Sadly, the streak is over.
After two great sessions in a row here
in Southern California (see here and here), I was unable to come up with a
third big win in a row on Saturday. Or
any kind of a win. Or a break-even
session.
Nope, all good things must end and I
had a pretty good-sized loss.
Furthermore, remember what I said in
the post here, about how much I was
getting to like Player’s Casino in Ventura, that it was a really enjoyable place
to play poker? Well, Saturday, not so
much. And not because of the loss I
took. It was because of the players, or
one player in particular who, as far as I’m concerned, totally ruined the game.
But I’ll start at the beginning. There was a good sized list when I arrived
and it didn’t take very long for them to start a new 2/3 game. I recognized a few players but couldn’t
recall anything particularly valuable about the players who looked
familiar. I bought in for $300 as usual.
I drew the short straw and was the big
blind on the very first hand. With Ace-Queen, I called a raise to $10 and it
was three-way. I called $22 on a Queen-10-x flop and then $25 on an 8 turn,
which made it two hearts and two diamonds on the board. We were heads up after the
flop. A black 9 hit the river and this time
he checked behind me and showed his hand, saying, “I have Ace-high.” Except that his other card was a Jack so he
had a straight that he hadn’t even noticed.
Bad enough to lose a pot, but losing it to someone who didn’t even
realize he had a good hand was more than mildly annoying.
The very next hand, in the small
blind, I call $10 with Jack-10 off. The
flop was Ace-King-King. I called $10
just to see if I could catch a Queen for Broadway. But I missed and then on the turn I folded to
a guy who shoved for $87. But someone
else called him. The guy who shoved had
an Ace, the winner had a King. The guy
with the Ace was a newbie who didn’t last at our table very long. He was pretty
old and it looked like he had a lived a long, hellish life. It appeared to me that if this was his first
time trying poker, it was pretty much the last thing on his bucket list to
try.
I guess I lost a few more chips and
hadn’t won a hand when this next hand happened. I called $12 with King-10 of
spades and six of us saw the flop, which was 10-7-x, rainbow, one spade. I
called $15 or $20. There were a bunch of
callers, I think it was still five of us left.
The turn was another 10, and I called $20 and then saw a guy check raise
from early position to $40. Everyone
else had called the $20 so we all called another $20. But I smelled a boat. I suppose with all those calls I should have
just gotten out.
The river was an 8, no flush possible,
and would have filled a gut-shot if someone had Jack-9. I saw that but was honestly more worried
about a boat. The guy who had checked
raised on the turn shoved his remaining $75.
It folded to me. There was only
one person left behind me. The size of the pot was quite large and although I
feared the boat, I just felt I had to make the crying call there, so I did. I did think there was a reasonable chance he
just had a 10 and a worse kicker than a King.
And then the guy behind me announced
“all-in.” Damn. His shove was a bit over $100 and I realized
that was more than I had left after calling the $75.. The pot was now really, really big and even
though I didn’t really like it, I felt I just couldn’t fold there. Not for just another $70-$80 or so. So I called and the guy who had shoved behind
me flipped over Jack-9 for the straight.
The other guy didn’t even show!
He claimed to have a 10. I asked
him how big his kicker was and he said, “not big.” I hadn’t shown but I said I had a King. He said that was definitely good against his kicker.
Ugh.
I was busted. I actually said to
the guy who won, “If you had shoved in front of me, I could have folded…I would
have folded.” But once I put that $75 to
call the first bet, it didn’t make sense to me to fold. I briefly wondered if I had shoved first,
would the guy with the straight have folded thinking I had a boat? Almost definitely not. I didn’t have enough to get him to fold and
I’m not sure he had enough to ever fold his straight.—although in the face of
two all-ins of front of him he might have thought his straight wasn’t any good.
Well, I bought in for another $300
while trying to figure out exactly how badly I had misplayed that one.
Soon after, I called a small raise
with Ace-4 suited and then folded to a raise to $88 from an older Asian
man. No one called and he showed pocket
8’s. So he raised to $88 with 8-8. That
was the first time all day he’d done something at all unusual but it wouldn’t
be his last time.
The seat to my left—where the newbie
had been—had been vacant for awhile.
Finally it was taken by a youngish guy.
He bought in for the minimum, $100.
He raised big on his first hand and then shoved the flop. There were two Kings on the flop and he was
called by someone with a King. The young
guy showed Jack-10 for….absolutely nothing.
It was a total bluff.
He re-bought for another $100. He raised big pre again and got it all-in on
the flop again. This time he had a hand:
King-10 on a 10-high board. But the guy
who called him had Ace-10.
And so he bought in again, this time
for $200. And the fellow next to him
said, “Just leave your wallet out.”
Somewhere along the way I heard him
say that he had been there since 3AM.
But he might have meant 3AM the day before, not that very morning. He said he didn’t know how he was still
awake.
The very next hand, he raised big
again (his opening raises were like $25-$30).
This time, the Asian man I mentioned earlier shoved in response. He had about $150 maybe. Another player (the guy who didn’t know he
had a straight in the very first hand) also shoved. He had slightly less than the Asian man. The young fellow, who from this point forward
we will refer to as “The Maniac” snap called and flipped his cards over. They were two Aces. Even maniacs get Aces, you see. The other two players didn’t show.
Well the flop came Queen-Jack-9. The turn was a King. The river didn’t matter. The Asian fellow showed Jack-10 for a
straight. The other guy showed King-10
for a flopped straight. The Maniac had
his Aces cracked by both of them. The thing
was, the other two players made terrible plays, getting all their chips in with
marginal hands. No doubt they were encouraged to do so by the early play of the
Maniac. They assumed he was betting with
nothing. So the Maniac’s maniac act
almost paid off. I mean, you want guys
with hands like Jack-10 and King-10 to go all-in against your Aces, right? But they had both gotten very lucky.
Very next hand, the Maniac open shoved
his remaining stack. He was called by
another player (not either of the two players in the previous hand). Guess what?
The Maniac had pocket Aces again—yes, back-to-back. And they were cracked again. By King-10 again! This time the King-10 had two pair. Aces back-to-back cracked by King-10 both
times. What are the odds of that?
Well I didn’t know what to make of
this, other than those four hands in a row made for a good blog story. The Maniac got up but asked for to have his
seat held. Frankly, I was assuming—and
also praying—he wouldn’t come back. It
was nice of him to distribute his money like that (but none of it to me). But it made it difficult for me to do
anything with this clown on my left. I
had to wait for a hand it made sense to play knowing he was likely getting it
all in either on the flop or before.
But it appeared I wouldn’t have to
worry. He was gone for quite
awhile. Someone said he went to play
blackjack. They should have stopped
holding the seat open for him—except there was no board, and other 2/3 games
had empty seats. I figured I was well rid of him.
But no….he did indeed return. Apparently he won enough at blackjack to buy
in again. And he immediately went back
to raising big and/or shoving and if not shoving pre, usually shoving on the
flop. The only difference was he did
occasionally limp or even fold pre. But he
was still earning the “Maniac” name I gave him.
But the game had totally changed
because of his presence. People were
playing differently because of him, calling light, raising light, shoving
light.
In particular, the Asian man I
mentioned was playing against the Maniac every chance he could. He would never fold to a Maniac raise, and
more often than not, he would raise himself—or shove. He shoved preflop multiple times against the
Maniac’s raise, and from what we could tell, sometimes with pretty crappy hands
(that he would hit a lot of the times if it went to the flop). And by this time, The Asian man’s stack was
huge, you couldn’t call one of his moves without committing your entire stack,
he had everyone covered. But if the
Maniac folded, he would play normal.
As he said once when the Maniac asked
him why he shoved when he had nothing, “Because I knew you had nothing.”
I called $10 with 9-8 of clubs and
folded on a whiffed flop. Very next hand
I got the same two cards. There was a
raise to $20, a call, and I called as well.
The Maniac was away from the table for this one. As I called, I kind of felt like it was a
tilty move, especially with the Maniac out of the hand. I mean, if I could see almost any flop that
cheap with him in there, it’d likely be worth it with a hand that could pay off
like that one. But against two normal
players, it was probably too much to pay.
But I found myself thinking I had to take some shots to get my money
back.
The flop was Queen-7-5, two
hearts. It checked around. The turn was a 6 of hearts which gave me the
straight on a board where two hearts would beat me. But no one had bet the flop, so I put out
$15. The peflop raiser folded, but the
last guy, who happened to be the older Asian gentleman I mentioned earlier,
raised to $30. Damn, did he have the
flush? I couldn’t fold for $15, so I
called.
The river was a black King which
didn’t change anything. I checked
wondering how big a bet I would call.
But he checked behind me. I showed
my straight and he just mucked. It was
my first pot of the day, at long last.
I called a $6 straddle with pocket
10’s. Why anyone was stupid enough to
straddle in this game with the Maniac around is inexplicable to me. But I just called hoping the Maniac’s raise
would be something reasonable I could call to try to make a big hand. The Maniac made it $45. That was large even for him. Yikes.
I had to see what happened before it got back to me. So….the Asian man announced “all in.” Yeah, as I said, he’d done that a few times before,
but it wasn’t automatic. The previous time he’d done that, the Maniac folded
and the Asian showed pocket Kings. I couldn’t call. The Maniac hesitated for a long time and then
finally did call.
The flop came King-King-5. Then a Queen.
Then a 10. So I would have had a
boat, in case you missed that. The
Maniac showed….pocket deuces. The Asian
showed Ace-Queen and stacked the Maniac.
Of course, I just shook my head knowing that I would have won a huge pot
if I had called the Asian’s shove, but that would not have made sense to
me. And had the hand been played
“normally” I would have been out of the hand before the river card hit me.
I had to fight off the tilt. I was losing patience with the game. I was debating internally if maybe given the
circumstances calling the shove preflop would have been a good play. With 20-20 hindsight, of course. And the Asian’s shoving range facing a Maniac
raise was damn wide. Maybe it was the
right play. Shove, get a triple-up or go
home. But damn, whenever that Asian made
a play like that with bad cards he always seemed to hit it The debate in my mind was now edging me
closer to tilt than the action at the table was.
Again, the Maniac left for a bit—but somehow
came back with more money to buy-in.
They allowed a short-buy and the Asian doubled him up, making him
dangerous again.
While he was away I had Queen-10 of
clubs in the big blind and no one raised.
The flop was Queen high and I check/called $20 from the Asian. It was
three-way. I should have led out, but I
was kind of shell-shocked at this point. I called another $20 on the turn when
I picked up a gutshot—I needed a Jack.
It was now heads up. I missed the
straight and again called $20. He showed
Ace-Queen. Damn.
I got Ace-Queen myself
under-the-gun. For the last orbit or
two, the Maniac had been a bit more subdued.
So I decided to take a chance and raise. I made it $12. The Maniac just called. Phew! There
was another caller or two, but the Asian folded. Last person to act was the guy who had been
sitting on my right all day. He too was
Asian, a perfectly reasonable player.
Until this very moment when he announced all-n! He had like $400, at least as twice as much either
the maniac or I had.
What the f***? I mean, seriously, what the f***? I folded.
Maniac tanked and then called.
The flop was Ace-high. It ran out dry. Before showing, both players,
almost simultaneously, said they had nothing. Are you freaking kidding me? No.
The Asian on my right showed King-10. He shoved with King-10. Unsuited.
He remembered the back-to-back hands earlier when the Maniac’s Aces were
taken down with King-10. Brilliant, just
brilliant.
And what did the Maniac risk his
entire stack with? Why King-Queen
offsuit, of course. Who wouldn’t? And he got his double up. Because he had King high with a Queen kicker
vs. King high with a 10 kicker! And again, I had thrown away the winning hand
because of some absurd move in response to the Maniac.
The Maniac had clearly changed the
game, changed the way everyone was playing, and it was not
exactly to my liking. As far as I was
concerned, he had totally ruined what had been a pleasant game (and I thought
it was pleasant even after I lost my first stack).
For a long time now, I had been
considering asking for a table change. It
was a big debate in my mind. On the one
hand, with the action at this table, my best shot at getting my money back was
staying there and trying to make a hand.
On the other hand, I needed to get some cards I would be willing to risk
the rest of my diminishing stack with.
And I sure wasn’t getting them. Or maybe I was and was just too wimpy to pull
the trigger?
I felt constrained by the fact that I
had already lost my first buy-in before the Maniac showed up and changed the
game. I think I might have been more willing
to gamble a bit if I had another buy-in in my pocket. But my stop-loss is two buy-ins. It was extra annoying because I knew this was
my last poker session for awhile. I’m
definitely not playing next weekend and my poker sabbatical may extend longer.
Also, I was short-stacked now, not
planning to buy-in for one penny more as I indicated, and I didn’t like the
idea of taking the short-stack to a new table where I’d be starting over. If I’m
starting over I would definitely prefer a full stack.
Besides….our table was actually
short-handed and I likely wouldn’t be able to move tables for quite some time. And by this time, with the way everyone was
playing, a seat change to get away from the Maniac didn’t feel like it would
make much of a difference.
So I decided to hang in there.
But then, somehow, the Maniac got even
more annoying than he had been. Suddenly
I started hearing music. Tinny, loud
music. The Maniac had taken to playing
music on his cell phone. Without using any head phones or ear buds. Just loudly blasting music out of his phone
for all of us to “enjoy.”
I did not enjoy.
So is this a thing now? People playing their music at the poker table
(or anywhere in public, for that matter) right through the speaker?
I hope it’s not a thing.
It bothered the piss out of me. I recognized some of the tunes, they were
kind of old, but they all sounded terrible.
In fact, I was surprised they didn’t sound better. He appeared to have a modern phone that
looked very much like mine. And when I
play music out of my phone’s speaker it sounds really good. I dunno, maybe I was just the perfect
distance for it to sound bad. Maybe I
was just appalled that I could hear it and he didn’t have the courtesy to use
ear buds or headphones. Although he did
tell the guy on his left that it was just Youtube music, not from his own
collection. Maybe that made a
difference.
To me it was just noise. Very loud, very annoying noise. Did I mention loud? Although you might not have been able to
recognize the song, I bet you could have heard it at The Bike.
I thought about saying something but I
didn’t want to come across like a dick.
Or have the guy think I was just being a grumpy
old man. Especially since
the older guy on the Maniac’s immediate left was not only enjoying the music
himself, but actually encouraging him and doing a running commentary of music
from his vast musical knowledge. I would have been spoiling it for two idiots
if I asked him to turn down his “music.” So I just keep quiet and stewed.
I limped in with Queen-Jack of hearts,
then called the Maniac’s raise to $20. It was three or four of us to see the
flop, which was Queen-8-6. I checked,
and surprisingly, so did The Maniac. The
last action was on the Asian fellow to my immediate right—the guy who shoved
preflop with King-10 off because he thought King-10 was the hot hand at the
table. I figured if he bet I could call,
I likely had the best hand (I checked because I wanted to see how much the
Maniac wanted to put in play). So of
course, this Asian fellow announced all-in.
WTF? Again, he had us both
covered.
That was it, I was done. I had reached Popeye state—as in, “That’s all
I can stands, I can’t stands no more.”
Only instead of wolfing down a can of spinach and beating the shit out
of everyone at the table—the Maniac first, followed by this joker on my right—I
just mucked and got up to get a rack.
Before I could leave the table, I saw the Maniac fold and the guy on my
right show his hand. It was Queen-6 for
a flopped two pair.
I suppose I should have thanked him
for saving me some money. I could have
lost more there if he had made a reasonable bet. But to me, all I could think of was how
ridiculous this game had become, thanks to the Maniac—the Musical Maniac, that
is.
I beat a hasty retreat, leaving with a
bad taste in my mouth for Player’s Casino, poker, and yes, life in general. That hand where I caught a straight was the
only hand I’d won all day. I dropped a
buy-in and a half, give or take.
It just takes one maniac to ruin a
nice poker game.