Flattery will get you…...somewhere.
In response to the post here, one of my readers, xdex7,
posted a comment complimenting me for doing a good job with my tournament
summary and thanking me for posting it. He
said that most of the blogs he reads don’t do tournament summaries. That got my
attention because the tournament wasn’t even the main part of that post. I actually haven’t done too many tournament
recaps lately, not feeling very motivated to write them up unless I
cashed. And lately, I haven’t cashed in
many.
But xdex7 gave me some
motivation. I remembered a tournament
where I lasted a long time but didn’t cash. More important in my mind however,
was that there was a classic “woman said” from it. For over a year, it’s been eating at me that
I had this “woman said” out there and just hadn’t been able to get it up here
on the blog. And the longer I waited, the less interested I was in revisiting
that tournament. But xdex7 inspired
me. I knew at least one reader who would
like to hear about this tournament. And
there must be at least one or two of you out there who would like the “woman
said.” So, here’s the story on a Binions
2PM tournament from last year. This
one’s for you, xdex7!
Before the tournament I noticed
another tournament going on, and recognized a bunch of my Vegas pals playing in
it. One of those pals was Jeanne. It’s important that you to know that I first
met Jeanne when I noticed her taking a picture of her friend’s cleavage (see here) at this same Binion’s tournament
over a year before. And it’s also
important for you to know that a few months later Jeanne insisted that I take a
picture of her and her two pals pulling down their shirts and modeling their
cleavage (see here). For some inexplicable
reason, to this day, Jeanne thinks of me as a “boob-man”—and rarely lets me
forget it. Go figure.
Anyway, Jeanne and I had a nice chat
while she was playing. Then I left to
play in the 2PM. Now, there was this guy
directly to my right at the table who I didn’t recognize (and I recognize a lot
of the players every time I play this) and who I figured out was visiting from out
of town.
As I am known to do, I was taking
notes in my trusty notepad, and the guy never said anything about that, unlike
others who have indeed commented about it.
But at one point, I dropped my notebook and he noticed it on the floor
before I did and pointed it out to me.
So, a few hours into the tournament
Jeanne, finished with her tournament, came
over to my table. But she didn’t come to
see me. No, it seemed she knew the guy
next to me—the guy who had pointed out my fallen notebook. Sidenote: The poker world is a very small
community and these days, I’m more surprised when two poker people don’t
know each other than when they do.
She nodded to me but carried on a fairly
lengthy conversation with this guy who had been to my right all afternoon. Then suddenly, she pointed to me and said to
him, “Watch out for this guy. He’ll
write about everything you do and everything you say. And whatever you do, don’t show him any
cleavage, because he’ll write about that.”
This was said loudly enough for everyone at our table—at least—to hear.
He didn’t seem to find that comment at
all unusual. All he said, “Yeah, yeah,
he’s already writing about me. I picked his notebook up.”
She responded….”Well, don’t show your
cleavage….don’t show your boobs….he’ll write about your boobs.” And then she left. (Note to Jeanne: I generally don’t write about man-boobs)
To this day, it astonishes me that the
guy never asked me what the heck she was talking about, but he didn’t. He didn’t say a word about it. And it was disappointing too, because if he
had asked me, I already had the perfect response picked out. I was going to say, “I have no idea who that
woman is.”
First level, in early position, I
raised to $300 with Queen-Jack of spades.
One player called. Flop was
King-10-4, one spade. I bet $500, she
made it $1K and I called. A Jack hit the turn the
turn and she bet $2k and I called. The
river was a 9 giving me the straight, but I checked worried she might have the
top end of it. She checked too and she
had King-7 suited, top pair, crappy kicker. (Edited to add, thanks to ohcowboy12go who was the first to comment on this post and noticed an error. Originally I had it that the turn was a blank, but if that was true, she couldn't have had a bigger straight. My voice recording totally ignores mentioning what the turn card was, which is way I thought it was a blank. Hopefully it was a Jack--or a Queen--otherwise I didn't bet the nuts. I'm sure there was a chance she had a bigger straight).
To the fourth level, I had a bit over the $20K starting stack, blinds 200/400. On the button I raised to $1,200 with Ace-Jack of diamonds. One guy—the big blind—called. There were two diamonds on the flop, and the other guy led out with a $1,200 bet. I called. The third diamond hit the turn. He bet $1,200 again. I made it $4,500. He shoved with a similar stack to mine. Since I had the nuts, I of course called. The river was a blank but he was drawing dead. He had Queen-2 of diamonds for a small flush.
To the fourth level, I had a bit over the $20K starting stack, blinds 200/400. On the button I raised to $1,200 with Ace-Jack of diamonds. One guy—the big blind—called. There were two diamonds on the flop, and the other guy led out with a $1,200 bet. I called. The third diamond hit the turn. He bet $1,200 again. I made it $4,500. He shoved with a similar stack to mine. Since I had the nuts, I of course called. The river was a blank but he was drawing dead. He had Queen-2 of diamonds for a small flush.
Fifth level (300/600), $51K
stack. I raised with pocket 8’s and no
one called. Very next hand I had pocket
Jacks. A guy in front of me raised to
$1,200, I three-bet to $3,600. He shoved
for $11K. Tough decision there but I
called. He had Ace-Queen and caught a
Queen on the flop. Ouch.
Then I had pocket 9’s and raised to
$1,800. The lady I mentioned early made
it $5K. She only had a few more thousand
behind her. And she had been playing aggressively. So I shoved to put her all in. She called and showed pocket Queens. Ugh.
But there was a 9 on the flop and, for good measure, another 9 on the
river. As she left, someone said to her,
“Well, at least you can say you lost to quads.”
Fast forward to level 8
(100/600/1200), I started with nearly $40K. I raised to $3,500 with Queen-Jack offsuit in late
position and had one caller, a brand new player to the table. Flop was
Jack-9-3. He checked, I bet $6k. He responded by shoving for $28K. WTF?
As I said, new to the table. I
saw no point in risking half my stack in this spot, so I had to fold.
Next level a lady with a short stack
shoved in front of me for $6-$7K. That
was a good time for me to be holding the dreadedpocket Kings. I raised
and no one else called. She had pocket 6’s
that didn’t improve.
Level 11 (300/1200/2400), starting
with about $72K. I raised to $7,500 with
Ace-King off. The only caller was the
big blind, the same guy who had check-raised me off the hand when he was brand
new to the table. By now, I could see he wasn’t any kind of maniac, he was playing
fairly tight. The flop was Queen-10-4, rainbow. He checked, I c-bet $12K and he shoved. By this time, he had me covered. With just a gut-shot, it was an easy fold to
his check-raise. This time he showed his
hand, he had a set of 10’s. He said, “We
were in a big hand before, sir, so I want you to see I’m not bluffing.” Nice of him.
But losing the chips hurt.
That same player got into an
interesting hand with a nicely dressed woman I’ve played with before, normally
a good player. But she kind of
embarrassed herself out of the tournament.
The guy had flopped a flush, and all she had was a pair of Kings (one
King on the board). She bet the river,
and the guy, who had been slow-playing his flush, asked for the amount of her
bet before he raised. She thought he had
called and showed her hand. The player
insisted—and the dealer confirmed—that he hadn’t taken any action yet, and then
raised—a bit more than a min raise, not a shove. Everyone had seen her hand, which the dealer
had tried to instantly cover with his hand (she was directly to the dealer’s left). But it was too late. She waited for the guy
to show his cards, apparently not hearing yet that he had raised. When the dealer told her, she said, “OK,
all-in.” She could have folded, or even
called and still had chips left over; her “all-in” there was a horrifically bad
play. The guy snap-called and showed the flush, and she was out.
The rest of us were all kind of
surprised. Her bet on the river wasn’t
necessarily a mistake, but when he raised it should have been an easy fold for
her. We came to the conclusion that she was so embarrassed by prematurely
exposing her hand that she just wanted to get out of there so she wouldn’t be
in the company of those of us who saw her mistake. Weird.
Or maybe she had dinner plans.
Another bit of discussion was whether
the dealer had made the right move by trying to cover her cards. He was a new dealer and he just went by
instincts, but I believe the general consensus was that he shouldn’t have done
it. It didn’t matter since the other
player had seen it plain and clear.
Anyway, I said to the guy with the
flush, “I thought it was just me that you flopped monsters against.” He laughed and said, “No, no, nothing
personal.”
By this time, I was down to
shove-or-fold mode. I took pots without
resistance by shoving with Ace-King and pocket Jacks. And then a level later, I did the same thing
with Ace-10 and pocket Kings. I had
shoved so many times without getting called I decided to show the Kings just so
they wouldn’t think I was shoving with mediocre or bad hands.
I didn’t make a note of the level but
we were down to about 24 players (paying 9) and I had less than 10 big
blinds. On the button, it folded to me
with pocket 6’s. I shoved. The big blind, who had a big stack, called
with Ace-Queen. Because I had been
shoving so often (and hadn’t just made a raise in a long time), someone
sarcastically said, when they saw my 6’s, “Oh, he actually has a hand there.”
And there was a Queen on the flop, and
another one on the river for good measure, and I was done. I had survived 6 hours, but it wasn’t enough
to cash.
Rob,
ReplyDelete1st hand below the picture you said you had QJ and the flop was KT4. Blank on the turn; 9 on the river. You checked worried that she had the top end of the straight. Were you nervous that she was holding the AQJ? Was the blank on the turn the J? You may want to fix that. haha
I really like your comment about not knowing the lady. That would have been hilarious.
Last week I was playing at the Cincy Horseshoe and one of the dealers pointed out the lady at the next table with the huge amount of cleavage that she exposed. The dealer said that her boyfriend brings her each time to sit and play with the idea that it distracts the rest of the table. Not only was she distracting that table, but also 3 or 4 other tables. Quite impressive.
ohcowboy12go
Wow, thanks for that correction, cowboy. I dunno what happened, but as you can see, I didn't even mention the turn card in my notes and so I assumed it was a blank. I couldn't have thought she had a bigger straight without a Q or J there on the turn, could I? We weren't playing Pineapple.
DeleteAh yes, the situation you described is known on this blog as "The Jennifer Tilly effect." There's even a label for it.
"I ...just hadn’t been able to get it up."
ReplyDeleteThere's pills for that now.
Ba da dump.
DeleteGreat post Rob, somehow I missed the post when you first put it up. I like how you used the boob story as a warm-up for the tournament summary :)
ReplyDeleteI found it interesting that you lost a hand at Level 8 and had about 30K chips left. Then, at Level 11, you were up to 72K chips! Must have been a nice rush of cards. Thank for sharing.
Hmm....well, I did stack a lady with pocket Kings. I don't think I missed any big hands, just raising and winning preflop or a c-bet.
Delete