Well last Saturday, March 7, I played
at PC Ventura. At the time, I didn't
realize it would be the last time I played live poker for awhile. All the local and semi-local casinos are
closed now, and who knows when they will reopen. My blog output will likely get a lot lighter
than it has been, and of course it has already been fairly light. We live in interesting times.
Nevertheless, I can still talk about
that "last" session, and so I will. There was one good hand to report.
I also have some news and a couple of interesting stories. Well, they're interesting to me, hopefully
they will be to you.
First the news. When I went over to the podium to add my name
to the waitlist, I told him I wanted 2/3.
The (relatively new) guy working the podium asked, "Just 2/3 or
2/3/5?" Huh? That was a new one. Without asking details, I reflexively
replied, "Just 2/3." Then I
went over to look at the board more carefully.
I had already noted that there were four 2/3 games going when I walked
in. Now I noticed that there was also a
column indicating that they were spreading a 2/3/5 game. And they in fact had two tables of it, and at
least 4-5 names of players waiting for it.
There were many more names waiting for the regular 2/3 game, and I was
thus hopeful that they would start another table soon.
I was pretty sure I had never seen
them spread a 2/3/5 game before. I do remember
that in the past, the sometimes spread a 3/5/10 game, but I hadn't recalled
seeing that in awhile.
While I was waiting I asked the guy
what the buy-in was for the new game.
Not that I ever intended to play it.
I mean, you guys know me. Can you
imagine me playing a game where there is, essentially, a forced $5 UTG straddle
every hand? Not bloody likely. Anyway, the min/max is $300-$600. The buy-in for the 2/3 is $100-$300 and I
always buy in for the max.
When I finally got into a game, I
overheard some talk and it appears that they just started offering this game at
the beginning of the week, and it seems to be fairly popular. I just hope it doesn't displace the 2/3 game,
as I have no interest in the bigger game.
Even if started getting more tables than the regular 2/3, it would be
bad—it might make it harder and harder to find a good 2/3 game. I hope the 2/3 game remains dominant. Note: this was written before all the
closures. Who knows what will happen now
when they reopen?
Well, I finally got into a game, right
before they called down the list for a new game. I was assigned a corner seat at the existing
game, which had bad lighting. Also the chair
was broken so I couldn't adjust it. And
I have problems seeing the board from the corner. So after a few hands, when the guy to my immediate
left got called to that 2/3/5 game. I grabbed his seat.
I hadn't played a hand to that point,
and as I moved over one seat, I looked down at a couple of Aces. You might say "good seat change"
but no one had yet taken my old seat so I would have gotten the same hand if I
hadn't made the move.
On this hand, there had been a $6
straddle (UTG, the only spot they allow it).
And the next player called the $6.
Then the guy right before me made it $40. He had about $110 or so left after that bet.
Nice.
That was an overbet to be sure. I
didn't know how the table had been playing and I'd never seen this guy
before. I've seen people overbet like
that with the dreaded hand, but it more
often is pocket Jacks. Truth be told,
I've seen people with Aces bet like that, as in, "I hate getting my Aces
cracked."
My normal three-bet is 3X plus any
limpers. In this case it would be plus
the two straddlers. Oh and by-the-way,
would my raise technically be a four-bet since the straddle could be considered
a raise?
But I decided that $120 was enough
without adding anything for the straddlers.
I figured I was unlikely to get a call from any of the players left
behind even at "only" $120. I assumed
there was a good chance though that the guy betting $40 would call, because he
didn't have all that many chips left, and unless he was just trying to steal
with nothing, he probably really liked his hand to make it $40.
So I put out $120 and it quickly
folded to the guy who made it $40. I
thought he said all-in. But when the
dealer said, "Sure you can go all-in," I wondered if the guy had
said, "Can I go all-in?" instead.
This was my first clue that maybe he was somewhat of a newbie. Any experienced player wouldn't have to ask
if he could go all-in. I confirmed with
the dealer that he had indeed gone all-in.
So of course I called. Although
it wasn't necessary to do it right away, the dealer counted his stack and told
me I need to add $30 to make the call, which I did.
The guy didn't show, so neither did I.
The flop was Jack-high and dry. It
remained dry except that by the river there were two 8's on it. I think we flipped over our hands at the same
time. He had Ace-7 offsuit
for….nothing. My bullets were good. And I was certainly grateful to the guy by
playing so badly and getting me off to a really nice start. Also glad that he
had Ace-7 and not A-8.
He left to get more cash. That was more good news. Seriously, what the hell was he doing playing
Ace-7 like that? Once I caught his steal
attempt (if that's what it was) he should have folded like a cheap suit.
Now the guy did come back, but after
another orbit or two he got called into the 1/2 game. Based on how he played subsequent hands it
was obvious he didn't really know how to play and he definitely made the right
decision to switch to the smaller game. I dunno if he had ever played poker
before but he definitely wasn't ready for 2/3.
I almost felt guilty for taking his money.
Almost.
I managed to win a whopping two more
hands for the day. About 45-minutes
later, I looked down at two Jacks. There
was a straddle and a two callers so I made it $30. Only one caller. The flop was King-high and I c-bet $40. He folded fast.
Near the end of my session, in my last
big blind, I had Queen-Jack off. No one
raised and four of us saw I Queen-high flop.
I bet a whopping $5 (the pot was only $6 after the rake) and took it
down.
Other than that, I was obscenely
card-dead. I think I only got one other
pocket pair—8's that went nowhere. No
Ace-King or Ace-Queen. Suited connectors? One.
It was 9-8 and I was UTG so I just mucked them. It was pretty pathetic.
As it happened, the guy who took my
old seat a hand or two after I had those Aces noticed how few hands I'd been
playing. He had relocated to the other
end of the table. At one point he must
have said something to the fellow next to him, because the fellow responded,
"Yeah, he placed Aces once." I
looked over there and the first guy said to me, "No Aces or Kings, huh,
sir?" I just shrugged.
I didn't appreciate the comment. He's giving free information to the other
players—that I haven't played a lot of hands.
You say it should be obvious to anyone else at the table? Well yeah, it should be. But believe me I run into plenty of players
at this room that aren't paying that kind of attention—why help them out? It's one player to a hand, after all.
There was a female player who did a
couple of annoying and disgusting things. She apparently moved over from
another table, with the waitress following her with her food order. Apparently she ordered the Ahi tuna
salad. The waitress herself pointed out
that the tuna seemed to be overcooked.
The player agreed and the waitress took it back to get it replaced. Of course the women complained about being
hungry the whole time waiting for her new meal.
Eventually the waitress brought her
back a new meal. The woman immediately
picked up a leaf or two of lettuce off the plate—with her hands—to examine the
Ahi, to see if it was cooked to her liking.
She said it was and then picked up a lemon wedge off the plate and
squeezed lemon juice over her meal.
Again, she did this with her bare hands that had just been touching the
cards and the chips. Has she not heard of the coronavirus?
Even before the casino closed, it was in all the papers. It was never a good
idea to touch food you are about to put in your mouth with your bare hands
after touching casino poker chips. But
these days, it's a really, really bad idea.
Then after she finished eating, she
made a call on her cel phone. And she
put it on speaker so the whole table could hear her call. She was calling Netflix because she was
having trouble changing her password.
Seriously? She had to do this at
the poker table? First we heard the
automated attendant thanking her for her call and telling her how important her
call was to them. Then we heard about 15
minutes of that horrific music they play when they put you on hold. Then we heard her talking to someone from
Netflix walking her through what she had to do to change her password. Yes, we heard the Netflix person through her
speakerphone. All this while she was playing poker!
It was annoying and rude.
Anyway, it came time for me to
leave. I had booked a $120 profit. As he saw me racking up my chips, the guy who
had commented earlier about my tight play said to me, "Leaving, sir? No Aces or Kings?" I ignored him. But in order to get to the cage, I had to
walk right by him. So as I passed him, I
said to him, "I don't even play Kings."
I had planned to add, "They're
Ace magnets, haven't you heard?"
But I saw he had his face buried in his phone and didn't appear to have
heard me. So I didn't say it.
However, the guy who was next to
him—the guy who pointed out that I played Aces once—laughed and nudged him and
said to him, "Did you hear what he said?
He said he doesn't even play Kings!"
I was gone by the time the guy had a chance
to answer, if he did.
I always look forward to your post Rob. I will keep an eye out for your updates after the poker rooms close. Stay safe!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lester.
DeleteYou stay safe, too.
Stay safe Rob. I’m locked inside as I’m old and have breathing issues. Can’t chance it. I got a new Grandson coming soon and want to be sure I can spoil him.
ReplyDeleteSure wish we had online poker here in AZ as about to go stir crazy.
Thanks. Yeah it's rough. No online poker for me either. I hope we can get back to normal soon.
DeleteStay well.
Old Man Coffee
ReplyDelete