This is a follow-up to my previous post
(here).
It’s not a second part, this session was never meant to be a two-parter.
It’s just that a few hours after publishing the previous post, I realized I’d
left out this little part of the session, and I thought it was worth
mentioning. So since I need something to
post anyway, I thought I’d do it as a separate entry. Hopefully this will
please those of you think my normal posts are too long.
At one point during the session, the
seat to my left opened up and a distinguished looking gray haired man took
it. I had noticed he had been playing in
the now-broken 3/5 game that had been right next to ours. I sort of recognized him. I couldn’t remember anything about his play,
but I knew I had seen around this room before.
He apparently didn’t recognize me at
all. But he must have noticed that I
wasn’t playing any hands. Now at one
point, I misread where the button was and put out a $5 chip for the big blind
when I was actually under-the-gun. Said
gentleman said to me, “Are you straddling?”
I double checked and realized my error, took back the chip and said to
the guy, “No, I just thought I was the big blind. Thanks.”
Well that should have been the end of
it, but he said something like, “You’ll be the big blind next hand.” Well, duh.
I assumed he was just trying to be funny.
But when the next hand came around, he
said, “Now you’re the big blind.” Thanks
for the lesson, Sparky. This isn’t my
first rodeo (actually, to be honest, it wasn’t a rodeo at all, but I digress).
So play continued and next orbit, the
guy on my right was away from table when it was his big blind. I posted the big blind of course. I don’t think the guy on my left gave me any
coaching this time. Next hand, I put out
my small blind and just then, the guy on my right returned and wanted to buy
the button. I was looking at my phone so
I didn’t notice immediately. So my “helpful”
neighbor on my left, instructed me to take my small blind back and then launched
into a brief lesson on what it meant for the guy on my right to be buying the
button.
Up until that point, I wasn’t really sure,
but it was now clear to me that this guy thought I was a total poker
newbie. He thought I knew nothing about
poker! Hey, if he thinks I don’t know
how to play poker tactically, I’m not gonna argue with him, I know I’m not Phil
Ivey (never mind that I still was playing any hands for him to discern
this). But I do know the rules and the
etiquette of the game fairly well.
I’m sure he gave me one or two more “lessons”
in how the blinds work before my session was done.
I was more amused than annoyed. I didn’t say anything, I was just kind of
nodding as he educated me, but in my
head I had all sorts of responses that I decided not to give him.
“I may not know how to play poker
well, but I do know the rules. In fact,
I work
in the poker business. I work for one of the most popular poker websites there
is. I write for a monthly
column for a poker magazine. Oh and I by
the way, I have my own poker blog that’s received well over a million page
views. I think I understand how the
blinds work.”
I said nothing, no point. It’s a small room with a relatively small
cast of characters, and I don’t want to out myself as a blogger. Besides, if I ever did play a hand, it would
work to my advantage having this guy think I was clueless. Sadly, I never got to test this theory.
That’s all I got. The pic below has nothing to do with
anything, but I’m guessing most of you will like it.
Where did you get that pic of PPP's girlfriend?
ReplyDeleteIn his dreams, Lester, in his dreams.
DeleteMine too for that matter.
like it? A++++++++++++++
ReplyDeleteYeah, that young lady is quite the knockout.
DeleteI'm sorry. Was there a blog post here?
ReplyDeleteIt was a pretty short post, I agree. Sorry.
Deleteis Beaver Hunt a poker mag???
ReplyDeleteSounds like more of a Poke Her mag.
DeleteOr a hunting magazine.