The Juciest 1/2 Game Ever! (Part 2)
And we pick up right we left off in part one (here).
The Dane told Jamie he had lived in
Australia for a number of years. They
talked about life down under for a bit.
Suddenly he asked Jamie and Matt if Guido Hatzis
was still around. Jamie had no idea what
he was talking about, but Matt knew and said he hadn’t been heard from in a
number of years. Apparently it was a
comedy act that was popular in Australia some years ago. Matt seemed surprised his new bride wasn’t
familiar with Guido Hatzis. She said, “Well, I’m young!” I found that amusing. Even though I
personally had never heard of Guido Hatzis until that very moment, it just
seemed intuitively obvious that an Aussie man shouldn’t marry a woman unless he
knew whether or not she knew who Guido Hatzis was. So I said to Matt, “How could you marry a
woman who doesn’t know who Guido Whats-his-name is?” This got everyone laughing. The Dane started looking up Guido on his cell
phone (as did I, out of curiosity) and offered to show Jamie, but she declined,
insisting that Matt would give her the Guido debriefing back in their room.
Now at one point the Dane wanted to eat. He asked the floor if they could order a sandwich to eat while he was playing. They used to order food for you and have some poker room staff pick it up and bring it to you. But as a result of some recent personnel cuts, they no longer have enough staff to do that. Now all they will do is order the meal for you, but you have to go get it yourself when it’s ready. The Dane was not happy. He didn’t want to leave the table to pick up his sandwich at the deli. But he had them order his sandwich (I think it was ham and cheese, but definitely with mustard) and then asked Matt if he would get the sandwich for him (since Matt was just watching the game, not playing). At first Matt thought he was joking—why should he get this guy’s sandwich? But the Dan kept pressing him to do it since he had nothing better to do. Finally he offered to pay him to get his sandwich. I believe the offer was $10. Matt was still reluctant because he said he had no idea where the Deli was. “Is it far from here?” After it was explained that it wasn’t that far, Matt said ok, he’d pick up the sandwich for him. He collected the money for the sandwich and his $10 tip and took off after the guy’s sandwich. He gave the delivery fee to Jamie to add to her stack.
Now at one point the Dane wanted to eat. He asked the floor if they could order a sandwich to eat while he was playing. They used to order food for you and have some poker room staff pick it up and bring it to you. But as a result of some recent personnel cuts, they no longer have enough staff to do that. Now all they will do is order the meal for you, but you have to go get it yourself when it’s ready. The Dane was not happy. He didn’t want to leave the table to pick up his sandwich at the deli. But he had them order his sandwich (I think it was ham and cheese, but definitely with mustard) and then asked Matt if he would get the sandwich for him (since Matt was just watching the game, not playing). At first Matt thought he was joking—why should he get this guy’s sandwich? But the Dan kept pressing him to do it since he had nothing better to do. Finally he offered to pay him to get his sandwich. I believe the offer was $10. Matt was still reluctant because he said he had no idea where the Deli was. “Is it far from here?” After it was explained that it wasn’t that far, Matt said ok, he’d pick up the sandwich for him. He collected the money for the sandwich and his $10 tip and took off after the guy’s sandwich. He gave the delivery fee to Jamie to add to her stack.
A few minutes later, he returned with
the guy’s sandwich. And so the Dane
started to eat and noticed there was no mustard on it. “I asked for mustard.” He complained to the floor person who ordered
it but that wasn’t where there problem was.
You see, at this Deli, they don’t put mustard on for you. They have little packets of mustard, ketchup
and mayonnaise off to the side for you to put on yourself. Poor Matt had no idea he had to go get
mustard in addition to the sandwich. So
the Dane asked Matt to go back and get him some mustard. Matt laughed, was he joking? No, he wasn’t. Matt didn’t want to go. So the Dane said he would pay him to get the
mustard. And then he tossed two red
chips in the direction of Jamie and Matt asked where he would be able to find
the mustard, and then proceeded to walk back to the Deli to get some mustard
packets. The Dane had paid something
like $30 for his ham and cheese.
A few minutes later, he came back with
a bunch of mustard packets. The Dane was
in the middle of a hand (as usual) and trying to figure out how much to
bet. Matt came in right behind him and
plopped the mustard packets not on the tray behind the Dane where the sandwich
was, but right on the poker table next to his chips. It was pretty funny, I was thinking the Dane
may bet some mustard packets in addition to whatever chips he bet.
Somehow there was a brief discussion
of Australian Rules Football. Someone
asked why there is a box in the middle of the field (there is?). “What’s the box? What’s that for?” The Mexican said, “Don’t you want the
box? Don’t you want to taste the box?
You’ll be happy when you taste the box.”
Jamie turned slightly red but was a good sport.
So back to the poker. Finally, after what seemed like an eternity
of not playing a hand, I had 10-4 of clubs in the big blind. And lucky me, this was the one hand per hour
where no one raised. The flop came out
three clubs. I bet $6 and got two
callers. The Dane thought this was
noteworthy and commented, “Wow, you haven’t played a hand in an hour.” That was probably accurate, but I didn’t
appreciate him pointing that out to everyone.
I bet $20 on a blank turn and they both called. Another blank on the river and I checked,
worried that someone might have been slow playing a bigger flush. Nobody bet and my flush was good.
My buddy Jack came to the table and
soon dealt me a couple of black Queens, easily the best starting hand I had
seen all night. I think I was in middle
position and amazingly it hadn’t been raised by the time it got to me, so I
made it $15. When it came to him, the
Dane again said about me, “He hasn’t played a hand in three hours.” Jack properly told him not to make comments
like that. That is the correct thing to
do and I wish more dealers would do it. Only six players called, including both
of the maniacs. The flop was Ace high,
rainbow. A guy (not one of the maniacs)
donked out $10. Hmm… I just called. Surely someone had an Ace. Five of us saw the turn, including both
maniacs. The turn put a second heart on
the board. The same guy bet another
$10. I called, as did the maniacs.
I didn’t think I even had the second
best hand, but the bet sizing there kept me in.
If I could see a cheap showdown, why not? I was pretty sure I needed to
hit my set in order to win this pot, a real long shot. And then, starring at two hearts on the
board, I started thinking I wasn’t sure I wanted the Queen of hearts to
hit. Between the bet-sizing and the lose
play at the table, a backdoor flush wasn’t at all unlikely. So I figured I was probably down to one-out,
the Queen of diamonds.
Just like the first hand I described,
when I willed the Ace of clubs to hit, I started trying to will the Queen of
diamonds to come out. “Come on, Jack,
put that Queen of diamonds out there,” was what I was thinking.
And then somehow, Jack, looked deep
into my thoughts. He read my mind. He read my mind and produced the river card I
was looking for. Yes, it was the Queen
of diamonds! The same guy bet $10 again,
and both maniacs called. This time I of
course raised. I made it $70. The guy
who bet shoved for a little more than that, but the two maniacs folded.
The guy had Ace-King. So, he had limped in with that. And had he made a decent bet on the flop
and/or the turn, I might have given up on my Queens. But, as it was, well played, sir!
I was sitting right next to Jack, and
as he pushed me the pot he whispered, “nice river card.” Jack knows all about my blog and so he said,
“I can just see it now, ‘Jack reads my mind and puts out the Queen of diamonds
I was thinking about.’” He kind of was
reading my mind because I admitted I really was thinking of that card, and was
trying to telepathically communicate the Queen of diamonds to him. I told him that since my Queens were both
black and the hearts were out there, I only wanted the Queen of diamonds, not
the Queen of hearts. “Yeah, yeah, I read
your mind, make sure you put that in your blog.
You know, you can send it to me and I can edit it for you.” Ha ha. Well, I didn’t send this to Jack for
his review, and he’s probably pissed that it took me so long to write this up,
but here you go, Jack!
A little while later, the Dane was all
in against somebody (no surprised) and had his cards face up. The river was a queen that made the Dane’s
hand and he won a nice pot. He got
excited when he saw the Queen. “Ah, the Queen, the great Queen…..that’s the
Queen of England!” Jack was amused and
said to me, “You’ve got to put that in there, ‘the Queen of England.’”
I said, “Oh I will. But when I write the blog post, I’ll have been
the one to have said ‘The Queen of England!’”
Jack laughed at that and said, “Yeah, ok, I’ll back you up.” But see, I was honest, I didn’t give myself
credit for the Queen of England reference.
I had a lot of chips in front of me
for not playing very many hands. It was
getting late, and I was still card dead.
I was beginning to think that was fine.
It was a high variance type of game and I was on the good side of that,
but I was thinking there was a high likelihood of me getting burned if I stayed
too long. So I was hanging on, enjoying
watching the action and the conversation, and not minding not getting anything
to play.
By this point I had seen the Dane go
through some huge stacks a couple of times.
One time when he busted out, he actually had to go to the ATM to get
more money. He ran up to that $300 to
well over $1,000 in less than an hour.
And burned through all of and busted out again in less than 20 minutes.
And then I got a couple of deuces. The Dane’s stack was kind of low and he only
raised to $10, probably as small a raise as he’d made all night. The Mexican called, I called and one other
player called. I flopped the set on a
rainbow board (no good straight draws either).
The Dane led out for $25, the Mexican called and I decided to slow play
it, so I just called. The turn was a
second diamond. The Dane shoved for his
last $100 and the Mexican called. The
Mexican had a huge stack, well over $1,000.
I had about $400. I just called. The river put a third diamond on the board
which was a concern. A back door flush
was not rare in this game. The Mexican
took a long time to think about it before checking. I took a long time to think about my action.
Now, the Mexican would have called any
bet the Dane made even if all he had was Ace-high. But he was aware of who the tight players
were and I’d seen him fold plenty of times to bets made by everyone but the
Dane. If he had forgotten that I hadn’t
played a hand in a long time, he was reminded by the Dane who had once again
made a comment about it when I called his initial flop raise. The more I thought about it, the more I felt
that the Mexican would only call a bet from me if he had me beat. Had he rivered a baby flush? Maybe he had set-over-set?
So I played it safe and just flipped
over my set of deuces. The Dane stared
at my hand and the board for a long time and finally mucked. The Mexican showed a pair of 8’s (one on the
board, one in his hand, along with a Queen).
I was worried for nothing, but I am quite sure he wouldn’t have called
any bet I would have made there.
I settled for adding over $200 to my
stack. Perhaps I could have gotten more,
but I wasn’t really upset with myself for being overly cautious under the circumstances.
Amazingly, the Dane didn’t rebuy, and
left without really saying goodbye, which was surprising. The game quieted down. A tough regular raised to $10 and I called
with Ace-King offsuit. It was
three-way. The flop missed me but no one
bet. The turn was also a blank and
again, no one bet. A King hit on the
river and the reg bet $25. I just
called, the other guy folded and the reg just mucked without my even having to
show my hand. Fine with me.
A few minutes later they had the
drawing and this time I didn’t get called.
I racked up my chips and cashed out with $540 of profit. That about equals my best cash session
ever. Oh, and I had $100 in my pocket
from the earlier cash drawing promo. So
it was a very good night indeed.
I’d never seen a game like this
before, to be sure.
You're killing me Rob - you call with what you believe is a one-outer and you hit it. Ugghhh... :) Let me know when you write the book on winning telepathy. ;) Congratulations on the session! Also never realized that the queen of hearts is kinda sexy... :D
ReplyDeleteHey, poker is a great game when you hit your one-outer! Remember, I called there because $10 was a ridiculously small bet consider pot size. I couldn't fold for that.
DeleteI tried that trick of sending telepathic messages to the dealers constantly the rest of the trip and darn it, I couldn't get it to work again.
i would be embarrassed to say on my blog my biggest win at $1-2 was $540
ReplyDeleteWell, I'm not.
DeleteOTOH, I would sure be embarrassed to admit I dumped $5K (or whatever it was) into a machine before leaving Vegas. Fortunately, I never had to do that.
smelling so BAD that Lightning has to roll down the windows of his car is embarrassing. imo.
DeleteOh come on, anger....why would you make a stink about something like that?
DeleteLOL nice
DeleteHi Rob Congratulations on your nice score. I have a certain lady I am thinking of and it is not the Queen of diamonds. Anyway I play a lot of 30 and 60 dollar buy in tournaments at my local casino. This lady always calls out the possible straight and flush draws during the tournaments. The dealers all correct her each time. This is even on hands she has folded. Her answer is always " I know that" but she can not stop doing this. This is a small local casino and all of us are regulars. They never give her a penalty like sit out a round or skip the next tournament. The truth is she really does not play all that well and I am sure most people want her money. We just have to put up with it or go to bigger casino's.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ed, yeah I think you've mentioned that lady before. You know, if they actually penalized her an orbit once, it might just cure her without losing her business.
DeleteOr not.
We all know TBC to be a mentally challenged degen derelict, with no room to be critical of anyone's win/loss record. So stfu TBC.
ReplyDeleteRob, Hope to see you at the WSOP playing deepstacks and Collossus. GL sir.
Big L
Good luck to you, Big L. I hope to see you at the WSOP. So far, everyone I know is playing the Colossus, so if not before, see you there at the final table!
DeleteOn 2+2 i asked the Trooper to video the "slut parade" at MGM,
ReplyDeleteI doubt he honors the request, but it would be hilarious. lol.
Big L
Heh heh. Thanks, will be interesting to see if he responds. He definitely should try it, would be interesting if he can pull it off. I'm impressed that he does so much video inside the casinos.
DeleteAre you on Twitter? When he tweeted out about the fine looking ladies he noticed while playing at the MGM, I tweeted back with the Slut Parade post (which he retweeted).
Seems inevitable he'll mention the SP on a video one day/
Yes sir, i'm VegasDegen on 2+2 and ZetusLarry on tweeter.
DeleteGL, see you @ the Rio in late May. Also, the offer for a complimentary lap dance at the Rhino still stands, if you're ever inclined to check it out. They have a huge stable of thoroughbreds, so to speak.
Big L
Well, I dunno about the lap dance, tho I do appreciate the offer, but I do look forward to seeing at the Rio this summer. Also, maybe we can enjoy said Slut Parade together one night!
Delete