All posts by Linda

Saturday, February 12, 2005

I made the E/O list. Several points of interest happened while I was dealing but I just can’t get into those right now. My eyes are running water like the Las Vegas skies. I’ve been crying for the last hour and I can’t stop.

It all started here: I came home from the Aruba trip to a phone message from a youngster named Jason. He said that I didn’t know him but he had talked to Carmen (high brush) and she recommended that he get in touch with me and she’d given him my phone number. Yup, I trashed her later for this when I went back to work from the Aruba vacation…told her that I really didn’t need to contact these people, I had enough on my plate. Of course I was jiving her and she knew it.
Continue reading Saturday, February 12, 2005

Friday, February 11, 2005

Hells bells! It’s r-a-i-n-i-n-g again. It started last night and, of course, it’s my fault. Only this time the patio slabs were poured yesterday so the Rain Fairy must have been sleeping. Usually the rain starts a day or two before the date I’ve committed with my son to arrange the pour…this time the Rain Fairy snoooozed and the concrete went down before he sent the Turn On the Water over Las Vegas Order. HA!!!!! It’s done. It will take longer now to settle and dry but…kiss my grits, Rain Fairy, you are too late. Na-na-na-na-na-na! *thumbs nose*
Continue reading Friday, February 11, 2005

Thursday, February 10, 2005

Twenty six tables in the pit – the poker room is a huge vacuous space with a giant floor to ceiling wall built around it. The room is being extended out into the pit area – past the ‘O’ entrance and while the wall around it is larger than the room will actually be, it appears to be H-U-G-E! Probably after 40 tables and podiums, etc., are loaded into it, it won’t be quite so damn big.
Continue reading Thursday, February 10, 2005

Wednesday, February 09, 2005

My friend, Wayne, is catching a red eye flight tonight – heading for a Poker Cruise in which he’ll be disguised as a dealer – while in reality he’s a fun, warm hearted soul that can’t take a compliment well. He left a bottle (unopened) of champagne here from one our Pan/Poker games a few weeks ago and I’ve decided to toast to his trip and partake of the joy of drinking in general.

The toast: May all your days at sea be filled with laughter and memorable experiences.
Continue reading Wednesday, February 09, 2005

Tuesday, February 08, 2005

The pit in front of the poker room is in various stages of disarray – roped off to protect the public from themselves – slot machines on carts and a zillion other things going on out there as preparations begin to set up the temporary tables and room. Lots of rumors flying in the room – one of them is that the pit area will only have 15 tables in it on Tuesday night and 25 on Wednesday night. I asked Kamell and he said he had no news as to what would be set up in the pit yet. Guess when I hit the area tonight, it’ll be pretty easy to figure then. 🙂
Continue reading Tuesday, February 08, 2005

Sunday, February 06, 2005

Dirty rotten rats-l-frats! Crap! The room remodel was supposed to start tomorrow. Friday night I got the major E/O…out by 9 p.m. and since the room remodel was going to find us with 25 tables in the pit instead of the normal 30 in our room, me and a few other dealers were asked if we wanted Monday off.

Yippeee! Yes indeedy! A three day weekend? Hell yes! Sweet! Then as I anticipated all of the things I would be doing with my time off, I got a call on Saturday. Gloom! The room remodel wouldn’t start until Tuesday so all the dealers that were thinking they had a three day weekend had to think again. *sniff* Back to work tomorrow night.
Continue reading Sunday, February 06, 2005

Thursday, February 03, 2005

Sure enough, as the luck of the draw would have it, I ended up on Table 1 again – late in the night. $2,000-4,000 Mixed – eight handed. Just one small stress fracture here…actually more a curiousity point to me than anything else. Tom – 1s – plays infrequently in the room is an integral part of this curiosity. He always tries to run the Dealer’s Box from the player’s seat while he’s involved in the game. It’s quite perlexing at times – almost throws a wrench in the smooth flow of the game.
Continue reading Thursday, February 03, 2005

Wednesday, February 02, 2005

My last month or so was the best of the starting line-ups – right in the middle of the lower limit games and no hassle dealing with money sliding into my pocket on almost every hand I dealt. The last two nights have found me hitting the high limit section.

High limit is a strange land with a completely different poker code than the rest of the room. No one there is chuckling or giggling or conversing about anything in the realm of people and life. They discuss what food they are going to order and where they are going to order from. They dine together over the flurry of chips and cards being dealt, the beats, the wins, the overall stigma of life as a poker player, but never as a pleasurable, chatting, dining experience.
Continue reading Wednesday, February 02, 2005

Tuesday, February 01, 2005

Maybe the Earth is in a cleansing stage – just like when we have a cold, our bodies sluff off via coughing, sneezing, snorting, and blowing – that’s what’s been going on in Vegas for some time now. Rain the last few days, gloom and dismal to the heart of the person that loves light, a teensy bit of sun around 10ish today, and this afternoon the wind moved in or rather is trying to move everything out. It’s not even gusting – it’s down right damn ripping through everything and sending it spinning down the street if it’s not nailed down. Whew! Thankfully I have the haven of my little house to tuck into and watch the mayhem from a safe place. Thank you, God!

*****

The business of poker.

Table 30 – $8-16 Holdem.

Jerry was in the 1s and he’s pretty much nonstop talk to the dealer, even though a lot of it goes unheard because he has a tendency to almost whisper as he looks at the dealer, even if he’s across the table – it’s like he thinks you can pick it up through sonic wave or something. I usually just nod. That’s the easiest way to deal with it.

Bill L. in the 3s doing his usual gab (he’s funny – keeps me chuckling but tonight he was a teensy bit obnoxious in his statements).

The 6s – a woman I’d never seen before, small build, blond streaked hair, with a strong face, somewhere in her 40’s would be my guess, was talking quietly with the 7s when I sat down. At first I thought they were together – not even as the down panned out – not that they were fighting but she was putting some horrific beats on him. She was on one of those Bad Card Rushes and played every hand, although I get the feeling that she played every hand anyway, whether she was winning or not. Everyone in the game was a little leery of being in a pot with her.

The 2s plays at Bellagio off and on and the rest of them were pretty much strangers to me – except the 4s comes in once in a Blue Moon.

One hand, the 6s called a raise from the 7s, with 9-4 off. She flopped a 4 and snagged a 9 on the Turn to beat his pocket Kings. He shook his head but took it pretty well. She asked him where all of his chips had gone and he managed a weak smile as he told her she had most of them.

Another hand, UTG, with Pre-Flop raises, she called with 7-2 off. The Flop was J-8-2. It was four way action and the 4s had pocket 10’s. He released them on the Turn. The 6s caught a 7 on the River and bet it. Jerry paid her off with A-8 off and was really disgusted that she had caught on him – I still haven’t figured out why he thought he had such a stellar hand, second pair does not the nuts make.

Bill couldn’t stand it. “Can you believe it, she called right up front with 7-2?”

As I pushed her the pot, I said to Bill, “Hey! That’s a name brand hand in case you hadn’t noticed. It’s called THE HAMMER!” I was trying to get him to clam up.

She just stacked up their chips, small smile intact, and kept stacking.

Bill kept it up. I asked, “Why do you want to educate the players when you’re at the table with them?”

We were chuckling back and forth as he explained how he always tried to make everyone aware of how they played when they were in a game with him. I continued, “Yes…Bill…you are a great emissary for poker.”

He yuckle-chuckled as he told me about an incident a few days ago where he insulted another player, that was younger and bigger than him, and how he got out of with his skin.

Then…all the talking and educating paid off for him…he beat himself in a hand. The 6s and Bill were heads-up. Bill was first to act and led the bet all the way to the River. He talked every Street – with every bet, asking her if she had a straight draw, a pair, etc., etc.

She never said a word.

He checked the River. She just reached for chips and fired at the pot. He turned up A-10 off and left it on the table in front of him for a minute as he went into a dissertation about his draws and how he thought he was going to get there and the outs he had, blah, blah, blah, finishing with “You take it!” as he released his hand.

She showed her hand to the 6 through 10 seats and pitched it. I mucked it, pushed her the pot, and the right side of the table started twittering…she bluffed him. Sometimes you’re just so damn smart you beat yourself.

I got a huge kick out of her game play and attitude. She had them spellbound – did it last? Don’t know. I was off to Table 1.

Table 1 was $1,500-3,000 Mixed, seven handed. I made it through that without any noise or confusion.

Table 2, four handed, half Omaha 8 or Better and Deuce to 7 Triple Draw. A little noise from Kian in the 2s but there usually is…as in I had only dealt him one winning hand in the last 30 years. I laughed and said, “That’s not true. I remember two.”

Table 3 was a little bit of mayhem. $10-20 NLH. Troy was in the 8s – with multiple sweaters – and left just before I arrived. He hadn’t missed his blind so he was being dealt in each hand. I collected time, dealt the first hand, his wife (one of his sweaters) leaned forward and looked at his hand.

I immediately called Skip (high limit brush) and asked him if it was ok if she took the hand since I had NO instruction from Troy that she could play his cards.

Skip asked the players if it was ok. Skip ascertained that it was ok with everyone and walked away. I got a deluge of idiot responses from some of the players I’d never seen before that was directed at me. “Of course it’s ok!” – “She’s been doing it all along, they’re married…” and a few other dumb butt things.

I said, “Look, I don’t care if Godzilla plays his hand. I do care about the fact that if she went broke, he might be upset with me and Bellagio for allowing another person to take control of his chips and cards.”

Some of them figured out what I was talking about…if permission isn’t specifically given – it shouldn’t happen.

Then the big wrinkle. Marlon and another player suddenly had their memory refreshed. Troy had taken a $5,000 chip off the table and all that was left in play was about $500. So….”NO, Linda, the hand is dead. She can’t play it!”

Sure glad we’re all on the same page here guys! Figure it out!

I believe the rule should be that NO ONE can play anyone else’s chips. It just alleviates the whole problem of people list hopping, hot water for the dealer for doing their job and not dealing a player in (in lower limit games where they aren’t dealt in even if they haven’t missed a blind), and the risk of retribution to Bellagio if the player’s pinch hitter did go broke and was playing without specific permission. There’s a lot of grey area in allowing someone to play another person’s chips, why even let that happen? Make it black and white.

It’s that time. Time to see if I can skate with the wind on my way to work. Wish me luck!

Monday, January 31, 2005

Finally…almost completely back to my normal, feisty self…I will endeavor to work my entire shift tonight, sharing my charm and dealing skills with the World of Poker. *Laughing*.

On a note of interest, possibly only to myself and a few friends, I still run my Saturday night Pan game. During the course of the last few months I’ve made several new friends through this site (converted a few of them to Pan) and taught a few of those new friends to deal poker. My long time Pan buddies are poker players also and they have been gracious enough to play poker on some Saturdays so the new friends could have actual dealing experience.

Two of my new Pan converts, (and graduates of Linda’s dealing school), Greg and Chad Patterson, recently auditioned and are dealing poker now. They are so damn cute, so full of energy and life, and so excited to be dealers. We – the Pan crew – are as excited as hell for them that they are doing what they want and we got to help them start their journey. *Puffed up chest*

*****

Bellagio’s Five Star World Poker Classic schedule is up. It’s going to be huge. Make your arrangements now so you aren’t left out.

*****

Next week should be the beginning of our room closure for remodel. It should be interesting. I am anxiously awaiting news on what’s going to happen. There’s talk of putting the button panels back in the table (no…not for player eject buttons) for signalling seats open, etc.

On that same vein, some of our dealers that applied and auditioned at Wynn have now decided they are not going. Their reasoning is that if Wynn wants seasoned, experienced dealers that can deal any game and limit, Wynn should be willing to offer them more than just a lateral move.

Well DOH!!!! I already figured out that it was just a lateral move to deal another poker room. Why bother? I’m very comfortable where I am, know what’s expected of me, know I’m working with a seasoned core of Floor People that know and do their jobs…why give that up to start over with a bunch of noise and confusion and inexperienced people that are afraid to step on someone’s toes the first year?

It is pretty scary though, the flood of new dealers coming in to the fold that know absolutely nothing about table procedures, limits, rules, and customer service from the Dealer’s Box. It’s going to get worse – everywhere! It will be a few years before the Poker Tidal Wave begins to smooth out – that includes staff, dealers, players, etc.

I have a hard time playing in our room at times because we have dealers that have been with us for years that still have no idea what they’re doing – it wouldn’t be so bad except I’m extremely ‘dealer aware’ and it makes me crazy when I’m trying to concentrate on playing. In my case, it’s Tilt-o-rama from both sides of the table. If I play – it makes me crazy watching some of them deal, if I deal and follow some of them in the Box – it makes me crazy that they didn’t take care of a problem before I got there…now I have to do it.

So…without further ado let me head for the shower and see who I’m following in the line-up tonight.

See you there!