-bet on a monotone flop. I compromised
by betting small, $20. Jeff made it $50
and the other two folded. I put out
$100, which was actually a bit more than he had left. He called.
I showed my hand and said, “You need
help.” He flipped over the dreaded pocket Kings. One of them was the
spade but no amount of spades could help him this hand. He didn’t get his runner-runner boat (or
quads) and I had stacked Jeff Bridges—with Michelle dealing, no less!
There’s some poker blog out there
somewhere that talks about what a bad hand pocket Kings is. I guess Jeff needs to find it.
The last hand I’ll talk about was the
hand with the Asshole, which I was only peripherally involved in. I limped in with Ace-7 of hearts. Four or five of us saw the flop. It had one heart, and a 7. There was also a 5 and a face card. Someone made a small bet and I called with my
middle pair. There were four people
still in the hand when the turn card was revealed, another 5. That didn’t help me at all, and I was done
with the hand. But no one bet so I was
still technically alive to see the river.
I don’t recall the river card but it
didn’t help me. Asshole led out for
$30-$35. And everyone promptly folded.
This did not please the Asshole. He was actually livid. “Damn. Nobody calls! Not one of you?” And he slammed down his hand face up, which
was pocket 5’s.
Trust me, I know how frustrating it is
when you have quads and don’t get paid off for them. Still, you would think a guy could handle it
with a little more class than that. He
was actually screaming at us. “How does
not one person call me there? Not one!”
Meanwhile, I realized that for his
quads he qualified for the high hand bonus, which meant he would get to pick an
prize ball that would be worth between $50 and $1,000. I even said, “high hand,” although of course
the dealer had noticed it too. He called
it out for a floor person to confirm it.
The asshole wouldn’t shut up about how
bad it was that no one called. He seemed oblivious to the fact that he had
earned a high hand bonus—although what I learned the next day indicated to me
that he indeed did know about the promo.
Which kind of makes his behavior even more inexcusable.
He was still ranting and raving about
no one calling when Nancy, who was working floor
this night, came over, saw the quads, was told it was Seat 3’s hand and asked
him, very nicely, “You want some money?”
Asshole replied, almost screaming, “Yeah
I want money. Of course I want some
money! I’ve got kids. Of course I want money.” He practically bit Nancy’s head off. He was so rude and nasty, I only wished there
was a way to deny him his bonus money.
And I kind of felt sorry for his kids right then.
And after finding out he was going to
get some bonus money for his quads, he still kept complaining that no one
called him.
Asshole.
As he left the table, I whispered to
the annoying guy next to me, “The only thing worse than a sore loser is a sore winner.”
There are 100 prize balls in the
hopper. I think well over 70% have
either $50 or $100. I’m pretty sure that
only one has the biggest prize, $1,000.
Nancy led Asshole over to the hopper
and a few minutes later, I heard him whooping and hollering and the shift
manager announced, “We have a lucky $1,000 winner.”
Are you kidding me? A f***ing jerk
like that and he wins the biggest prize?
The most underserving winner in the history of promos. A one-in-a-hundred shot.
When he came back to his seat, he said
to the table, “Well, you’re all forgiven for not calling me. I won a thousand bucks!”
We’re forgiven? Wow, thank you sir. I can sleep well this night.
F you!
The last thing I wanted from this schmuck was his forgiveness. How about an apology? Especially to Nancy, who actually got
screamed at for telling him she was going to just give him money.
Nothing worse than seeing
reprehensible behavior rewarded. Life just isn’t fair. Yeah, I already knew that, but I didn’t need
to see the message brought home so vividly.
Anyway, it took a while for them to
process the paperwork and bring Asshole his thousand bucks. And as soon as they paid him off, he put all
the chips (mostly $100 chips but a couple of hundred in $25 chips—no redbirds)
in his pocket. Nothing wrong with
that. I just wondered how he could
forget to pass a few of those green chips (if not a black one) to the dealer
who gave him the quads, who was still at the table dealing when he got paid
off.
So, a couple of things. The fact that he didn’t tip the dealer—or so
I thought—made him the world’s biggest asshole in my mind. In fact, that was originally going to be the
title of this post, “The World’s Biggest Asshole.” But….but….well, I’ll get back to that.
Now, I didn’t say anything about him
not tipping the dealer. I am of two minds about that. Tipping is really a personal decision, and I
sure hate to be confrontational. It’s
really none of my business if the guy doesn’t tip.
Or is it? I felt guilty not saying anything. I felt bad for the dealer, who is a real nice
guy who I’ve known for a long time from the room even if he hasn’t yet done
anything to earn his own blog pseudonym. A few seconds later, Asshole got
called into the 2/5 game. I considered
going over to him even after he moved into the new game and asking if he forgot
something, but I couldn’t bring myself to do it.
And I felt really shitty about not
saying something.
What say you? Do you say something in that situation? I mean, I assume he had tipped the dealer
when he dragged in the pot, but since—as he was only too eager to point out—it
was a small pot, he probably didn’t give him very much.
Grrr….it bothered me all night and the
next day while I was working. My one
consolation was the scathing blog post I was going to write calling him the
world’s biggest asshole.
I decided that because he was such a
jerk, I was going to find out his real name and use it here, not giving him a
pseudonym. First name only. But let’s say his name was Joe. I was going to call him Joe Asshole. I knew I
could probably find out his name because he signed the form, and maybe the
shift manager would remember.
So the next night, I asked Nancy, who
was working floor again, if she remembered the guy and his name. She didn’t
remember his name. So when the shift
manager walked by, I asked him if he remembered. Nope, he didn’t remember. But I’m glad I asked when I did. Mike was dealing and he actually knew who it
was (he was not the dealer who gave him the quads). He knew his name because he is apparently a
2/5 regular! I didn’t recognize him, but
that’s because he doesn’t usually play 1/2.
So I learned his name and then when I
bitched about him not tipping for his high hand, Mike told me that I was wrong.
He assured me that the asshole did indeed tip for his high hand! Apparently he had tipped the dealer from his
stack before getting the thousand bucks.
Shit, I was feeling guilty and being mad at this guy for no reason.
In fact, later, the dealer who had given
him the quads came to my table and I asked him directly if the guy had taken
care of him. He confirmed that he
had. He said he gave him “a few
bucks.” I assumed that it wasn’t the
most generous tip he’d ever gotten, but he had gotten something and that made
me feel better. No doubt if I had said
something to him about not tipping, I would have had my head bitten off, and
maybe even deservedly so.
Ok, so the guy is just a garden-variety
asshole (for the way he reacted when no one paid off his quads) and not the
world’s biggest.
So I want to publically apologize to
Asshole for thinking he was a much bigger Asshole than he turned out to
be. Sorry, Asshole.
Anyway, it was a strange night of
poker. I never completely recovered from
the cooler hand, even after stacking Jeff Bridges.
Excellent post, Rob. Looks like your blog gets more interesting the more pissed off you get!
ReplyDeleteThanks.
DeleteIf only that would work with poker....the more pissed off I get, the better I played. I'd win the Main Event.
Definitely an awesome entry. It got a few wheels turning in my head, but I posted too late last night to expand on and rip off your idea seedlings. I intend to do so in the near future though... ;)
DeleteThanks, Coach, looking forward to it.
Deletemayb if it wasnt Jeff Bridges .it was his body double like when he played THE DUDE in The Big Lebowski. also, u played the hand correct imo. u bet out to protect and represent the queens. u were against two hand that u want to b against and inferior queen and a 2nd nut flush draw. and the turn was money bcuz now the flush draw has top pair to go with his draw.sometimes in poker there is no right/easy answer(OBVIOUSLY). i can see QJ shoving on the turn and the king flush draw calling but not as much bcuz of the paired board.like u said ,it was a cooler hand. p.s. i bet if Jack Bauer was touching yr arm all night then u would of been in 7th heaven.p.s.s. NO BOOBIES. i am sure if u googled assholes and titties u could find some pics. so this post gets a B-
ReplyDeleteAnger, Jack Bauer doesn't touch men's arms...he BREAKS men's arms.
DeleteI was looking for a picture of Jeff Bridges with a hot chick (the hot chick was just for you) and this, believe it or not, was the best I could find.
against all odds??????????????? great song the movie not so much. ok B+ for effort. i know i just made your day.
ReplyDeleteI'll be able to sleep well tonite, sir.
Delete