On a Wednesday night during my recent
Vegas visit, I decided to play at the Venetian.
And then I saw a tweet from Andr0us that
he and his fiancé were going to be playing there that night. As I mentioned when I basically did an entire
post “dedicated” to him (see here),
he and I are Twitter buddies. Although,
before this night, I had never met him in person, I kind of felt like we were
almost brothers.
When I got to the V I made sure to tweet to him and ask him if he was there. In the meantime, I had gotten a seat at a 1/2 game. When he replied that he was there and gave me his table and seat #, I realized he was sitting at the table right behind me. In fact, he was in the seat right behind me. I didn’t say anything to him directly. I noticed the person in the seat he identified was wearing a Dodgers baseball cap, backwards. So I tweeted to him, asking if he was wearing a Dodgers baseball cap, backwards. He tweeted back, “Just for you.”
When I got to the V I made sure to tweet to him and ask him if he was there. In the meantime, I had gotten a seat at a 1/2 game. When he replied that he was there and gave me his table and seat #, I realized he was sitting at the table right behind me. In fact, he was in the seat right behind me. I didn’t say anything to him directly. I noticed the person in the seat he identified was wearing a Dodgers baseball cap, backwards. So I tweeted to him, asking if he was wearing a Dodgers baseball cap, backwards. He tweeted back, “Just for you.”
Awesome. Of course, I have made a point, here on the
blog, of saying that I hate it when guys wear their caps backwards. But if someone does it on purpose just for me,
as an “homage” to my well known pet peeve, well, I’ll take that compliment
every time. And by the way, later in the
evening, he asked me if I was satisfied with the cocktail service in the room,
a reference to the post I linked to above. For the record, after while, he
turned his cap around and wore it the proper way, as all people with class do.
Actually, this is the proper way to wear a Dodgers cap |
Anyway, we turned around and met,
chatted a bit, and he introduced me to his lovely fiancé. But there was no empty seat at his game and I
had already figured out that the table I was at might be worth staying at. I had been there for three hands, and each
one had been all-in by the turn. Clearly
if I could get a hand, I could make some money at this table.
Both Andr0us and I tweeted out that we
had finally met. So Tony tweeted back that he should straddle every chance he got. Andr0us replied, “Are you kidding? He’ll blog about me! No way!”
That was actually in reference to then-current Twitter discussion about
me blogging nasty things about my friends and fellow bloggers. That is untrue,
of course—I would never heap abuse on any of my friends in this blog—except of
course, when I do.
But we never played together, and just gave each other updates on our tables through the night. Apparently both of our games were juicy.
But we never played together, and just gave each other updates on our tables through the night. Apparently both of our games were juicy.
The guy on my left was a major league
maniac and loved to straddle. He straddled under-the gun—meaning he straddled
my big blind—and also from the button.
At least at the V, the action on a button straddle begins as God
intended—under-the-gun and not with the small blind. His stack fluctuated like
crazy. One hand he got a big double up,
shoving (or calling a shove) with two pair against a guy who had TPTK with
Ace-King. But within three hands, he had
lost most of it to someone else, when he shoved his TPTK with Ace-King into a
guy with two pair. Yeah, it was like
that.
I probably would have asked for a seat
change (if not a table change), but whenever I had the chance to move, I was
doing well and had determined that my seat was lucky. Then, since it was a high variance game, I’d
start losing but there would be no seat to move to.
Early on, I had the dreaded pocket Kings in the big blind. Of course the maniac on my left had
straddled. One person had called the straddle when it got to me so I made it
$20. Maniac called and the other player
called. The flop was Ace-high. Brand new to the table but already knowing
the action was wild, I just checked.
Note: usually in that situation,
I do bet with the Ace on the flop. But
it checked behind me. The turn was a
blank and this time I bet $50. Nobody
called.
Within an orbit, I got Kings
again. I was in early position and
opened to $15. That was, I thought, a
smallish raise for this table. And I
don’t think I had been there long enough to have really gotten a tight
image. But no one called.
In late position, I limped in with
Ace-10 offsuit. I had noticed the maniac
had actually left the table before the action got to him. But everyone else saw the flop—all 8 of us. The flop was 10-5-5, and I called $12. There were now only five of us left! The turn was a King and it folded to the
button, a woman, who bet $20. Very small
bet for the size of the pot. It folded to me and I called. We were heads up. An Ace hit the river and this time I led out
for $30. But she folded (guessing she
had a weak King).
I had Ace-2 in the small blind. By this time the maniac had busted a couple
of times and had to hit the ATM up for more money. When he got back, it seemed like he had had a
come to Jesus moment and was playing a lot tighter. I decided to limp in and see if he raised—but
he just checked. Five of us saw a flop
of A-4-2, two clubs. I bet $5 and two
players called. I bet $10 on a red face
card and got one call. I sure didn’t
like the 3 of clubs on the river, but I bet $15 and got a call. He said, “I don’t think you have a 5,” and
called. He was right, but he obviously
couldn’t beat two pair and just mucked.
Then I got pocket Kings again. Third time of the night. Early position player opened to $15, I made
it $45. It folded back to him. He doubled checked my bet and then said, “I
guess I’m all in.” It was only a total
of $88. Of course I called. All the cards on the board were low and he
showed pocket Jacks. Wow, three for
three with the dreaded hand this nite.
I checked from the big blind with
Ace-4 of spades. Five saw a flop with
nothing for me but a single spade.
None-the-less, I called $10 and it was three-way. A second spade hit the turn and I called
$15. It was just heads up. The 7 of spades on the river gave me the nut
flush but also paired the board. So I
just called his $30 bet. All he had was
trip 7’s and my flush was good.
By this time, the table had quieted
down considerably. The other aggros at
the table had all left, replaced by nittier players. The maniac on my left was also much quieter,
as I mentioned. He only got frisky again
when he opened to $25 when I had a pair of 6’s I wanted to see a flop
with. But not at that price. I folded and went to the Men’s Room
immediately so I wouldn’t see the flop.
Backwards cap and Q-10. I live that life and I love it. That is all.
ReplyDeleteQ-10? Huh? Don't believe I mentioned that hand in this post. What are you smoking?
DeleteI once scooped a 500+ pot with quads at the V just a few minutes after sitting down at about 2:30 am. Then left a gaping hole and headed up to my room. I was so out of it after gambling and partying all day and night, I probably should not have stopped to play, but glad I did.
DeleteHaha....cool story Tino, thanks for sharing.
Delete