Lead Up.
This one’s going to be long. It has a fair bit about poker, but is
worth a read… at least as much as anything else in this blog is… even if you aren’t a poker player.
By default, we played Texas Hold’em or simply Hold’em.
A bit of Omaha Hi/Lo Split 8 or Better was also played,
but that was just to pass time.
The cast for this trip:
Jim. The reason we are going.
Jim won NETSNew England TARGET Satellite a super-satellite that we held at our place a month or so ago.
Winning buys you a $200 entry into
TARGETThe Annual Rec.Gambling Entry Tournament, and $400 to cover airfare to Vegas.
Strengths: Aggressive play. Hitting outs. Odds analysis. Post-flop play. Ogling blondes.
Weaknesses: Hand selection. Not folding. Blondes.
Andy. Friend who plays in our home game. Apparently, we should be very, very scared of him.
Strengths: Too many to list from our point of view at this time.
Weaknesses: We can’t find them, ask better players.
Dina. The person who goaded me into going, making it a group trip.
Strengths: Reading other’s hands through playing the person. Being difficult to read.
Weaknesses: Inexperience. Unwilling to lay down pretty hands. Position.
Nick. Your humble narrator.
Strengths: Reading other’s hands through bets and the person. Pre-flop hand selection.
Weaknesses: General, post-flop play.
Thursday: Getting There
First, the flight was at some unghodly hour06:00, Thursday morning.
Andy was on a different flight, leaving after work, and arriving around midnight.
Thankfully, I’d been up until 06:00, 04:00, 04:00, 04:00, and 02:00 the last 5 nights, playing to get into a
super-satellite.
Since Wednesday was my last day at work, I didn’t mind showing up tired.
Surprisingly, I showed up at decent hours every day.
Even more surprising to me is that I went on scarce amounts of sleepfor me
regularly, and was still able to function without being overly grumpy.
I’m not sure whether the previous lack of sleep helped or hindered my performance in Vegas.
We played $0.5-1 Hold’em on the plane.
Jim and I were up, Dina was down.
In TiltBoys fashion, Jim circled me a few times on the plane.
We’re playing a punchless version, although we have toyed with the idea of charging the lookee a dollar.
I think my goal for this weekend is to get some cute blonde to circle JimI failed..
The plane turns out to be the last time we attempt to circle each other.
Jim: I’d have lost it if circled by a cute blonde. Absolutely lost it…
We try to teach Dina odds.
I say the odds of flopping a set with a pocket pair are about 6:1 against.
Jim thinks it’s higher. We bet $1. We do the math. I lose.
That’s one of the things I need to work on in the game, figuring out odds,
and calculating whether the pot has enough money in it for me to call when I am drawing.
The actual plane trip sucked.
We hopped from Boston Logan to Chicago Midway to LAX to Las Vegas.
Not much leg room… even Dina was complained about the lack.
Worst part was, in Chicago, there were 4 flights to Vegas and one to L.A.
As we’re looking at the departure monitors, someone beside us complained,
“I can’t believe that I have to go to L.A. via Vegas.”
<sigh />
.
While we were on approach to Vegas, Jim tries to bet me $5 on which bag gets to the baggage claim carousel first.
Dina is incredulous, she obviously hasn’t read TiltBoys. I take the bet.
We get into the Vegas airport.
There are slot machines in the gate area.
I appreciate a town that does things right.
Jim rushes over to the slot machines and drops $0.50 in the slot machine in order to be the first among us to gamble in Vegas.
He doesn’t win.
While we’re walking to pick up our bags, Jim angles Dina.
He bets her that she won’t be the first one among the three of us to win a bet in Vegas.
He’s generous… he gives her 2:1 odds, since there are two non-Dina’s on the trip so far, and only one Dina.
Dina takes the bet.
I offer Dina the bet “Dina, I bet you $1 that my name doesn’t begin with an N.”
She doesn’t see the writing on the wall, and declines.
We get to the baggage claim.
Dina and my bags are identical… one of them arrives… as I’m about to check which one it is, and while Jim is crossing his fingers that it isn’t mine, our other bag arrives.
Jim loses… I win… but… Jim turns to Dina… she’s not the first person to win a bet while in Vegas… Dina is pretty apeshit…
About this time, I realize that I forgot my camera… guess that means that I have to come back.
Pretty sucky… Vegas is a city that is wonderful for long exposure night-time shots, something I love doing.
Had I had my camera, I probably would have spent a fair amount less time at the poker tables. Hah… who’m I kidding?
Thursday: Afternoon: Let’s Play
After checking into our nicely sized room (“It’s the desert, it’s not as if they’re lacking for space.”) at Treasure Island,
we drop by the Mirage poker room.
It’s a nice place, smoke free, not too noisy.
Jim plays a few short $3-6 Hold’em games while waiting for satellites.
From about 17:00 to 17:50, Dina, Jim, and I play two $25 No Limit Hold’em satellites for entries into the night’s tourney…
all sitting at the same table.
We don’t do to well…
I last the longest in both cases, but it’s a pathetic 6th and 8th on a table of 11.
Playing with 300 chips and 10-15 blinds a bit foreign to me… I didn’t adjust well.
It wasn’t really much fun.
These are the last tourneys that Dina and I play for the trip.
To bust me out of the 2nd tourney, I raise my small blind of 50 to 75 all in.
The big blind turns over a 2♦7♠ vs. my K♦3♥.
I’m currently about a 2:1 favourite.
27oA two and a seven of different suits is the worst possible starting hand at Hold’em.
The flop is K♠K♥x♠.
I’ve got trips.
I’m a big favorite.
The only way that my opponent can win is they hit running ♠s for a flush.
The odds against this are about 21:1 against (1 of 10 ♠s of the 45 unseen cards hitting on the turn, 1 of 9 remaining ♠s of the 44 unseen cards hitting on the river.
Of course, since I’m telling you about this, obviously the ♠s hit.
Jim notes:
The 27o is not the worst hand heads-up; 23o is. 27o is the worst hand
multi-way.
He actually has worse odds than you claim to suck out on you. Only
9 of the cards help him on the turn and 8 on the river since the 3♠
gives you a full.
The fun starts when we start playing the cash game.
I play the $3-6 game from about 17:50 to 22:30 and lose about $207.
I’m at a table without any of the gang, and it’s damn boring.
I decide to liven it up… live straddles are legal in Vegas…
(the floorperson tells Dina, who asked for me, “Of course it’s legal. It’s poker.” We didn’t tell him ’bout Atlantic City, where they aren’t allowed…)
So… I live straddle.
Good that comes from this: the table is looser, and some of it is having fun… the bad part… well…
Jim notes:
When we were in AC and trying to straddle, people kept asking if we were
from Vegas… So we shoulda known they were legal in Vegas.
I raise my straddle blind.
Some callers.
Flop is AAA.
Scary.
I look.
OK, I have a Q6.
Not good, but decent kicker.
I bet.
Only one caller.
Next card is a King. I bet. Call.
Last card is another King.
I play the board… thankfully, there is no way for him to beat me unless he has the last remaining Ace…
Conversely, there is no way I can beat this guy… unless…
I bet… maybe this guy is also a tourist and will fold, either thinking I have an Ace, or not realizing that we will both play the board.
He raises. Oops. I call. He turns over an Ace.
Oops.
Jim gets to the table soon after, and is frequently mouth agape as he watches me play.
I am channeling Jim with the best of them.
The problem is that when Jim does it, he’s a natural.
I have to work really hard at it.
1 Michelob Ultra… or was it water? same diff…,
2 Rusty NailsScotch and Drambuie,
and one Green Apple… think apple martini… make the task simultaneously slightly harder and slightly easier.
Surprisingly, this isn’t the last time Jim will witness someone channeling Jim this weekend
One old lady decides to sit down.
She watches the table while waiting for her blinds.
When a seat opens to my left, she changes to it… it’s good to be to the left of loose, aggressive players, as I am now playing.
Before it gets to her blind, she gets up to leave, with quotes like
“I’ve played lots of cards, this isn’t cards, I’m leaving.” and
“I’m 78 years old. I don’t need to go to the loony bin now.”
Dina and Jim were in hysterics.
I tilted someone off the table before they even started playing.
One tourist, who’d been there since Monday, said it was the most fun table he’d been at all week.
Made me feel useful.
After the Quad Ace debacle, straddles go well.
I take down some pots, by simply continuing to bet after the flop.
Some hands are crap, and easy to get away from post flop.
Then I get some really blind luck… on the hands where I’m playing blindBetting without looking at my cards.…
On one, I wimp out and look at what I live straddled with… OMGh… it’s QQ.
I raise. I get a few callers as I announce that I have looked at my hand and that it’s a good one.
They think I’m just showboating.
Flop is 8TA. I bet, Jim calls. I don’t remember if anyone else does. The turn is a Q.
I’m happy, I bet. When Jim raises, I know he has a KJ.
I’m a bit dismayed that I don’t have the best hand as I thought I did about 5 seconds ago.
I just call, but I feel that I will hit. I do. The river is an 8. I bet, grinning like a demon at Jim.
He announces that he doesn’t believe that the 8 made my hand, and re-raises.
I grin some more, tell him that I’ve got his ass beat, and re-raise.
He looks at me, and he is already starting to fume. He calls. I turn over my QQ.
The look on his face mirrors the one normally seen when Jim beats others like a rented red-headed-step-mule-child.
I don’t feel that bad for long though.
One hand, when I’ve straddled and re-raised with a lot of callers, Jim is in.
The flop is 553. Jim starts betting. I’m sure I’m the only one who has pegged him for a 53.
I’m trying my absolute best not to say anything at all. The table can’t believe it when Jim turns his hand over after the river.
One more straddle. I announce that I’m not looking at my cards, and drop some chips onto them.
I raise blind pre-flop. Flop is 335. Jim is out, so I have absolutely nothing to fear. I bet.
One caller. Turn is a 5. I still have nothing to fear. I bet, one caller. River is a 7.
I decide it’s time to look. I somehow have a pocket pair… 77. I bet. Call.
I tell Jim he’s not going to believe this one, and turn over my 77. The other guy has A♦J♦.
Despite the fact that I was ahead all the way, the table is still steamed.
Despite / because of my crazy play, I’m only down about $50.
Well worth the entertainment, and better than I’ve been doing at the $3-6 game at Mohegan Sun.
As I walk out of the Mirage, the Volcano is erupting.
Dina and Jim leave, with stern warnings to calm down a bit.
I calm down, drink club sodas, the game becomes boring, and I vent $150 as I am no longer in control of the table.
Oh well. It was fun playing table captain. I learned a few things about the psychological side of the game.
I also learned how to get out of trouble in large pots…
I guess I have a better understanding why Jim does well with his crazy style of play at times.
My mad skillz are getting better.
Friday: Morning: TARGET Preparation
Friday morning, as I phone Daniel to ask him some questions, I look for my palm pilot…
it takes me a while to figure out that it is also my phone…
The problem with Vegas is the problem that I have when something that is normally scarce is abundant.
I don’t want to get up from the table because I feel it’ll be a long time before I sit down at a table again.
As such, when I leave my hotel room, which is on the strip, I pack my pockets as if I’ll be gone the whole day.
I decide not to wear my contacts, since I’m worried about them drying out.
I can probably stroll to the hotel room, remove my contacts, and get back to the table without losing my seat.
We hit the buffet at the Mirage with some other TARGET players.
It’s interesting listening to the stories about Vegas for us Vegas Virgins.
Friday: Afternoon: TARGET and Cash Game
Jim and Andy play in TARGET… neither win.
Meanwhile, in my second session of $3-6 Hold’em at Mirage, I’m up $78 from 12:00 to 13:00.
I decide to play the dumb tourist, who’s tagging along with his poker playing friends.
Despite the fact that I think I should take acting classes, it worked.
I check first when I have the button preflop, and other times.
I ask people to show me how to shuffle chips. Despite the fact that I can handle up to stacks of 22, I ‘practice’ with stacks of 6.
I’d bet 6 on the flop. I’d bet 3 on the turn.
I’d post 3 for the small blind, or 1 for the big.
I asked some of the veterans what a chop of the blinds was.
Every so often, I’d play a hand that looked pretty, but was easy to underestimate by novices.
Sometimes, I’d just plain turn over crap.
I played hands in a straightforward manner for the most part…
Yes, Erin, I do enjoy playing the groundling at times.
While I’m on the dumb tourist act, one of the people who witnessed the mad-ass act the night before sits immediately to my right.
I figure I’m busted, so I don’t make any more overt dumb tourist moves, and do what I can to not to do anything that appears
smart, experienced, or sophisticatedNo comments from the peanut gallery please..
Although she recognizes me, she doesn’t say anything.
When her SO drops by, she quietly points me out to him… tells him that I’m the idiot from last night…
I think he suggests she raise my blinds a lot… I think this is what was said… they may have been talking about something completely different.
Once we get to talking, I’m reassured.
She’d only played home games; the night before was her first night at the casino.
Keri (sp?) and James are from Austin, TX, and is there with a bunch of her SO’s dot com friends.
“Trilogy?” I ask. Yes.
I tell her I know Josh and Micha through friends of mine. Small world.
For my last hand before we want to leave for the Bellagio, I prepare to straddle.
She says “Please don’t straddle me.” I bite my tongueI have a friend who’d love to… Don’t worry, I’m safe, I’m married….
As it is, despite the full house potential on board, I have the nut flush, and the winning hand.
I regret not straddling…
Friday: Afternoon: Bellagio
The Bellagio $4-8 game was pretty easy… 14:48 to 19:38, up $224.5, about 5 big bets per hour. A very respectable rate.
Actually, the $30-60 game didn’t look that hard other than my unwillingness to play with that big a bankroll.
The players were making plays that I didn’t comprehend…
I was worried that, since any sufficiently advanced technology will appear as magic to the natives,
They were playing over my head, at levels I haven’t conceived.
Nope… they were just bad players.
Next time I find a table that looks that soft at those limits, I’m sacking up and sitting down…
At the Bellagio $4-8 game, a nice hand, I’m first to act pre-flop. K♣J♣. I call.
Someone after me raises. I call.
Flop is JT4. I check. Raiser bets. I flat call.
Turn is J. I check again. Raiser bets again. I flat call again. It’s heads up.
River is another J. I now have quad Jacks, the nuts… no hand can beat me…
This time I bet.
We bang back and forth for 5 more bets.
I turn over my cards.
He turns over AA, and is steaming.
He left after that hand.
According to Jim and another guy at the table me re-checking my cards after every bet helped the guy continue betting.
This is the second time that I get quads with 3 on the board, and my opponent insists on banging back and forth an
inordinate number of times before calling. Good to know that I can fool bad players who don’t know me…
Next I work on good players who don’t know me… eventually, I may progress up to good players who know me…
The Bellagio $4-8 game isn’t an exercise in fun.
I think it’s a beatable game though.
I’m not getting great cards, other than the one mentioned below.
I’m calling down to the river and losing…
I bet on the river and lose…
I play too loose and pitter away 16 calling the turn and the river on a bunch of absolutely hopeless draws…
I’m playing a little too loose…
Yet, I’m still up a fair bit…
Andy watches me play and gives me some pointers on my limit game…
I’m not sure I’ve completely absorbed them…
in fact, even though I know he’s probably right,
I still disagree, and need to convince myself of the reasoning behind his suggestions.
Have I mentioned yet that Andy is crushing every game he plays in.
During my stint at the $4-8 table, Andy was crushing the $30-60 game to the tune of about $2,000 in two hours…
$1000 an hour, or 17 big blinds an hour is pretty damn good.
The $20-40 at the Mirage, and the $30-60 at the Bellagio contribute nicely to Andy’s bankroll.
He’s up so much, he decides to enter one of the WSOP events at Binion’s,
the $1500 Pot Limit Hold’em tournament.
There were some games for insane stakes going on at the Bellagio.
$400-800 limit Stud, Omaha, and Hold’em.
$50-100 Pot Limit Omaha High, which is about as big as a $500-1000 limit game.
There were people I recognized, both from Poker on TV and as book authors playing.
Some chip stacks were easily worth over $100,000.
Friday: Evening: Non-poker entertainment
Supper at the Garden Cafe in Harrah’s with Andy and Dina.
Talked to Andy at supper about seat choice trade-offs.
A lot of the books discuss where you want to sit compared to different types of players.
They don’t seem to discuss the real world where you have to deal with up to 9 different styles of play.
Do you give more weight sitting relevant to the aggressive players, or the passive players, the loose or the tight, the drunk?
Saw a comedy show at The Improv at Harrah’s, whose mascot is a fool in full motley…
other than the fact that one of the comedians and the sound man were drunk
(they may well have been the same person…) it was pretty good, though not exceptional.
Played Blackjack at the seen-better-days-and-attracts-men-in-wifebeaters Casino Royale with ‘bonus’ coupons that the casino gives out for getting their player card. At least they have cool looking chips.
I was even, Dina was down $25, and Andy lost $200. The coupons are a great deal for the casinos.
At one point, one of the more talkative guys, let’s call him Mr. Math, with an 8 and a 5 says to the dealer “Give me a seven.”
Interesting that Mr. Math wants to hit to a 20.
As a 10 falls, he notes “That’s a weird looking seven.”
Later, he has a 13, the dealer has a 7 showing. He stands.
Mr. Math’s friend has a 7. Friend hits a 6 to 13.
Mr. Math suggests that friend hit, and he does.
BTW, I don’t understand the camaraderie us vs. the dealer thing at the Blackjack table…
Played $20 worth of slots for someone with instructions for a single play through. Got $13.50 back.
I don’t get the deal. Maybe if I actually won the BMW Z4 I would.
I still think that the Z3 is a nicer car.
Back at the Mirage, Dina and I played some slots for ourselves.
We’re down $9. Up $1 on the 1 penny slots, and down $10 on the $5 slots.
I don’t get the big deal about slots. We mainly played the $5 to see if it felt any different… nope.
We watched a couple playing the $100 slots as if it were 25 cent slots to us. Still don’t understand it.
Friday: End Of Day Observations
Been observing other people play.
Many look at their cards too early.
I’m surprised more people don’t look at the others as they look at their cards, or as the flop, turn and river fall.
Some think ahead to figure out what they’re going to do in the most common situations, which speeds up their play, and makes them seem much more decisive and good.
After observing this, I found that I was actually more effective as I was running through scenarios and factoring the personalities of the players into the mix.
What do I like about Vegas so far?
It’s pedestrian friendly, clean, temperatures are nice, the air is crisp, and it’s simply pretty.
From the point of view of someone who enjoys night time long exposure photography, it’s beautiful.
Too bad I forgot my camera.
On the other hand, that’s the strip.
Prettiness and cleanliness fall away sharply as you walk even a block away from the strip.
The Bellagio and Mirage bathrooms had proper automatic faucets.
The faucet reaches a fair way over the sink, so you don’t bump your hands against the back of the sink as you wash your hands.
The sensor has a good range… if you move your hands in the sink, the water turns on.
The faucet has a delayed off, so it doesn’t immediately shut off if you accidentally move your hands out of range of the sensor, or to reach for soap.
Technological efficiency fascinates me…
We discuss one prize for a tourney that was your weight in silver,
and noted that it was a hefty person who won.
The line is set that silver is $20 an ounce. I take the over for $1. Jim takes the under.
I fear that I made a bad betLooking up the price online today, silver seems to be about $4.50 an ounce.
It’s interesting to all of a sudden have a bit more respect for my own poker skills.
Playing against really poor opponents helps your confidence a lot…
you see all the mistakes that you’ve grown out of…
who says that poker isn’t a game of skill?
Anyway… my goal for the trip is now:
- To see if I am winning due to:
- Blind luck.
- Good table.
- Good cards.
- Some combination of the above.
- To see if I can get the trip to pay for itself:
- Good would be if I could pay for hotel and airfare.
- Great would be if I could pay for above plus food, shows, etc.
- Astounding would be If I could pay for above for both Dina and I.
Needless to say, I’m simply aiming for good…
Saturday: Morning: Online In Vegas
I’m 10Xth in Paradise Poker’s WSOP Challenge.
I may get into the 100 player tourney if some of the top 100 don’t show.
I get internet access in the room, $20 from 12:00 to 11:59. Ouch.
Even more ouch since I’m signing up at 08:30 and only get 3.5 hours of use.
I don’t make it in… I lost the $20 bet.
Saturday: Afternoon: Binion’s
We head over to Binion’s downtown.
It feels too old-school for me… it’s old, a bit dingy, and very, very smoky, both cigarette and cigars.
The bathrooms are a bit gross… even by male standards…
Andy enters a satellite for the WSOP main event.
Jim enters a couple of super-satellites, and then plays for cash.
Meanwhile, Dina and I play the cash game.
I play the $4-8 game from 16:45 to 21:02 and lose $112.
It’s not much fun. The second most interesting thing that happens is that two players
almost come to blows…
The best hand is when I have AA.
I bet, Jim calls.
Flop is AKQ, with one ♦.
I have top set, but fear the straight or straight draw.
I bet, Jim calls.
Turn is x♦.
I bet, Jim calls, and is the only caller.
River is T♦.
I sigh in disgust, look at Jim, and say “You sucked out on me, didn’t you.”
Jim smiles and says “yes.”
I tell him I’m going to bet anyway, and do.
Jim raises.
I call, and throw my aces on the table in disgust.
Jim looks, says nice hand, and mucks what he still claims to this day is a flush.
I’m amazed, because I believe that he has a flush, and has accidentally mucked it, thinking that I have a full house.
The dealer pushes the pot to me. Jim is fuming.
Andy has been kicking ass all weekend…
maybe we should uninvite him from the home game.
I watch him play a super satellite to the WSOP main event.
He was super aggressive around the bubble…
refused deals when down to 3 players… grinning like a maniac… big… big brass balls…
my heart was thumping for him…
most adrenaline I felt on the whole trip to Vegas.
He finally finished 3rd in the super-sat as he ran his 4s into AKo with a K on the flop.
At the same time I’m watching Andy, I pay some attention to Chris Ferguson winning the
$2000 Limit Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better. It was cool, but not as fun as watching a friend play.
The Freemont street experience was underwhelming.
It also gave me a crick in my next.
There is no good position in which to watch the show other than lying down on the ground.
I was geeky enough to count the ‘pixels’ of vertical resolution.
Overall, I don’t like the way the experience was put together.
Cool, but could be much better.
By this time, late night Saturday, I’m in the mood for a good, long session at the table.
Thankfully I get in a good session at the Mirage.
Sunday: Early Morning
I play $5-10 Omaha with a full kill from 00:00 to 00:27 and rake in $110.00.
Not that interesting a game.
Then, I sack up, and play the $10-20 Hold’em game at the Mirage.
It’s the first time I play for these limits.
I play from 00:27 to 07:09 and rack up $507.
I start off well.
My first 2 hands, in the bb and sb, are AKo…
I don’t remember if they win or not though.
My 4th hand is 35o, which Jim has been playing to full houses all weekend…
I’m in early position so I fold… this one hits A355x… oh well.
After the 35o would have hit, a marginal hand that I decided to fold would have also hit
big to a full house.
Now, is it really 2 hands in a row that I would have won if I were in?
If I played the 35o, my cards would have been mucked / given to the dealer differently,
and therefore shuffled differently, giving me a different 5th hand.
The $10-20 game, although not difficult, was good…
it felt like the Hold’em they describe in books…
because it was a harder game, I played better…
I regularly had the discipline to lay down top pair, bad kicker…
usually a K or Q flush draw hitting on the flop and being bet into…
In fact, I don’t think I ever folded that type of hand without someone actually showing down the better kicker…
I wasn’t as efficient as I could have been… I probably wasted a good $200 or so playing
’til the river instead of folding on the flop.
Of course, you know this rational behaviour and play
couldn’t go on forever… which is why the clockwork
of the universe deemed it was time for Leslie to show up…
Leslie, also from the Austin, TX contingent, arrived, and really loosened up the table…
I was up about $250 at that point, and was about to leave…
The big blind was immediately to my right…
I’d racked up my chips, and my ass had just lifted itself out of my chair…
She barreled into the table, and started talking smack at a mile a minute…
it looked like it was going to be soooo much fun that I stayed for another 3 hours…
I dropped $200 almost immediately as the table went a bit crazy, but then straightened out…
finally up $500 or so… the hands in the last ½ hour helped…
Leslie comes in and Jims the table.
What was a relatively normal game is now loose.
Capped 6-way pots pre-flop.
She appears crazy like Jim… talks up a storm… and says all sorts of outrageous things…
except that she chose her hands… I’m not sure if other people notice this… she gets lots of callers…
Very assertive, very aggressive player…
interesting watching her and Jim tilt the table from the other, calm end of the table…
My next session at the Mirage, I’m hoping for Leslie to show so I can pad my bankroll, but to no avail.
In my 7 hour session, it took till the last hour to finally get KK,
and the last ½ hour to get AA twice… the AA were both good.
I also got QQ about 3 times… 2 were busted, 1 made a full and paid off well…
I should have mucked the QQs much earlier once I knew they were bad, a theme
that will come out a couple of times in later sessions.
Didn’t have my favourite hand all session.
The sun is shining when I leave.
My drinks of choice become carrot juice, strawberry julius,
and “tomato juice with as much celery and as many olives as you can stuff into the glass”.
There is something ironic about a sexy waitress named Hope.
Sunday: Afternoon / Night
We buy a small stake of Andy in his WSOP event.
Unfortunately, he busts out relatively early.
We’re rooting for him next time.
Sunday during the day turns out to be a slow gambling day, since I got home from the Mirage session
at 08:00. Woke up, relaxed a bit, and went with Dina to see her cousin that lives in Vegas.
Had a nice, long lunch at Mon Ami Gabi at the Paris casino. Food was very good.
Got home, napped, and then saw Cirque Du Soleil’s Mystère.
It was very good, although I think that each successive Cirque Du Soleil show that I see,
Saltimbanco, Dralion, Quadam, Mystère, are getting more and more showy, and less and less
circusy… they are still awesome… just moving away from the style that I like.
Monday: Early Morning
Well, now I’m awake, so I plod off to the Mirage for another session at the $10-20.
I play from 00:30 to 04:18, up $541.50.
The table is good, but a bit tight.
Although I can make money at the table, I’m looking around for Leslie, to loosen the game up.
Nope. Can’t convince Jim to come and play either… he’s too tired, and prefers the $3-6 game…
Note down that Jim resisted temptation, and that I was playing in a bigger game than he was…
Oddly, I’m one of the tighter people at the table…
Playing for stakes that have the potential to lose me lots of money have me playing about correctly,
at least according to Jones’s starting hand selection.
Again, playing in the $10-20 game makes Jones and Sklansky make much more sense.
At another table, $20-40 Hold’em, a drunk old man goes on a rush.
He’s so drunk his wife is stacking up his chips.
He’s raising every hand in a 20 hand stretch blind.
He wins about 15 of them, including a full round of the table unbeaten…
He leaves up about $2K.
I leave the $10-20 table, up big for the trip.
I’m tired, but not yet playing badly… I figure it’s best to leave
now before I crash, as I may not realize that I’m too tired to play by that time.
As I walk out of the casino, I have a better appreciation for what people mean
when they say that they have money burning holes in their pocket.
I stare at some of the table games, which I know I shouldn’t play…
I watch a craps game for 5 minutes.
I start at an empty roulette table.
I give the slots a second look.
I leave the Mirage.
I think about walking to a show, and realize it’s 04:30, and the only shows that will be on are at strip clubs…
I even entertain that thought for a few minutes on the walk home…
I go through the same routine at Treasure Island before I take the elevator to my room.
We need more poker friends, better poker skills, and a gimmick…
I was thinking either Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy t-shirts, with
“So Long, And Thanks For All The Fish”, or making
“fish-finders” like one would find on a boat, that would point
to the player of our choosing.
Monday: Day
Monday miraculously has some non-poker content.
Where’s Jim? Not with us, not with Andy, not at the Mirage…
We finally remember that he wanted to play tournaments at Mandalay Bay.
We have him paged. After he plays a quick tourney at Luxor’s tiny, 5-table poker room, we
watch him order 2 burgers, protein style, at In-N-Out Burgers.
Then we pick up Andy at Binion’s downtown.
Once we all get on the same page, we take the car to the Stratosphere to ride on the Big Shot.
You’re near the top of a 1,600 foot tower.
You sit in the ride.
You are shot the remaining 100 feet to the top of the tower, then bungee up and down for a while.
The ride started in the middle of one of Dina’s sentences… pretty cool.
After a bit of Dance Dance Revolution, damn that’s a lot of exercise,
we head to the Sahara to try the Speed Ride, ~45 seconds of non-stop thrills.
It’s a forward and back roller coaster.
The acceleration at the beginning is really quick.
Go through one loop, and then shoot straight up a vertical portion of the track.
Then backwards to the finish.
One other tourist asks, “What if the brakes don’t work as you’re going straight up?”
Thankfully I notice that the engineers have installed brakes at the top of the vertical,
in case gravity doesn’t work.
Since I’m itching to play poker, I go back to the Mirage while the others walk around the strip
and eat at the Bellagio buffet.
I’m at the $10-20 table again.
Not as good a session, I play from 18:12 to 21:53 and go down $336.
I get KK twice, and neither time goes well.
The first time, the board is 9♣T♣K♦5♥2♠.
The pot is raised and re-raised preflop.
On the flop.
I bet, and someone raises.
I re-raise, and get re-raised.
I peg the raiser for QJ.
Drat.
There are 4 other callers.
I’m assuming they are on straight or flush draws.
At this point, I’m convinced that I have 10 outs.
I mistakenly lead into the turn, and get re-raised by the original raiser.
Still have 4 other callers.
On the river, I check and call… I’m the only caller, as the turn and river don’t help anyone.
Raiser turns over a QJo, as expected.
Expensive. Not sure if I misplayed this hand or not.
I don’t think so, but it sure feels like it when you lose that big a pot.
The second time I get KK, I raise someone’s straddle, and get 5 callers.
The flop is A35. I bet, am raised, and there are 4 other callers before it gets to me.
I figure one of the 5 has to have an A in order to be calling.
I fold. Turn and river are 59.
In the end, a pair of 8s beats a 46 draw for the pot.
I’m really pissed off, am taking deep breaths and counting to 10 to avoid tilting.
Did I play the hand badly?
I don’t know. Maybe I should have called.
Jim Notes:
I don’t think it’s a mistake to lead at the 9TK5 board with 2clubs and top
set. You and the QJ guy need to conspire to charge the club draws the
right price. (One of you is enough to charge the AQ/AJ draws the right
price… :) ) You two should make it two bets on the turn however you like
and since you’re behind, you should initiate (otherwise, he can make it
three). With 4 other callers, there’s either 5 or 6 players in [depending
on what you mean by caller] You’re still way ahead with 10 outs (although
you probably don’t really have 10 outs with that many callers since
someone must have a piece of it to be calling.) Clubs don’t hurt you, but
all the two-pairs, pair w/A, etc do. JJ, QQ, and AA also have some
possible reasons to stick around and don’t hurt you. I don’t think you
misplayed it at all, including the check/call on the river. It’s mandatory
I think since the disaster of mucking to top-two or AK is so huge.
On the A35 hand, you need to call the raise on the flop. There’s enough
in the pot for you to try to turn a set, even if you think there’s an
ace out there… 23 small bets in and you need to call one to turn a
set. Unless you’re SURE you’re against AA, you have the 45:2 against
to call, since the pot is laying you 46:2. (Obviously, if you’re
against 24, you also should muck, but that’s much less likely since
Leslie and I aren’t there…)
All in all, it was a very frustrating session.
Besides the KKs, I kept getting punished for my mathematically sound decisions on draws…
I’d get there frequently when I folded to betting on the flop, especially on runner-runner draws.
I only got there once when I decided to stay in, playing good straight, flush, or straight flush draws.
At one point, I have AKs.
Flop comes QJx, with 2 cards to my suit.
I calculate that I have 12 outs, the 9 cards of my suit, plus tens.
I call.
Turn is a blank.
I call again.
River is a ten.
Opponent checks.
I do to.
He turns over AQo.
I think his pair of Qs beats my no pair.
I turn over my AK in disgust.
I’m thankful that I did that, as the dealer informs me that I have the nut hand.
AQo paid me off nicely about 3 times, either by an A or a Q falling on the flop.
I am starting to understand the value of high cards better.
Top pair top kicker, or top pair, good kicker are nice when the whole table isn’t calling you with nothing.
Wrap Up
Overall, I was up $766.50 at poker, and down $40.50 at other games,
including a $25 piece of Andy in his WSOP tourney.
That means that gambling + expenses other than hotel and flight on the trip came out even.
Definitely worth it. Had a lot of fun, both at the poker table, and away from it…
Good times with friends… and learned a lot about playing poker.
Playing $10-20 has added to my repertoire of favourite hands…
notably, 2-7, 3-8, 2-8, 4-9 are now all nice to see… easy to play…
not losing any money…
On a related topic, I seem to be getting a lot more garbage hands…
maybe because I classify a lot more as garbage… I’m happy though…
recognizing garbage correctly and folding it ASAP saves a lot of money.
Notably, I’m learning that big + bad kicker, A-baby, K2-K8, Q2-Q8, J2-J8, suck since,
if played, they will cost you a lot of money when they lose because of the kicker…
I learned a lot about the importance of table selection.
My style of play lends itself better to games where people play mostly rationally…
which is why I enjoyed myself much more at the $10-20 game than the $3-6… and I think it’s why
I did better…
I think that there were some higher games that would have been easier… if only because there
were noticeably worse players there…
I’m happy that I got to play in the $10-20 game.
I now feel comfortable at that level, even though I have a feeling that the tables were very easy
this week due to all the side action at Binion’s.
I think I’d actually feel comfortable at up to 30-60,
although, it worries me that some pros / columnists play the game.
I’m no longer scared of the players at the games, at least in Vegas, at properly chosen tables,
and of the limits it entails.
I’m a bit disappointed in myself for not playing in any pot limit games…
On the other hand, the weekend was only so long,
and I did only spend 31 hours and 3 minutes at the poker tables…
Did I mention that I started keeping better notes?
Impressed with the dealers and the floor staff…
They were knowledgeable and efficient.
There were fairly few lines laid. Next time we should determine them in advance, and let
our friends get a piece of the action. Some lines:
| Description |
Line |
Actual |
Comments |
| Number of person-visits to strip clubs |
0.5 |
0 |
I don’t think anyone actually took this bet. |
| Number of times Jim gets Heisman’d |
25 |
<<25 |
Dina set the line and took the over.
I took the under.
I think Dina was sleep deprived, or colluding with Jim…
Jim: Hey Dina,
<wink />
<wink />
<nudge />
<nudge />
Dina: Go away.
Jim & Dina: That’s 26. You lose your bet Nick.
|
| Number of times Jim gets laid. |
0.5 |
0 |
I gave Dina 7:1 odds against up to $5.
As far as we know, I won.
While discussing this at a buffet table, we had to come up with clarifications.
|
| Litres of Diet Coke consumed by Jim |
24 |
~20 |
Beer, water, and other beverages took up space. I won the under against Dina. Bellagio buffet accounted for ~3-4 litres, but still not enough to get there. |
| Number of times Jim / Dina tell each other “fuck you” / “fuck off” |
1 / 3 hours together. |
About that. |
No one took the action. |
Next time we need to bet how long we last at tourneys if we’re all in the same tourney.
Yes Dina, you were right, I liked Vegas.
I’m already planning for September.