Saturday I was at PC Ventura and
saw a player do something so dumb I couldn't believe it. Maybe there's an angle here I'm missing, but
I don't get it.
This guy had been table for
awhile, at least an hour that I had seen.
I know I have seen this guy before so he was no novice. He certainly
understood the basic rules of the game. He wasn't a particularly noticeable player. He was neither a maniac nor a nit. H didn't seem like the type of player who
couldn't wait to get his gamble on, just your pretty average 2/3 player there
to for an afternoon of poker, hoping to hit a big hand or two and walk away
with some profit.
Anyway, he left the table for
awhile and missed his blinds. By the
time he got back, he would have naturally been under-the-gun. As the dealer
readied the shuffle, he put a $5 chip in front of his stack. The dealer started to say something, then
stopped himself for a second. I could
tell the dealer was wondering if he should say something. I actually heard him mutter to himself that
he shouldn't speak up, but then realized there was no harm in saying something,
this wasn't giving him advice. Note: I
didn't recognize the dealer and I tend to think he was a new dealer, that's why
he hesitated.
But speak up he did and he told
the guy, "You can wait one hand and just post the big blind
then." That's exactly what I was
thinking, of course. Then the dealer
added, "Or you could straddle for $6 if you want to come in
now." Again, that's what I was
thinking. I've seen many players come in
after missing their blinds by straddling in that exact same situation. The player looked at him like he was nuts, as
if to say, "Is there anything wrong with coming now, and not
straddling?" I guess he didn't see
the problem.
The guy actually said, "No,
this is fine. I can come in now for $5, right?" The dealer acknowledged he could do that so he
broke his $5 chip into ones and put three in front of him and put two in the
pot as dead money.
Of course it's not a lot of
money but how does this make sense? Why
not wait one hand and just come in on your natural big blind and save the five
bucks? The way they do comps at this
place, he wasn't losing anything (they come around once an hour to scan your
card, he wouldn't be losing a few cents of comps). And two of those five bucks is just dead
money you're giving to whoever wins the pot, it's not even a bet anyone has to
cover.
Conversely, if he was so eager
to get back into the game that he couldn't wait one more hand to see some
cards, might as well toss another buck on the $5 chip and straddle, that way
you have last action preflop. Now I'm
not a fan of straddling, but in this situation, if you want a hand that badly,
this makes more sense than posting $5 just for an UTG hand, right? You know, I think one time at MGM I straddled
in that type of situation so that I would be eligible for a drawing that was
about to take place, I didn't want to be disqualified by having a missed blind
button. But again, there was no penalty
for this here.
It's hard for me to believe the
guy didn't understand what he was doing was making no sense, he surely had
played enough casino poker to get it, I would have thought. I suppose he may possibly have been trying to
make sure he was eligible for the bad beat jackpot if it hit that hand. It was up to $35K.
But that too would have been
stupid. Say he sat out that one hand,
and that was the hand where the jackpot hit at our table. And he'd be beating himself up something
silly for not getting a table share.
Except that simple logic dictates that if he had decided to play that
hand instead of sitting it out, everyone at the table would have gotten
different cards and the jackpot wouldn't have hit then. Right?
In fact if he had made the choice to sit out the hand and that's when
the jackpot hit, I'm sure the other players would have given him some money,
especially since someone would have pointed that if he taken a hand there it
wouldn't have hit and he was actually responsible for the rest of us getting
some nice jackpot money.
I have no idea if he was
thinking about the jackpot when he decided to come in for $5 or not. I'm just throwing it out there as a
possibility.
As for the poker for me, it
wasn't anything to write home about. I
didn't win a pot for about 1-1/2 hours.
No, I take that back. There was
one pot where I had limped in with a suited Ace and there was no raise and it
was five-handed and no one bet any street and by the river there was a straight
on the board. All five of us played the board and got $2 back, so a net loss of
a buck. Actually, the player in earliest
position got an extra buck and it must have been that the small blind folded
because that's the only way the math adds up.
Finally I won a hand, completing
from the small blind with Queen-9 off.
It was mult-way and the flop was Queen-5-4. I bet $6 and had one caller. The turn was a
Jack and my $10 bet was not called.
Monster pot there.
I limped with Ace-6 of clubs and
it was five ways. The flop was Ace-6-3,
two spades. I bet $10 and it was 4
ways. The turn was the third spade and
it checked around. The river paired the
3 and this time I went against my nitty nature and put out a $20 value
bet. One player called but she didn't
show after I flipped my cards over.
I called $17 with 8-7 of
hearts. I expected other callers but it
was heads up. The flop was 9-7-2, one
heart (the 9). I called $15. The turn was another heart and it checked
around. The river was another
heart. This time I bet $25 but he mucked
right away.
I had been down about $150 and
ended up losing only around $30, so it was a decent comeback.
Da hell?!?
ReplyDeleteHell if I know.
Delete[insert all the WTF GIFs]
DeleteUmmmm...you're welcome?
ReplyDelete