New Year's Eve, 2016
Part 1
This is the first of a three-part post—my
attempt to tell the story of my most recent New Year’s Eve in Vegas. It was one of the most unusual nights since I
started the blog. It had a little bit of
everything. There were “woman saids,” controversial
floor rulings, a celebrity sighting, an almost infinite amount of extremely
hot, extremely scantily clad young ladies, dealers almost coming to blows with
each other, and, oh yeah, a “little person.”
That’s the political correct term for a person who is genetically
height-challenged, right? I wouldn’t
want to offend anyone. Although, if these
posts doesn’t offend pretty much everyone who reads them, I haven’t done my
job.
As you may recall, I had celebrated
the new year in Vegas the previous three years.
The first year I got a great three-part blog post out of it (see here).
The next two years I also had a great time, but the blogging material
was somewhat disappointing (see here
and here).
In fact, the second year I never actually blogged about the NY’s Eve
session! I see my notes say there’s
stuff to talk about, so maybe one of these days when I need a post I’ll check
my voice notes and remind myself how the year 2014 ended and the year 2015
began.
Regardless of the quality of the
blogging material, the reason for being in Vegas for New Year’s Eve is
obvious. It is the best Slut Parade of the year. It really is in a class by itself both in
terms of quality and quantity. It seems
that pretty much every female on the planet who looks sensational wearing a
dress that covers less than 13% of her body goes to Vegas for NY’s Eve. The
only thing that can possibly compete with it is the Halloween Slut Parade. But, as you may remember, I couldn’t catch
the Halloween Slut Parade this past year because I had just had my chest ripped
opened.
So of course I was looking forward to
the New Year’s edition. When I arrived
in Vegas, I could only hope my health and my stamina would hold up and allow me
to stay for New Year’s. I had only been
cleared to drive and travel barely a week before my arrival in Vegas. But I’m happy to report that my strength and
overall well-being actually improved the entire time I was in Vegas, and by
NY’s eve, I wasn’t worried about lasting in the casino the 10 hours or so
required to fully enjoy the experience.
The poker room on New Year’s Eve is a
bit different than any other day.
Actually, I can only speak for the MGM because that’s the only poker
room I’ve been in for the celebration.
Maybe others are different. But
the MGM poker room is very busy early during the day, then starts to thin out
early in the evening—just when the room gets busier on a normal day. As midnite approaches, the room is virtually
empty, as even those folks who wanted to play poker New Year’s Eve desert the room
for a while to watch the fireworks on the Strip. Then, after the fireworks are over, they all
file back in and for the first couple of hours of the new year and the room is
absolutely packed—they can’t start games fast enough.
I arrived at MGM around 3:30 PM. I wanted to make sure I got there before they
started closing down all the roads.
Unlike past years, I didn’t mind getting into a game right away. I figured I’d play a few hours, take a dinner
break, and then get into a new game. My
hope was I’d do well in the first game and have to consider “ratholing” to keep
my profits from it. I was prepared to
wait the two hours necessary (over a dinner break) to get back in a game if I
made a big score in the first game and wanted to protect my winnings. Sadly, it never came to that.
That first game I was in was just
terrible. For one thing, it was
freezing. There are certain tables at
MGM that are naturally colder than others and this was one of the cold tables,
in the back of the room. The tables near
the front (which also have close proximity to the Slut Parade) are generally
warmer (or should I say, less cold).
Although the weather had been pretty cold during most of my stay, this
was one of the milder days, so there was really no excuse for it.
Also, the table was never full for
very long. This was the last 1/2 game
they opened before things started quieting down and after it opened, there was
never much (or any) of a list for it.
When I first got to the room, they were starting a second 2/5 game, and
they actually had a 4/8 limit game going.
That was pretty amazing. It was
the first time I’d seen them spread a limit game in a few years.
Two of our players (who were a couple)
were actually waiting for seats at the 2/5 game. And they played like it. They were making opening raises like it was a
2/5 game--$20, $25. And raising a lot of pots preflop and betting all the
streets. When they got called to the 2/5
game, the game remained short-handed the rest of the time I was there, and was
a terrible game.
I didn’t ask for an immediate seat
change to get to one of the preferred parade viewing tables because I knew I
was going to take the dinner break and start anew. It was a bit early for the parade. Although, I must admit, the casino was full
as soon as I entered it and the young ladies in their club attire had already
started to appear. Once the game got
short-handed I knew there was no way I could table-change out of there and at
this point my main reason for wanting to get away from that table was the
temperature.
I only made a note of one hand from
this session. I called a $12 raise from
one of the 2/5 players with King-Jack of clubs from the big blind. The flop was Jack-Jack-x and I check called
$15. It was now heads up. The turn was a Queen and I intended to
check-raise, but the aggro fooled me and checked behind. I bet $25 on a blank river and didn’t get a
call.
Despite that monster pot, I ended up
losing about $140 at that table, before I got tired of freezing to death and
took my chips and left. I had dinner at
the deli. Having had a bad opening
session, I took my sweet time eating dinner and caught up on social media.
When I was ready to return to the
poker, I noticed that there was a seat available at one of the tables in the
front. Even better, the open seat was
one of those next to the dealer—the preferred seat for viewing the pedestrian
traffic walking by the poker room. So I
asked for a seat at the podium and the fellow there—who has known me for over
10 years now—started to send me to one of the tables in the back. I asked about the open seat right in
front. He said that the other table had
two open seats and thus he couldn’t send me to my preferred table. I started to ask him to put me on the list
for a table change. I explained that I
had been in the back of the room earlier and it was too damn cold back
there. Although that was undeniably
true, that was not the real reason I wanted the seat up front, of course.
Just then, he recognized a player
approaching the podium and asked him, “Are you ready to play now?” The guy said yes and he turned to me and
said, “OK Rob, you can take the seat you want, I’ll send him to the other
table.” Sweet.
Playing in your “home” room has its perks.
I was just settling into seat 1 at
that preferred table in the front when I recognized the unmistakable cackle of
a long time reg coming from seat 9. It
was Faith. I’ve mentioned Faith numerous
times (see here), but it has been
awhile. I haven’t seen Faith in the room
in a long time—probably over a year.
Although part of the reason for that may be all the extra time I’ve been
away from Vegas lately. Faith is a good
friend of Ginger, a dealer in the room who I’ve mentioned dozen of times (see here).
Faith is a total luckbox, a bit of a wild player. But between her luck and her cackles and her
nonstop talking, she can put other players on tilt. I figured that even though she might very well
suck out on me a few times, it’d be worth it for the game if she could entice a few other players to
play badly.
There were a lot of players coming and
going during this time, and I noticed another seat opened up immediately next
to Faith. I saw Ginger come over to talk
to Faith. I had seen Ginger dealing
earlier but she hadn’t dealt to me.
Anyway, I overheard a bit of their conversation, and then saw the body
language, and I put two and two together and figured out that Ginger was going
to take the seat next to Faith and play.
Ginger put some money down there to hold the seat for her while she
changed out of her uniform.
It appeared that she would be off the
clock, which meant she could drink. It
made a difference. When she’s not
drinking, she’s a bit of an aggro but likely wouldn’t be paying that much
attention to the game if she was sitting next to her pal Faith. But when she drinks, she becomes a total
maniac, splashing pots (literally) and shoving at random, with any two cards. It would be a wild game. And let’s see, it was New Year’s Eve. I’m trying to think. Do people like to drink to excess on New
Year’s Eve? I can’t remember.
Ginger soon took her seat and then a
few minutes later another woman came over to greet Faith and Ginger. It was the person I called “Jennifer” in the
post here.
I hadn’t seen her in quite some time and I had heard that she had left
MGM and was working at another poker room.
Thus, she was saying hello to all her former co-workers. It soon became
apparent that she had just gotten off her shift at another Strip poker room,
and had walked over to MGM when she learned Ginger and Faith were planning on
spending the evening playing there. She
walked because by this time all the roads were closed and there was pretty much
no other way to get there.
Jennifer took the seat that had just
opened up next to me but then left to say hi to others in the room before
playing a hand. When she got back, a
seat had opened up nearer the other ladies and she took that one. Then a seat opened up right next to Ginger
and she took that one, all before she had played a hand.
I don’t think I’d ever played with
Jennifer before, but I had a strong feeling she was a good player.
The first—but by no means last—‘woman
said” of the evening occurred at this point.
I didn’t hear the set up. It was
likely something like one of the other ladies telling her to sit her ass down
or get “your ass over here.” But
Jennifer said, “Don’t talk about my ass. It’s a good ass.”
Soon after the ladies all settled into
their seats, I overheard them talking about dinner. And I realized that very soon, the three of
them planned on leaving the table to go eat.
Ugh. I’m sorry, I just find that rude. It’s bad enough when one person leaves the
table for an hour to eat. Sometimes I’ve
seen two friends or a couple do that.
That’s really bad. But three
people? Three? All at the same time, leaving their chips
behind and leaving the table that short-handed?
That is extremely selfish. During
the time they would be gone, we would be assured of playing some hands
five-handed or even four-handed.
I was pissed at the thought of it, but
sure enough, after a particular dealer’s down, the three of them all took off
and headed for dinner. The rule at MGM
is that you actually have one hour, 15 minutes to be away before you get picked
up. I’ve always felt that was way too
long. But that’s the rule and they used
most of that hour and a quarter to eat.
The game during this time was bad,
very little action. Of course, the three
ladies had been providing most of the action while they were there. I was just kind of dealing with it, resigned
to it. They reduced the rake, but the
thing that bothers me the most is that the blinds come around faster. Combine that with the fact that the pots tend
to be smaller and it’s just a bigger drain on your chips than in a full game.
The game was lousy and a few players
started complaining, particularly a guy in the center of the table who was especially
pissed about it. He started complaining
when they were gone for about 15 minutes and so I told him that they had gone
to dinner and not to expect them back for an hour. I believe he actually came to the table after
they left so he didn’t know they all left together. But I did tell him, “They’re probably all
drinking, so when they get back, the game should be real good.”
But he was really bothered by it. He asked the dealer, “Don’t you have a
third-man walking rule?” The dealer
assured him they did not. He wanted to
know why not. So the dealer called the
shift boss over. You know what the
third-man walking rule is, right? No? Well if two players are already away from the
table, the third person leaving the table gets a “third man walking” button and
if he/she is away long enough to get a missed blind button, their chips will be
picked up and a new player will be called from the waiting list to replace them
(assuming there’s a list).
The dealer explained to the boss that
the player was unhappy that the three seats were empty for so long. The boss explained that they had an hour
fifteen to be away from the table before getting picked up. The player said,
“Well, most rooms have a third-man walking rule. You should have a third-man walking
rule.” The shift boss apologized and
said they don’t have such a rule and the only person who can make the decision
to have a third-man walking rule is the manager of the room, and that he was
welcome to email him about it.
The guy was not happy with that, of
course. He said, “Well, I can make a
decision too. I can decide to play in
another room.” Well, ordinarily that’s
true. By this time on New Year’s Eve,
however, easier said than done. Very
hard to get around, virtually impossible by car and not easy to get a cab or
Uber. He could take the monorail or
walk. The shift boss apologized again and did tell the guy that this particular
evening it would be like this all night.
Actually, it only gets really bad around midnite. The poor guy just happened to be a table
where three people all decided to go to dinner together.
Actually, as I’ve pointed out before,
the third-man walking rule is a bad rule. It sounds good in theory, but in
actuality, it only serves to punish the innocent and let the guilty get off
scott-free. It’s the first two players
who leave who are actually the culprits.
If player #3 just needs to take a break for a quick bathroom break and
somehow gets picked up for missing his blind, that would be ridiculously
unfair. However, in this case, since all
three were going off together at the same time, the third-man walking rule
would have worked well, as one of the three would have been picked up. But generally, the only way to reduce the
problem is greatly shorten the time players are allowed to be away from the
table for before getting picked up. The
hour and 15 minutes that MGM allows is ridiculous.
The complaining player stayed for
about 10-15 minutes more, and then left in disgust. Fortunately, there was a small list and the
seat was filled right away so we weren’t even more short-handed.
And that’s where part one ends. You can now click here for part two, where the question will be asked, “What are breasts for?”
And that’s where part one ends. You can now click here for part two, where the question will be asked, “What are breasts for?”
It is the best Slut Parade of the year.
ReplyDeleteWhat, no pics? You gotta be kidding me.
Sorry, MOJO, but there's just no good way to do it. The casinos frown on taking pics in the casino and the ladies probably wouldn't appreciate it either--nor would their boyfriends.
DeleteI actually did try to do it once and posted some pics, but no one seemed to be interested in them at the time, based on the (lack of) reaction. Maybe it's because the way I did it, they weren't very good.
But thus, it just isn't worth the hoops I have to go thru to get something that doesn't come out well, doesn't do the parade justice, and is so much work for me that it detracts from my own enjoyment.
nice to see people agree 3rd man walking is a poor rule, and punishes the wrong people.
ReplyDeleteThank, Tony. Yeah, I realized it was a bad idea when I was the victim of it. Two other guys left the table for a long time and I couldn't even run to the Mens room.
DeleteI think the 3rd man walking rule is good if used correctly. I have played in a game where six people got up and went to dinner together and came back 1 hour and 15 minutes later and then they picked up there chips and left and there was a list of 20 people waiting for seats.
DeleteI would give the the third man walking 10 to 15 minutes to get back to his seat or he gets picked up if there are people waiting for a seat. So if you gotta hit the restroom you have enough time.
It is kind of insane to let up to 9 people at a table all get up and leave for 1 hour and 15 minutes when you got people on a list waiting for seats.
Yes, but the third man walking rule isn't enforced that way, as far as I've seen. It usually is, if the third man walking misses a blind, and there's a list, they pick up the third man's chips. Not fair.
DeleteI agree, they need to modify the third man walking rule so you get picked up after 10-15 minutes instead of just missing a blind and also you should not be picked up if there is no list.
DeleteI play at Aria a lot and on weekends you can have 30-40 people on the list waiting for seats and you got a lot of tables with empty seats because a bunch of people went to dinner and left there chips on the table.
DeleteIt's really the fault of the poker rooms for being so generous with the time away allowed. I wonder what their thinking is? Do they think that it would piss off more people if they cut it down to 20-30 minutes allowed away from tha table? i think most people would appreciate it...after all, most people don't abuse the rule.
DeleteI suppose for high end rooms like Aria & Bellagio, they might me thinking they are catering to their high limit players by allowing them time for a fancy dinner. But what excuse does MGM, or say, Planet Hollywood, have?
What if Aria and Bellagio had different rules for the 1/3 & 2/5 games (say 30 minutes) and 1:15 for the bigger games? No reason you couldn't have different rules for different stakes games. They take the rake differently.
Man, I just hate HATE when people take dinner breaks. The decent thing to do would be to cash out and come back. Its even worse when they're gone for an hour, come back to play one orbit, then leave.
ReplyDeleteOr even worse....don't even play a hand when they come back, just rack up and leave. I've seen that. The term "a special place in hell" comes to mind.
DeleteHowever, the ladies in my story did play in the room for many hours after they return, so that was one sin they did not commit.
If your going to go for dinner you should pick up your chips and leave. Like Rob says a lot of times after dinner they decide to leave anyway.
DeleteThe rule should be if your gone for more then 30 minutes your chips should be picked up.
Thanks, Nappy. I actually thing 30 mins is too long, but I'd go with that.
DeleteWhen I first started playing poker, I thought they should have the "time to pee" rule. Figure out how long it takes the average person to pee and use that. To be fair to the ladies, us their average time since they take longer.
If you have to do something more involved than that, pick up your chips and get back on the list.
Of course, I know that would never fly.
I agree with you that 30 minutes is too long also. There should just be one rule where if your gone for 20 minutes or more and there is a list then they can pick your chips up.
DeleteSo even if just one guy leaves the table and he is gone for over 20 minutes and there is a list then pick him up and fill in the seat.
Over all I hate the hour and 15 minute rule before people get picked up. It is kind of rude when people leave for that long. Even more when a group gets up and they all leave and your playing short handed.
How is the parade on St. Patrick's Day? I've never managed to be in Vegas during the holiest of holy days but its on my bucket list.
ReplyDeleteI was there last year for it (a Thursday) and my recollection is that it was pretty good, but I don't think it was anything special for St. Patty's day. Just an ordinary good day. Maybe more green dresses than usual.
DeleteJohn, here's the blog post (one of three) that I wrote about the St. Patty's Day Slut Parade from last year. It was a good one but not sure how much that had to do with holiday.
Deletehttp://robvegaspoker.blogspot.com/2016/04/flamingo.html
As I started reading this post, it felt familiar. When I got to "Flamingo!", I knew why!
Delete