This one goes back to the Sunday of
Memorial Day Weekend. This was early in
the “Vegas Trip from Hell” (see here)
and by the time I got to BSC, I had wasted most of the day dealing with
internet issues. I wasn’t in the best of
moods. I was deep in thought, looking forward to a long session of poker to
cheer me up. What could go wrong?
As I was walking past the lobby from
the parking structure, walking right in the area where I’ve been known to
encounter a hooker or two, I thought I noticed a familiar face out of the
corner of my eye.
I stopped and looked back, and sure
enough, it was the one and only Pete P. Peters,
blogger extraordinaire. He was parked in front of some kind of gambling
machine. I assume he not only emptied
his wallet into it but a good chunk of his 401-K too. I did recall Pete saying he was visiting the
promised land for this holiday weekend.
I assumed we’d run into each other in the poker room but from reading
his subsequent write-up of this trip, he apparently indulged in everyone of his
degeneracies but poker (you know, sports betting, boozing, gourmet eating,
concerts, and banging Starbucks baristas).
So we never got together other than this impromptu meet-up.
I do want to point out that Mr. Peters
failed to mention running into me in his blog post about this trip. And here I’ve mentioned him prominently (and
oh so flatteringly) in the very third paragraph of this post. Just sayin’.
Soon after I arrived in the poker room
they opened a new game and Nancy was the dealer. Nancy is the one who had been dealing with a
cast as she had broken her hand punching out another woman (see here). I can’t recall if she still had the
cast on this time or not, but I did ask her how her hand was coming along. She said it was getting better, getting
stronger.
I said, “Yeah, it’ll be fine as long
as you don’t punch anybody out again.”
Things went south for me early. Third hand of session, I was on the button
with Ace-Queen, offsuit. There were a
few limpers so I made it $12. It folded
back to the Asian guy in the cut-off who looked familiar. I was pretty sure I recognized him as a bit
of a loose player.
Just the two of us to see a flop
Ace-8-8. He checked, I bet $15 and he
check-raised to $40.
If this was the guy I remembered, he
could have easily done that with a weaker Ace than mine. No way did he have Ace-King or he would have
raised before it got to me. So I went
ahead and called.
The turn looked like a blank and he
shoved—for $76 more. The pot was about $100 before his bet, and I reluctantly
called. I was trying to figure out how he could have an 8 that he would call my
raise with, when he knew it was just gonna be heads up. I couldn’t come up with a good way, other
than he was loose. But that also made me
think it was possible he had a weaker Ace.
Another blank on the river and I asked
if he had an 8. He didn’t say a word,
just flipped over 8-7. It wasn’t even
sooooted! Ugh.
I took a break, skipped an orbit or
two to recompose. I stopped by the
cashier to pick up another stack of $100.
I got pocket Queens and after one
limper, I raised to $10. Four callers
and the flop was King high. I was
probably overly cautious and checked, as did everyone else. No one had a King? A blank on the river and this time I bet
$40. It folded to a guy who I had already
pegged as a pretty bad player, kind of a newbie. He thought long and hard and finally
folded. I thought he might have folded a
weak King there.
I got Queens again a little bit later
but a tight player raised to $15 in front of me. Again, proceeding with caution, I just
called. It’s heads-up, and the flop came King-Queen-3. He bet $20 and I called. This was long before
I had written the post about slow-playing (here),
and I had started experimenting with
slow-playing sets. The turn was another King which I liked a lot (unless he was
prepared to show me pocket Kings). He
bet $30 or $35 and I shoved for my last $93.
He thought for a good long time, then finally called and showed pocket
Aces. The turn was a blank and I had
taken in a nice pot.
Having almost fully recovered from the
early disaster hand, I took an extended dinner break. The table wasn’t full, and I thought it was
in danger of breaking anyway. Thus I
didn’t really consider leaving my chips at the table to eat. I was gonna take too long anyway and I
figured I’d be fine with just going to a new game when I was ready to play
again.
After dinner, I got back and was given
my choice of four tables, each with one open seat. And to my surprise, not only was the game I
left still going with mostly the same players, but my same seat was the one
available. It was as if they had been
holding it for me. None of the other
three games looked any better, so I rejoined my old friends.
I started losing chips, drip, drip,
drip, and then a new player came to seat 1.
I was in seat 9 (it’s 9-handed). He was young and loud, a big guy. “What’s the most I can buy in for?” He was told $300 and handed over three
hundred dollar bills.
His very first hand, I was the big
blind. He could have waited to come in
behind the button for free, but no, he took a hand. And open raised to $15. Under-the-gun. First hand at the table. As far as I could tell, he didn’t know a soul
at the table.
To my surprise, four players call his
$15 bet before it got to me. I had 9-8
suited and figured that, for those odds, I should call, so I did.
I don’t remember the flop, other than
that it totally missed me. I checked and
new guy put out a big bet, I don’t remember how much. Only one guy called, a middle-aged, very
serious gentleman who hadn’t said a word the whole time he was there. He was there before I went to dinner
too. I think I recognized this guy as
someone who mostly plays $2-$5. The new
guy bet bigger on the turn and the serious man called. On the river, the new guy went all in for his
last $155. He had managed to get his
entire $300 buy-in into the pot on his very first hand, betting all streets.
The serious man took a long time. He counted out his chips. He had the new guy covered. He restacked his chips and thought some
more. I really thought he was going to
call, and I was sure hoping he would because I was dying to see what the hell
the new guy had.
But after a long, long time, he
folded.
The new guy of course didn’t have to
show. But he flipped over his hand,
which was Jack-3. Offsuit. There was a King and a Queen on the board,
but no Jack. No 3 either. The guy never
had a straight draw. He never had a
flush draw. He had Jack high. That’s it.
And oh, by the way, yes, he raised preflop, under-the-gun, with
Jack-3 off.
The new guy said, “Oh, I was so sure
you were gonna call, I was all ready to muck it and say, ‘good call.’” The serious man said nothing. Not a word.
He had a poker face, but I’m pretty sure he was not a happy camper. Pretty sure he could beat Jack-high
there. He actually left the game a short
time later, and I suspect that hand was the reason why.
Well, the new guy was every bit the
maniac you might expect from this hand.
He rarely folded preflop. He
never limped in. Once maybe. He came in with a raise every time. Every time.
And a big raise too. That $15 he
raised with the first hand was the bottom end of his bet-sizing. More often it was $20-$25.
OK, I know some people love to play
with a maniac like that, but I don’t. Especially in this case, since he was to
my left. But I resisted the temptation
to get a table change, at least for a while.
I figured all I need is a hand, one hand, and I could get paid. Just sit there patiently, wait for a big
pocket pair, limp in, let him raise, and then do the old limp/re-raise
move I love so much. This time, I would
love it if it was against him.
So I put up with him for awhile and
waited for a hand. When I got playable
hands I played them and that cost me chips when I’d miss. Please, poker gods, please, give me a big
hand. Give me the goddamned pocket Kings
even. I’ll take my chances getting it
all in against his 7-deuce.
But no, it didn’t happen. And with each and every huge preflop raise he
made, I got more and more annoyed with this maniac. Meanwhile, a really nice guy had taken the
seat on my immediate right. Very
friendly fellow, seemed like a good player, was talking about how he liked to
play tournaments and was probably gonna play in the 10PM tournament that night
at BSC.
Anyway, the nice guy had a small
stack, a bit over $100 I guess and had raised preflop. The maniac re-raised and the nice guy called.
On the flop, the nice guy checked and the maniac bet more than enough to put
the nice guy all in. The nice guy reluctantly
called for his last $75. At which point
the maniac flipped over one card—a 6.
There was a 6 on the board (and one or two paint cards). “My six is good, isn’t it? I bet my six is good.” The nice guy didn’t show any cards or say a
word. When a 10 hit the turn, the maniac
said, “Oh shit, I bet my six is no good now.”
But the nice guy said nothing.
And after the river, the nice guy just mucked without saying a word.
At which point the maniac got up and
started shouting—with delight—“Yeah, yeah, my six is good. My six is good. Yeah, yeah, damn it, my six is good.” He practically got up on the table and
started dancing. He kept this up for a
good thirty seconds. It was one of the
most obnoxious displays I’ve ever seen at a poker table. It was sickening
And then the nice guy left the table
without saying a word. He had been real
friendly to the players around him, but he left without acknowledging any of
us. I could hardly blame him.
I had had enough. Life is too short for me to spend time with
assholes like this one. Right then, the
shift boss happened to walk by and I grabbed him and asked for a table
change. He accommodated me immediately
and I grabbed my chips and moved to the open seat at the table he pointed to.
I really should have told him about
the disgusting display I had just witnessed.
Actually, the dealer should have. I think the dealer did mention to the
player something about “excessive celebration.”
But more than anything else, I wanted to get away from this jerk.
As I said in a recent post, I seem to
be running into more and more jerks at the poker table lately, and I have less
and less tolerance for them.
The guy to my right at the new table
was a guy who talked non-stop, but at least he was pleasant. I can best describe him by telling you that
people asked him if he had heard he looked like Curtis Jackson (aka 50 cent)
before and he said he got that a lot. He
talked about every decision he made, every decision someone else made. “That
flop was good for me,” or “That flop didn’t hit you.” The turn card came and he’d make similar
comments. He was in love with the sound
of his voice. He played a lot of hands and it didn’t take me long to figure out
he was a pretty loose player.
The player on my left seemed like a
nice, quiet gentlemen, um, middle-aged, I guess, who I was 100% sure I had
never seen before in my life. For reasons I will soon reveal, I’m going to call
this guy “Joe.” Joe didn’t say hi to me when I came to the table (no reason he
should have). But I guess he was
observant enough to notice me carrying on conversations with the first two
dealers I played with there. In fact, Nancy
was dealing when I got there and she had heard the jerk celebrating that hand
he had just won, and could even see him standing up and practically
dancing. She asked me what that was all
about and I gave her a brief rundown of what had happened and why I got away
from him. I probably told her that he
had been making huge opening raises nearly every hand.
The first hand I played at the new
table was the dreaded pocket Kings. There were a few limpers and I made a
standard raise, but nobody called me.
Not too long after that, I looked down
at pocket Aces in the Big Blind. I made
it $8. It folded to the small blind, aka
50 cent. He played a lot of hands, but I was thinking, damn my luck, I’m not
going to get anything for a big pocket pair again, he’s gonna fold. But no, he not only didn’t fold, he raised!
He started counting out chips and
said, “Let’s make it $29.”
An odd amount, I thought. I wanted to say something cute like, “Twenty-nine? Well if you made it $25 or $30, I would fold,
but since it’s $29, I’m going to have to raise.” But I thought better of it, feeling that
might give away something. I counted out
chips. I wanted to make it $70 but I
miscounted and put out $75.
Fiddy said, “Really? Oh really?”
And then counted out chips. I actually thought he was gonna re-raise,
but no, he just called.
The flop was Queen-Jack-3. He checked and I shoved for around $110. He had me covered. He thought for a long time. Several other times before this, when he
would call a big bet, he’d say, “I’m betting the come.” He might have said it this time, not sure. But he considered it for a long, long time
and then he said, “I think I’m gonna hit it.”
And he still took some more time before announcing he was calling.
And he said to me, “Come on, let’s
show.” Ok, fine, so we both flipped our
cards over. He had pocket 9’s. He really was betting the come. This was the first hand he’d seen me play on
the flop. He couldn’t possibly believe his 9’s were ahead of me. He was counting on hitting a two-outer.
The board bricked out for him and I
had a very nice double up. Thank you, 50
cent!
I was pretty happy and gave the dealer
a nice tip and as I was stacking my chips, I heard the fellow on my left—the guy
I’m calling “Joe,” say, “That would have been a better story if it was Kings.”
Did I hear that right? I was sure I did. He made a reference to pocket Kings. To me.
I didn’t respond. I was too happy stacking my chips. And I thought that maybe it didn’t mean
anything. A lot of people have issues with
pocket Kings, right? It’s not just
me. Just a coincidence. I looked over at him again and was still sure
I had never seen him before in my life.
Just a weird thing to say.
Although, I was thinking maybe I should ask him what he meant by that.
So I let it go for the moment, and
then, as I was still stacking, he said to me, “You know, I read your blog.”
Holy shit. I don’t remember what exactly I said, other
to ask him if we’d ever met (we hadn’t) and how he recognized me. From my pictures on the blog, he said. Plus,
he saw me chatting with the dealers and he could tell I was a regular. Maybe
even some of the conversation I was having gave him further clues. Besides, I suppose, the fact that he knew has
playing at BSC and might have suspected there was a chance he’d run into me. In fact, although he said he didn’t comment
much, he did say he actually had commented one time asking (or guessing) about
the true identity of “BSC.” No, I haven’t
looked through the over 4,600 comments that are on the blog to find that one.
I asked him his name and he said it
was Joe. Yes, that’s his real name I’m
using. For two reasons. One, I don’t have anything embarrassing to
say about him. Oh wait, I just told the
world he reads my blog, I guess that could be embarrassing.
And second, Joe is such a common name
no one could figure out who he is anyway.
Joe is from back east, and he told me he discovered Josie’s
blog from a Google search and that led him here. Then he showed me on his phone that he put a
link to the blog right on his home screen.
Naturally, I was quite flattered, and
we started chatting up quite a bit. Joe was a real nice guy—as you would expect
from one of my blog readers. It turns out that he and his wife made a last
minute decision to hit Vegas for the holiday weekend and when they got to town,
his wife heard about the Cher concert that was that night. He had no interest, so she was enjoying Cher
while he had a few hours to get some poker in.
So I told him that the first dealer
when I joined the table was Nancy, the dealer who punched out her friend. I gave him her line from earlier in the
evening about her friend not being back in town yet. I identified a few others from my “cast of
characters” and even got to introduce him to Abe, who came over to say hi.
And oh yes, at one point, getting back
to his pocket Kings reference, I did tell him that the first time he saw me
raise and not get a call, I did indeed have the dreaded hand.
I ended up calling it an early
evening. It was a mentally exhausting
day from all the issues I was having with my hotel room, and I was finding it difficult
to concentrate on the poker. I figured I
better leave before I spew away all those chips 50 cent gave me. I said goodbye to Joe and thanked him for
making my night by telling me he liked the blog and recognized me. And I left with a small profit, which was
pretty nice after the way the evening started.