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    <title>ATLARGE 1997 on BARGE.org</title>
    <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/</link>
    <description>Recent content in ATLARGE 1997 on BARGE.org</description>
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    <lastBuildDate>Tue, 01 Apr 1997 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Another from TIGER123</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_tiger2/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 1997 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_tiger2/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;
hiya, folks!
&lt;p&gt;
a review of my archives shows that i&#39;ve posted some
sixteen trip reports, four &#34;atlarge&#34; reports (two each
about &#39;96 and &#39;97), and one &#34;barge&#34; report (about &#39;97)
since i started posting here in february 1995.  but  i
didn&#39;t save my first report (my de-lurk) about a day
trip to bally&#39;s park place.
&lt;p&gt;
and i&#39;m tired of smoking/non-smoking flames; obscure
probability questions about how many jacks can be
adjacent to red aces; and the rantings of a certain
person who seems to think that those of us who post
here are all casino shills.
&lt;p&gt;
so,  here&#39;s another trip report!!&lt;br&gt;
enjoy!&lt;br&gt;
:)&lt;br&gt;
tiger&lt;br&gt;
---------------&lt;br&gt;
friday&lt;br&gt;
i&#39;m tied up all day in depositions about this little old
italian lady who slipped and fell in my client&#39;s supermarket.
what else is new?  two-thirds of my practice involves
little old ladies of various ethnicities who slip and fall
in my client&#39;s supermarkets.....
but i&#39;m able to catch the 4:30 bus out of the port authority,
but since there&#39;s a rainstorm and traffic, i don&#39;t get
to atlantic city until close to 8 pm.  larry (&#34;senor el
fuego&#34;) and josh (&#34;puggy&#34;) are already in play at the taj
mahal.  i dump my bag in the room and head back down to
the poker room.  the place is pretty empty.  apparently,
the tropicana&#39;s friday afternoon poker tournament is one
helluva big draw - nobody&#39;s on the north side of the board-
walk.  so, after i sit down and play for about 30 minutes
(and get on the comp clock), josh and i drive down to the
tropicana.
the place is pretty busy, and both of us are soon seated at
different 10/20 stud tables.  the main topic of discussion
at my table is the future of sportscaster marv albert.  all
the players at my table are agreed: he&#39;s finished.  i gotta
disagree - i&#39;m willing to lay odds that he&#39;ll be back on top
within two or three years.
josh and i both book a win, and it&#39;s back to the taj.  our
roommate larry hasn&#39;t done very well at his 20/40 stud game.
but we each take $10 in comp and go into the bengal club.
they have some food, and i have some scotch.  they have a
beer or two, and i have some more scotch.  :)  no trouble
getting to sleep tonite.....
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;saturday&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
i stagger into the shower around noon - the boys are still
sound asleep.  i spend the entire day switching tables, taking
one beat after another.  rgp&#39;er jay sipelstein sees this one:
three people fold after the bring-in.  a 10 of spades raises, and
there are two more folds.  i have a 5 up, with a pair of jacks in the
hole.  i re-raise, and i&#39;m heads-up with the ten.  on 4th street,
he gets a suited 4, and i get my jack.  i&#39;m high, and disdainfully
toss in two reds.  he raises, and i smooth call.  on 5th street,
he catches an offsuit ace, and i don&#39;t help.  he bets $20, and i
raise it.  he calls.  nothing happens on 6th street: check, bet and
call.  on the river, he squeezes his hole cards, and bets out at me.
i don&#39;t help.  i throw four chips into the pot and say, &#34;three jacks!&#34;
he says, &#34;oh no!  i&#39;ve got a flush!&#34; and shows three little spades.
::::sigh::::
the only good thing about my day is that it&#39;s better than larry&#39;s!
he calls an early end to the weekend, and leaves before our other
friends mike and kathy show up!  we can&#39;t get into the dynasty (gourmet
chinese restaurant with a sushi bar on the side), nor into any other
gourmet restaurant at the taj.  what to do...what to do....
hey!!  let&#39;s do the white house!!
for those of you who don&#39;t know this place, the white house is a
*world* famous emporium of submarine sandwiches (grinders, hoagies,
heroes - or whatever you call them)!!  every single celebrity who
has ever lived has a picture on the wall of the place!!  so, we
order a white house special, and a cheesesteak, and a meatball,
and a tuna, and an italian special... and drinks! and the whole
damn dinner costs $6.50 per person!  wow!!
back to the taj for some poker!!
i quit at about 1 am, and go up to the room.  two hours later,
josh calls. &#34;hey tiger!  c&#39;mon downstairs! it&#39;s time for some
hold &#39;em!&#34; josh, mike, kathy and your dauntless reporter all sit
down at a 2/4 hold &#39;em game.  my first hand is the big blind, and
i&#39;ve got a j 10 unsuited. five people have called the blind.
&#34;let&#39;s see some!&#34;  sure enough, the flop is a pair of tens and a 5.
i bet and get three or four callers.  there&#39;s nothing on the turn,
and one guy calls my bet.  he pays me off on the river. &#34;cocktails!!&#34;
  very next hand, i see a 6 9 suited in the little blind, and
there&#39;s the usual five or six callers.  i flop two pair and fill
in on the turn!  hey!  i love this game!!   :)
twenty minutes later, i&#39;m in later position with pocket rockets
(and i&#39;ve already had 2 double scotches....)  &#34;i raise!  hey! i got
a really good hand!&#34;  four people call, including josh in the big
blind.  flop is three spades to the queen and josh bets.  i&#39;m pretty
sure that one of my aces is the spade, but i don&#39;t bother to double-
check before i call.  another guy calls behind me.  another queen
hits on the turn.  josh bets again, and this time i do check - yeppers!
there&#39;s the spade ace!  i call!  so does the other guy.  the river pairs
a three.  josh checks, i check, and the other guy bets his full house.
::::sigh::::
meanwhile, mike (who&#39;s sitting to my immediate left) has twice raised
on the button with 7 2 offsuit.  and both times, he&#39;s flopped a pair
or two, improved on the turn, and gotten paid off on the river!!
wtg mike!! so, pretty soon, i&#39;m again holding aces!  i raise and a
couple people call. flop is two fives and a nine.  big blind bets
and i raise it!  we&#39;re head to head, and she just calls my raise.
the turn is the third five.  i call her bet on 4th and again on 5th.
yeah.  she had the case five.
::::sigh::::
two hands later, i&#39;m on the button.  couple people have called, and
i see i&#39;ve got the deuce-three of spades.  well, i can play just
about anything on the button....(&#39;specially after 3 double scotches)....
mike picks his hand up off the table.  i can&#39;t believe it.  he&#39;s got
the aces this time.  but he&#39;s seen what&#39;s happened to me.  hehehehehe.....
most of the players at the table manage to see his hand before he throws
it into the muck.  mike later explains that his hand wasn&#39;t suited,
and he didn&#39;t think it was worth completing his small blind!  };)
so, the flop comes 9 5 2 rainbow.  you *know* i bet it!  and get three
callers.  nothing happens on the turn; it&#39;s checked to me, and i bet
again!  one caller!  the river, of course, is a trey!  and somebody
actually pays me off!  lol!!!
we all stagger up to the room around 5 am, laughing all the way....
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;sunday&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
i take a jitney to the tropicana, and play there for a couple hours.
when i&#39;m done playing, i have a nice chat with poker room manager doug
dillon.  doug had a big part in nolan dalla&#39;s last column in &#34;card
player&#34; magazine, entitled &#34;ten atlantic city poker regulations that
should be changed.&#34;  for the record, i favor changing all ten.
here they are:&lt;br&gt;
1 allow dealers to keep their own tips&lt;br&gt;
2 allow chip runners and &#34;two-way&#34; cashiers&lt;br&gt;
3 allow more game variations to be spread&lt;br&gt;
4 show greater flexibility in advertising and announcements&lt;br&gt;
5 show greater flexibility in regulating tournaments&lt;br&gt;
6 allow poker in non-gaming areas, when necessary&lt;br&gt;
7 allow shills and props&lt;br&gt;
8 permit poker personnel to play in their own rooms&lt;br&gt;
9 eliminate bureaucratic overkill&lt;br&gt;
10 condense and simplify regulations&lt;br&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
--------&lt;br&gt;
p.s. i happened to see rgp&#39;er marty frasca this weekend!  he
confirms that his computer is still down - but he promises
that as soon as he&#39;s back up and running, he&#39;ll get back
to handling the &#34;california split&#34; list!   :)&lt;br&gt;
---------&lt;br&gt;
tiger</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: David R. Trinidad</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_david_trinidad/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 1997 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_david_trinidad/</guid>
      <description>First and foremost, I would like to recognize Jazbo for the success of
ATLARGE II. ATLARGE II gathered all sorts of backgrounds and experiences
together for a brief moment of poker and fellowship. Organizing events this
large is time consuming and stressful. Thanks again Jazbo!!
&lt;p&gt;
In describing my experience at ATLARGE II I can only relate to last years
event. I did much better at the Hold&#39;em tournament by not showing up!!
However, I missed the fellowship. So this trip report describes my
experience from a frame of mind that I survived my poker play but got to
meet some really neat people.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;&#34;The Smoker&#34;&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Though I do not drink anymore and try and cut down on the cigars, I still
find the smoker to be one great event. Great food, great people, and great
stories -- all the right combinations for an evening of fellowship. Tiger
did a great job of organizing this event.
&lt;p&gt;
The ADB&#39;ers were in full force. The Darkside (Nolan Dalla), Fold&#39;em, (Peter
Secor), Big Boy (Bruce Krammer), Elrasio (Eric ???), Satan (Jeremy) and the
honorary (Though he did not know it yet) member Bill Alan. The smoker
consumed three full tables and I believe over 20 fine people attended.
&lt;p&gt;
A highlight of the evening was executives of the Taj Poker room providing
nice T-shirts, hats, a deck of cards and the book &#34;Caro&#39;s Fundamental
Secrets of Poker&#34;. As you soon will read, I should have more closely read
the book
&lt;p&gt;
In any social event involving 20 or more card players there will be the bad
beat stories. I am the worst at getting the facts right and making the
story interesting. However, there is one redeeming quality of a bad beat
story \u2013 it reflects a part of life. When I arrived in Newark, my wallet
fell out on the airplane. I had a strong hunch the most precious parts of
me were laying on the seat 1B. Like without a picture ID. How do I get back
on the airplane? So anyway, I approach the gate agents who referred me to
security. They referred me to lost and found. Hey! This plane leaves in 15
minutes and my wallet is sitting in seat 1B!! Well I cancelled my cards
when somebody finally went abroad, and found my wallet on seat 1B. Now how
is this different from the story &#34;There I was with A-A and I flopped a full
house A-2-2\u2026.&#34; ? You see bad beat stories emulate life. A smoker is a place
to experience some interesting realities life presents us all.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;&#34;Taj Poker&#34;&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
I concluded Thursday&#39;s evening with an hour of 15-30 Hold&#39;em. I recognized
&#34;Daveles&#34; and someone I met at Fort McDowell in AZ.  The table was not too
friendly with three people on tilt.  So I got serious and engaged in only
two hands. Both scored and I left the table with my dinner paid.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;&#34;Craps Tournament&#34;&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
The craps tournament was a free for all. Satan, (Jeremy) played the
&#34;darkside&#34; and layed the back.I played right side most of the way and
busted out. Jeremy won the tournament. There is a lesson to be learned here
but I have not figured it out yet.
&lt;p&gt;
As Fold&#39;em and I said, it was fun to work T5000 on a craps table. I do not
think that I will be flinging that much black chips in this lifetime.
Unless of course barring some untoward event against the casino.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;&#34;Pot Limit Hold&#39;em&#34;&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
I entered the Pot Limit Tournament on Friday with the notion that this
would be a $85 poker lesson.  I had the right idea. Having never played
Pot-Limit, I experienced a very cheap lesson compared to flinging real
green and black chips.
&lt;p&gt;
Actually, I was doing pretty good. Bluffed a couple of nice pots and
engaged in one pot with &#34;Big Boy&#34; (Bruce Krammer). Three sixes flop giving
me an excellent full house. I bet the flop and the turn. Bruce disengages
to fight yet another day.
&lt;p&gt;
The hand that did me in was quite interesting to me. A guy who bullies
three pots in a row engages in his fourth. I have A-K suited and the flop
shows A-X-X of diamonds. Everybody checks. On the turn, a rag drops so I
bet. The bully raises. I go all in. He had K-7 of diamonds.
&lt;p&gt;
Therefore, I should have taken a lesson from Bruce from the earlier hand.
When we do not have the nuts -- it might not be the time to fully commit
ones bankroll. The lesson was relearned again. You know the adage of all
teachers \u2013&#34; do it over and over again until you do it right.&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
Bruce has some inspiring words for me at dinner. &#34;The word is that you&#39;re
the Stay-Puff softie man..&#34;.  I can see that my aggressive play will have
no threatening context with this crowd. Second, it will take a big win to
reestablish any honor amongst my peers.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;&#34;Passing the Time Away&#34;&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
I had to work on Friday so I could only play until 12:30 AM on Thursday. I
played short handed 10-20 Hold&#39;em which is my worse game. I just do not
make the right choices between aggression and passivity with less than 5
players. I feel good surviving with all my chips. I flop a full house
against &#34;Bwana&#34;, &#34;Elrasio&#34;, &#34;Sippy&#34; and Ming. One other person pays me off
until the end.
&lt;p&gt;
It was a nice way to pass the time away. I was listening to Bwana and
Sippy, tell poker stories. The one lesson from this session is that I have
a lot to learn. There are four stages of learning. We all start as
&#34;Blissfully Ignorant&#34;. We do not know what we do not know. Then we wake up
and achieve a state known as Knowingly Ignorant. We now know what we do not
know. The next stage makes us an expert in a particular field. We become
Confidently Ignorant. We are confident in what we do not know. The last
stage is becoming Arrogantly Ignorant. We are arrogant about we do not
know. That is where learning stops. I realize do have a long way to go.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Hold&#39;em Tournament.&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
I placed 22 last year by not showing up. This year, I was the fourth to
bust out. Not understanding the lessons of the previous day--  I engaged
David Croson (2nd place at BARGE). Things went very badly.
&lt;p&gt;
I watch David bluff a flush to lay down with 2 pair which set up the ending
hand for me. Here goes ..
&lt;p&gt;
I am sitting as the big bling with K-Q Hearts. Four people call, I raise
T50. Everybody calls. The flop comes 9-9-Q. I have two pair with an
excellent kicker. No raises before the flop besides me so I doubt I am
looking at A-Q. The only possibility is 9-9 and or 10-9/J-9. One I have a
Q, two a Q is on the board, and last Q-9 suited is a weak hand for a
tournament.  I bet T300. It folds to David who raises T400. He either has
K-Q offsuit (He would have raised with K-Q Suited or a nine. I have T145. I
go all in. He has J-9 suited. Only 2 outs for me. The run actually gives
Dave the flush and I am defeated. It does not help the reputation at all. I
can see my badge for next year, a 6&#34; stay puff marshmallow logo \u2026
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;&#34;Back to the Taj&#34;&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
The live game did me well. Finally leaving the 5-10 Hold&#39;em $145 up. Even
with a string of bad beats I was able to get really lucky once. With the
button, I am dealt 7-8 suited. A RGP&#39;er raises with A-9, two drop-in&#39;s
call. A manic re-raises with Q-10 suited. I cold call for the flop. The
flop comes 4-5 club&#39;s suited and a 2. The A-9 and Q-10 cap the raises in a
bidding war. I call. The 6 shows on the turn. The A-9 and Q-10 war again.
On the river I get one raise in before it is capped. The A-9 paused a bit
thinking something was wrong, but he did not quite understand what. I show
the straight flush. I get one more straight flush this session.
&lt;p&gt;
Probably the average reader is thinking how do you get to straight flushes
and not take home the money? I also lost 6 three-of-a-kinds, and two full
houses on the river. Mike Caro so well states, not losing $500 is wining
$500. Another lesson learned.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;&#34;Banquet&#34;&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
The banquet was great. Bill Allen was awarded the &#34;Honorary ADB&#39;er hat and
Jazbo received a freeroll at TARGET. Well deserved awards. I met Fold&#39;ems
wife and talked her ear off about Phoenix and cruising the Caribbean.
Peter came just in time to rescue his wife from the clutches of boredom!
&lt;p&gt;
Then Peter and I discussed how the Payouts are adjusted on slot machines. I
good lesson for the both of us. We both walked over to the Taj following
each other. Finally, we ended up at the Resorts poker room.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;&#34;A Friendly 5-10 Hold&#39;em Game&#34;&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
I engaged a table with a beginner, Elrasio, Daveles, PRM,  Quie (Tom
McHugh), and Ming to my left. One RGP&#39;er to my right and a drop-in. This is
the definition of a &#34;friendly game.&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
A dealer from the Trop sits down. We converse \u2013 exchanging small talk. I
bet with Elrasio Quie, and Ming raising. &#34;Gee I was looking for a softer
game&#34; the dealer says and cold calls. I cap the raise. The beauty of this
hand is that Quie takes it with a pair of duce&#39;s -- One deuce in his hand
and one on the board. The dealer gets up on leaves quickly.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;&#34;ADB&#39; Dice Engagement&#34;&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Again the ADB&#39;ers let me tag along for the dice engagement. This is where
we convince &#34;Darkside&#34; to roll them bones with one don&#39;t bet for Noaln. We
bet the right side. It ended up with Nolan losing and us losing. However,
it is a lot of fun watching the more emotional patrons get upset at Jeremy
and Jeff exclaiming their exuberance over a 7-out.
&lt;p&gt;
One thing that was puzzling, the Resorts had 12 well-intoxicated
individuals ready to spend money but no dealers to open a craps table. As a
casino operator who could ask for anything more? The locals and the tourist
just would not accommodate the ADB&#39;ers at the craps table. One floorman
said, &#34;Go to the end table.&#34; It turns out that another floorman was running
the show down there. Give the problem away is always a good move.
&lt;p&gt;
Just to balance this story out I thought it would be nice to mention the
cocktail waitress &#34;Shannon&#34;.  Though Shannon possesses many redeeming and
attractive features, it was her service attitude that struck me the most. I
was focused on a hand, and Shannon paused until I bet. Then she alerted me
to the drink I ordered. A small gesture, but this is the kinds of things
that I notice and makes me appreciate a casino.
&lt;p&gt;
Jim Stydio the winner of the Hold&#39;em tournament offered me a couch to sleep
on before the stud tournament. He was supposed to get me before retiring.
Unfortunately, some bottom feeders had occupied a Hold&#39;em game at the Taj
and so I did not get that nap in until 0600. I am not sure how Bill Lamont
and Jim did in the game.
&lt;p&gt;
While waiting, I observed the 10-20-30 Hi-Low game. In one hand Bill Turner
is R00ling against Bozo, Andy, Jazbo and ????. Bill has J-10-9 suited
against Andy&#39;s A-A. 3rd street and fourth street cap. Bill makes the flush.
Lesson learned, I am not up to par to play this table!!
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;&#34;The Stud Tournament&#34;&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
I was at a table with Sippy, Chuck Wienstock, and others I respect. I was
remarkably unlucky in getting the low card. I did take the last chips from
four players that had been hurt previously and built a fair stack. I also
learned about the &#34;Putnum&#34; puzzle from David Croson who was elaborating
about geometry with Sippy and others. Nothing like a poker game to
fellowship with academia.
&lt;p&gt;
I did have a secondary thought on my mind the whole time. Not only
exploring the outer reaches of what is to be discovered, but also after
drinking enormous amounts of coffee waiting for Jim Strydio, I had to use
the bathroom. The urge was unbelievable and a break was not in sight.
&lt;p&gt;
Then the engagement\u2026 With the loss of players new players moved to our
table. Bill, who eventually came in second, raised three times and stole
three antes with face cards showing. I had the button (again) and the low
card. Bill raised with an Ace showing, and I called with a two-suited
10-10-3. The next card is a heart and Bill gets a rag. He bets again.  I
call. The next card is a rag and I get another heart. I bet a black chip
but forgot to say &#34;raise&#34;. There goes that bluff\u2026.The next card is a rag
for the both of us. I get a 3 he gets a jack and gets the higher  two pair.
I am now hurt.
&lt;p&gt;
Relief comes. Our table breaks up and I have time to use the bathroom.
&lt;p&gt;
Modern warfare consists of five steps. Contacting, Tracking, Identifying,
Targeting, and Destroying a hostile target. No honor, no glory \u2013 just
impersonal blips on a radar screen. Somehow, the thought comes to me how
two friends engage each other at Gettysburg. Lowell Armistead for the south
and Winford Hancock for the north faced each other the last and fatal day.
&lt;p&gt;
I approach the table after using the bathroom and greet my fellow poker
buddies. &#34;Hi Paul&#34; (PRM). Paul responds with a similar friendly greeting.
&#34;I could not tell if that is a green chip or a black chip on the bottom,
how much do you have?&#34;  I have definitely been contacted and identified for
destruction.
&lt;p&gt;
I get K-J-10 suited with Paul raising Jim Strydio with a Q showing. Rule
one, don&#39;t get in-between a chip war. I call once to see if a get a suited
card. A 7 diamonds show and I drop. Probably bad to engage with the Q&#39;s
dead and only a king or a flush out. But I am running out of time.
&lt;p&gt;
The second hand at this table gives PRM another Q showing and a raise.
Everybody drops. I have split queens with a A kicker. The A-Q is suited, I
re-raise. PRM looks at my stack and decides to put me all in.
I have PRM out-kicked with the ace and three to a flush. He makes Q-Q-3-3
and I do not improve. Say goodbye Dave. At least this time it was a fight.
&lt;p&gt;
Noaln Dalla wins the tournament. I watch systematic engagements between
Bill and Nolan. One thing I noticed was that Nolan was steady in his
mannerisms whether he was raising on a good hand or a bad hand. Rock Solid
all the way. A guy I want on my right for sure\u2026
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Conclusion&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
The fellowship was well worth the trip from Phoenix. As usual I met new
friends, Tiger, Quie, Bill Turner, Andy Heck, and Ming. I got an
opportunity to share a moment of my life with some of those I met at BARGE.
Nolan, Peter, Eric, Jeremy, Bruce and how many others! Jazbo did a great
job of organizing and I will definitely be there at BARGE and next years
ATLARGE.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Keith Miyake</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_keith_miyake/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 1997 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_keith_miyake/</guid>
      <description>Here&#39;s some notes of my ATLARGE adventure:
&lt;p&gt;
I minimum-bet my way into the money at the blackjack tournament, which
was nice considering how poor my pocker was in the other tourneys.
&lt;p&gt;
Once again, Merv got $10 off me by dangling a match play coupon.
The deed was done at the craps table.
&lt;p&gt;
Most of the poker was nondescript.  I played a lot of 1-5 stud
because I didn&#39;t want to be bumming &#39;cause I got stuck early.
I was in an 8-way hand that got checked to the river.  Dealer
shuffled the cut cards back in (with the leftover card) and
dealt a community river.
&lt;p&gt;
My last session of the trip was by far the most memorable.
&lt;p&gt;
Listen ye traveller to my poker tale of woe.
(Actually it&#39;s not that bad, but it&#39;s a great sounding intro)
&lt;p&gt;
I had been sweating Alan for a while in the pot limit game (1-2 blinds)
when a seat opened up (both 5 and 6 were open across from the dealer,
calling me).  Of course, I bought in for $200.
&lt;p&gt;
Jazbo (jbu...@monmouth.com), Me (kmiy...@cs.rutgers.edu),
Kris (k...@munn.com) and Alan (a...@idacrd.ccr-p.ida.org)
were there the whole time I played.  Ray (ray3...@aol.com?) and
Bill (V...@aol.com) were there, Ray earlier and Bill later.
Plus cameo appearances by Foldem and Jester.
&lt;p&gt;
Kris soon moves in on my left and we make R00ling table talk.
&lt;p&gt;
I had been in a couple of pots with not much happening
(ahead a little) until hand #1.
&lt;p&gt;
We had been talking earlier about how some people had lost big
slowplaying aces and I get dealt pocket kings.  There were a
couple of callers before me so I decided to try to take it
and raised the pot.  Folded around to Alan who reraises the pot.
I&#39;m visibly shaking by the time it&#39;s back to me where I put in
another raise, and in short order I&#39;m all-in preflop.  We flip
our cards and sure enough, I&#39;m a big dog against pocket aces.
&lt;p&gt;
Here Alan offers insurance.  I know the concept, but have never
done it before so it takes a while before we get things sorted out.
We use (*begin shameless plug*) Jazbo&#39;s holdem card thingie
(*end shameless plug*) to help us figure out just how big a dog
I am.  I eventually agree and only lose most of my money.
&lt;p&gt;
-- Keith gets out with his pants after betting into aces.
&lt;p&gt;
Sometime later, still a hurting puppy, I limp in with pocket tens.
-- three players.  flop: rainbow; 5 spades, pair 3s.&lt;br&gt;
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;(you might imagine what&#39;s coming)  Checked around.&lt;br&gt;
turn: 8 of spades.  Checked around.&lt;br&gt;
river: 10 of spades.&lt;br&gt;
I&#39;ve got top boat, and someone may have made a flush.  I check.
Check, raise $10.  I raise the pot, leaving me about $20.  Fold, call.
I show my 10s and he&#39;s got those 3s you&#39;ve been concentrating on.
Mr. Nice People decided not to put me out of my misery.
&lt;p&gt;
-- Keith is inexplicably spared by a stranger holding the nuts.
&lt;p&gt;
Downhill from here, eaten by the blinds and folding failed draws.
I&#39;m playing it out to the bitter end (there were seats still available).
Talking with Jazbo we agree that once I get below the $5 mark,
I shouldn&#39;t be able to play (as I have less than a bet), so I decide
to make my stand straddling under the gun.
&lt;p&gt;
It was kinda boring sitting and waiting for my blinds to get eaten,
so I made my move one round early.  $8 left, under the gun,
I toke the dealer $3 and use my last $5 to declare my straddle.
&lt;p&gt;
Bill has written about my all-in &#34;live&#34; straddle, so I won&#39;t
get into that, but since this is my poker tale of woe,
you can hear how the hand turned out.
&lt;p&gt;
Kris is to my right and calls, I think there&#39;s someone in 7 who calls.
Ray had left earlier so a New Guy in 8 calls, then Alan calls.
Past the dealer, Mr. Nice People raises the pot, so I said
&#34;Nice People give me protection&#34;.  Bill folds, and Jazbo raises the pot.
I shut up.  Back to me and I consider my options...
&lt;p&gt;
Kris calls, 7 folds, then New Guy raises the pot.  Alan folds,
Mr. Nice People calls all-in.  Jazbo thinks and folds, as does Kris.
&lt;p&gt;
Now there&#39;s two all-in preflop and I still haven&#39;t seen my cards.
No insurance today as the dealer lays a board of 347TQ, no flush draw.
&lt;p&gt;
Nice People has kings and New Guy has aces.  Mr. Nice People has busted,
Mr. Nice People rebuys.
&lt;p&gt;
I flip my cards and out pops a pair of 3s.  $35!  Stylin&#39;!
&lt;p&gt;
Three or four hands later I limp in with A8 diamonds.
Four players see the flop which comes down with two diamonds.
$20 raise (pot sized raise would be $25), call, call, and I call
all-in.  Turn is a diamond and they check it to the end.
I&#39;m back at $100 with quite a turnaround of fortune.
&lt;p&gt;
Put back $25 before cashing out at 11:30.
4-5 hours; -$125;
&lt;p&gt;
Keith&lt;br&gt;
-- &lt;br&gt;
kmiy...@cs.rutgers.edu</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Nolan Dalla</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_nolan_dalla/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 1997 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_nolan_dalla/</guid>
      <description>Nolan Dalla&lt;br&gt;
ATLARGE Trip Report&lt;br&gt;
Atlantic City, NJ  &lt;br&gt;
March 20-24, 1997&lt;br&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
&#34;THE LONG AND WINDING ROAD&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
****************&lt;br&gt;
The long and winding road,&lt;br&gt;
that leads to your door,&lt;br&gt;
has left me standing here.&lt;br&gt;
****************&lt;br&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Introduction:  This year, I was content NOT to post an ATLARGE trip
report.  This decision came about for three reasons:
&lt;p&gt;
          First, I couldn&#39;t possibly do justice to so many events and
unique personalties.  How to chose from among them when writing such a
report  
&lt;p&gt;
          Second, my memory for detail (re-constructing hands, chip
counts, etc.) is admittedly imperfect.  In fact, when laced with
single-malt scotch which flowed gratuitously from a certain hotel room --
my capacity for testimony is downright appalling.  Of course, to regular
readers of my column -- this should come as no suprise.  
&lt;p&gt;
          Third -- and perhaps most important -- I lament my inability to
include EVERYONE in the report -- including some old friends, and others
whom I met for the first time.  To those who do not find themselves in the
report, please don&#39;t view my omission with personal disappointment or
disdain.  Keeping in mind that last year&#39;s BARGE trip report contained 6
separate chapters, each in excess of 2,000 words, I&#39;ll try to keep some
things here to a minimum (the key word in that last sentence is SOME.
Major embarassments and personal indecretions will be exaggerated for
their full entertainment value).
&lt;p&gt;
As I was saying -- my erstwhile intent was to remain hidden behind a
panelled glass of cyberkenetic solitude, escaping into an inner-sanctum of
inconspicuous spitrtuality and metaphysical simulacrum.  AND THEN IT
HAPPENED, I began reading OTHER trip reports.    
&lt;p&gt;
My blood pressure increased.  I started sweating.  Beads of perspiration
globulated beneath my brow.  My hands began to tremble.  Tears swelled in
my eyes.  Sitting beside me, Marietta (Mrs. Dalla) sensed something was
wrong, especially since it wasn&#39;t even football season.
&lt;p&gt;
&#34;That&#39;s it!  I&#39;ve had enough!&#34; I cried.  &#34;Shut off the 486! Do it now!&#34;
I unplugged the monitor.  I turned out the lights.  
&lt;p&gt;
&#34;No more poker!  No more RGP!&#34;  
&lt;p&gt;
I shut it off for three whole days.  
&lt;p&gt;
I tried to ccupy my time in other ways.  I looked around the house for
good books to read.  But the bookshelves were only stocked with the
seductive works of  Sklansky, Malmuth, Caro, and Zee -- a quartet of
omnipotent voices who cried out to me in the night.  
&lt;p&gt;
Resigned to my cerebral imprisonment I searched the pantry for a video.
Some choice. Alas, it was a decision between World Series of Poker
highlight films from 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, or 1995.  
&lt;p&gt;
&#34;No more poker!&#34; I screamed.
&lt;p&gt;
I drank a few shots of brandy, hoping the ruffle of flopping imaginary
sets and hitting flush draws on the river would subside.  But the
temptation became too strong.  Finally, I just couldn&#39;t take it any more!
I had to do it.  It was like drugs, alcohol, and (dare I say) gambling --
an irresistible vice over which I am powerless and occasionally reduced to
a dribbling and babbling foray of emotions!  
&lt;p&gt;
My friends, I confess, I am a trip report addict!  Call the Oprah show!
Book me on Geraldo!  Please....no Jenny Jones (I heard the actuarial
tables for participants on that show are not particularly encouraging).
&lt;p&gt;
The admitance of self-addiction is the first step toward recovery.  So, on
this cool and cloudy Monday afternoon at 3:00 pm -- while the cherry
blossoms are in full bloom around our nation&#39;s capital where I reside --
sans notes, I begin to write -- placing my quill to paper, or more
precisely the bones of my naked flesh upon the keyboard.  
&lt;p&gt;
Here&#39;s my (and I hope &#34;your&#34;) daily FIX on &#34;The Long and Winding Road&#34; of
poker dependency:
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;THURSDAY&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
---------- $15-30 Hold&#39;Em / $10-20 Hold&#39;Em (Taj Mahal)
&lt;p&gt;
Call it &#34;the Russell Rosenbloom Show&#34; --- Since the $15-30 is a dead game,
I transfer to the adjacent table.  I see RGPer Russell Rosenbloom.
Russell simply dominates the table.  When faced with any decision, there
are only two options for Russell:  RAISE or FOLD.  Fed-up with the
ceaseless raising and re-raising, one of the locals quips, &#34;It&#39;s also your
option to just CALL a bet if you want to, Sir.&#34;  Most interesting hand
occurs when every round is capped and at the end Russell shows down a nut
flush, the local to his left shows a full house, and the third player
shows broadway (Russell lost the hand on the river when the board paired).
 How the clown with Broadway stayed is anyone&#39;s guess.  Were it not for
that painful loss (maybe a $400-500 pot), Russell would have filled yet
another chip rack.
&lt;p&gt;
RGP people will love this one! --- An interesting conversation takes place
at the table when a local pro (whom I know from the regular pot limit
game) starts talking.  He&#39;s beaming with confidence and remarks, &#34;Hey, all
these computer guys are coming into town this weekend.&#34;  He goes on to say
that he expects to kick everybody&#39;s ass and make tons of money from &#34;them&#34;
(Note:  He did not know that yours truly was included amidst the &#34;computer
guys&#34;).
&lt;p&gt;
&#34;Oh yeah?&#34; I ask.  &#34;How do you know they&#39;re so soft?&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
The pro goes on with some ellaborate explanation of how he plans to run
over the &#34;nerd types (his own words)&#34; with his aggression.  I can barely
contain myself from an odd junction of laughter and taking personal
offense at his unfair characterization.  But, I&#39;m content to remain silent
with the knowledge that UNDERESTIMATING YOUR OPPONENTS is the fatal flaw
of many otherwise good poker players.  We&#39;ll just see who ass get&#39;s
kicked.  
&lt;p&gt;
---------------- Gentlemen&#39;s Smoker (Taj Mahal)
&lt;p&gt;
Hail Tiger! --- Again, I can only add to the many posted accolades and
congratulatory remarks directed toward Tiger for his Herculean efforts on
our behalf.  Several people already know this, but I should point-out once
again that Tiger went to a great deal of trouble in SAVING the smoker from
last minute extinction -- even though, at the time, he was not sure if he
himself would be able to make the engagement.  This selfless act of
heroism deserves high praise and everyone&#39;s gratitude (remove lips from
Tiger&#39;s ass now).
&lt;p&gt;
Also, the visit from Tom Gitto, Ron Garvey, and Tony Marino was a real
treat.  Everyone in the ATLARGE contingent greatly appreciated the Taj
gifts -- which included two t-shirts, a hat, two decks of cards, and a
poker book for each one of us (Bad joke here:  For any of you who don&#39;t
like your **black** t-shirt, just place it in the wash -- and you&#39;ll get
back a **grey** one).  
&lt;p&gt;
One funny sidebar to the fancy dinner (which has nothing to do with poker)
occurs when I hear one of our group complaining about his cut of beef to
the waiter.  Suddenly, I had this flashback of the time I once worked in a
restaurant several years ago and used to hear complaints (you can imagine
how many times they complained about my service).  &#34;Waiter! My steak is
overcooked!  The potato is raw!  Blah, Blah, Blah.&#34;  When faced with such
trivial discourteousies, I used to parrot a line that would usually leave
&#39;em rolling.....either that, or get me a complete &#39;stiff&#39; on the check.
&#34;Allright Sir, I can certainly understand your displeasure. Would it make
you any happier if we shoot the cook, fire the manager, and burn the
restaurant down to the ground?&#34;  Fortunately, our service was void of
ritualized Southern sarcasm, and everyone enjoyed an outstanding dinner
(except for the guy who complained about his cut, I suppose).
&lt;p&gt;
Special note to Dave Trinidad --- who deserves some extra notoriety here
for coming all the way to Atlantic City from Phoenix to attend ATLARGE.
Dave and Patti Beadles (from San Francisco) get the ATLARGE &#34;greatest
distance traveled awards.&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
(To be continued)..........maybe</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Paul McMullin</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_paul_mcmullin/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 1997 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_paul_mcmullin/</guid>
      <description>I&#39;m told that Tiger is going to post a trip summary from ATLARGE II, and
I look forward to it, but I felt that I had to express my thanks to
Jazbo for putting on a super weekend myself [THANKS JAZBO!]... and to report
a few hands from the two poker tournaments that I really liked that I&#39;m
pretty sure won&#39;t be in Tiger&#39;s report:
&lt;p&gt;
In the T500 no-limit holdem on Saturday, when the blinds were about T25
and T50, the guy under the gun had about T1500 and made it T300; I had
about T2200 in late position and found pocket kings - I raised back T600,
and he considered and pushed all-in... I felt pretty confident calling (and
turning up my Kings) until he turned up his Aces... no help; back to being a
below average stack!  They consolidated to 3 tables shortly after that, and
I decided it was time to double up or get up - the blinds went by and then
I stole them back with trash, I survived an all-in to double up with a hand
I don&#39;t remember (pocket Ts? against AQ?) and then the blinds were raised
T400 or so by the second under the gun; I looked at AQo and pushed T1075
all-in... folded back to the raiser who considered for a few seconds (FOLD
FOLD FOLD - it seemed like forever), counted that he&#39;d have about T400 or
so left if he called and missed, and folded; as we were waiting for pictures
to be taken he said he had AKo; that it was the hardest lay-down he made the
whole day.
&lt;p&gt;
I was in 3rd place (T5300?) when they consolidated to the final table
(all 10 places paid), but had the blinds by go twice without anything
resembling matching cards and ditched after a steal attempt got re-raised
to come back down to T4100... three had busted out, and ERB (Ed Baker?) was
down to a single chip and waiting for the blinds to come by when I got pocket
8s in late position (about three more hands before ERB would be blinded in)
when BUD (name?, position T5000?) raised the T200-T400 (I think) blinds to
T1600 in fairly early position... if I folded I&#39;d be sure of being 6th or
better (with ERB out), but if I pushed in and survived I could probably coast
to 2nd without calling another hand. The prizes were $160 for 7th and $190
for 6th; I decided to take my shot; all folded to BUD who called and turned
up AT (suited?); I turned up my 88, someone called out &#34;11-10 favorite&#34;
(what are the REAL odds here - don&#39;t I kill some of the straights for the
T with my eights out of the deck and make boats on others?) - the board
helped neither thru the turn, but the river was an Ace and I was standing...
It probably wasn&#39;t my best move, and I&#39;m wondering what the West Coast half
with more frequent tournament experience have to say about my reasoning?
&lt;p&gt;
Sunday morning, Ed Baker saw me before the tourney and mentioned that he
was impressed with the level of aggression that I had shown in the holdem
event (we had also played in a 5-10 holdem ring game on Friday evening,
and I was raising about twice as often as any one else at the table - he was
sitting at the other end of the table, frequently muttering about &#34;what
could prm have down there to be doing all of that raising???&#34;). Thanks, Ed,
your comment really helped my confidence going into the Stud event!
&lt;p&gt;
I was entered into the Stud tourney (T300) strictly for grins - I&#39;ve probably
played 100 or so hands of 7-stud (mostly with Tiger, drinking scotch at the
1-3 table at the Trop in December)... I&#39;ve read McEnvoy&#39;s and Bjutner&#39;s (?)
books on tournaments, and have played in 20-30 tournaments (which is probably
about 15 or so more than most of the rest of the ATLARGE contingent), but
never anything other than Holdem, so I decided to finally follow their advice
and mostly ignore my cards and play my stack and my position... I attempted to
steal the blinds whenever two or three of the upcards were duplicated on my
left (regardless of my cards) and whenever I had paint showing.  I called
about 2/3 of the re-steals hoping to get a scare card, and got checked
into a scare card just often enough to about triple up before they started
consolidating tables... When I had built to about T1300 I had split Queens
with a suited Ace when (Arti?, T900) on my right raised the bring in with a
Q up... I re-raised and called his re-re-raise... I got a T and he got a
brick (5?), I checked, he bet, and I raised... he hesitated and called, and
we were committed.  He caught the case queen on 5th street but I bet to put
him all-in anyway... I didn&#39;t improve, declared Queens with an Ace after the
river, he turned up a four-flush pair of Queens with a King that didn&#39;t
improve when he rolled his river card!
&lt;p&gt;
Several people asked how I could be playing that hand that strongly, and I
explained that I knew where the queens were and was nervous enough about my
stud ability to know that if I didn&#39;t get a big stack QUICKLY I&#39;d just as
likely be out-played easily, so my strategy had been to double up or get out...
after that I went on an absolute binge of stealing the blinds and attempting
to put shorter stacks all-in... I was actually HOPING to get the bring-in
card and brought it in for a raise whenever I had *any* paint underneath
or any of the other upcards were duplicated. I don&#39;t think that I flat-called
the bring-in or checked any street more than 5 times on the hands I was in from
there to the final table...
&lt;p&gt;
When we got to the final table, there was only one player there in the
running for the over-all jacket - he had finished ahead of me on Saturday...
Jazbo came by and worked out that I had to finish THREE places ahead of
him to win the jacket... fortunately I was the largest stack and he was the
third smallest. He finished in the money (6th), so I had to make it to
third - but when he stood up I still had the largest stack...
&lt;p&gt;
I wouldn&#39;t feel like an honorable Rec.gambler without claiming some
sort of an angle - so here&#39;s mine: when we got down to three handed,
someone offered to deal: the stacks were about JimS (?) on my left with T4800,
Nolan (I should get out a card player and check the spelling) on my right with
T5700, and I had T6700. The prizes left were $280, $700, and $1400. As the
leader I didn&#39;t want to flat split it, so I offered to take $150 over and
let the third place take $150 under a split - there was some hesitation,
so I offered $650, 1/3, and the rest for me, and Jim agreed if Nolan would...
He did, and my extra came to $136.  I was trying for something &#34;close&#34; to
the actual chip position; at this point I don&#39;t know if I got the math
right or not, but Jazbo pointed out that the small stack&#39;s chips are each
more valuable than the biggest stack&#39;s, so a pro-rated split isn&#39;t really
fair... The &#34;angle&#34; comes in when you consider that I had about tripled my
seven-stud experience in the tournament - that most of the day I had been
playing &#34;get someone&#39;s chips all-in, turn up your cards, and see if the dealer
pushes you the pot at the river&#34;. If they had been paying attention to how
unreal my play had been to that point, they probably would have wanted
to play a few more hands before agreeing to any offer that gave me almost
40% of the money left.
&lt;p&gt;
I think that I had someone all-in almost 20 times during the day, and only
5 of them survived... [Nolan had been one of them when we were at about 3
tables - my Ace high hand rivered a pair of sixes - his unpaired open-ended
king-high four-striaght completed with a nine on the river to survive - he
was probably favored at the river, but I was ahead when I put his three-paint
King high all-in on third street with my Ace high...)
&lt;p&gt;
My favorite hand (which turns out to be inconsequential, but still gets
my vote) was when we were down to three and had negotiated the split -
I got 2 9 down, and an 8 up; the other two both showed aces.  The ante
was T100, the bring in was T150, and the first raise was to T500. Without
a flinch I shoved T500 in (I was risking T350 - the completion of the
bring-in - to win T450 if they both folded; I knew that Jim would be sweating
a raise from Nolan if his ace was unpaired - and that Nolan would be looking
at a dead Ace and someone who had raised into TWO Aces). Sure enough Jim
sweated 20 seconds and folded... and then Nolan sweated another 20 seconds
and folded too! Peter (&#34;foldem&#34;&#39;s brother) had been watching over my shoulder
for about 20 hands, and that was the only time I heard him flinch after the
hand had been settled...
&lt;p&gt;
I finished third... I caught absolutely no paint, no pairs for a stretch of
10 or 15 hands, and my stack dwindled to slightly smaller than 1/3 while they
chopped all of my forced bring-ins to both be slightly higher than me...
my last hand was a split pair of 8s against Nolan&#39;s Ace up - again I had the
bring-in and made it a full-bet to go; Jim folded a queen or jack, Nolan
raised with his Ace and I re-raised... it only took another pair of raises and
I was all-in; Nolan turned up a no-pair Ace with side paint... on fifth street
I was two-paired (8s and 6s) and he had paired his Ace; I got no more help -
his 6th street was a brick, but he caught a third Ace to send me home with
the third place plaque.  If the money and over-all jacket hadn&#39;t both been
settled, I surely would have folded right out on that hand. Nolan wound
up winning; I&#39;m sure we&#39;ll read about it, but just the same, Congrats!
&lt;p&gt;
I had a hooting-super-good weekend; when they were writing out my ticket
to take to the booth after both of my bustouts they asked me for my birthday
(it was Saturday) and were delighted that I had done so well for the weekend.
&lt;p&gt;
Again, thanks to all; I&#39;m looking forward to the next one.
&lt;p&gt;
-prm</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: TIGER123</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_tiger/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 1997 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_tiger/</guid>
      <description>prelude - &#34;dealer&#39;s choice&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
on wednesday night, peter and stephanie secor, their friend jim
lane, michael mantel, scott byron, mitch firestone, and myself
attended an off-broadway play by patrick marber entitled &#34;dealer&#39;s
choice.&#34;  the action takes place in a small restaurant in london,
where every sunday night after closing, the owner hosts a poker
game in the basement.  the play is about what happens one night
when a professional poker player joins the game.
&lt;p&gt;
some good lines from the dialogue:&lt;br&gt;
1 &#34;i can&#39;t play poker tonight.  my doctor told me i have a heart
condition!&#34;&lt;br&gt;
2 &#34;you expect *justice* at the poker table?&#34;&lt;br&gt;
3 &#34;ah....a game for men of vision: omaha!&#34;&lt;br&gt;
4 &#34;you&#39;re on tilt, mugsey!&#34;  &#34;no, i&#39;m not!  i raise!!&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
one waiter in the restaurant wants to move to las vegas to become a
professional poker player.  he has visions of being comped to a
&#34;five star suite in caesar&#39;s palace!&#34;  too bad this guy doesn&#39;t realize
that poker players don&#39;t get comped to rooms (much less a suite),
and that the poker room at caesar&#39;s closed in the early 90s!!  ;)
&lt;p&gt;
one player wears an obnoxious orange-printed shirt, with a
bilious green tie.  when he donned this &#34;lucky&#34; attire, peter leaned
forward, and muttered loud enough for our group to hear,
&#34;if that guy puts on a white &#34;qb1&#34; hat, i&#39;m leaving!&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
in any event, the author is certainly a poker player!!  and i&#39;d bet that
the director is, too!  together, they work marvelously, and the play and
the performances were superb!!  if you ever get a chance to see this,
don&#39;t miss it!
&lt;p&gt;
-------------------&lt;br&gt;
thursday
&lt;p&gt;
mitch and i meet in the port authority bus terminal for the 3:00 pm bus
to resorts.  peter secor is a no-show.  we&#39;re about 45 minutes out of
atlantic city when i hear an advertisement on my walkman radio for a
bar in tom&#39;s river, new jersey (&#34;the sportsman&#34;), which actually features
the &#34;qb1&#34; online interactive game!!  as many of you know, i usually wear
a white baseball cap with a red &#34;qb1&#34; on it.  i won the hat playing trivia
online from a group in california (ntn - national trivia network) that
pipes live interactive trivia games into bars and hotels throughout the
country.  when there is a live football game (such as monday night
football),
ntn runs the qb1 interactive game instead of the trivia games!  this is
the
first time i have ever heard a bar advertise the game!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
we arrive at resorts at about 5:30 pm, and check into our room.  the
thursday
night smoker isn&#39;t until 8:00 pm, so what are we going to do until then?
duh.....play some poker, perhaps?  mitch and i are seated at two different
5/10 stud games at the taj mahal, and we both book a win at our first
poker
session of the weekend!  yay!    :)
&lt;p&gt;
all right!!  the safari steakhouse is located on the convention floor of
the taj mahal (one floor above the casino).  when we arrive at the bar in
the lounge adjacent to the restaurant, jazbo burns is distributing our
individually-customized weekend packages - name tags, schedules, entrance
tickets, etc.  we&#39;re all seated in a corner of the restaurant at three
tables.
22 people actually show up for the dinner (out of 24 who swore they would
attend).  it doesn&#39;t take very long for the boys to fire up their claros,
panatellas and magnificos!  and it doesn&#39;t take very long for some other
patrons of the restaurant to complain, either!  the restaurant manager
quietly asks us to tone things down a bit, and the boys nod their
acceptance.
but nothing is going to stop messrs. fruchter, kramer, et al., from
enjoying
their stogies at a smoker dinner....   };)   so the request is otherwise
ignored!  peter secor favors some very special people with hats emblazoned
with their nicknames below the acronym &#34;a.d.b&#34;.....i kept on trying to
figure out what &#34;a.d.b.&#34; meant, but i was just too drunk.....
&lt;p&gt;
virtually everyone (with one or two exceptions) really enjoys dinner!  and
just as we&#39;re finishing dinner, some surprise guests show up!  tom gitto
(taj mahal poker room manager), tony marino (poker casino host), and ron
garvey (shift supervisor), enter the restaurant carring bags of
promotional
gifts for all of us!!  the bags contain taj mahal hats, taj mahal
t-shirts,
a copy of mike caro&#39;s &#34;fundamental secrets of poker&#34;, two souveneir decks
of
cards, and some promotional literature!  wtg tommy, tony and ron!
nolan dalla calculates the over/under for the dinner tab at $1225, but
doesn&#39;t
get anyone to play.  the actual tab was #1300.
hehehehehe...and although &#34;atlarge&#34; was actually held at resorts, i
spotted
an awful lot of atlarge name tags in the taj mahal poker room.....
&lt;p&gt;
after dinner, mitch and i play some more poker, but we retire to our room
to crack open the new bottle of macallan&#39;s single malt scotch which i&#39;ve
carefully tucked into my bag....
&lt;p&gt;
-------------&lt;br&gt;
friday&lt;br&gt;
&#34;through the looking glass&#34;, or &#34;mitch and tiger&#39;s adventures in slotland&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
trump castle and harrah&#39;s (both located in the marina district) have been
running a guaranteed no-lose slot promotion for the last several months.
at harrah&#39;s, you are guaranteed reimbursement up to $100 if you play slots
for 60 minutes.  at the castle, you are guaranteed reimbursement up to
$100
if you play slots for 30 minutes.  friday morning, we take the jitney bus
to
the marina, and get out at the castle.  first thing to do is get
breakfast!  :)
during breakfast, we solemnly pledge to be lifelong equal partners in this
slot promotion (which should last a few hours, anyway).  after getting our
trump castle cards, we each buy $80 of $1 slot tokens, and $20 of quarters
(which we&#39;ll use to complete the 30 minutes if we run out of tokens).
now,
the hard part.  what machines shall we play?  we&#39;ve been advised that, for
the
purpose of this promotion, we should avoid the progressive slots, and
those
machines that offer large back-end payoffs, in favor of those machines
that
offer more and larger payoffs for small wins on the front-end.
&lt;p&gt;
i feel like one of those decrepit old ladies, as we wander up and down the
rows of slot machines.  which machine has the prettiest front?  which
machine
has the nicest-sounding &#34;dings&#34;?  we finally sit down at two adjacent
&#34;double
diamond&#34; machines, which each take a maximum of two tokens. i&#39;d reproduce
the payoff schedule for you, but how compulsive a note-taker do you think
i
am, anyhow?
&lt;p&gt;
we dump our $80 in tokens into plastic buckets.  we&#39;ll play from the
buckets,
and leave any winnings in the hoppers.  mitch carefully writes down the
time
in five-minute increments - if we can&#39;t do anything at these machines
within
ten minutes, it&#39;s &#34;goodbye, double diamond!&#34;  we&#39;re almost ready!  we
synchronize
our watches (okokok...mitch synchronizes his watch - i don&#39;t wear one!)
and
at exactly 12:55 pm, we each drop two one-dollar tokens into the slot.
the
wheels spin, but nothing happens.  we&#39;re determined to learn the best way
to
drop tokens into the slot.  i try give each token a half-flip, and mitch
is
experimenting dropping the tokens from different heights, which range from
.01 inch to all the way up to 3/4 inch.
&lt;p&gt;
i&#39;ve played about eight or ten pulls, when something happens!  i&#39;ve won
$20!
yay!!  of course, i do my best to duplicate the exact half-flip i just
used,
and sure enough!  two pulls later, i win another $10!!  yay!!
unfortunately,
mitch is still on the schneid.  and three minutes later (i&#39;ve perfected
the
half-flip by now), i hit a winner!  bells start to ring, and tokens start
to
drop into the hopper!!  i&#39;ve just won a $320 payoff!!  as the tokens
continue
to drop, mitch tells me that i better get another bucket!  we don&#39;t want
the
damned machine to jam as it is paying!!  i walk away for a moment, and
spot
another bucket in a nearby row.  and as i&#39;m walking back, bells start to
ring
and i hear the lovely clink of tokens dropping into mitch&#39;s hopper!!
yay!!!
he&#39;s hit the very same $320 payoff!!!  and if his wheel had taken an
additional
1/32 of a turn, his payoff would have been $1600!!  mitch needs another
bucket,
too!!  but before we can get one, his machine jams!!  lol!!!!  eventually,
i
find a slot attendant, who opens his machine, clears the chute, and the
rest
of mitch&#39;s money comes pouring down into the hopper!!
&lt;p&gt;
rofl!!  we&#39;ve played for exactly 8 minutes!  and we cash out for a net
total win of $611!!  mr jitney is waiting for us at the front door, and we
decide to bag the side trip to harrah&#39;s!!
&lt;p&gt;
we check out the scene at the blackjack and craps tournament in a private
room on the dining floor of resorts.  there&#39;s lots of folks there, and we
greet some old friends, and meet some new ones!  :)  but it&#39;s time for
some
poker.  not much doing in the resorts room, so it&#39;s across the street to
the
taj mahal for a couple hours, and then we play some more poker at resorts!
and then it&#39;s time for the reception!  this isn&#39;t anything special, but i
manage to drink a couple beers, so it couldn&#39;t have been all that bad....
we&#39;re asked to fill out some psychological survey for a grad student.  i
didn&#39;t see the point of the survey, which was all about current risk,
future
risk and lotteries.
&lt;p&gt;
back to the poker room.  i watch jim karlinski play a hand of 1-5 7-stud.
he&#39;s made a diamond flush on 6th street and raises an obvious straight.
but
jim is re-raised by another guy who&#39;s also showing three diamonds
(including
the ace).  jim calls.  jim checks blind, the ace of diamonds bets, and jim
calls blind.  the ace shows a diamond flush to the ace.  jim faces his
hole
cards, and says, &#34;yeah, i got a diamond flush, too....&#34;  but jim doesn&#39;t
notice that his rivercard has made a gutshot straightflush! i lean over
the
table and say &#34;seven, eight, nine, ten, jack of diamonds!  that&#39;s a
straight-
flush!&#34; just as the dealer turns over jim&#39;s hand and mucks it.  but the
guy
with the ace flush saw the hand, and conceded the pot to jim.  well, jim
was
prolly thinking about his overdue term paper.....   ;)
&lt;p&gt;
mitch and i meet up with a friend of ours from home, who was in town for a
trivia convention at another hotel.  we head off to the tropicana, where i
meet with poker room manager doug dillon.  i  tell him with regret that,
although i really do love the management, staff and players at the
tropicana,
and although i really do think that the tropicana poker room is the nicest
in town, my records show that i make an awful lot more money playing at
the
taj mahal....  :::sigh:::
&lt;p&gt;
after dinner, mitch and i play at the taj mahal for a couple hours, and
manage to consume *many* scotches before we decide to cash in for the
night!
well....mebbe we might have had one or two more nips from the single malt
bottle before we turned off the lights....
&lt;p&gt;
----------------&lt;br&gt;
saturday
&lt;p&gt;
saturday 10:00 was the scheduled time for the start of the no-limit hold
&#39;em
tournament.  since (as we all know) &#34;i don&#39;t play hold &#39;em!&#34;, i&#39;ve agreed
to
track the bust-outs for the purpose of calculating the overall champion.
i&#39;ll post a separate report about the tourney, and the important hands at
the final table, later in the week.
&lt;p&gt;
after the tournament, i walk across the street to play some 5/10 stud at
the
taj mahal.  i&#39;m seated almost immediately, and proceed to get hit with the
deck unlike any other time in my life.  within 45 minutes, i make kings
full,
aces full, 3 jacks, kings up, aces up, 3 sevens (which was my only losing
hand), rolled 9s and kings up.  i cash out for a $376 win.  lol...later
that
night, a friend tells me that the woman who took my seat won more than
$600
in less than three hours....
&lt;p&gt;
the saturday banquet was held in a private room upstairs at resorts.  the
food
was okay, but this event (alone of all the atlarge events) wasn&#39;t worth
it.
nevertheless, spending time with the rest of the atlarge crowd was fun!!
jazbo was given a free ticket to &#34;target&#34; later this year, in recognition
of all
the many hours of hard work he did in organizing the event. and this
writer
was honored with a bottle of dewar&#39;s scotch for organizing the smoker.
(thanks so much, gang!!)  bill alan was awarded an honorary &#34;a.d.b&#34; hat,
by
virtue of the fact that, when last spotted at 4 am on friday night at the
craps table, bill announced that it was time to *really* start drinking!
:)
&lt;p&gt;
mitch and i play some poker at the taj mahal.  after a while, i wander
through
the room, and tell every single rgp&#39;er i see that i&#39;m going to be pouring
scotch in my room starting immediately, and that everyone is invited!  and
i wander over to resorts and make the same announcement!!  but peter
secor,
richard sooy, and a bunch of the boys have got a &#34;rocks and beers&#34; game
going at resorts, and there&#39;s no way i&#39;m gonna pull any of those
characters
off the table!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
but nolan dalla, russell rosenblum and mark horowitz show up to join mitch
and i for some scotch, some stories, some discussions of poker ethics, and
some good conversation!  mark wants to tell a &#34;bad beat&#34; story, and i tell
&lt;p&gt;
him, &#34;the scotch is free...but i charge one dollar to listen to a bad beat
story!&#34;  lol...he actually stands up, and reaches into his pocket for a
buck!!
ok!  here it is!  he&#39;s playing hold &#39;em and plays a 10-9.  the flop comes
7 8 j rainbow, giving him the nut straight!  the jack pairs on the turn,
and
a third jack hits on the river.  some fool wins the pot with a pair of
kings
in the pocket for jacks full of kings!  ::::sigh::::
later, russell says that the ultimate act of poker deception is to tell
your
opponents exactly what cards you have!  i laugh out loud, and promise to
send
russell a copy of my &#34;i think i have three aces!&#34; post from last december!
mitch and i kick our guests out at 3 am, because tomorrow is the 7-stud
tournament...and i intend to win it!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
----------&lt;br&gt;
sunday
&lt;p&gt;
the tournament is to start at 10 am and mitch and i leave the room at 9.
i need a breakfast before i start playing poker.  we get to the resorts
poker room at about 9:50, and i wander around, wishing everyone good luck!
i&#39;m seated at a pretty tough table!  tom mchugh, jerry gerner, jazbo
burns,
palmer chappell, andy bloch and ray didonato are all staring at me when i
walk over to the table.  thank goodness the guy sitting in seat #6 isn&#39;t
there - otherwise i&#39;d have seven players gunning for me.  in fact, #6
doesn&#39;t
show up at all, and we happily take his ante and bring-in each time!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
as a member of &#34;a.d.b.&#34;, i&#39;m automatically entered in pool between a.d.b.
and wednesday night poker.  each group has six (i think) horses in the
tournament, and whichever group has the last man standing wins.  as an
additional side bet, dave fruchter and i agree that first man out will buy
the scotch next time we meet!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
i don&#39;t remember too many hands from the tournament.  i win one or two
hands
and lose one or two hands.  by the time we get to 15/30, i&#39;m not in very
good
shape chipwise.  and by the time we get to 25/50, i&#39;m short-stacked.  :(
but then a key hand develops.  ray (on my immediate right) is the
bring-in.
jerry raises.  jazbo re-raises.  i see pocket rockets, and make it three
bets.
jerry and jazbo call.  i bet the hand on 4th street, and i&#39;m all-in on
fifth.
i make a second pair on sixth street, and take down the money with two
pair,
to restore my stack to respectable size.
&lt;p&gt;
my table is broken down, and i manage to hold on for another round or two.
i make a bad play, and let david meeks take a pot from me - but two or
three
hands later, i outplay him and steal a pot with about five big bets in it.
ray didonato makes a play at me, and i don&#39;t bet my small pair on fifth
street.  he makes a pair of kings on sixth to win the hand.  ::::sigh::::
&lt;p&gt;
nevertheless, i&#39;m in ok shape (about t900) at the break. and a.d.b. has
nolan
dalla, bruce kramer, bill alan and myself alive, but wednesday night poker
ohly has palmer chappell!  some time after the break, at 150/300, i only
have about t500 left.  i&#39;m the bring-in with the four of hearts up.  fold,
&lt;p&gt;
fold, fold, but palmer chappell raises with a nine. i see an ace of hearts
and a jack of hearts in my hole, and re-raise.  palmer makes it three
bets,
and i re-raise all-in.  yeah.  he&#39;s got a pair of nines. i&#39;m told that i&#39;m
a small dog in this situation.  palmer makes nines and tens on fourth
street,
but i get a deuce.  i get a five on fifth street, and an ace on sixth!  a
trey gives me a wheel, and any other pair is aces up!  my rivercard is
another four!!  all right!!!  but palmer gets another nine to make nines
full and i&#39;m outta there!
&lt;p&gt;
bruce kramer and bill alan go down soon thereafter, and it&#39;s nolan against
palmer on the side bet!  when palmer busts out, adb rooooooooools!  and
the
ten bucks i win in this side bet just might pay for the scotch i have to
buy
david fruchter!  ;)
&lt;p&gt;
after the tournament, i play some 5/10/15 stud at resorts with john walsh,
and finish the weekend with another winning session!
&lt;p&gt;
i had a great time!!  mitch had a great time!!  i think everybody had a
great time!!  once again, many thanks to jazbo for making it happen!!
let&#39;s do it again next year!!   :)
and i&#39;m looking forward to meeting the nevadans and west coasters at this
year&#39;s barge!!
&lt;p&gt;
tiger</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Tom McHugh</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_tom_mchugh/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 1997 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_tom_mchugh/</guid>
      <description>This was a great weekend and fantastic job was done by jazbo and tiger
to put this event together, CONGRATES. The poker was great and I even
managed to plus out for the weekend and finish in the money in the NL
holdem tour. (10). One memorable hand in the N.L.H. a player I&#39;ll give
him a fictitious name &#34;Eric&#34; ( he, he) has been stealing the blinds
with  $100 bets at less 7to10 times I look down AcKh I got him now, over
the top $300 , Eric push his stacks in I call ( had enough to call and
still be in the game) Eric lays down AA oh S--- in deep dodo flop xcc-cc
club flush Eric&#39;s face goes white Iam amazed the poker God smiled on me
.Eric  set me up perfect I just escaped. A news flash they discover a
new illness amoung the players attending ATLARGE 2 P.B.I. poker
brainitis.
&lt;p&gt;
I know at lest 10 who have it. Last but not less the &#34;Resorts&#34; poker
room staff Jerry Bear and Ed Cooper and the dealers did a great job. I
had a wonderful time and met a whole bunch of great people hope to see
you all soon.
&lt;p&gt;
Tom M (quie)</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Yet another from TIGER123</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_tiger3/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 1997 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1997/1997_trip_report_tiger3/</guid>
      <description>hiya, folks!&lt;br&gt;
here it is!&lt;br&gt;
the long-awaited report on the &#34;atlarge2 no-limit texas hold &#39;em
tourney&#34;, by your intrepid atlantic city reporter, tiger123! :)
i would have posted this earlier...but i did post my own atlarge
trip report, and (as i am sometimes loathe to admit) i really do
have one or two other things to do in life besides write trip reports!
but, it&#39;s here!&lt;br&gt;
it&#39;s got frills...it&#39;s got bells and whistles...and even alliterative
allusions to allegory a la nolan dalla!  just a typical report!&lt;br&gt;
enjoy!  :)&lt;br&gt;
tiger&lt;br&gt;
-------------&lt;br&gt;
my notes don&#39;t show the total number of participants in this tourney -
i seem to recall that there were 63 entries.  last year&#39;s winner,
peter secor, managed to show up on time for the start this year!
:::ding, ding! collusion alert!!:::
earlier, peter and i had agreed to swap 5% of our tournament action!
i had 5% of him in the no-limit hold &#39;em, and he had 5% of me in the
stud tournament.  lol!  neither of us came close to cashing in!
but i don&#39;t play hold &#39;em and he doesn&#39;t play stud!  :)
:::ding, ding!  end of alert!  false alarm!:::
however, k-man lemke and matt treasur (who was my nominee for honorary
a.d.b.) both tried to &#34;pull a secor&#34;, and slept through the start of
the tourney.  but they were awoken by our host, jerry bear. they showed
up about 15-20 minutes after we started.  jerry doesn&#39;t have my touch
in waking up tournament players; neither k-man nor matt made it to the
final table!
&lt;p&gt;
jazbo had prepared a very special prize for the first player to win a
hand with a &#34;presto&#34;!!  sure enough!  on the very first hand, andy bloch
calls a raise from david fruchter, who holds A-10 offsuit.  the cards on
the board are Q 2 3 - 6 - 9, and it&#39;s checked down.  andy&#39;s superb play
in calling a raise with lousy pair of fives is rewarded by noisy
acclamations of &#34;presto!!!&#34;, and jazbo&#39;s secret prize is revealed to be a
copy of &#34;casino poker&#34; by that well-known and highly-respected poker
expert (:::koff! koff!:::), john patrick!   };)
&lt;p&gt;
and on the same first hand, steve &#34;bozo&#34; blackstock is the first player
knocked out of the tournament.  he is rewarded by an autographed copy of
lee jones&#39; &#34;winning low limit hold &#39;em&#34;, generously provided by chuck
weinstock of conjelco.
&lt;p&gt;
let&#39;s skip to the final table!   here is the lineup and the chip count:
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;table border=0 cellpadding=4&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td&gt;1&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;jay sipelstein&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;2200&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td&gt;2&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;jim strydio&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;4300&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td&gt;3&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;tom mchugh&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;500&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td&gt;4&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;paul mcmullin&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;5500&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td&gt;5&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;peter segal&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;5900&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td&gt;6&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;andy bloch&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;2100&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td&gt;7&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;ray didonato&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;900&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td&gt;8&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;bruce kramer&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;1900&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td&gt;9&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;ed baker&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;1000&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td&gt;10&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;al frampton&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;7900&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;/table&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
the blinds are 300/500.  on the very first hand at the final table,
ray goes all-in with 10 9 offsuit.  jim, holding K Q suited, calls.
tom puts in all his chips with J 7 suited (different suit). the flop
is A 2 3 rainbow; the turn is an offsuit 5; and a 9 on the river keeps
ray alive.  tom collects $65!  wtg tom!
&lt;p&gt;
on the very next hand, jim (having done so well with a K Q suited in the
previous hand) puts it all in with a Q J suited!  paul, who holds A 10
offsuit, calls.  jim flops a pair and stays alive.
&lt;p&gt;
pretty soon, the most infamous hand of the tournament was played.  andy
has been busily studying and absorbing john patrick&#39;s advice.  andy&#39;s a
harvard law student!  he knows what to do with 5 5 !  he puts it all in!!
and al calls him!!!  naturally, the flop comes A A A.  the turn is a 4.
and of course, the river is the fourth A.  al turns over a pair of 10s,
and andy stands up with $97.50. wtg andy!  mitch (bfb) firestone notes
that &#34;he who lives by the presto, dies by the presto!&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
later in that round, ed is all-in in the big blind for T200.  he&#39;s got a
9 4 offsuit.  jim and ray call.  the flop is Qd Jh 3s.  ray goes all-in,
and jim mucks.  ray turns over J 10.  the turn of Kc gives ed a gut-shot,
but the river 6h ends his chances.  ed wins $130.  wtg ed!
&lt;p&gt;
on the very next hand, paul goes all-in for T1000.  peter calls.  bruce
goes all-in for T1100, and peter tosses in another black chip.  paul&#39;s
got a pair of tens, and both peter and bruce turn over A Q. the flop
is K 10 8, giving them a gut-shot, but the turn 4 and river 2 lets paul...
:::ding, ding! alliteration alert!:::
triple through with trips!  :)
:::end of alert!:::
&lt;p&gt;
the blinds go up to 400/800. al raises T1600 with A 10 offsuit.  paul
raises
all-in T2500 with a pair of eights, and al calls.  the flop is a rainbow
J 9 2; the turn is a 4; but the river brings an ace, and paul has to say
goodbye to cash in a ticket worth $162.50.  wtg paul!
&lt;p&gt;
bruce is short-stacked, and puts in his last black chip with Q 3.  ray
calls with K 10. the flop helps ray with J J 10, but the rest of the cards
are A - 6, and bruce wins sixth place and $195!  wtg bruce!
&lt;p&gt;
on the next hand, al raises T2000 and jim calls.  the flop is a J 7 6
rainbow.  jim checks, al bets another T2000, and jim mucks.
&lt;p&gt;
pretty soon, peter is the small blind, and ray is the big blind.  sippy
calls all-in with a pair of deuces.  peter calls.  ray raises T2000, and
peter mucks.  ray shows A 6 offsuit.  the flop is J 10 8; the turn is a
bullet and the river is a king.  sippy&#39;s tournament is over, and he wins
fifth place and $227.50.  wtg sippy!
&lt;p&gt;
several hands later, peter raises T1600.  al calls in the big blind.  the
flop is 10 10 3 with two clubs.  it&#39;s check and check.  the turn is an
offsuit ace.  al bets T1000 and peter calls.  the river is the eight of
clubs, and peter bets the rest of his chips (T800).  al mucks.  peter
shows K 9 of clubs.
&lt;p&gt;
later in that round, al raises T3000 with A K suited in spades.  peter
calls in the small blind with A J suited in hearts.  the flop is Jc 8h 3h.
peter bets T2000 and al calls.  the turn is the club ace.  peter checks,
and al makes a big bet; peter calls all-in.  al&#39;s only wins are the three
remaining kings, and the deuce of hearts on the river completes peter&#39;s
flush.
&lt;p&gt;
pretty soon, ray raises T1900 on the button with J 9 offsuit.  jim calls
all-in with a pair of sevens.  the flop is Q 8 7, giving jim trips and
giving ray a gut-shot.  the turn is a 9 and the river is a jack.  ray has
made two running pair, but that doesn&#39;t beat trips.  jim is still alive!
&lt;p&gt;
the blinds go up to 500/1000.  on the very first hand of this round, jim
goes all-in with a pair of jacks.  ray calls all-in with A Q.  the cards
on the board are K 9 7 - 8 - 4.  ray wins fourth place and $260!  wtg ray!
&lt;p&gt;
several hands later, peter raises T2000 on the button.  al calls.  the
flop is Jc 7d 5d.  al makes a big bet and peter mucks.
&lt;p&gt;
next hand, peter makes a big raise on the button, but mucks when jim
re-raises all-in.
&lt;p&gt;
at this point, the stacks are about even.  somebody says something about
a split, and your humble reporter hastily computes that a three-way chop
would yield each player $704. it takes about five seconds for the three
remaining players to smile at each other and shake hands.  whew!
suddenly,
all the pressure is off, and the game is fun, again!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
pretty soon, peter raises T2000, and both al and jim call.  the flop is
Kh 10d 6c.  peter bets another T2000, and four cards hit the muck.  peter
grins and shows K 10.
&lt;p&gt;
at this point, tournament director eddie cooper announces that the blinds
would go up to 1000/2000.  he laughingly tells the players that he would
have been much softer on them (less of an increase) if they hadn&#39;t agreed
to chop!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
jim, on the button, mucks.  small blind peter calls T2000 and al checks.
flop is Kc Qh 8c.  check and check.  turn is 2h; peter checks; al bets;
peter mucks.
&lt;p&gt;
the boys trade some blinds.  al then goes all-in with A 3 offsuit.  peter
calls all-in with Q J offsuit.  flop is 7 5 3.  turn is a 6.  the river
is a king, and peter wins third place and (officially) $325.  wtg peter!
&lt;p&gt;
down to head-to-head.  the hands are fast and furious, and i don&#39;t have
anyone helping me record the cards.
&lt;p&gt;
al raises and jim calls all-in.  he&#39;s got K J offsuit.  al shows 7 6.
flop is 4 3 2; but the other two cards are queens.  jim doubles through
and takes the lead.
&lt;p&gt;
al has about T5000 in the big blind and puts it in.  jim calls.  i didn&#39;t
get the cards, but al doubles through.
&lt;p&gt;
al raises all-in with Q 2 suited in spades.  jim calls with A 5 offsuit.
cards on the board are 10s 4s 3c - 4c - 3s, and al&#39;s flush doubles his
stack again!
&lt;p&gt;
next hand, jim goes all-in, and doubles through with a pair of eights on
the turn.  jim had 10 8, and al had an ace.
&lt;p&gt;
on the final hand, jim has Q 10 offsuit.  al has 7 5.  the cards on the
board are J 5 2 - 10 - 6.  jim&#39;s pair of tens beats al&#39;s pair of fives!
al takes second place and (officially) $552.50.  wtg al!!
&lt;p&gt;
and congrats to the winner of the no-limit hold &#39;em tournament and
(officially) $1235, jim strydio!!  wtg jim!!
&lt;p&gt;
--------------&lt;br&gt;
once again, i had an awful lot of fun tracking the bust-outs in this
tournament, and even more fun sitting at the final table taking notes
on the hands.  and i had an awful lot of fun (and drank an awful lot of
scotch) throughout the entire weekend!!  oh yeah.  i won some money, too!
&lt;p&gt;
by the way, i stopped by resorts cardroom this last weekend.  the
cardroom management and staff all had very nice things to say about us.
(hehehehe...well, supervisor mark marino was still mumbling about two
wet tables from something called &#34;rocks and beers&#34;, but......)&lt;br&gt;
;)
&lt;p&gt;
let&#39;s do it again, same time, next year!!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
tiger</description>
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