And I suppose the title of this post
really should be, “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way Out of the Forum.”
.
But I wanted the title to match the
musical I’m paying homage to exactly.
You know that musical, don’t you?
It’s the one that opens with the following:
But before I get to the story from
whence the title came, I have to discuss a little poker first.
For this evening’s session, I decided
to return Caesars Palace another shot. I
failed to mention that the story I told here took
place at Caesars. It wasn’t the bad beat
that made me hesitant to return to Caesar—that could happen anywhere (and
usually does). The reason I almost didn’t return was because of the temperature
in the room that night was unbearably cold (as I’ve mentioned, this was a
running theme during this trip—poker rooms almost as cold as the outside
temperature). When I told my pal Don of
the issue of the temperature, he told me that the back of the room is
particularly bad and that the tables closer to the front are usually much more
comfortable. My table was in the very
back, of course, and my seat was as far away from the front as you could get.
So I went back there in hopes of
getting assigned or reassigned a table where it wasn’t freezing. I arrived and was taken to a table right
away. They took me right past a table
with an empty seat in the very front. I
asked if I could play at that one and they said no, a player from another table
was moving there. So instead, they took
me to the exact same table I had played at a week earlier, the freezing
one. Worse, the open seat was the same
one I had then, too.
Well, I would have asked for a table
change immediately but it turned out that a player was leaving in a middle
seat, so not quite so far in the back of the room as the other one. I took that seat instead, and figured if the
temperature wasn’t more to my liking, I’d ask for a change.
And in fact, for the first half hour
or so, the weather at my table was pleasant enough. And then, there was the poker….
One of the first hands I hand was
pocket deuces. There was no raise, and
in fact no betting at all. The flop was
all face cards, more highish cards on the turn and river, no one took a stab at
it, and my deuces were good. It was an
$8 pot, but that sure as hell beats hitting a set with those deuces and losing
your stack.
I limped in with pocket 6’s and then
it was raised to $12. Another player
called the $12, my call would close the action so I called. The flop was
King-8-6, two spades. Remembering what
happened the last time I caught a set in this room, and seeing those two
spades, I decided to make a donk bet, I put out $25. The other reason for the
bet was that I hadn’t been at the table very long, and hadn’t see the preflop
raiser raise before, so I really had no strong feeling that he would c-bet and
give me the opportunity to go for a check raise. The preflop raiser folded, but
the other player called.
The turn card was the 6 of spades, not
a bad card for me. This time I checked
my quads and hoped that maybe the other player caught his flush. But he checked behind. The river was a blank. It looked like the other player had about
$40-$45 left, so I bet $35. Maybe I’m
wrong, but I think you’re more likely to get called if you don’t say “all-in”
when you don’t have to. He immediately
announced all-in, and I announced call and turned over my quads. He was showing the flush. Lucky for him he didn’t have more chips.
The very next hand I had Ace-King
offsuit in the big blind. There were a
bunch of limpers so I added $15 to my buck and had one caller. The flop was Jack-10-4 and my $25 c-bet took
it.
Not too long later I called $12 with
6-5 of diamonds in late position. I was
hoping a few of the early limpers would call but they didn’t and we were heads
up. The flop was 8-7-7 rainbow. I called $20.
The turn was a 9, giving me the straight (but the “ass” end of it, as
I’ve recently started hearing it referred to).
I called $40. The river was another 8.
Yikes. Having a straight on a double paired board didn’t really thrill
me. He put out $40 again and I went into
the tank.
The reason I hadn’t raised the turn
was because my straight was the bottom end and the board was paired. Now it was double paired. It pretty easy to believe he had a boat
there. But I dunno, I guess I just had a
feeling that maybe he didn’t. So I made
the hero call. I was pretty surprised,
pleasantly so, to see him turn over King-9 there. That was a nice pot to drag.
I had Queen-Jack of hearts in the big
blind, no raise. The flop was
Queen-high, one heart, I called $20, heads up.
There was no more betting and my Queen was good.
I was up $235 but I had a
dilemma. It was no longer comfortable at
my table. It was freezing again, every
bit as cold as the last time I’d played there.
I couldn’t stay there and that was frustrating because obviously I was
running well. I’d doubled up in less
than 90 minutes. If poker was the only consideration, I’d have never considered
leaving, but I was at the point where the cold was so bad I couldn’t really
concentrate on the game anymore.
Of course, I could have asked for a
table change in the hopes of finding a warmer spot. But here I became kind of superstitious (hard
to believe for a poker player, I know). I
don’t like changing seats when I’m running well, and I certainly don’t like
changing tables when I’m running well. While
I was wrestling with that, another problem presented itself. The table got short, and there were no
players to replace the players who left.
We were down to 6 at one point.
And I realized that even if I wanted to change tables, it would be a good
while before they could move me because they would want to fill up this table
first. Either that or I could hang on
and see if maybe they would break the table.
But I really didn’t think I could
wait. It was just too unpleasant where I was sitting. So I felt I had no choice but to leave the
poker room, even though it was too early to quit for the night. Now, there are any number of other poker
rooms near Caesars of course. However,
this brings me to the other issue of the night—my back. Actually, my back had felt real good all day,
as good as it had been since I got to town.
Then I drove to Caesars, parked a million miles away from the casino,
and by the time I walked to the poker room, it was aching pretty good. If I walked to my car and headed to almost
any poker room on the strip, that would still be a lot of walking.
So I started wondering if I could make
it on foot to any nearby room. The
trouble was that it was really cold outside, which would ordinarily encourage
me to walk briskly when I was outside.
But my back only allowed me to walk slowly. I was trying to figure out if I thought I
could make it across the street to the Linq.
Then I had another idea. Just up the Strip from Caesars is Mirage, And
you know, when I’m feeling ok, I’ve been known to park at the Mirage and walk
to Caesars (because I hate the Caesars parking structure). If you exit Caesars from the northern most
exit/entrance, you are actually only a few yards or so from the southern most
entrance of Mirage.
The trouble is that at the northern
most end of Caesars is something called “The Forum Shops at Caesars.” It is their big shopping plaza. So the closest entrance/exit to Mirage from
Caesars is thru the Forum Shops.
I’ve walked through the Forum Shops many
times over the years. And every time I
do, I come out of there with but one phrase going through my mind. “Never again.” If I ever meet the architect/designer of this
place, I will punch him in the face as hard as I can. If you’re familiar with it you no doubt know
what I mean, and if you’ve never been there, there’s no way I could accurately
describe it for you (and also, consider yourself lucky).
The place is a maze, and it is
designed to make you walk as much as possible to get thru it. I swear, Magellan couldn’t find his way
through it. When I enter it from the
Strip, I always get lost trying to find the casino, reaching a dead end
instead. Also, you have to go up one or two levels from the street (I never
remember which) just to get to the level that actually has most of the shops
and that goes to the casino. On top of
that, the escalators are super slow and semi circular so it takes forever to go
up or down a level….and then they are spaced so you have to do the maximum
amount of walking from wherever you happen to be to get to them. There’s a point where are literally two feet
from the bottom of the escalator and you can’t get there because of some barricade
blocking you and you have to basically walk a city block to get on the damn
thing, all in a big, useless circle.
So why would I even consider going
thru the shops to get to the Mirage on this night? I mean, aside from the fact that I’m stupid?Well, I usually get lost coming in
from the Strip and heading to the poker room.
This time I was doing it in reverse.
I figured it would be much easier to find the Strip from the casino than
it is to find the casino from the Strip.
I wasn’t sure how much—if any—walking I’d
save if I went thru the shops. But the
important point was that it would be warm walking thru there, so I could walk
slowly. The key though to making it work
was to not waste any steps—in other words, not get lost.
Thus, I cashed out and proceeded to
the shops. I kept looking for the fork
that I knew I had to correctly navigate in order to take the direct route. And then….somehow, as much as I was looking
for it, I totally missed it. Suddenly,
after seemingly walking forever, I was at a freaking dead end, and had to
double back. The scream I let out was
likely heard at the In-N-Out Burger. Not
the one on Tropicana. The one in
Barstow.
Note: Yes there are one or two giant
maps in the place you can look at, but because the place is so weirdly laid
out, I found them totally useless. I was
so mad, and by this time my back in so much discomfort, that I almost gave up
and figured I’d just get back to my car and call it a night. But as I was retracing my steps, I realized
what I had done wrong. There was a
restaurant jutting out that, from the angle I approached it originally, looked
like it didn’t have a way around it. It
turned out that if I noticed I could make a right there, I would have found the
exit to the Strip. Grrr. I decided to make my way to the Mirage as
planned.
By the time I got near the exit, and
had to take those stupid, slow moving escalators, I was pretty enraged, and
then as I said, I had to take a long walk around to get to the front (hard to
explain, but if you’re familiar with the place you know). I escaped, took a few more steps, and entered
the Mirage.
By the time I got to the poker room
there, I was in bad shape. My back hurt
and I was actually sweating (because I was wearing a heavy jacket inside the
Forum shops). And I was dying of
thirst. I had to wait a good 20-minutes
to get seated. By then, I was not really
in the best frame of mind to play poker.
I don’t think that was the reason I
lost my $200 buy-in in relatively quick fashion, however. It was mostly that I was getting bad cards,
and a few second best hands. Nothing
noteworthy enough to mention here. It
wasn’t pretty though. When I was done, I
still had a small profit for the night.
But now I had to head back to Caesars.
I was sure this time I would be able to find my way back to the casino
from the shops. I was 100% positive.
And then when I got to the Forum
entrance, it was freaking closed for the nite!
My luck had sucked since the first hour of poker. I had to make my way
back into Caesars the “long way” in the cold.
Grr. Somehow I made it. I think I sat by a slot machine to catch my
breath before heading to my car—which was parked a long way from the
casino.
Nothing better than announcing "6th pair" and having it be good.
ReplyDeleteYes. I had them crushed!
DeleteI know exactly what you're talking about with the shops at Caesars. I too found it hard to navigate, but figured I was a tourist so it was par for the course.
ReplyDeleteThanks. Yeah, it is a ridiculous layout. I bet no rat could find the cheese in that maze!
DeleteI once convinced my wife and 4 of her friends (all in high-heels) that we didn't need a cab to go between CP and Mirage. Well, 45 minutes later... I felt bad so I ended up buying a round of drinks at Rumbar for everyone, so it cost me at least $100 to save a $10 cab fare.
ReplyDeleteHaha...great story (but not for your wallet). Thanks.
DeleteRed Sonja????????????? B+++++++++++++++
ReplyDeleteWell, I was searching for a hot chick in Ancient Roman garb, not sure if it is accurate or not but I liked the pic.
DeleteHa ha, good story. I will bear this in mind!
ReplyDeleteThanks, and definitely heed the warning.
Delete