This happened in one of my last
sessions in December in Vegas. It was a situation I’d never encountered before
and I wasn’t sure how to handle it.
I was sitting at seat 9, right next to
the dealer. The dealer was new. I had never seen him before and I could tell
by the way he was dealing that he was inexperienced. Not that he made any mistakes, but he was
methodical and a little bit unsure of himself.
In this particular hand, I had pocket
7’s. I think I called a small
raise. There were multiple players in
the pot, and the flop missed me and had overcards. So when there was a bet, I folded. There were still multiple players in the
hand.
The turn was the 7 of diamonds and I
started cursing the poker gods. But not
for long. Didn’t I have two red 7’s? I really thought that both of my 7’s were
red. I couldn’t be 100% sure, but I was
at least 97% sure.
The players were betting and calling
and I was wondering what to do. I
figured I had to say something. If the deck was fouled the hand should not
continue. But I couldn’t prove anything
right then and there, and I knew there was a possibility I was mistaken.
And if I was mistaken, speaking up
then and saying that I folded a 7 would give away valuable information to the
players. If I was right, it wouldn’t
matter, since the hand would be dead and everyone would get their money back.
But if I was wrong, it would improperly affect the hand in play.
Fortunately I was sitting right next
to the dealer, as I already noted. So I
leaned over and whispered to him, “I’m not positive, but I really think I
folded the 7 of diamonds.” I added that I folded pocket 7’s and I thought they
were both red. At first he didn’t seem
to grasp the significance of this, but then finally the light bulb went off
over his head. “Oh, I see the problem. Let me think….” He obviously didn’t know what to do. Neither did I, but then, I’m not a
professional poker dealer.
Finally he said, as the action on the
turn was coming to a close, “Well, I’ll just check the deck when the hand is over
and we’ll see.”
Sounded reasonable, but…..well the
hand played out, there was a showdown and somebody “won.” And the dealer pushed the pot to the
winner. Really? What if, after checking the deck, it turned
out I was right? The pot would have to
be returned to the center, right? And by
then, the winner would have already mixed the pot in with his own stack.
Well, he looked through the muck. I think I was the only one who saw what he
was doing—he didn’t explain to the other players why he was doing this. And he found two 7’s right next to each
other. One was a heart, but the other
one was black. No extra 7 of diamonds in this deck. I was wrong.
My memory ain’t what it used to be.
They say that the memory is the second thing to go. I can’t remember what the first thing is.
Anyway, I was relieved and in the end,
no harm was done. Well, except that I felt damn foolish. But I wondered if I had handled the situation
properly. More importantly, I wondered
if the dealer had.
For my part, I was lucky that I was
sitting next to the dealer and I could easily whisper my concern (also, in the
end, that saved me the embarrassment of the whole table knowing I was so
wrong). But what if I hadn’t been
sitting next to the dealer? What should
I have said? Any thoughts?
Again, if I spoke up so that the other
players could hear, I’d be giving away information about cards out of play. I mean even if I said something semi-vague
like, “I think I threw away one of the exact cards on the board,” it would be
obvious I was talking about the turn card since I hadn’t spoken up after the
flop.
So, if I hadn’t been able to whisper
in the dealer’s ear, how should I have handled it?
As for the dealer, I think it was a
mistake to push the pot to someone if he was gonna check the deck per my
comment. I think he should have had the
winner keep his cards, and say, “Before I push you the pot, I have to check the
deck, this player thinks we might have a fouled deck.” Yeah that would embarrass me if I turned out
to be wrong, but better that than giving a pot to someone that has to be
returned a minute later. Perhaps even
better, before pushing the player the pot, he should have called the floor over
and explained what happened. Because not
only was the dealer new and unsure about what to do, but if there was a fouled
deck, the floor is going to have to be involved anyway.
How do you think the dealer handled it
and how should he have handled it?
In the end, it was just my faulty
memory playing tricks on me, but fouled decks do happen every once in a great
while. What should have happened?
Unless you have a great memory (which you admit you don't) and were 110% sure, then say nothing since you will be mistaken 99.9 of the time.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment, crazybitch --I've always wanted to say that :-). I didn't feel like I could just ignore it. I was pretty certain I was right, and as long as I had a way of saying something without ruining the hand if I was wrong, I figured I had to speak up.
DeleteI'm a little behind on blog reading....
ReplyDeleteI think everything you said is exactly right: It's an impossible situation. There's no better solution than the one you came up with. The dealer should have done just what you suggested at the end (including calling the floor to oversee his search).
And, incidentally, a virtually identical thing happened to me once. I made the same choice, the dealer took the same steps, and the outcome was the same. http://pokergrump.blogspot.com/2008/03/i-couldve-sworn.html
Thanks, Grump. I should have known....every time I run into an oddball situation at the poker table, you already encountered the same thing and blogged about 10 years earlier.
DeleteI read your old post. In both your case and mine, the dealer pushed the pot before checking the muck. I think that's a mistake...what if the pot had to be returned?
Also couldn't help thinking that you had to get out of your seat to alert the dealer. Surprising because I know your favorite seats are next to the dealer.
And finally....interesting that you made that mistake with different color cards. Would have been much easier for me to believe you had the Q of clubs, and remembered it as a spade, rather than thinking a red card had been black.
I agree about the pot--seems an obvious precaution. I can't explain why I remembered a red card as black. Maybe I had the Qs on the previous hand, and was remembering that? I'll never know.
DeleteThat could be it. I know a lot of times after I fold a garbage hand, I'll look at the flop and see it hit me hard...then remember I was thinking of the hand before, not the current one. The mind is always playing tricks on us.
Delete