Filed under: Yarns
Recently I’ve been getting into a bit of the old 7stud HiLo.
There is a LOT of dead money out there, begging to be taken on busted low draws.
I’m not sure how you’d get the usual hold’em junkies sucking at the teat of 7stud, but if you could it could be lucrative. Novice players who know a little bit seem to get obsessed with drawing to a low and taking half the pot instead of playing properly.
Keep a few kings and queens waved or trimmed and you’ve pretty much guaranteed yourself some pots off the back of a pair of sixes.
Discuss?
Filed under: Card Table Artifice, Yarns | Tags: card, cheat, hold'em, holding, muck, out, palm, palming, warning, wrong
Should that title read “where does one muck his discards?” or is that a different thing?
All this mechanic slang about slugs and mucks and stacks and lights and pegs and shade and juice and culls and overhand shuffles (the most complex of all) gets me both aroused and enraged. As with any language, new words are simply created from derivations or suitable syllables, and then repeated enough times for others to start using it. Thus, the infection spreads. We have Shakespeare to thank for many of the gorgeous intricacies the English language presents for us, so who do we thank for the interesting slang that emerges from the world of the card table? Somewhere in history, did a Jacobean fop learn to muck cards? I, for one, certainly hope so.
Anyway, from now on, I think I’ll make up words occasionally. Why not? (because.) Could be interesting to read (it won’t). They might stick (They won’t).
Main body of this post is a simple lesson.
Whilst playing a swift game of cards, I noticed one particular pesky player was playing heavy and holding out. The held out cards were stashed in the pocket of the jeans, crumpled and painfully obvious. When it came to his deal, he elevated the held out card onto the bottom of the deck for the shuffle. INGENIOUS!… wait… wait… no. Not ingenious. Bloody stupid.
I hear this fella is quite the poker champion on his pub circuit, and now we know why. Intoxicated people don’t notice someone holding their cards underneath the table and two pairs happening practically every single hand.
The irony is, if he had left the card palmed in his hand, I doubt I would have noticed. The added “security” of the pocket was ultimately a counter-productive measure.
So, kids, never hold out cards in your pockets. It will get you in hot water, as it got this fella in. A simple deck count is enough to get you sweating amusingly. And when you do miraculously find the card on the floor, six feet from the table, its crumpled state will be a precursor for your health.
–Arthur—
Play safe
Filed under: Yarns | Tags: cheat, cheater, cheating, friends, greek, other, sucker, Yarns
For the first time ever (and I am writing this both inebriated and fatigued) I have met a cheat at a table.
Playing poker tonight with (notice the inverted commas) ‘friends’ I noticed some foul play. A little bit of flop/turn/river peeking by way of a gin rummy peak. Very amateur, but very effective among friends all drinking and having fun.
Now… call me a hypocrite. But, I would like to think when I play an advantage it is the fault of the sucker playing someone he has never met.
Playing with friends is a wonderful time to sit back and see how good I am at cards when on the square.
How did I deal with this amateur (pukingly amateur and therefore, as an elitist I wish for him to die) cheater? Nothing. Creating bad blood among friends would not be wise. So, after informing just one close friend, I cordially left.
If he does it again however, I’ll go apeshit.
That is a technical term of course.
…Ahem…
Yours,
–Arthur–
Here’s a free tip for your home/local game. Don’t get bored with dealing and let someone deal every single hand. Especially when you have never met the guy before.
Unless you’re playing with me. In which case, carry on.
–Arthur–
Filed under: Yarns | Tags: advantage, four, jacks, kind, mishap, quads, stacking
Relatively amusing story.
In a game a few nights ago I stacked a set of hooks for my mate. By sheer fluke, the 4th Jack also hit the flop. In other words, I accidentally gave him an overly strong hand. Now we all know that advantage play should be subtle, not overly ballsy.
He didn’t play the hand very well. (Though to be fair, who the hell knows how to play quads?)
Sad part is, in the end we only won the blinds. Which is obscene. Slow playing to the MAX. And to add stupidity to misfortune my mate didn’t muck his hand when the last player folded to his ridiculous 5x pot raise on the river so everyone KNEW he had quads meaning the heat was on and I couldn’t stack another hand for him for a while.
What a night.
–Arthur–