This took
place the day after I dropped Lightning off at the airport, as told in this post. It was a Saturday and I wanted to
play a tournament, but I wasn't sure which one.
It was Seniors weekend in Vegas, so that affected some of my options.
The WSOP was running their seniors bracelet events, and most of the places
around town were also running seniors events to complement what was going on at
the Rio. So I had really only two
options, the 1pm $150 at Golden Nugget or a slightly smaller buy-in tourney at
Planet Hollywood. But by the time I was
ready to head out, I had already missed the start of the PH event, and because
the buy-in was less, the structure was such that by the time I could make it
over there, it'd be so late that I'd likely be coming in with a starting stack
that was down to an M level of 10. That
sounded like a bad idea. But then to me,
so does starting a tournament at 11am, which was the case for this PH tourney.
The
only reason I was hesitant about the Nugget tourney was that I knew they were
also having a big seniors event this day—a $250 NLH event with a $100K
guarantee. The starting time for it was
10am. And I seemed to recall that this
is a big draw for the Nugget and that maybe the space for the 1pm would be
limited. So, worried about the crowd, I
rushed like crazy to get there as early as possible. I made a quick lunch in my room and gobbled
it down as fast as I could. I had to
pray that traffic downtown wasn't awful and I lucked out there. So I arrived at the Nugget at least a half
hour before the start time. Hopefully
that was early enough so I could claim a seat at the start and not have to wait
around as an alternate, which was a big concern of mine.
When
I walked into the ballroom they were using for the Grand Poker Series, I was
rather amazed by just how crowded it was.
The room was absolutely packed.
Not only was every table full, it looked like they had managed to jam in
a few more tables in there than there were the last time I was there. And I saw people milling around who I hoped
were people waiting for the 1pm tournament to start and not alternates waiting
to get into the Seniors event.
But
fortunately there wasn't much of a line to buy-in. So I got up to the cashier
and told her I wanted buy into the 1pm tourney (I was very specific about that,
because they might have still been accepting late entries for the Seniors and
sadly, I cannot pass for someone who is too young to play a Seniors event).
And
she promptly told me that due to the popularity of the Seniors event, the 1pm
tourney had been moved back to 3pm.
Ugh.
So I
rushed over there for nothing.
I had
to do some ruminating about whether I still wanted to play if it wasn't going
to start until three. For one thing,
that would make for a really late night if I made a good run. For another thing, what the heck would I do
for the next couple of hours, waiting around?
And lastly, would they still have a dinner break? Remember on these (hopefully) long
tournaments a dinner break is rather important to me. She said yes, but because the tournament was
starting two hours later, the dinner break would be two hours later also. I wasn't sure I believed her, so I asked if
she was sure there would still be a dinner break and she assured me there would
be.
OK,
so I figured I didn't have to decide right away whether to buy into a
tournament that wasn't starting for 2-1/2 hours. So I asked the lady, "Is there someplace
I could take a nap for a couple of hours?"
She laughed and said, "Oh, if you can find one, let me know."
Yeah,
I was tired—hell, I'm always tired when I'm in Vegas—and if this had been some
place near the Strip, I probably would have driven back to my room and tried to
take a nap, then see how I felt after that.
But I was already downtown—valet parked, no less—and I wasn't about to
leave unless I knew for sure I wouldn't be returning later that day.
So I
decided to check out the sights on Fremont Street while I was trying to figure
out what to do. As it happened, there
was some kind of classic car show right on Fremont St. They had brought in a whole bunch of spiffy,
cherried up old cars to look at. I'm not
a huge classic car fan, but I have to admit this was pretty cool. All the cars were in like perfect
condition. Plus, most of them had their
hoods open and the engines were all shiny and new. I mean, this engines were so pristine you
could eat off them. I wondered if these
were real engines or just mock-ups.
Then
I went over to Binion's to see how they were doing with their summer
series. Jerry, who runs the room these
days, greeted me warmly and told me how busy most of the events were. They actually didn't have enough tables to
accommodate the crowds they were getting for their non-hold-em events (which is
what they were mostly offering again this year). They only had eight tables and he said they
could easily fill double that. This day they were running the 7-Card Stud Hi/Lo
event, and there were plenty of alternates waiting to get in. I didn't make this comment to Jerry, but I
thought that he was in direct competition with the Seniors event across the
street. Let's face it, virtually
everyone who wanted to play 7-Card Stud Hi/Lo was easily eligible to play a
seniors event! I didn't notice any young
whippersnappers at the tables at Binion's.
I
thought maybe I could play a little 1/2 until the tourney started. Ha! I
went back to the Nugget and their regular poker room was also completely jammed
(needless to say, Binion's didn't have any tables for cash games). First off, I believe they were actually using
some of the tables in the poker room for the tournament (even though there's a
pretty good distance between the poker room and the tournament area). There was not an empty table there and there
were 41 names on the list for the 1/2 game.
There were over 20 on the list for the 2/5 game and a similar amount on
the list for the 2/4 game. It was pretty
much impossible to play poker downtown right then if you already didn't have a
seat!
I
managed to kill time until 2:30, so I decided to check back in the ballroom and
see how they were doing. I wasn't convinced they were going to be read to run a
new tourney at 3. If every table was
still being used, then I would have to think that they might cancel the 1pm
altogether or push it back even further.
But 3pm was definitely the limit for me.
Well
when I got back there were some empty tables that they were setting up for a
new tournament. Not a lot, but
some. And I could see they were breaking
tables fairly rapidly. Ok, well I felt
pretty good so I decided I would play. There
wasn't a big crowd at registration So I
told her I was buying into the 1pm, I mean 3pm, you know, the $150
tournament. And she said, "You'll
be an alternate, is that ok?"
WTF? They had at least six tables
ready to go for the tournament and it was still a half hour before the new start
time. Damn, I should have bought into it
when I first got there.
I
asked what alternate number I would be.
She said 72. 72??? Yep.
Oh boy, having just wasted a couple of hours killing time, I'm going to
leave now? Well, as I was talking to her
I could hear and see that they busting out of the seniors event really
quickly. I thought that I might not have
to wait too long to get it. I knew if I
bought in and didn't get in quickly enough for my comfort, I could get a refund
(should have thought of that at 12:30pm).
So I bit the bullet and handed over my $150. Alternate 72.
I was hoping that I might get in early in level 2 if not before, which
wouldn't have been so bad.
The
place was still quite crowded and I realized that I could be in for a really
long day so maybe I should see about charging my phone a little before the
tournament started. Fortunately I
remembered that there was a bank of USB ports over by one of the monitors
showing the tournament clock, which happened to be right by the area where the
new tournament was going start (see here).
So I
went over there and "stuck it in."
I didn't trust that my brand new phone was safe if I just left it there
so I stood right by it, unable to sit down. It wasn't a very fast charger so I
decided to turn my phone off in order to charge it a bit faster in the limited
time I had. I later was informed by my blogging buddy Memphis Mojo that
he was playing at the Nugget's senior event right then and he actually saw me
standing over there. He was going to
come over to say hi when he was on break but by then I had disappeared. Too bad.
They
started at 3 with six tables….but there were some other empty tables. Sure enough, almost as soon as they got cards
in the air, they called for the first 50 alternates to come and get seats. Damn, still shut out. But actually, before all the first fifty
alternates got situated, they called the next 10, and soon thereafter, another
10 more, which included me. So I got my
assignment, got my seat, and honestly, I didn't miss more than the first 10
minutes of the first 30-minute level.
Not bad at all.
My
luck hadn't been good up until this point of the trip and it didn't get that
much better this time. As I mentioned
when I first started writing up these reports from this trip, I didn't cash in
any of the tournaments I played, so you already know how this turns out. But I did have a bit of a better run in this
tournament than any of my previous ones.
So much so that I actually made it to the dinner break for the first
time all trip. Of course it was my luck
that the first time I made it to the dinner break it was in a tournament that
had the start time delayed and thus the dinner break was pushed way back.
So
let me explain how the dinner break was supposed to work and how it worked this
time. Tournament was supposed to start
at 1pm, there was a regular 15-minute break every 4 levels. The 40-minute dinner break, however, was an
extra break after level 10. I guess they
thought 5:30pm was too early for dinner, and 7:30pm was too late.
Now,
with the later start time, I was absolutely sure that they would just have the
dinner break after level 8 this one time, eliminating one of the 15-minute
breaks. This would get the tournament
over with a little sooner than otherwise, and would send us on the dinner break
at 7:30pm instead of the kind of late 8:30pm.
I mean, there really seemed like no reason at all not to do it that way,
right?
In
fact, the table started talking about the dinner break and speculating about
when it would be and if it would be changed (or cancelled). One of the ladies at the table said,
"They better not cancel the dinner break, I haven't eaten all day and I'm
starving." That sounded like me,
but of course, I had medical concerns if I couldn't get a real dinner. At one point, after the topic had been
breached, one of the TD's walked by our table and we asked about the dinner
break and if maybe it had been moved up.
He assured that the dinner break was still going to happen, and that it
would happen after the 10th level, not the 8th, just as originally
scheduled.
That
made no sense to me but I think I eventually figured out why they didn't move
the dinner break up. This is pure speculation
on my part, I never asked. But I assumed
the breaks for the tournament were all programmed into the Bravo clock they
were using. Moving that break would have
meant reprogramming Bravo. So my guess
is that they didn't have anyone there would knew how to do it, or perhaps just
didn't want to bother with the reprogramming.
I have no idea how much is involved in reprogramming the clock, but I
suppose it might not be that simple.
Anyway,
I guess when I was figuring out whether to play in the tourney, I was just
assuming a break at 7:30 but once I knew for sure it was an hour later, I
realized that was a problem for me. I
can't go that long without eating, plus one of the medications I must take
needs to be taken with food, a decent amount of food at that. So 8:30 wasn't going to work. Fortunately, I had remembered to take a few
Kind bars with me and at the 15-minute break at 7:30 I gobbled a few of them
down and took the pill that would likely make me toss my cookies if taken on an
empty stomach. I had to hope the Kind
bars were enough food (apparently they were, I had no stomach issues).
And
then an hour later came and it was the dinner break and now there was another
problem with the delayed start. At 8:30
on a Saturday night, Fremont St. is really crowded. At least the cool cars had been removed,
otherwise there would be no way to move at all.
So it was a real challenge walking in the very crowded street to get up
to The Plaza for my Subway dinner (the Kind bars were enough to take the meds
with, but not enough sustenance). So
another bit of bad luck because of the delayed start.
Well
what about the poker, you ask? As I
said, I didn't make it to the money. I
won't go into many hands, just a few. In
the fourth level I finally hit a really big hand. In the big blind, I called a smallish raise
with 8-7 spades. There was six of us.
The flop was Jack-10-9, so yeah, I flopped the joint. I donked out a bet
of $1,500, not sure why I did that—well, I might have been thinking that with
so many players the raiser might not have made a c-bet unless he hit something. The preflop raiser called. I checked the turn, a harmless 6. He bet $3K and I shoved and he snapped called
and flipped over a set of 10's. Wow. I
dodged the boat on the river and had a real nice double up.
Later,
close to the dinner break, I had to shove Ace-8
I got called by Ace-King. I would
have been gone before the break except I caught a miracle 8 on the turn, and
lived to make it to break.
Very
next hand a lady opened the pot to $2,100 (which I believe was a reasonable
raise) and another lady called. The
first woman was new to the table but the caller had been there the whole time
and been playing some unusual hands and hitting them. She had a big stack. I looked down at two Aces and figured I had
nothing to do but shove. The original
raiser folded but the caller snap called and flipped over the other two
Aces! Now I have seen Aces vs. Aces a
few times but this was the first time I'd ever been one of the players with
Aces. My first thought was how the hell
could she have just called with her Aces?
I'll never know. We were both
worried about the flush and I actually flopped a back door flush draw but by
the turn it was just a guaranteed chopped pot.
I
observed that although I had seen that before, I'd never participated in an
Aces vs Aces hand myself. Someone asked
me, "Well, how was it?" I
said, "Well…..it was like kissing your sister." The lady who folded took exception to
that. "Hey, you got my money—and I
would have won!" Apparently she
folded King-Queen and would have hit two pair.
Honestly, except for the suits, I didn't even notice the cards on the
board.
By
the time I came back from the dinner break to level 11, I was quite desperate
and early in that level I had to shove Queen-Jack. I was snap called by a big stack with pocket
Kings and yes, that was dreadful. A
Queen on the flop gave me some hope, but the board bricked out and I was
done. So after rushing to get that
overpriced Subway meal at nearly 9pm, I played about 10 minutes more and was
done. Again, more bad luck.
They
say better late than never, but it didn't work out that way for this
late-starting tournament.
Note,
this story took place in summer, but I'm posting it on Halloween, so that
explains the pics below. Happy Halloween everyone!