Well, it turns out my last post was
too short. Don't laugh, but I left out
vital information about my one session at MGM from July. I also may have screwed up the hand history
that was the main topic of the post. So
this post is my attempt to remedy all that.
First things first, I have a critical
update on the straw situation at MGM.
Readers will recall that over a year ago I learned that MGM had a new
policy. They were no longer provided
drinking straws in beverages. I wrote
about it here.
Well, when I went into MGM that Friday
night, I had forgotten about that—until I received the diet Coke I ordered and
it came without a straw. Damn. They
still have this stupid no straw policy?
Oh well.
But a few minutes later, I noticed a
few drinks around the table with straws in them. And when the waitress came back around, I saw
that she had a container of straws on her tray.
So I asked her if I could have a straw, and she said sure and handed me
one. Apparently, they have straws but
you have to ask for them, they don't just automatically put one in for you.
Well, that's good enough, I thought.
But then I noticed the straw she
handed me was one of those god-awful paper straws, which are almost totally
worthless.
So….you have to ask for straws and
they're paper??? Yeesh. As long as they are going to give out those
damn paper straws, can't they at least make it automatic so you don't have to
remember to ask? It's the worst of both
worlds.
I know getting accurate, current
information on the straw situation in Vegas is more important to my readers
than any discussion of poker I could come up with, so I had to make sure I
related this to you. It should have been
in my previous post, but I messed up.
Anyway, for those of you who do come
here more for poker than straws (there must be some of you out there), I need
to correct my last post anyway. You
probably should reread before continuing, it's here.
My good buddy "Zourah" left
a comment for me on Twitter. Actually he
tried to leave a blog comment but it didn't go through. So let's see what Zourah wanted to comment:
"But pocket 8s do make a straight there
don’t they?
I really don’t have a problem with calling the
turn given your position but you’ve underrepresented your hand to the point
it’s worth raising the river."
Well that had me perplexed for
sure. But first, to get to Zourah's
point on my play, I think he's right and I already admitted that I misplayed
the hand. I should have raised on the
river. I have no argument with Zourah's
recommendation.
But had I butchered something in the
relating of the hand history? Did I
describe the guy as having a straight?
Well, I reread my post and sure enough, the way I told the story, he
would have had a straight. How did I
miss that?
I had to reconstruct my thoughts. I recalled that when I was reviewing my voice
notes and the contemporaneous notes I made at the table, there was a bit of a
discrepancy. My written notes said the
turn card was a 9. But I remembered
somewhat disputing that when I listened to myself relate the hand on the
recorder.
Sure enough, I just played back the
voice note and I was debating what the turn card was. I can hear myself saying, "I don't
remember what the turn card was. I wrote
here 9, but it might have been a 7. I
don't remember. I know it wasn't a
really low card and it wasn't an over card."
This happens all the time when I do
voice notes. I know I tap those notes
into my phone really fast and frequently screw up. But if my finger slipped trying to type a
"7" I most likely would have typed a "6" or an
"8", not a "9". But
clearly the next morning when I voice-recorded it, I was not sold on that card
being a 9.
Since my voice note wasn't sure
though, and I had written 9 at the time, I went ahead and called it a 9 in the the
post without realizing the implications of that.
So I suppose I should just say it was
a 7 and move on. That way he didn't have
a straight. In the long run we're all
dead it doesn't matter if he had a straight or just two pair because he was
always losing to my full house.
But it reminded me of just unclear it
all was to me at the time of showdown.
Here's what I remember. I called and waited for the lady to show her
hand, which she did promptly. I only
could see one card, the Jack. But the
dealer declared her hand to be trip Jacks, not a full house. At that point, the other player was unhappy,
he turned over his hand and I thought it was a pair of 8's. But before I could be sure, he flipped them
back over face down and mucked them. Meanwhile,
I was in the process of showing my hand, which I did fairly promptly, but not
before he had already conceded the pot by mucking his hand, after the brief
display.
In other words, he thought he was
beaten by the lady's trip Jacks. He
definitely conceded the pot to her before he even saw my hand.
Which he wouldn't have done if he had
a straight, of course. He would have
known his straight was no worse than the second best hand and could still have
conceivably been the best hand.
But as I said in the previous post,
it's hard for me to believe he called with just an unimproved pair of 8's. He wasn't that bad a player. Maybe he was a bad enough player (or just
having a brain freeze) to think his straight was losing to trips? Or perhaps he somehow thought the lady had a
full house? I couldn't see her other
card (she was on the far side of the table from me) but the dealer told me (and
everyone else) she just had the three Jacks.
Another thing I failed to put in my
previous post: When he turned over his
hand, he muttered something about, "I knew I should have been wary of the
paired board." Well, that's
something you're more likely to say when you have a straight than just a pocket
pair, isn't it?
So I can't be sure what happened
there. Why was I confused about what the
turn card really was? And did the guy
concede the pot even though he had the best exposed hand at that point?
I'm actually thinking he may have had
the straight there. And somehow thought
the lady had turned over a boat.
Of course if the lady had turned over
a boat, she would have won the pot, as her boat would have been better than
mine. I'm assuming if the dealer had
misread her hand she would have said something.
Although maybe she missed it too,
maybe she trusted the dealer. I have to
assume that there is a greater than zero pct chance I was awarded the pot in
error.
That would be unfortunate for the
lady, but ultimately that's on her for not speaking up. She was a solid player but you know we all
make mistakes.
And of course, there still exists the
very real possibility that the guy just screwed up by mucking too soon.
It's also possible that the turn card
was a 7 and not a 9. I thought it might
have been a 7 the next day. That would explain everything but the guy's bad
play.
Anyway, thanks for Zourah for pointing
this out (no one else did) and giving me all these possible scenarios to
consider.
No comments:
Post a Comment