The TBC Invitational, Part 2
This is the second part of this night of poker, and continues right where part 1 (see here)
ended. And it's not just a good idea to read part 1 before you read
this part--it's mandatory. Reading this saga out of order will cause
your computer to explode. That's probably just a joke, but why take that
chance?But not long after that, luck intervened. Pete texted me, asking me what was going on with trying to get together at the same table. He said that the table he was at needed players. Really? I folded the pocket Aces I had just been dealt (just kidding) and rushed over to his table. There were actually three open seats at his game, which had apparently all been opened at once. Awesome. I practically ran over to the guy I had earlier talked to. He was talking to another floorman and I got his attention. I explained that at Pete’s table there were there open seats, and would it be possible for the three of us to be moved there right now, before they sent other players there?
He said sure. Then the floorman who he had been talking to
tried to interrupt and asked, “Wait, are you in other games now, or are you on
the waiting list?” No, no, we were not
attempting to cut in line, we were all playing.
The shift boss knew that. Did
this floorman think his boss was going to violate his own room’s policies?
Anyway, I went back to Pete’s table
while the shift boss was messaging to the front about three table changes and
reserved my seat right next to him. Then
I went to Tony and Coach and told them to pick up their chips and come to
Pete’s table. And so, we finally were
all at the same game. I didn’t use my “influence” to do it, I did what anyone
could have done. Next day I received a
tweet back from my Venetian contact and he apologized for not responding
earlier, but he was indeed out of town.
No worries, I told him, it all worked out.
So I was in seat 1, Pete in seat
2. On the other side of the table, Coach
grabbed seat 8 and Tony initially took seat 9.
The Venetian 1/2 game is 9-handed. Anyway, not long after we
all got to the table, seat 7 on the other side of Coach opened up and Tony
asked to move there, which he did.
Immediately after moving his chips and all of his stuff to seat 7, he
went to the Men’s Room. By the time he
got back, a new player had come to the table and taken seat 9. On returning to the table, Tony saw the new
playing in seat 9 and told him to get out of his seat. He had completely forgotten that he had just
moved to seat 7. Fortunately, Coach was
there to remind him before things got heated.
After we were all there awhile, having
a fine time, the guy in seat 3 or 4 suddenly turned to Pete and said to him,
“OK, now that I’m leaving, I can tell you this.
I don’t want you to think I’m a stalker or anything—I’m not—but I once
flew on a plane with you to Charlotte. I
even commented on your blog about it, but you didn’t respond.”
Pete was taken aback, and then the guy
described the flight and he knew the guy was not making it up. He said goodbye and said something about
hoping to run into him again. He also
said something about being on AVP and mentioned his handle there. Anyway, after that, Pete described the flight
and it was memorable. They couldn’t
catch their connecting flight home from Charlotte due to a snowstorm. And Pete did remember a guy commenting that
he was the plane with him, but he didn’t respond (he had asked where he was in
the airport, while they were waiting for a flight) because it did sound a
little scary. In person, the guy seemed
harmless enough.
Now, just based on our conversation at
the table, it would have been easy for this guy to figure out who Pete
was. But he couldn’t figure out how he
knew who he was back last winter when they found themselves on a plane
together. Especially since he didn’t have any contact with him. And as I’m writing this, I figured it
out. He didn’t know who Pete was or he
might have said hello during the flight.
He just happened to be a blog reader and read the blog post that Pete
wrote from the Charlotte airport after the flight! And from his description, he could tell Pete
was talking about the same flight out of Vegas he was on. So he made the comment but didn’t have any
idea what Pete looked like. You can find
Pete’s airport post here, and the guy we met at
the Venetian is obviously the first commenter, using the pseudonym
Anonymous. Obviously, from all the
conversation we were having, he was able to figure out that PPP was the author
of The Poker Barrister blog. Small
world.
At Tony’s suggestion, I sent a text to
grrouchie to see if he could join us (in
case he had missed my tweet and all our blog posts about this). He was working, but after I assured him we’d
likely be there to way past midnite, he said he would stop by if he had a
chance. Oddly, when he arrived, he just
got into a game first without looking for us.
Then he texted me to find out where we were. I gave him our table number
and he put in for a table change. One
player shouldn’t be a problem. However,
when a spot finally opened up right next to Pete, they wouldn’t move grrouchie
there, saying there was a table change in front of him. He had to come to this table?
Yes, he did, because he had asked for
our table. It was a fellow named Dave,
an avid reader of Tony’s (I don’t think he’d ever met him in person
before). When Dave found out about the
game, he arranged to join us and even spent some time catching up on all our
blogs, which I don’t think he was familiar with before (except for
Tony’s). He had commented on Tony’s
blog before.
Anyway, it turns out Dave is a really
nice guy, and we had a great time chatting with him. He only recently moved to Vegas to become a
full time grinder, and so far, is doing pretty well. Since this took place, he’s been making a
bunch of really insightful comments about poker strategy here on my blog.
And then grrouchie finally joined the
table. He ended up in seat 9, so I was
to his immediate left (although there was of course a dealer always sitting
between us). Bloggers were now sitting
in five of the nine seats in this game, and when you throw in Dave, a long-time
follower of Tony’s, we had 2/3’s of the table.
So I’m not sure how much serious poker
was being played. To be honest, I wasn’t
really paying much attention, which perhaps explains why I did so well. One of the reasons I haven’t played a lot at
the Venetian is that I never seem to do well there. Isn’t that ultimately the biggest reason you
like or dislike a poker room? I mean, if
you always walk away with extra cash in your pocket, you’ll forgive a lot of a
room’s sins. And similarly, if always
seem to lose multiple buy-ins at a place, they could have Kate
Upton-look-alikes dealing topless and you wouldn’t play there. Hmm….perhaps that’s not quite the analogy I
was looking for.
At my first table, before we all got
together, I was even more distracted than I would later be when we all the Avengers bloggers assembled. That’s because the only thing
I was paying attention to was trying to figure out a way to get us all at the
same table. But while there, I looked up
from my phone long enough to notice I had been dealt pocket Jacks. I raised to $10 and had a whole bunch of
callers. I don’t remember the flop (I
started writing notes down long after, when we all got together). I bet $30 and
had one caller. We checked it down the
rest of the way and the Jacks were good.
I called a small raise with pocket
deuces and flopped a set . I checked and
the raiser, a woman, shoved for $31, and it folded to me, with one player left
to act. I just called hoping the guy
behind me would call (or even raise) but he folded. The lady had Ace-Jack for
Ace high, I didn’t even need the set to win that pot (though I wouldn’t have
called her shove if I hadn’t had the set).
That was the last hand of note at my
original table. When the bloggers table
assembled, I managed to hit three more sets before I was there half an
hour. It was a set of 7’s, a set of 4’s
and a set of 3’s. I didn’t get much
money tho as none of those hands progressed beyond the turn. I never had to show one. I whispered to Pete that I had already hit
four sets this nite. Of course, I don’t
think I hit another set the rest of my trip.
Then there was the titanic
confrontation between Coach and Tony. I
don’t remember who raised first, but there was a re-raise and before I knew it,
they were both all in. Wow. Since this
was the first time Coach had raised all night—hell, I’m pretty sure it was the
only hand he actually played all night—I assumed he was
somehow dealt quads. They both turned
over the hands and I expected this to be one of those classic Aces vs. Kings
situations and I was ready to feel sorry for whichever one of my blogger pals
was stuck with those dreaded pocket Kings.
But it turned out they both
had them! No Aces here, just all four
Kings between two of them. The board mercifully played out nice—no four card
flush for anyone—and they got their money back.
Speaking of Coach, when I was dealt
his Kryptonite hand—Queen-10—I limped in, mostly in his honor. Also because it was suited (spades). Four of us saw the flop. The flop was Queen-Jack-10, two clubs. I bet $8, the guy in Seat 4 (one of the rare
non-bloggers at the table) raised to $16.
Hmm…..I just called. It was heads
up. Ace of clubs on the turn, and I checked and then called $16. Another club came on the river, and we both
checked. He showed Jack-10 and no club. My two pair was just a notch better than
his. Of course, as I dragged the pot, I
had to make a point of showing Coach that I won with his “evil hand.”
The guy in Seat 4 was a nice, friendly
fellow who seemed to enjoy listening in on the conversation we were all having.
And he joined in whenever he could. He
kept asking us about our blogs. “All you guys have blogs?” This was before grrouchie joined us, so I
said, “Well, four of us do. Less than
half the players at the table have blogs….but just barely less than half.”
He asked what we all blogged about—
“Poker?” Pete said, “Some of us talk about poker, some of us talk about other
stuff…Tony talks about his whole life…..”
And then I added. “I mostly talk about poker. And also, boobs.” He laughed at that and so did the cute Asian
girl sitting next to him. I hadn’t
intended for her to hear that but she seemed to enjoy it, so I was relieved.
Speaking of the cute Asian girl who
laughed at boobs, she hadn’t been at the table very long when this hand
happened. I think she had just bought in
for $100 and still had all of it. She opened the pot for $16 and it folded to
me. My good friends, the dreaded pocket
Kings were staring me in the face. I
made it $43. She called. The flop was Jack high and she led out for
$10. I made it $30 (I would have put her
all in but I was worried that she wouldn’t call). She reluctantly called. Now she was pot-committed, but based on her
flop bet, I wasn’t sure she understood that.
Of course, she should have just put it all in there. The turn was a blank and after she checked, I
bet enough to put all in. She reluctantly
called. The river didn’t change
anything.
I showed my Kings and she showed
pocket Queens. I shouted over to Tony
and Coach., “Did you see that…..did you see that?” to make sure they saw I just
won a nice pot with the dreaded hand, of course they had already noticed. Pete had not, he had stepped away from the
table. I can’t recall if he was dealt in that hand and folded or didn’t get a
hand—if it was the latter, then his absence was the reason I won the hand. When he returned, I had to tell him about my
Kings paying off and of course, he didn’t believe me.
That Asian gal rebought, and she was
one of two Asian woman to occupy seat 5 during the festivities. I believe Tony texted Pete each time a new
Asian woman came to that seat to see if she might be Alysia Chang. But none of them were. At least as far as
we told Tony.
And so ends part 2. We will conclude next time. You can find part 3 here.
For once I was actually wishing your post would have been longer.
ReplyDeleteOh man -- did I really just say that? Next thing you know, I'll be talking about boobs, the BSC and the DREADED POCKET KINGS.
ghost writer??? mayb BUT at least the BOOBIE PIC is AWESOME KATE UPTON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! A++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Delete@Lightning: JEEZ....there's no pleasing some people. The post is over 2,000 words, so while it is by no means my longest post, it fairly long....I guess I should have post all three parts at once. That WOULD have been my longest post.
Delete@anger, I figured you'd like it but...A plus? Kate's a D at least, maybe a DD.
i c what u did there. NIIIIIIIIIIICE
DeleteWow, that was pretty short. I feel empty inside... :)
ReplyDeleteSee my comment above to Lightning.
DeleteNo reaction to the KK vs KK being the ONLY hand you played, hiuh?
It wasn't the only hand I played, so no reaction. I've already written about flopping quads, but like you said, you weren't paying much attentiin to the game that night...
DeleteOK, my mistake. You only play pocket Kings, AND hands when you flop quads! Much bigger range than I thought!
DeleteHint: Drop the pocket Kings...they are definitely -EV.
rob hasnt been the same since he was PWNd by the Dragon Lady.mayb rewatching episodes of 24 with Jack Bauer or the WSOP with new BFF mONEY MAKER will snap him out of it. or building a birdhouse
ReplyDeleteOK, I know that the Dragon Lady is the Bag Lady but did you know that Jack Bauer is actually Chris Moneymaker? Did you ever see them together?
Deletei saw them holding hands only BUT jack said WE R RUNNING OUT OF TIME
DeleteYeah, he says that a lot.
Deletehe should trademark that sheeeeeeeeeeit
DeleteLove reading these recaps . . . I feel like I was actually there. Oh, wait . . . But seriously, was the best night of the trip. Looking forward to part three . . .
ReplyDeleteI thought you were there....but I haven't ruled it that the guy sitting next to me was really a very clever Pete Peters impersonator.
Deleteif he was drinking a Miller Lite eating a free range/no steroids Kobe Steak and wearing a David Wright jersey .it was the counselor. BUT if the person was wearing a day old tux, drinking a martini, and ranting about Timothy Dalton,Pierce Bronson,etc,etc it was Roger Moore just mourning the death of Richard Kiel
DeleteActually he kept getting up to play video poker. What does that mean?
Deleteooooooooooooh,it was P3 then. VP is the crack of maryland counselors.
DeleteHe said he had found one of dem good machines.
Deleteall addicts say that LOL. just joking P3 .we know u r a PRO,sir. i hear the law game is good in evansville too
Delete