Sigh.
In my last post (here),
I mentioned that I'd had the dreaded pocket Kings a few times so far this trip and won a few, lost a
few, but nothing too dramatic.
Until Sunday night. I was having an ok
session, down a little but mostly due to still being incredibly card dead when
my buddy Mike came to deal. The night
before, I'd actually won a few small pots during his down, so I was hoping the
trend would continue.
Now those of you who have ridiculously
good memories might recall me mentioning here that Mike seems to deal me pocket
Kings more than any other dealer.
Actually, I'm not sure that's true.
But going back to the days when I was playing 2/4 limit, we both noticed
that there was a time there where Mike seemed to deal them to me at least once
every down that I was at his table. Of
course, when you're playing 2/4 limit, pocket Kings can't do as much damage as
they can when you're playing no limit. And losing with them is pretty
common. Usually 4 to 6 players see the
flop, so even pocket Aces don't hold up very often unless they are
improved. So it was just a running gag
between the two of us.
It wasn't till I started playing NL
that those Kings started killing me so much I came to dread them (and I still
regret not trademarking the term "dreaded pocket Kings.") Honestly, I can't say the pocket Kings Mike
has dealt me over the recent years have been any deadlier than KK dealt to me
by any other poker dealer. And truth be told, despite the running gag, Mike
hasn't been sending Kings to me in pairs very often for some time. In fact, I can't remember the last time he
dealt them to me. Well now I can….it was
Sunday night.
So near the end of his down, Mike
dealt me a couple of cowboys just like old times. I was in late position and someone in early
position had raised to $8 and it seemed like everyone but Wonder Woman called
the $8. So I made it $50. Everyone folded until one guy went all in,
but he only had $37 to shove. We were
heads up.
We didn't show but the flop looked
harmless enough to me. Just a couple of
7's and I can't remember what else.
There was no King, of course. So
when we revealed our hands, naturally the guy showed pocket 7's. Of course I would lose with pocket Kings to
freaking flopped quads with Mike dealing!
It seemed so right.
Well, Mike pointed out that it could
have been worse because he was short-stacked.
True enough, but if he had a decent sized stack, he likely wouldn't have
called a $50 bet with two lousy 7's.
Before Mike left, he dealt me two 4's
and I limped in, along with five others.
I flopped a set, bet $5 and got three callers. I bet $20 on a blank turn and didn't get a
call.
A new dealer came in to replace
Mike. On his first hand, I opened to $8
with Ace-9 of spades. It folded to the
guy to my right who made it $28. I
decided to let it go. The guy showed his
hand….pocket Kings.
The very next hand, in the big blind,
I got the Kings. This was less than 10
minutes after Mike had dealt me the Kings and exactly one hand after the guy on
my right had Kings. An early position
player had opened to $7 and there had been a caller. I made it $28.
The original raiser—who had just come
to the table and who I didn't know from Adam—made a large re-raise that was
more than I had left. It folded back to
me and of course I called off my stack.
We didn't show. The flop was
Queen-Jack-X, which I figured was bad news.
The turn was even more bad news—an Ace.
The river was a brick.
I mentioned to the dealer, who I was
sitting next to, that it was a horrible board for my hand. He said, "pocket Kings?" And when the river was dealt I showed them. The other guy took his sweet time to flip his
hand. Now that I think about it, he kind
of slow-rolled me. And he showed….Ace-King
of course.
I was done. Losing twice in a 10-minute span with my
cursed hand was a signal it was time to call it a night. It was getting late and I didn't think I'd
get off tilt before it was time to quit anyway.
Dreaded.
Bravo on calling it a night. It's hard to do sometimes after that, but probably the best thing you could have done. Hope the weather out there isn't keeping you down.
ReplyDelete-TDiddlez
Thanks, TD....yeah, I knew I was incapable of playing well for at least 15-20 minutes....and before I got the Kings a second time, I was about to reload. Money saved is money won, right?
DeleteWeather is oppressive but staying inside 99% of the time. Thanks.
If you expect to lose with KK, why would you leave? The secret is... you still like kings. I won't tell anyone.
ReplyDeleteWhat's the definition of insanity? Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.
DeleteI'm insane.
This post actually made my day.
ReplyDeleteThanks?
Delete