Monday, May 31, 2010

Busman's Holiday

Barry and I were standing in the parking lot talking about the day’s events and mainly how poorly the dealers are managed. I was repeating my running joke about how during orientation they overly stressed their policy of embracing diversity and inclusion – right before telling us that because we were WSOP dealers we would be treated differently i.e. we were not allowed to use the regular employee entrance nor park in the employee parking lot. WSOP dealers park in the “lower employee lot”. Surprisingly, the Employee Dining Room did not have separate lunch counters for us.


Despite the facts that participation in the WSOP tournaments continues to grow and the structure of the tournaments provides longer play for most of the players, we continually face the challenge of having too many dealers and not enough work. I think it is understandable. The single fatal error that would cost our Dealer Manager her job would be a dealer shortage. It is unthinkable that we would have chips, cards, tables and players and no one to deal the cards. Solution? Overstaff and over schedule and give those who want it a last minute day off. As the tournament progresses and players leave, offer “early out” for those dealers who want to avoid moving over to the more challenging cash tables. But we still have too many dealers. I do not see it changing. If I were Dealer Manager I would make sure I had a cushion of excess dealers and I would make sure to set the expectations accordingly.

As the day started I had seemingly won the dealer lottery. They began assigning tables alphabetically starting with dealers whose last name begins with “L”. Thank you very much. I was assigned table 9 in a section of 60 tables. This meant that it was unlikely that I would find myself homeless as I “pushed” up through the tables and the tournament melted down the tables from high to low.

I had a full day. 11:00 dealer meeting. 11:30 set up for tournament. Noon to 6:30 PM deal Texas Hold’em with three 30 minute breaks. That is a good day’s work for a dealer.

In the parking lot after a leisurely baked chicken dinner in the EDR (Employee Dining Room) I told Barry I needed alcohol. It was far too early to go to bed for fear I would wake up at 5 AM but I really didn’t want to go out and “Party” I wanted to relax. Barry suggested we go find a cheap Pai Gow table where we can play slowly, chit chat and drink for free if we break even.

We decided on the Stratosphere. It is easy to get to, parking is available and close and the atmosphere is pretty laid back. Problem was it was Saturday night on Memorial Day weekend, the casino was packed and the Pai Gow table had a $10 minimum.

“The hell with it, let’s play poker. We’ll play really tight, drink for free and just relax.”

Can you imagine? Here are two guys who just spent their entire day dealing Texas Hold’em and what do they wind up doing to relax? Playing Poker.

The game that night proved to be interesting.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

My Dinner with BJ

My nephew BJ, son of my sister Diane, showed up in Vegas yesterday and gave me a call.  We dined, along with his business partner Juan, at the Voo Doo Steakhouse on the 50th floor of the Rio.

More later...

Later:

Dinner at the Voo Doo begins with the elevator ride up the outside of the 50 story Rio tower in a floor-to-ceiling windowed elevator car. It is a spectacular view.

In the restaurant we were seated right on the window facing the Strip.  As we dined on dry aged and prime steaks the sun set and the lights illuminated the Strip.  Good company, great food, spectacular view, what could be better?

BJ and Juan are in town for the UFC (Ultimate Fighting Championship) Fan Expo at Mandalay Bay.  Juan and BJ represent one of the UFC fighters that Juan hooked up with through a friend.  Las Vegas:  a great place to mix business with pleasure.

After dinner we did a quick tour of the shops in the Masquerade Village which included a sports memorabilia store with lots of autographed baseballs, football helmets and framed celebrity photos.

BJ was thinking the clubs would be hopping by eleven or midnight and he wanted to put his feet up for a little while before they hit the nightclub scene.  Seeing that midnight is 3 AM back in Columbus, I wonder if they ever made it?  Oh yeah, they're young.

Me?  I just headed home and crashed.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Texas Hold'em

In the event you are are reading this and need a refresher on Texas Hold'em and its terminology, click oh this link:

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_hold_%27em 

for Wikipedia's description of the game and its origins.

Where to Stay

After a few days at the Stratosphere I moved to Sara's place just south of McCarran airport.  It is about a 15 minute commute to the Rio. Sara owns a four bedroom house with a master bedroom on the first floor and three bedrooms upstairs.  She rents out the bedrooms upstairs.  It provides a nice respite from the casino environment.

The tough part is transportation.  Since I flew in, I need a car.  I can easily get one from Hertz or Avis but I want to spend less for my car than for my room.  While there aren't too many rentals available from private parties, I was able to find one.

For about half the price of an economy rental from Avis I can rent a 1994 Mazda Miata (pictured) from Mike, who calls himself Blueman on email.  Blueman is a lawyer who lives in Baltimore and spends a fair amount of time in Vegas.  He owns a condo here and rents it out when he is not using it, along with the Miata.  His current tenant doesn't need the car, so it is available.

The Miata, while a value, is not without its problems.  Last year, I didn't check the registration or insurance card in the glove box until I got stopped  for an expired license plate.  The cop gave me a ticket for not having a current proof of insurance card.  Fortunately, Blueman is a lawyer and by the time I went to the courthouse, proof of insurance had been given to the court and the fine waived.  It also overheated on me.  Blueman has since gotten it repaired and it seems to be holding up.

We'll see if we can get through the next couple of months without incident.  In the meantime, its pretty cool to be bopping around Vegas in a little convertible sports car. ;-)


Thursday, May 27, 2010

Wednesday, Dealer Review Day

On Wednesday the crews were still building the tables in the Pavilion Room in the Rio’s convention center. This will be the first year for WSOP to use the Pavilion Room. It is the largest room in the center. In past years it has been occupied by a Poker themed trade show displaying all manner of Poker supplies and paraphernalia. This year it will be a football field size expanse of Poker tables. Okay, well maybe it’s not the size of a football field, but it is close. It is huge.

(Note: actually I stepped it off and it is 110 paces front to back!)

We were running a practice/review session for dealers who felt they needed a little refresher on some of the games that are dealt less often like Pot Limit Omaha and Deuce to Seven Lowball Triple Draw. Probably only a hundred of the one thousand WSOP dealers showed up for the session. Seeing that I hadn’t dealt a hand of Pot Limit or Draw Poker since last year, I figured I would show up.

Pot limit betting rules are a little quirky until you get used to them. Cash game rules are different than tournament rules and calculating a pot sized re-raise after the flop can really put the hurt on ones arithmetic muscles. Dealers not only need to know how much is in the pot but also do the math to calculate the amount needed to raise after a bet or raise has already been made. It’s a lot of numbers to keep in your head.

Draw Poker has its own quirks also. At home, if you play Draw, you don’t even think about it. Players toss their cards in and the dealer gives them however many cards they need. At the WSOP there are some specific procedural rules the dealer needs to follow. What the procedures do is first, give anyone looking at the table (like a supervisor or a security camera) the ability to determine which betting round you are on and second, assure that if you run out of cards for the draw, there will be no possibility a player will get the same cards back that he just discarded. To do this, the dealer keeps separate the muck (the folded hands), the discards and the burn cards for each draw/betting round. Keeping the discards separate from the muck assures that if you run out of cards for the draw, a player will not be drawing from a deck that contains his own discards. By burning a card before each draw, anyone can see which betting round you are on. If there are three burn cards sitting there, you know that there is not going to be another draw. Now you may think that in Triple Draw it should be pretty easy to count to three but in the heat of some controversy with a lot of money on the table and emotions running hot it is easy to lose track of where you are and when the Floor Supervisor comes over, it is nice to have something tangible like a stack of burn cards to prove where you are in the hand.

After the review session I had dinner in the Employee Dining Room with one of the rookie dealers, Jeff, a former golf pro from Mississippi who gave up tournament golf for real estate and Poker. Now, after the real estate bust, he has learned to deal to make a little money. After dinner I headed over to the Stratosphere for the 8 PM tournament.

Oops. 17 players and I busted out fifth.

I couldn’t get any traction early and my chips dwindled down to about half the starting stack. Then I got “Pocket Rockets”. I got a customer for my all in re-raise and when my aces held, I doubled my stack back to a playable size. I made the final table but by the time five players were left, I was the short stack. Only the top three would be paid. My stack was large enough to play but not big enough to beg for a five way chop.

On the button, I tried to steal the blinds with a raise a little less than half my stack but the Big Blind called. The flop came out K-6-2 and when my opponent checked I pushed all my remaining chips in. My thinking was that if he didn’t spike the king on that flop he would have to fold. He called. I was trapped. He had the king. The Turn and River cards were no help and I was out in fifth.

It was too early to call it a night. Although that Baldacci novel up in my room was still only half read, I decided to see if I could win back the entry fee I just lost by playing in the cash game. After all, there was an open seat.

The next two hours I was able to stay around even, sometimes $50 ahead, sometimes a little behind. Three players limped into the pot, calling the $2 Big Blind. I was on the button with a pair of deuces in the hole. I called. The player in the Small Blind next to me, an Englishman on holiday, raised it to $12. This is an interesting number because it matches the total currently in the pot i.e. the Big Blind’s $2 plus the four callers’ bets. This is a pretty strong raise especially coming from one of the blinds where the raiser will have to act first on every betting round, a disadvantageous position.

I recall my old friend Ray in Newport, MI telling me that in a cash game, good players rarely raised from the blinds and when they do, you can expect them to showdown a very strong hand. Often, it will be AA, KK or QQ. Sometimes AK from an overly aggressive player, but mostly, especially if it is a re-raise, it’s AA, KK or QQ. Because of this tip he gave me, I am always very wary of calling any raise that comes from a player in the Small or Big Blind.

I decided that with my 22 I could afford to see a flop. If I caught a deuce, I could win a big pot. If I missed, I could simply throw it away. The others folded and I called the additional $10. The dealer then spread out one of the prettiest flops you will ever see for the situation. 3-3-2. I flopped a full house. I’m sure I just sat and stared at it because I was stunned. The Englishman led out with $15. I am sure he was very confident that this flop could not have helped my hand in the least, just as I was confident he wasn’t holding any cards that resembled 2 or 3. I shot a disgusted glance over at him that tried to say, “You don’t have shit. Your bet is just an irritation.” I tossed $15 into the pot. The dealer put a king out on the Turn. He bet another $15. Could he have AK? Could he have AA? Could this be a nightmare with him holding KK?

I raised to $45 and pretty quickly he said, “All in.” He pushed forward two stacks of red $5 chips followed by a handful of white $1 chips.

Very excited, but still a little worried he would show me kings full of treys I said, “I call.”

The dealer said, “Turn’em up!”

Because he bet and I called, the etiquette is that he shows his hand first. He picked his cards up off the table and as he did I could see the ace of diamonds. Yes! Even before the cards hit the table I knew he couldn’t have the kings, he could only have AA or AK and I was way ahead. The cards separated when they hit the table showing his two aces. I had the deuces full and he was drawing to only 2 outs, the two aces remaining in the deck. Any other card made me a winner. The dealer put out the River card. Not an ace! No, it was not an ace. The total pot was about $350. The chips were pushed toward me.

To the guys I will be dealing to in a few days, a $350 pot will be miniscule. There will be $5000 bundles of hundred dollar bills being tossed into pots, thousand dollar chips in stacks of twenty on the tables in front of players but to me, this $350 pot is really sweet.

That’s probably why I am dealing rather than playing in the World Series of Poker.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Tournament Poker - Entry Level

     I came to Vegas to work and I also came to Vegas to play some Poker. I really don’t want to play against the best in the world because I know that my game is simply not tough enough. I need a little softer competition. Unlike the compulsive gambler, I get a high from winning rather than losing. This makes the Stratosphere well suited to the game I am looking for in Vegas. The Stratosphere Poker Room has a mixture of tough local players and tourists with the occasional WSOP player taking advantage of the Stratosphere’s inexpensive room rates. Some of the tourists really play well and some are beginners. This is a good mix for me. The hard line Poker professionals don’t waste their time playing $60 tournaments and $1-$2 No Limit Hold’em. That suits me just fine. My Poker bankroll insists that I play at these levels until I can win enough to play at higher limits.

     The Tuesday 8 PM $60 tournament at the Stratosphere was just one table of ten players when I signed up, but they got a few more entries and we had 19 on two tables by the end of the first level. Each player starts with 4000 in chips. With the blinds set at 25 and 50, this gives the player 80 Big Blinds (BBs) to work with. After 20 minutes the blinds go up to 50 and 100 and up from there every 20 minutes.

     My cards simply didn’t have any rhythm for the first few levels. My raises were called and my “Continuation” bets were met with check-raises forcing me to fold. At the 100-200 level I had 1800 left, only 9 BBs. I always have a sense of desperation whenever I have less than 10 BBs. I needed to start accumulating some chips or risk being blinded into oblivion.

     I was on the button and it was folded around to me. Nine BBs is enough to make the blinds fold unless they have a real hand. In fact the guy in the Big Blind had a stack slightly smaller than mine. To me that made the 6-5 off suit I was holding a power hand worth shoving with. I pushed my stack forward and announced, “All in.” The lady in the Small Blind folded and after some painful soul searching, the young buck in the Big Blind decided to put his tournament life at risk with an ace and a ten. Well, at least I had two “live” cards. I spiked a five on the flop and the board ran out favorably giving me a 3500 chip pot. After that pot, the rhythm of the game changed. The under-the-gun player, a burly, savvy tournament player called Big John, limped in for 200 and from late position with pocket nines I raised it to 800.

     He said, “Is it just me?” and folded his cards, giving me the small pot.

     I was pleased he didn’t come over the top because I would not have been able to continue. As I raked in the chips he said, “Five-six again?”

     “Are you kidding?” I replied, “I’d have gone all in with five-six!”

     The player to my right was dressed in all black with dark sunglasses. He was quiet and as expected played tight and aggressive. He had lost a few pots and was left with a medium-small stack. Big John raised and after some thought, the man in black, leaning on his right elbow and gesturing with his open hand asked the dealer, “How much is it?”

     Then he pushed his chips forward announcing, “All in.” Big John called and when the cards were turned up we saw the man in black’s pocket aces. The Aces held up. The man in black doubled up and Big John took a hit to his stack.

     Big John said, “So that’s your tell, huh? The ‘How much is it?’ That’s your Aces tell, huh?”

     We laughed.

     Next hand Big John was at it again, limping in. I had a strong Ace so I leaned over on my right elbow, gestured with my right hand and trying to match the man in black’s serious tone said, “How much is it?”

     The table erupted with laughter.

     “Aces?”

     “No, Five-six!” I lied with false sincerity. Then I raised and everyone folded. I smiled and traded the dealer my face down cards for the small pot.

     I worked my way up to a larger than average stack when with ten players remaining, we consolidated the tables. Then came a card rush. Five hands in a row: AK, KK, AK, QQ (no callers), AQ big pot. There may have been a few smaller hands in between that I folded but it felt like I was playing and winning every hand. In the second AK hand, after two callers, I simply limped and won a nice pot when I flopped a King and got a caller for my small bets all the way to the river. The AQ hand was one limper plus Blind versus Blind. I was in the Small Blind. I made a small raise. The Big Blind called and the limper folded. I checked in the blind before the dealer acted and I watched my opponent watch the dealer put out the flop. My opponent seemed unsure, picked up some chips, thought better of it, put them back on his stack and checked. The dealer put out the Turn card and I looked at the board for the first time. It was 10-6-Q-Q giving me trip Queens. I bet 3000 and got a call. The River was an Ace giving me the Queens full of Aces Full House. I bet 12000 which was about three quarters of my opponent’s stack. He called and showed A-10, his pair of tens counterfeited by the pair of queens on the board.

     At this point I had amassed about 39000 chips. This was over half of the chips in play in the entire tournament. If my friends Barry or Tim were here they would tell me to take a walk and come back when I reached the money. The cards helped. The rush was over as I looked at a string of hands where no card was higher than a seven. Twice I folded the Small Blind when it was folded around to me. I let them knock each other out. The few times I raised or re-raised I got no callers and won small pots without a fight.

     This tournament paid three players. We were now down to four. The Frenchman (who was not French but French Canadian) who had busted Barry the other night with pocket aces suggested we each put something up for the bubble boy. That way the player busting out on the money bubble wouldn’t go away empty handed. They all agreed on $20 per player giving the bubble boy an $80 prize for his efforts. I couldn’t in good conscience say no. A little voice in my head was saying, “Yes, it’s a lousy bet because there is no way you will be next to go out but if you’re an arrogant ass and say, ‘No,’ the poker gods will make you lose every hand from now on.” On the other hand, agreeing to donate $20 to pay the bubble was like taking an umbrella on a cloudy day. If you take it, it won’t rain. It was also an opportunity to be a “Great Guy”. One of my philosophies for living is that when you get that occasional opportunity to be a really great guy, you should take advantage of it.

     I pulled out a twenty and told everyone I would hold the money being the least likely player to win it.

     The next hand I busted the Frenchman. He had the smallest stack and having successfully negotiated a safety net for himself pushed all in. I was on the button with K-10 suited. I called. The Big Blind also called. There was a king on the flop and we went check-check. Another king hit the Turn and I couldn’t check anymore. The Big folded and when the cards were turned up I was shocked to see the case king in the Frenchman’s hand. I had him outkicked with my ten to his nine. The river was a blank and my ten kicker held up to get me into the money, the top three, with a dominating chip stack.

     A few hands later I found a pair of nines in my hand and called an all in raise. My 9-9 was a 70% favorite against my opponent’s A-7 and it held up when the board ran out without an ace. This put me in the top two with a 9 to 1 chip lead.

     The heads up session was pretty short. 3 small pots with no calls, then I raised with J-10, both hearts. He re-raised and I called. He had A-10 off suit, both black. It was literally a coin flip. I haven’t run the exact hand on pokercalc.com but if it is not 50-50, it’s only 55-45 in favor of the A-10. Small cards flop but I catch a Jack on the Turn and when the board paired on the River it was all over.

     First place paid $418 less a $25 dealer tip, less $20 for the bubble boy. My miniscule Poker bankroll is very happy.

Casino War

     My golf buddy Darren had asked me, “How does the casino make any money playing ‘War’? You put up a bet. The dealer gives you a card and then turns a card up for him. If your card is bigger you win. If the dealer’s card is bigger you lose. So how does the house make money?”

     My curiosity got to me so I went over to a table and the dealer showed me the rules. The house makes money on ties. They give you a choice and neither option is very pleasing. In the event of a tie, you have the option to surrender half your original wager e.g. you bet $10 and both you and the dealer are dealt a 5. The dealer takes $5 from you and you go on to the next hand. The other option is to go to war. You put up an additional $10 and the dealer puts up $10 and whoever wins gets all $30. This means that you are being paid one-half to one on a 50-50 proposition. This is a really bad bet. The only thing that makes it a little easier to swallow is the “Tie Circle”. Before the hand starts, you can place a bet in the Tie Circle and if your card matches the dealer’s you get paid 10 to 1. BTW it is about 13 to 1 against a tie.

     Let’s say you play 13 hands. Win 6, lose 6 and tie one. Bet $50 on each hand with $5 in the Tie Circle each time. If you opted to not go to war on the tie, you surrender $25 but collect $50 on the tie bet so the result is a profit of $25. On the six hands you lose, it costs $330. On the six hands you win, you put up $55, get paid $50 but lose the $5 on the tie bet for a net of $45 profit per hand – a total of $270. So every 13 hands, the expectation will be to win $295 and lose $330 for a net loss of $35 on a total wagered of $715 giving the house a 4.9% advantage. There is likely a more optimal strategy, but I would bet you can’t get the house edge to less than 4%.

     My recommendation: Play Blackjack, Craps or Poker.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

We Arrive

Barry and I showed up for the 8:00 tournament at nearly 9:00. There had been only 12 entries. It seems the slow economy has hit Las Vegas pretty hard. We paid our entry fee and took our seats at the final table with $4000 with the blinds at $100 and $200. It seemed we walked in and took over. Barry’s first hand got him all in against the chip leader, doubling him up. Next hand, I increased my stack by half and on the third hand Barry busts a player making him the new chip leader. Ah, but the Poker gods are a fickle lot. I get AK on the button, raise and get no callers. Next hand I get it again, raise, get a caller, a white haired grandma who also calls my bluff when I miss the flop and beats me with a middle pair. Then I lose a hand when I have to fold my top pair when it looks like I am outkicked.  As a result I am short stacked. By that time there were five left. This tournament will pay three places.
Two big stacks clash and pocket aces hold up to create a new chip leader. Desperate to get enough chips to last a few orbits, I decide to try to steal the blinds from my position on the button. The newly crowned chip leader was in the big blind. He hadn’t yet stacked up his chips from the previous hand when he peeks down and sees two black jacks and calls my all-in raise. End of tournament for me.
Barry on the other hand is sitting pretty good in second place against the chip leader, a fortyish guy in a button down shirt, and the white haired grandma who never raises and seems to call anything if she hits any pair. Barry loses a couple small pots to her when he just can’t hit. Then he finds AK on the button, goes all in and it’s Grandma’s turn to find pocket jacks in the big blind. She flops a third jack and Barry is crippled. A few hands later Barry is out in third place. Third place paid over $100, so he didn’t do too badly.


We moved over to the cash table and played a little $1 - $2 for an hour or two. Barry got busted when his big pair ran into a Frenchman with pocket aces. I was able to stay just shy of even for quite a while before picking up pocket sevens. I had noticed that the players in the seven and eight seats were willing to put all their chips in the pot with just one pair. This can be fatal in No Limit Hold’em. The flop came 7-8-Q giving me a set of three sevens and the eight seat bet out.  I made a small raise and he called. The Turn card looked like it didn’t help anyone, so when he bet I raised enough that it took all of his chips to call. The pot was about $150. He flipped over an ace and an eight and he was drawing dead on the river. Even if he caught an eight, he would make Three-of-a-Kind-Eights but I would have a Full House, 777-88. After raking in that pot I played a few extremely conservative hands and racked up my chips, happy to leave with a small profit for the evening.

Back in Vegas for WSOP 2010

Here we go again! This will be my third trip to Vegas to deal the World Series of Poker. I suppose I should update my blog’s web address because “rookie dealer” doesn’t really describe the situation anymore. On the other hand, I will still be a little nervous the first time I take my seat in the dealer’s chair in an event. I think.
I was very happy to get a warm up last weekend. On Friday I dealt a small No Limit Hold’em tournament at Innisbrook Country Club where an organization of beer and wine distributors were having a meeting. Saturday, I dealt a fundraiser tournament at Incarnation Catholic Church. Certainly, it is not the same as dealing a WSOP tournament and it doesn’t provide any practice keeping track of the pot size or taking a rake, but it was a welcome refresher to tune up my hands and remind myself of tournament procedures.
I arrived at McCarran Airport after a blessedly uneventful flight from Tampa. Luck was apparently on my side because there was a long line into security but just as I was walking up they opened a second line and I breezed right through. At Las Vegas, my friend Barry volunteered to give me a ride from the airport.
The burly former skydiving instructor drove his Mitsubishi Spyder from Tampa. Our original idea was to room together and share some expenses. It might be possible to rent a furnished condo and save a bunch of money however, doing it long distance from Tampa has proven to be difficult. Second alternative is to stay with the same folks I stayed last year. Sara had said she could have a room available for each of us. The price is good and it is just really nice to come home to a “home” rather than to a hotel or a cramped Extended Stay America room. Barry had arrived in Vegas a few days earlier because he wanted to try to get a second job at the Venetian.
During the WSOP, the Venetian runs their Deep Stack Series which is a series of poker tournaments with much smaller buy-ins than WSOP in the Venetian’s beautifully renovated, extended Poker room. Their strategy is to offer WSOP players a much nicer environment with a buy-in that competes directly with WSOP’s “Nightly No Limit” events. Many players, after busting out of their daytime WSOP event are looking for something to do. WSOP fills that need with cash games and small buy-in events conveniently located in the Rio’s convention center right there with the regular WSOP events. At The Venetian a player can play in similar price events against softer competition and enjoy the ambience of one of the posh destinations on The Strip. At the Venetian, you don’t have to play your poker in a conference room.
The popularity of the Venetian tournaments created a need for additional part time dealers. Barry wanted to fill that need by working days at WSOP and evenings at The Venetian. To get the job he needed to do a live audition for The Venetian supervisors. The audition consists of dealing a few mock hands to dealers posing as players. It allows them to be assured a prospective hire knows the basics and gives them a way to choose the better dealers when they have multiple applicants. The supervisor had him deal a few No Limit hands, some Omaha Hi-Lo and a couple Seven Card Stud hands. A little rusty, Barry made a few mistakes and got the, “we’ll be in touch” followed by a thank you but no thank you email. This means Barry will have more time to play Poker this year. This might not be such a bad thing if Barry can get his game and a bankroll together.
After picking up the rental car, the same Miata I rented last year, we headed over to the Stratosphere. I guess I just can’t pass up a good deal. I get a great price on the Miata in return for the risk that it might not make it for six weeks. The Stratosphere offered rooms for 60% off until Friday and seeing that I like their inexpensive tournaments, I couldn’t pass up the deal. I'll move to Sara's place on Friday for the duration.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Coming Soon: WSOP 2010 (click for schedule)

Opening Day for WSOP 2010 is May 27th when Cash Games will be spread and Satellites begin. I plan to be there. Dealer and Staff orientation is May 24th and I plan to post blogs with anything new or interesting.

This year I'll be spending the first few days at the Stratosphere Hotel. They offered a rate I just couldn't pass up (like $25 a night) and I thought it would be fun to spend those first few days playing the Stratosphere's daily No Limit Hold'em tournaments. I had some success winning one and cashing in several in '08 and '09, so I thought I would give it a go this year, really commit to it and see what happens. It is not a real big risk. Each tournament has an entry fee of around $50 with about 40 players and paying the top four or five finishers.

I like the Stratosphere tournaments because I think I can be competitive there. First off, it is far enough from the Rio that most WSOP tournament players don't stay there, however, last year several were in residence including a former professional baseball pitcher named Adam and a Norwiegen player called Acid. Otherwise, the tournament fields are made up of a few local regulars and the rest is tourists that often make the field softer than any you find in the WSOP or at the high stakes haunts like Bellagio or Venetian. Neither my game nor my ego is yet ready for major league competition.

By the end of the week I will be settling into more permanent digs renting a room from Sara and Al just south of the airport.

More to come...