This is the first of two parts. Part 2 will be published Sunday evening.
I’m sure all of my readers have been
dying to know how I spent Christmas Day in Vegas. So at long last, I’m gonna tell you.
Actually it was closer to Christmas
night by the time I got started. I slept
late and got a late start for everything I did that day. I had decided that I would poker at MGM and
give that NFL promo another try. You
remember that one, right? I back-doored
my way to $500 the first time I was there for it on my second night in town
(see here).
To briefly explain, there’s this game
called “football” and…..hmm, maybe that’s a bit more detail than you need. This took place during the waning days of the
NFL season and it was a Sunday so MGM had their football promo. They have these “Poker Parlay Cards” and they
start giving them out two hours before the Sunday Night Football game starts
(same for Monday and Thursday night games).
There are five poker hands on it, which are: two pair, three-of-a-kind,
straight, flush and a full house. Every
time you make one of those hands, you get that hand stamped. If you fill out the card with all five stamps
before the football game ends, you win $300.
If you fill out the card after the game ends but before midnight, you
win $200. At midnight, they take all the
cards that have at least one stamp on them and put them in a drum and pull out
two “last chance” winners. First one
gets $500 and second one gets $300.
That’s how I lucked into a $500 win my second night in town.
In order to get the stamp for a hand,
there must be $40 in the pot, both of your hole cards must play, and you
actually have to win the pot.
I was running so late I didn’t get to
the poker room until the football game started.
I hadn’t left my room until then.
I knew at one point I would have to take a dinner break. I would have to see how I was doing in my
quest to fill out the parlay card to figure out when it was best for me to take
that dinner break.
I didn’t have to wait too long for a
table, I was seated soon after the game started. And I quite literally was sent to the worst
table in the room. I state that not
based on the quality of the game, but based on the weather. It is in the back corner of the room, closest
to the utility/maintenance door which the janitors and the maids open about
every 10 minutes to empty the trash or get supplies. That area is outside the casino and thus in
winter, every time they go out there, a huge blast of freezing cold air enters
the back of the poker room and hits the back tables, particular the one I was
assigned to. During the summer, when the
blast of air is obscenely hot, it’s not nearly as annoying. Actually, it usually feels good, because the
A/C in the casino is set at a comfy 43° year ‘round. Also, this particular table is sitting directly
under one of the A/C vents, so it would be uncomfortably cold even without the
door to the outside being opened constantly.
Almost immediately after taking my
seat, I wanted to request a table change.
Then I thought I would try to wait it out a bit. I figured I might take a dinner break early
and just cash out, and come back and hopefully get assigned to a new
table. And there didn’t seem to be any
point to changing tables if I was just gonna cash out soon.
So I toughed it out, at least for awhile. But I had to put my heavy jacket on while
playing, which is totally ridiculous.
It’s actually a ski jacket and I can assure you I have never taken it
skiing. That kept my upper body almost
warm enough but my legs were freezing. I
guess I need to shop for ski pants!
I had only been at the table a few
minutes when I was dealt Queen-Jack of diamonds. I made it $10 after one limper. There were only five callers. The flop came Queen-Jack-X, two clubs. I bet $35 and no one called. And I almost forgot to show my hand so I
could get a stamp for two pair.
Fortunately, just as I was about to shove my cards face down to the
dealer, I remembered and flipped them over.
Stamp #1 in less than 10 minutes.
Cool.
Not long after a new dealer pushed in,
one I was mostly unfamiliar with. She
was new. I may have seen her a time or
two this past summer, but not before then.
She comes from a Eurasian country.
Early in her down she dealt me the
mighty deuce-four, aka the most powerful hand in poker.
It was even suited (diamonds).
And I was on the button. I called
a $10 raise from the most active player at the table and it was three-way. The flop was Jack-10-9, two diamonds. The preflop raiser bet $20, I called and we
were heads up. The turn was the 8 of
diamonds, completing my baby flush. Now
I said this guy was the most active player at the table. He played virtually every hand. At
this stage of the game, I don’t think I’d ever seen him fold preflop. But he didn’t always raise so he probably had
a real hand, at least to start. The
third diamond didn’t bother him, and he bet $50. Of course, in a situation like that, I’m
always worried about a bigger flush. I didn’t think he had the flush but
obviously he could have. I just called.
The river was a black 3 and this time
he led out for $75. Hmm….maybe he did
have the bigger flush? But from playing
with him for just a brief time, I knew he was more than capable of making that
bet with a lot of hands lesser than the flush—like a straight, for
example. I had pegged him as a
recreational player who hadn’t really studied the game much. Probably plays in a home game back home. I couldn’t see myself folding. I called and he turned over Ace-Queen,
neither of which was a diamond. He did
have the straight of course. I took down
a really nice pot. And of course I got
the second stamp on my card for the flush.
I dunno why, but for some reason I said to the guy, “I couldn’t convince
myself you had a bigger flush there.” He
said, “Yeah, I’m pretty easy to read.”
No, he wasn’t given off any tells.
I just didn’t smell a flush there.
Now I may have gotten some of the
details on that hand a little wrong, because I hadn’t started writing notes on
it when the next hand started and it was every bit as noteworthy, and then
some.
I had pocket 9’s in the cut-off. The guy from the last hand limped in and then
the guy next to him, a fellow who appeared to be from India, made it $10. I called and so did the limper. The flop was Queen-9-2, rainbow I think. But it was checked to me. The Indian hadn’t been a particular active
player up until now, which was a bit of a surprise. My default stereotype for Indians is that
they are pretty aggro. Clearly not this
guy. So when he checked the flop, I
figured he had something like Ace-King, or maybe an under pair to the
Queen. I had to hope the limper would
give me some action. I bet $20 but the
limper folded. However, the Indian
called. Hmm…
The turn was another deuce, filling me
up. Again the Indian checked. He sure
didn’t strike me as the type of player who would take a stab at the pot on the
river if I checked behind him. I figured
I had to try to squeeze something out of him if I could. So I bet $25 or $30. And I was happy to see him call that.
But not as happy as I was to see the
river card, which was the case 9.
Sweet. Even better, instead of
checking, he reached for chips to bet with.
Wow. But he only bet $25, a
totally baffling bet.
What to do? I’ve heard from one dealer pal that if you
have the stone-cold nuts, you should always shove. Sure, you won’t always get called. But you’ll get called enough in the long run
to make it a profitable move. I’ve never
subscribed to that theory, however.
Maybe I should? I usually just
try to figure out the most I can bet and still get a call.
I decided to make a small raise. Not quite the min-raise, but a little
more. I made it $60. And I had no idea what he would do. I figured a fold, a call or a re-raise were
all equally likely. He went for my
second choice, a call.
I showed my quads and he turned
over—can you guess—pocket Queens! Holy
shit, I was stunned. I had no idea, none
at all, that he was so strong. Or that I
was behind the whole way until the river.
Or….that I had extremely improbably hit my freaking one-outer!
Yeah, I hit a damn one-outer. Not sure I can remember ever doing that
before. Pretty sure it was a first.
I sorta apologized to him. I think I said, “I’m not really sorry about
it, but that’s a terrible beat.” He said, “That’s ok.” He was surprisingly good-natured about it.
Then I thought about the hand, the way
he played it and all. We should have
gotten it all in on the turn, for sure. I mean, if this was the old west, I
would have put my horse, the deed to my ranch and my grandfather’s gold watch
in the pot if I could have. All the
while having no clue I was drawing to a one-outer. But then, on the river, how the hell does he
not come over the top when I raise?
Seriously? He’s got the third
nuts but the other two better hands are both quads. I honestly think I hit my one-outer against
the only player on the planet that wouldn’t have shoved on the river (if not
before).
I had to ask him…I had to. “Why didn’t you shove? Why didn’t you re-raise me?” I wasn’t asking because I was upset I didn’t
get more of his money for my monster. I
was just genuinely curious.
He replied, “No, no no…I don’t do
that. I don’t go all-in.”
Huh?
I wanted to say to him, “Really? You’re playing the wrong game.” But of course I didn’t say that. I didn’t really respond. I suppose I should have asked him if he would
have called my shove or a bigger re-raise (I had him covered by quite a bit, I
think he started with ~$200). I have to
think he would have called, but maybe not.
Maybe if I had made it $100 or enough to put him all-in he would have
found the fold button?
The thing is, as I kept playing with him
during the evening, I realized—and I may have even heard him say—he was new to
the game. I think he was mostly
interested in having his one buy-in last as long as possible. Maybe he wouldn’t have called off all of his
chips there if I had forced him to. I’ll
never know.
Now, quads isn’t (aren’t?) on the
poker parlay card (neither is a straight flush). But if you get quads or a straight flush, you
are entitled to get stamp for any hand on your card that you need, your
choice. Of course what makes the most
sense is to get the highest hand remaining that you still need stamped. I already had two pair and a flush. It only made sense to take the stamp for a
full house and get that out of the way.
But I have to tell you, the thought crossed my mind to use it for the
straight instead. I swear I make a lot
fewer straights than flushes, though it’s not supposed to be that way. I may even get fewer straights than boats. I guess it has to do with my starting hand
selection. I really don’t play a lot of
connected cards unless they are suited—or really big. And whenever they’ve run similar promos, it
always seems like the straight is the toughest for me to hit. Nevertheless, I did the “sensible” thing and
took the stamp for the full house.
I had been at the table for about a
half an hour and had 3/5’s of a card filled out. I was starting to get optimistic that I could
complete the card and win the promo money.
And that’s where part 1 ends. Part 2 is now here and be sure to check it out to see if I hit the promo.
Your river raise with quads from 25 to 60 is terribad. You are basically min-raising what you yourself said was a bafflingly small bet, for value with the nuts against a player who is almost certainly not going to re-raise.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment. Well, inasmuch as I had no idea he was that strong, and his bet was weak, I sure didn't think he'd call a big raise. I suppose the argument could be made for a shove, which might look like a bluff, but I had been betting the whole way, making that less likely.
DeleteThe funny thing is, if I knew what he had, I would might have made the same bet because I would have SURE he would repop it!