"ANY MAN DRINKING MILK AT THE POKER TABLE MUST BE FEARED."

Sunday, August 31, 2008

BASTROPOLIS

The 2008 Bastrop invitational HOSE, and I lost -- bubble boy from that. Time to get groceries.
The sign for the HEB express lane read sign read "15 items or fewer." I stepped up to the checkout -- just managing to scoot in front of an approaching shopper and her assistance animal.
"I want to commend the store on y'alls grammar," I said to the cashier. "Most signs would say 'less'. But it's not as proper. Fewer is a better term."
The cashier just looked at me -- showing the level of interest one would get by listening to a dog show radio broadcast.
"I think this spinach is on special. Let me check."

Saturday, August 30, 2008

IT'S 6 PM AND I'M NOT FAMOUS YET.

My poker has been stunning this afternoon -- I wish it were televised. Everything I do is working, and I'm so in-the-zone that I could probably start laying down smack in Esperanto without even knowing the language.
Another miraculous play with mediocre starting cards, and the guy across the table asks me if I think I'm famous.
Well, no I don't. At least not now. Not yet. And then I started to think about what it takes to achieve fame -- at what point could I wake up in the morning, shave, have tea, and otherwise prepare for another day of what passes for civilization, and while straightening my tie in the mirror say to myself, "Self, I'm famous!" what could justify that? Certainly not winning a few bucks in pot-limit Omaha.
Here are there ways to become famous, in no particular order:
1.Start a clothing line.
2.Buy a clothing line already established by someone else, renaming it.
3.Attack someone else's clothing line to the point of giving regularly scheduled press conferences about the drawbacks of it -- every Tuesday at 5:30, for example -- and after each event, burning or somehow dramatically destroying a different product from that targeted clothing line -- consistency and parallelism are important and often overlooked by people seeking fame this way -- so if the speech to the press is about the ugliness of a belt, understand that it would be out of place to torch a sweater.

Friday, August 22, 2008

RULES

Picture a typical poker tournament in a typical home game. People are trying to make money -- gentleman and degenerates alike. Birds are chirping outside, though you can't hear them -- whatever. The only certain thing is that everyone there would appreciate as much fun as possible.
Some tournaments have a rule the when a new player switching tables decides to sit in the big blind position, they must post the big blind and play the hand. In other tournaments, the player coming in has the option of sitting out two hands before he plays -- just like in most sensible cash games.
In this particular tourney, the incoming player was required to post, but she didn't know about the rule, and she decided to sit out. The host demanded a big blind from her -- it's the rule, he said. Then she said she wanted to sit out and he told her to post or leave. Nobody was happy, and the fact is that with a $200 tournament purse nobody should care if she sat out or not.
Cambridge University has a lot of archaic rules that have been on the books for hundreds and hundreds of years -- that haven't been removed, enforced, or given much attention of any kind since the Renaissance. One of those old rules is that a student must be served a full meal during an exam, on request. Back in the 80s, an unprepared student refused to take his exam because his professor refused to serve a full meal.
The administration became upset, and the student was expelled for not carrying his sword.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

UTILITY

In the past few minutes, my right-hand opponent has given this 1-2 no-limit table hundreds of dollars worth of uncalled pre-flop action with neither paint nor a pair. It is truly sad. He doesn't forsee the impending loss, he doesn't understand postering strategy, he doesn't sense the chip-lusting salivation and naked furiosity of the rabid badger on his left, and I doubt he can afford to be here in the first place. There goes in another $50 pre-flop -- take it down.
In the summer of 2000, I spent about three months on self-directed motorcycle/camping tour of Central and Eastern Europe -- at that time, you could do that comfortably on $20 a day -- and less than that if you were careful. I bought the bike for something like $550 in May and sold it for exactly the same in September. I went through the whole summer spending south of $2400, including airfare, and it could easily have been less. The dollar was my friend, and it worked. I couldn't depend on the maps, or the roads, or even the hour-by-hour availability of electricity -- but I sure could depend on the dollar -- and the fact that my money went so far gave me a newfound respect for its value.
The player on my right needs to learn that lesson. He'll live better.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

POKER HAIKU #14



Tight, dark turtlenecks --
Cards with neither suits nor ranks --
Existential tilt.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

OMEGA-3

It's break time on the patio outside the glorious Third Base single-session freeroll.
"what did you have last hand?"
"j-10 of diamonds."
"I would have beat you."
People beside us are playing horseshoes. They're serious horseshoes -- heavy and a little rusty -- the idea that they served as actual horse footwear many, many years back is beyond a reasonable doubt.
Ringer! Ding! One spins around the stake briefly, like an incomplete, unmotivated hula-hoop, and I just can't complete the following analogy...
archer : archery :: __?__ : horseshoes.
They're throwing too close to our table. We can hear the swoosh as the forged iron flies past our ears. But the players are non-violent and accurate, so I don't believe we're in danger.
And she shouldn't believe I had the diamond J-10. She was close, but close doesn't count in poker.

Monday, August 18, 2008

RISK ASSESSMENT IS AN ACTIVE PASSTIME



So, it's two-way action in 1-2 no-limit with the rainbow flop of A-A-5 coming down and I check my A-3 -- leaving the bet to a woman who leads out with $25 -- a player who hasn't led out the betting since the early 90s -- it seems like. I fold and she flips over her A-K for the world to see.

Some people charged with murder are granted bail. Some do jump bail, but don't you wonder why more of them don't? Don't they understand that a trial is more of a risk -- that it's probably in their better interest to flee rather than face the court? Maybe the number of people who take the Social Contract seriously is greater than I suspect -- or I could be underestimating the prevalence of the blind complacency of all those folks who choose to submit to a trial.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

DISCRETION IS THE BETTER PART OF POKER



Making a call because you think someone is challenging you -- well, they might be, but you don't have to stand up to all challenges. You can cower. It's okay. You're here because some prehistoric ancestor decided to cower rather than fight something. It's never good to make a call just because you they think you're being challenged and want to save face or preserve manhood.

I usually just throw the hand down, tell myself that I'm still a good person and that my friends and family still love me. I'm just not as obsessed as some people are with the notion of respect.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

TALENT

It was heads-up. Two cards in my hand -- and when the flop came down, eight or nine people in the crowd yelled out eight or nine different suggestions.

When most toddlers encounter a piano, they start banging on the piano keys. But when Glenn Gould was a kid, he had a habit of striking one key hard with one finger -- holding it there for a long, long time -- listening to the tune of that one note -- holding his finger steady -- until the sound completely died away.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

CATS, CONDIMENTS, AND WARREN BUFFETT


I've decided that I must be going to one of the most unique HORSE home games in the world.
All the regulars there know how to play good poker -- and they're stimulating and interesting people. It's stunning how many poker players are too intensely into the game for me -- a lot of them are either way too loudly mathematical about the details -- or worse -- keep spouting bad math about the details of the game -- or really into yelling an interrogation of why I called or raised or breathed with my J-3 -- when the simple answer is that I just felt like it at the time -- that my goal is to play the most unpredictable poker in the world -- I've quit explaining things rationally to them. I've started giving the excuse "well it was suited" or other nonsense. Rationality and the logocentric mentality are the most overrated part of the whole poker experience, and I really want to unsubscribe from all the poker blogs where writers go on for three or four pages about exactly -- precisely -- how great they played K-9 against someone's A-10 -- of course, I keep reading that stuff -- I have to keep abreast -- I have a professional obligation to read all that crap -- I want to know how these people are thinking, since that's what they're so go at.
Anyway, those people don't frequent my HORSE game. I am among friends.
I wasn't being glib about people overthinking poker. All you need to know about poker is what warren buffett said is all you need to know about investing: "Be greedy when others are cautious. Be cautious when others are greedy. Have fun, and don't think too much."
So while I'm sitting out of this game, laying on a comfortable beanbag, $145 to the good, drinking High Life, watching the host's wife painting her pet kitty's claws with bright red nailpolish, I know in my heart that Buffett was right -- poker should be fun more than anything else -- and the main thought I have now is that cats are tasty with mustard.

Sunday, August 10, 2008



On my way home the other night I was cut off by a pick-up with a cage full of rabbits in the bed.
Rabbits!
The road rage possibilities were endless.

What to do?

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

THE TIME HAS COME, THE WALRUS SAID

Tonight at a free tourney I had some wicked bad luck.
I remember reading somewhere that one day in 1931 -- I think it was -- a Monte Carlo roulette wheel hit black 32 times straight. The odds against that are 2^32, and that's more than one in a billion -- so I don't guess I should feel that bad -- and that wheel has been spinning almost continuously for something like 300 years, so it was certain to happen sooner or later --and it really was. In fact, given a large enough sample size, you can name any sequence of red-black outcomes and be certain to find it somewhere within it. Just like you can name any sequence of random numbers -- however long you'd like -- and be certain that it appears somewhere in the decimal expansion of pi.
And the canonical example of this concept is that if you let a bunch of chimps type randomly for long enough, they're certain to come up with the complete works of todaysmilk.
The key word in all this is "certain".
So now, I suppose I've been playing hold'em poker long enough that it's my turn to flop top pair six straight times and lose each hand. It's certainly frustrating.