Yesterday I traveled to Ventura to
play poker at Player’s Casino. I was
seated immediately at the 2/3 game, and bought in for the usual $300, the max. The
place was rather dead, which didn’t surprise me. Memorial Day Weekend in Southern California,
a lot of people go out of town. And
let’s face it, a lot of people who might normally be there to play poker may
have gone to Vegas to play poker there instead.
Still there were three full tables of
the game and we were never short-handed.
I recognized a few of the players, but the one that stuck out was the
lady who I mentioned the last time I played there (see here). She had that odd playing style, sometimes
very aggro, a real LAG. I knew I had to
keep an eye on her. As it happens, she
never had a big stack, and played her wild game a smaller percentage of the
time than two weeks ago. But she still
liked to make the occasional big bet, the big three-bet, the odd shove. Just not as frequently.
The very first hand I was in, I was in
the cut-off with King-Jack of diamonds.
A few players had limped, and I decided to limp as well. The lady was in the big blind and I wanted to
see what her level of crazy she was playing this week. It was a marginal hand, and not really
knowing many of the other players, I didn’t want to raise so early. Sure enough, the lady made it $18, one of the
limpers called so I came along.
There were two low-ish diamonds on the
flop (the other card was low too) and she led out for $20. I called.
The turn was a blank and this time she bet $15. That was such an odd bet. I felt like raising but was worried that she
would re-raise—that was certainly in her repertoire. I figured that since she was giving me
excellent odds to chase my flush, I may as well take advantage and just
call. The river was indeed a diamond and
I had the second nuts. She checked. I bet $25 and she folded.
Nice to win the very first hand. I was hoping it was good omen.
I lost a few bucks chasing but was
still a bit in the black when I raised to $15 in late position with King-10 of
hearts. Only the guy next to me
called. From one hand I’d seen that day,
and from my recollection, he was a bit of an aggro. So I didn’t c-bet when I whiffed the flop. But he checked. I was still sensing something so I kept
checking and he kept checking back.
Nothing hit and my King-high was good (he said he had overs but
obviously below a King). Ok, I’ll take
even though I would have ended it sooner with a c-bet on the flop.
Then came the most interesting hand of
the session. I looked down at my first
pocket pair of the day, two Queens. A
tight player who hadn’t played more than two hands since I’d been there raised
to $12. I just called. The guy behind me called and then the young
Asian fellow at the table made it $35.
He had been up and down, losing his stack recently and only re-buying in
for $100. But he had hit some lucky
hands both before and after busting and re-buying, and had demonstrated some
interesting play. He had three-bet pre a
few times with Ace-rag type hands—and in the cases I’d seen, hit them big. Just before this hand, he had three-bet with
Ace-4 off and taken a pot with two pair against a much stronger Ace. When his stack was below $100 he seemed to
shove (sometimes a three-bet shove) fairly light.
It looked like he had around $150ish
left after the bet $35, give or take. But his chips were arranged oddly so it
wasn’t clear. I had a bit more than the
$300 I’d started with. When the original
raiser folded, I decided to re-raise. I felt my Queens were way ahead of his
three-betting range. I thought he very
likely had an Ace but the other card was lower than a Queen and thus it
wouldn’t be a coin-flip, I’d be a big favorite.
I also thought there was a pretty decent chance if a tight player like
me pulled the call/re-raise move, he’d fold a crappy Ace.
There was still a player behind me. I was a bit worried about him. His stack was closer to the Asian’s than
mine. I decided to put another $100 on
top of the $12 already out there. I
figured he’d either fold or shove, not call, and I was fine either way. The player between us got out of the way and
the Asian immediately announced “all-in.”
I snap called. He said, “Is it Aces
vs. Kings?” Gulp. He showed me two Kings
and I was certainly dreading them. I just shoved another stack out in front of
me, expecting to be down a fair amount after the hand played out. I got unlucky there, I thought, but based on
my read of this guy, I was ahead of more than half the hands he could have
there. Oh well.
The flop was all low, and rainbow….no
one was catching a flush. I saw a face
card come out on the turn, but it was a Jack.
I found myself thinking, why couldn’t that be a Queen? Of course, it could have been a King too,
leaving me drawing dead. I was resigned
to the worst and then….well, wouldn’t you know, an absolutely beautiful lady
hit the river. Everyone groaned or
whatever it is you do when you see that.
The guy took it pretty well. He muttered something under his breath but
otherwise was a good sport. I gave my
apology. “Sorry….not sorry.” And as I was stacking my chips, I said, “It
was worse because it was on the river, right?
Wouldn’t have been quite so bad if it had been on the flop?” He didn’t really agree with this
assessment. OK, whatever.
I few of the other players said things
like, “That’s awful,” “You hate to see
that,” or “That’s sick.” Really? I found it rather inspirational, myself. That Queen on the river was the best looking
lady I’d seen in a long, long time. And
she wasn’t even naked.
When I finished stacking, I had about
$510 in front of me. The pot must have
been $360-$370 or so. I’m sure that’s
the biggest I’ve dragged (in a cash game, of course), since I left Vegas at the
beginning of the year.
Later I was in the big blind with Queen-Jack
off and saw the flop for free. Only three of us were alive and it came
King-Queen-10. No betting on the flop
and I called $17 on the turn, it was heads up.
It checked around on the river, another blank. He had pocket 6’s and my Queens were good.
I raised to $18 after a couple of
limpers with Ace-Queen suited; no one called.
Very next hand, I raised to $12 with Ace-King off, and had two
callers. The flop was 10-6-2, rainbow. I led out with a $20 c-bet. The next player made it $60 and the third
player called. I got the hell out of
there. There was more betting on the
turn and they got it all in. Turned out
it was set over-set, 10’s vs 6’s (the 10’s just called the flop bet). Actually the board paired on the river and
the guy with the 6’s lost boat-over-boat.
Tough way to lose your stack.
I raised with Queen-Jack of spades and
had a couple of callers. The flop wasn’t
bad—Ace-King-10. There were two of some
other suit. I bet, an older gentleman, a
seeming nit, min-raised. I came over the
top, he shoved, I snapped and of course he showed Queen-Jack too. His was unsuited but he didn’t have the flush
draw. Beats losing, right?
Eventually my $200 profit had worked
its way down to closer to $100. It was
getting late—I was interested in getting home in time to see the basketball
game (Warriors-Thunder, game 6, what a freaking game!). So when I posted my big blind this time, I
felt it was likely my last orbit. I had
still been fairly card dead most of the day, save that one incredible suck-out
that went my way. The only other pairs I’d
started with were 10’s twice, both times calling raises with them, both times
folding to decent-sized bets on flops that had an Ace. The only Ace-King, Ace-Queen hands I had I’ve
already described. The Queen-Jack where
I flopped Broadway was the only suited connector I had above 5-4.
Anyway, the big blind hand was garbage
and then in the small blind, I finally saw another pocket pair. Two Jacks.
That same Asian fellow, under-the-gun, had limped in. After rebuying when I felted him, he had been
quite a bit quieter than before. Might
have been that this was his last buy-in, or maybe he was just not getting cards
he liked. He had about $200 or so, which
is what he’d bought in for after he started liking Kings as much as I do.
It folded to me and I made it
$15. The big blind folded and the Asian
fellow called. The flop was
Queen-Jack-2, two hearts. I bet $25 and
he called. The turn was a blank. This time I put out $50. He tanked.
But eventually called. A low
heart hit the river, and I was not happy at the scare card. My naturally tendency there is to check. I thought about overcoming it.
Yeah, he had tanked on the turn. But I remembered all the times—particularly the
post here—where I had misread a player taking
his time, thinking it was almost a fold when it was really almost a raise. Was this guy capable of raising me on the
turn with a flush draw, thinking I might fold a one pair hand to him? Yes, he was.
So if I bet and he raised, would I
have the discipline to fold my set?
Well, likely not. Hard to fold a
set of Jacks, especially to someone who was certainly capable of bluffing or
betting a worse hand than mine. I
figured if he had hit it, a check would cost me less money, so I ended up
checking.
I was somewhat expecting him to bet, I
was just hoping it was something I could comfortably call. But he instead flipped over his hand. King-Queen,
no hearts. I showed my Jacks, and he dutifully said, “nice hand.” As I dragged in the pot, I said to him, “I
thought maybe you were on the flush draw.
It would have only been fair if you rivered me back.” He sorta-laughed.
By then I realized he wanted to get to
the showdown cheap. If I had bet $100 on
the river, he’d probably have folded.
But if I had bet $50 again, it would probably have been too cheap for
him to fold. Oh well. I’m not losing
sleep over that.
Second to last hand, I got another
pocket pair. It was 3’s. I had to call $15 to see the flop, which was
Queen-4-4. I was done with the
hand. But here’s something I’ve observed,
maybe it’s just my mind tricking me. But
have you ever noticed, whenever you have a small pocket pair, and the board
comes out paired, more often than not the board pair is just one off from
yours? I mean, you have two 5’s and
there are two 6’s or two 4’s on the board, something like that? Or is that just me?
I racked up and was up $202. I wished everyone luck, as I often do when I
leave, and then nodded to the Asian. I
guess I said, “sorry,” and he said, “Hey it’s ok…that’s poker.” Good sport!
I’ve seen plenty of guys who don’t take it so well. I said back to him, “Well, next time, you’ll
get me.” I sure hope I’m wrong about
that.
My best session, believe it or not,
since the first few days of the year (from my Christmas trip). I dunno how well I played, but it was sure
nice to be on the right end of the luck curve for once. I was due, right?
C+++++++++
ReplyDeleteF-----------
Delete(my grade on your grade)
But Rob you had to know that you were going to hit the queen somewhere. I mean he had the worst hand in the world the dreaded pocket kings. Now I have seen you say many many times the dreaded pocket kings are a sure fire losing hand and with this in mind how could you possibly not win that pot right?? You knew that queen was coming the whole time, come on admut it, you knew lol.
ReplyDeleteNo, FD....you don't understand. Pocket Kings is MY jinx hand. Other people actually win with them. Look at Nick, who I dubbed, "The King of Pocket Kings."
DeleteIt's just me that has reason to dread them. Well maybe not just me, but mostly me.
Sure - you already know that while you were donking out Queens vs Kings, my Aces lost to the Dreaded Pocket Kings AIPF. Instead of having a stack of about $800, I had a solitary stack of redbirds. But at least the King came on the flop. I just said something like "That's poker. It sucks sometimes." Everyone at the table agreed and the game went on. Little drama, but maybe if a stapler was handy ...
ReplyDeleteThat's because you are a BAD PLAYER, that's why you had your Aces cracked!
DeleteSeriously....sorry, man that sucks. I actually cracked a woman's Aces with the dreaded hand. I thought that meant the curse was over but it proved to be a one-off.
Hahaha "if a stapler was handy"
DeleteYou said, "sorry..not sorry"? Sounds childish or am I misunderstanding the gesture?
ReplyDeleteWow, I had no idea it had a bad connotation, thanks for enlightening me. I had to look it up and realize now that really means being sorry for NOT being sorry. I had no idea, I'd heard it and didn't realize the true meaning. I'll never say it again, I feel I owe that guy a real apology now.
DeleteActually, it wasn't planned, it just came out, I said "sorry" reflexively and of course I knew I didn't mean it bec8ase I was not in the least bit sorry. i was just trying to offer some sympathy. We've all been there. I think I meant to say, "sorry.....but not really."
When people have said sorry to me when I got sucked out on, I often say, "You're not really sorry" or something like that.
I also say good luck to the table when I'm leaving. Nice win, Rob!
ReplyDeleteThanks. Yeah, if it's a friendly table I'll say good bye, good luck, If it was table full of jerks, maybe not.
Delete