In case you were wondering…no, I
haven’t finished all my blogging from my December trip to Vegas. Not by a long
shot. So let’s get back to it, shall we?
On a drizzly Wednesday evening in
December, I found myself driving to downtown to meet up with VegasDWP and Alysia Chang for dinner. We were
dinning at Hugo’s Cellar at the Four Queens.
Hugo’s Cellar is definitely old Vegas.
Very classy, very elegant. It’s
not cheap, but because it’s downtown it’s very reasonably priced as compared to
a comparable place on the Strip.
Actually, I’m not sure there is a comparable place on the Strip. Not in 2017.
You might have to take a time machine back about 30 years to find its
equivalent on the Strip. And thanks to VegasDWP for the great meal. To quote him, "Anyone who survives a triple by-pass deserves a free meal." Or something to that effect.
Dinner was excellent—I had a terrific
steak—and the conversation was scintillating.
I must say, all the juicy gossip we discussed would make one helluva
blog post. Unfortunately for you, I did
promise not to reveal anything scandalous from our dinner conversation. Sorry,
but I am a man of my word.
Meanwhile, word had come down from the
mountain—well, actually, it was Twitter—that the famous (and infamous) Tony Bigcharles had made his way to Vegas
from parts unknown (actually, it was Phoenix, if memory serves). We had reason to believe Tony would be
playing some of that pokerz at Golden Nugget.
So we decided to check out the GN poker room after dinner to see if he
was there.
He was indeed, and the three of us all
got on the list for the 1/2 game. I was
seated immediately, followed by AC and DWP….but all three of us were at a
different table from Tony. Tony got on
the list to transfer to our game, and eventually, all four of us were at the
same table. In fact, the three of them
were all sitting in a row right next to each other. I was kind of on the other side of the table so
I wasn’t able to hear a lot of the conversation they were having.
I played about two hours. I must admit that it is a weakness of mine
that whenever I’m playing with friends, I have a harder time paying attention
to the actual poker. So I didn’t make
very many notes about hands. Although I
don’t think I missed anything major. I
won a few very small pots that never got past the turn. I hit a few sets. I didn’t write them all down because I didn’t
get paid for them. I hit a set of 10’s
and one other set before…..
I limped in with pocket 4’s, and only
Alysia, in the big blind saw the flop with me.
I caught my set; I didn’t note what the other cards on the flop were. She
led out for a whopping $3 (but considering the size of the pot, it was an appropriate
bet). I just called. On the turn, she led out for $4. This time I raised to $12. She called.
She checked the blank river and I bet $25. She folded.
Then there was “big” hand against
Tony. For some reason, I didn’t write
down full notes on it and I had trouble remembering the details the next
day. I believe we were heads up in a
limped pot on the flop. One of us must
have been the big blind but I don’t recall who.
I had pocket 9’s. The flop was
9-6-6. I think flopping a boat is even
better than flopping a set. I
slow-played it on the flop and neither of us bet. I bet something on the turn and Tony
called. I bet something on the river and
he called. He didn’t show when I tabled
by boat. It was another small pot,
because it was limped in and I didn’t expect he would call any big bets.
That was the last hand of mine I made
any notation about whatsoever. When I
left I had booked a solid $15 profit.
But there were a couple of other hands
involving Tony that caught my attention.
In the first one, I think he talked himself out of taking down a nice
pot.
Because I wasn’t in the hand, I wasn’t
really paying attention until the river.
On the river, Tony shoved. I
guess it was over $100 because he had a bunch of chips and a $100 bill (Golden
Nugget is one of the few casinos in Vegas where cash still plays). It struck me as a big overbet although I can’t
tell you how much was in the pot. Still,
I ‘m sure his bet was way over the size of the pot. The flop had come out 9-6-x, one club. The
turn and the river cards were both clubs, there was no pair on the board.
It was heads up and the other guy in
the hand was sitting right next to me.
He was really tanking. And then
Tony did what anyone who’s played with him has seen him do so often. He talked.
And talked. And talked.
The guy was still tanking, but clearly
was very much considering calling. And
so Tony said, “I’ll be totally honest with you.
I had an open-ended straight draw but I missed. I don’t have a straight.”
The guy stayed in the tank, and Tony
kept talking. He repeated several times
that he missed his straight draw—and that he was being honest about that. The guy kept tanking.
I kept thinking, “He’s got 8-7 of
clubs. He’s basically telling the guy
that’s what he has. Why is he talking
the guy out of calling?” I didn’t like
his bet size either. He should have bet
much smaller to get a call.
Unless he was bluffing.
No, I didn’t think he was. One of my (many) weaknesses as a poker player
is that I’m not a great hand reader. But
I would have bet my house he had exactly 8-7 of clubs. And so, finally, the guy folded. And Tony showed his hand (which of course, he
didn’t have to do). It was….8-7 of clubs,
for the runner-runner flush. Just as I thought.
And all I could think of was, “Why did he talk the guy out of giving him
his money?”
At one point during this hand….)’m not
sure if it was while the guy was tanking or immediately after he folded….Tony said,
“Oh, Rob is gonna talk about this hand.”
Ya think? But I replied, “I don’t think I’m the only
one at this table who has a blog. You
can write about it yourself, you know.”
Soon after the hand where I flopped a
boat against him, Tony caught a boat of his own. He turned it.
His only opponent was Alysia.
Again, on the river, Tony made a big overbet….over $100 into a pot that
was smaller than that. This time, Alysia
tanked and called (I didn’t make a note of Tony talking this time, so maybe he
didn’t). She didn’t show after Tony
tabled his hand.
Now, I never checked with her, so this
is pure speculation. And I think she
would deny this even if it was true, but I strongly suspected that her call
there was just her way of gifting Tony with some money. I may be way off base, I realize that. Just a strong hunch. It’s certainly possible she had a good
bluff-catching hand or thought Tony was a lot weaker than he was.
Soon thereafter I said goodbye to the
gang and headed back to my hotel. All I
could think of was what I was gonna do with my big $15 score.
I'd have to venture AC was NOT gifting money to our Hero on that hand given the highwater mark for his roll at that time. If TBC was below $5K and AC called the big bet on the river then, yes, that could have been a gifting situation.
ReplyDeleteWell, remember, Lester, this took place in December, a few days before Xmas. i don't recall what Tony's roll was at that point and I'm way too lazy to look it up. But it was a lot less than the high point he was at just a few days ago before pissing so much of it away.
DeleteAnd then Tony did what anyone who’s played with him has seen him do so often. He talked. And talked. And talked.
ReplyDeleteWhat? I'm incredulous. Can't be.
You coulda knocked me over with a feather, MOJO.
DeleteI think the days when you aren't lucky and still don't lose a lot of money are the days when you make the most. It is easy to make money when you are lucky.
ReplyDeleteGood point Darryl. Losing the minimum is an important element of the game.
DeleteI googled the phrase "rose between two thorns" and saw the picture you featured in this post.
ReplyDeleteWait, what? Since I'm in the middle, are you saying I'm the rose and AC & DWP are the two thorns???
DeleteAC & DWP are the two thorns???
DeleteUm, no.
I didn't say it, Lightning implied it.
Delete