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    <title>ATLARGE 1999 on BARGE.org</title>
    <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/</link>
    <description>Recent content in ATLARGE 1999 on BARGE.org</description>
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    <lastBuildDate>Fri, 02 Apr 1999 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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    <item>
      <title>ATLARGE 1999 Photos</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_pics/</link>
      <pubDate>Fri, 02 Apr 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_pics/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;
Here are Patrice&#39;s excellent snaps from ATLARGE IV.
We are fortunate that she has permission to actually
take pictures in the gaming area.
&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;div class=&#34;atlg&#34;&gt;
&lt;figure class=&#34;atlg-image&#34;&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;../1999_winners.jpg&#34;&gt;
    &lt;img loading=&#34;lazy&#34; src=&#34;../1999_winners.jpg&#34;
         alt=&#34;Kate Dumas (middle) congratulates the first and second place winners in the Fourth ATLARGE No Limit Hold&amp;#39;em Tournament: 1st place winner Linda Lewis (right) and 3rd place winner David Trinidad (left). Not pictured: 2nd place winner, Tom Goodwin.&#34;&gt; &lt;/a&gt;&lt;figcaption&gt;
            &lt;p&gt;Kate Dumas (middle) congratulates the first and second place winners in the Fourth ATLARGE No Limit Hold&#39;em Tournament: 1st place winner Linda Lewis (right) and 3rd place winner David Trinidad (left). Not pictured: 2nd place winner, Tom Goodwin.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Another from TIGER123</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_tiger2/</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_tiger2/</guid>
      <description>hiya, folks!!
&lt;p&gt;
tiger123, your atlantic city beat reporter here, with the
latest headline news about &#34;atlarge iv&#34; - rgp&#39;s annual march
gathering in the town that made diving horses famous!  complete
details will follow later this week!
&lt;p&gt;
atlarge iv was a resounding smash success!!  rgp&#39;ers kicked
butt all over the poker room and beyond!  many thanks to
the inimitable jazbo burns, who created and organized our
atlarge events, and to will espin (tropicana vice president
of poker, keno and simulcast) and his hard-working and
charming staff: poker room manager kate dumas, poker host
patrice munafo and marie mchugh, poker facility administrator.
&lt;p&gt;
the weekend started with rgp&#39;ers grabbing the top two spots
in the trop&#39;s regular 10 + 10 limit thursday hold &#39;em tourney.
scott byron (my choice for rgp&#39;er most likely to win the
wsop $10,000 championship) was one, and i&#39;ve got the other
somewhere in my notes!  congrats to both!
&lt;p&gt;
thursday night, an amazing game of 1-5 high-low stud (eight-
or-better) was spread.  eight rgp&#39;ers bought in for at least
$500 each....all in white chips!!  &#34;reds don&#39;t play!&#34; was the
password!  there had to be at least six or seven thou in
whites on the table, and cries of &#34;outgoing!&#34; and &#34;incoming!&#34;
punctuated each and every change of dealers!  :)  and every time
floorperson anita ordered a fill, the gang would dig deeper
into their pockets...so that none of the chips ever got into
the rack!  :)   your intrepid reporter had to wait for more
than three hours before he could get a seat in this game!
&lt;p&gt;
on friday, all-around good guy tom goodwin (who hasn&#39;t been
seen in atlantic city since a certain halloween evening when
a certain feline got a big surprise birthday party) had the
goods on everyone! he won the trop&#39;s regular $100 + 15 no-limit
hold &#39;em tourney and an entry to mike sexton&#39;s tournament of
champions! wtg tom!
&lt;p&gt;
the friday night smoker at the old waterway inn was one very
fine dinner!  nolan dalla and peter secor put the over/under
line at approximately **twice** the actual total bill....
and they *still* got people to bet the &#34;over&#34;!!  ;)
&lt;p&gt;
llew213, one very tough poker player, was the big winner
of rgp&#39;s saturday no-limit hold &#39;em tourney!  even though
llew says that taking her husband to see &#34;rounders&#34; was a
big mistake, she again proved that she is quite capable of
beating the pants off every male poker player who thinks
that girls can&#39;t play poker!  wtg llew!  a fellow named
tom goodwin took the second place money.  after the tourney,
llew got to play in a &#34;beat the boss&#34; $500 freeroll against
kate dumas.  katie couldn&#39;t beat llew&#39;s quads, and our musical
lady from pennsylvania added five more franklins to her
bankroll!
&lt;p&gt;
kate, patrice and marie hosted the banquet dinner on saturday.
your dauntless reporter was lucky enough to be the first one
to ask kate to sit down next to him.  what a delightful
lady she is!  a random drawing was held to give away a number
of tropicana poker club jackets and t-shirts!  and everyone
got a trop poker club wallet!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
saturday night, a &#34;mats&#34; tourney (a mini-satellite for the
rgp &#34;target&#34; satellite) was held....in an undisclosed location.
ming lee and rob jarman chopped this one up, and ming promised
that he&#39;ll be in vegas come wsop time!  :)  g&#39;luck ming!
&lt;p&gt;
late saturday night, some of the crew got the tropicana staff
to spread a 5/10 hosel game (hold &#39;em, omaha, seven stud,
seven stud/eight-or-better, and loball draw).  but the
real action was two tables away, where there was a 1-and-2
&#34;rock &#39;n&#39; beers&#34; hosel game!!  yes...there was thousands
of white chips.  yes.....reds didn&#39;t play.  yes....&#34;outgoing!&#34;
&#34;incoming!&#34;  and &#34;cocktails!!&#34; were the words du jour!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
on sunday, dave fruchter knocked out your much-humbled reporter in
the second round, and then beat up on everybody else and took
first place in the rgp seven-card stud tourney.  all-around
good guy tom goodwin took fifth, and won the all-around best
player award!  but in the &#34;beat the boss&#34; freeroll, kate showed
dave that poker executives know how to play poker, too, and
kate was the boss of this freeroll!  :)
&lt;p&gt;
mitch firestone and i caught a 6 pm bus back to the big
apple sunday evening!  but before we left, we spotted
llew213 as the big stack in the five remaining players of
the tropicana regular $40 +10 seven-stud/eight-or-better
tourney....  whatta player!
&lt;p&gt;
that&#39;s all for now!  stay tuned for the videotape at 11!
&lt;p&gt;
:)
&lt;p&gt;
tiger</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Bill Alan</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_bill_alan/</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_bill_alan/</guid>
      <description>&lt;b&gt;THURSDAY, MARCH 18&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
I left Avon at 9 AM and had the best trip experience I&#39;ve ever had to AC.  I
live about 5 miles from I-84 and, once on it, I didn&#39;t hit a single snag and
it was interstate/expressway all the way.
&lt;p&gt;
I was determined not to smoke cigarettes this trip and I did just fine until I
got to the Trop and found a LOOOOOONG line at check-in.  Arti, who bears a
remarkable resemblance to the devil, was in line just before me and of course
he was smoking.  Then, of course, so was I.
&lt;p&gt;
Ah wilderness.
&lt;p&gt;
But, after a quick shower, I was in the poker room to stay most of the rest of
my 4-day weekend.  Kathy Raymond at Foxwoods has been asking me to advise her
on ways that she can improve the operation there.  These notes will go to her.
&lt;p&gt;
Without question the Trop&#39;s poker room is the very best I have ever played in.
(And the list is very very long . . . starting with Binions in 1952.)  Here
are some of the innovations I have never seen before and/or procedures I have
never seen done as well.  
&lt;p&gt;
- A POKER ROOM CARD, distinct from the casino&#39;s general comp card, complete
with my photo and bar-coded identity.  Once every hour (half-hour?) someone
comes around with a hand-held bar code reader and registers your play. At
Foxwoods, as at most casinos, you sign in and you are comped until you sign
out.  But if you forget to sign out you lose your comp for the whole session.
You can track your comp credit at The Trop through a swipe reader near the
sign-in desk, write yourself out a food (or other) comp electronically, etc.
(I simply let mine ride for 4 days and got a welcome credit on my room bill.)
&lt;p&gt;
- When I got my card I met the lovely &amp; charming Patrice Munafo for the
first time.  If I were about half my present age and not spoken for I would
kill for her.
&lt;p&gt;
- TV MONITORS all over the card room, that let you see your standing on any
game you&#39;ve signed in for.  Beats the hell out of a distant grease pencil
board at Foxwoods or a clipboard at places like Binions and the Mirage.
&lt;p&gt;
- A BEEPER you can take with you if you leave the card room, which will signal
you back for a game whenever your name gets to the top of a list. (You can
also give them your room number and they will lock up a seat and call you.)
&lt;p&gt;
- DEALERS KEEP THEIR OWN TOKES, which is not of course exclusive to the Trop,
but would be a welcome change at FW.  I&#39;d never been to the Trop B4, so I
can&#39;t make any comparison to the pool-toked days there, but I have never seen
dealers work so hard and so well as those I saw this weekend.  Q.E.D.
&lt;p&gt;
- GENEROUS COMPS.  My play (mostly at $10-20) earned me $2.11 an hour.  I&#39;m
used to $1.
&lt;p&gt;
Immediately apparent also was the excellence of the floorpersons.  I have long
been fed up with such people who remain aloof and disinterested, particularly
in the pit games.  In most casinos they look right through you in the crap
pit; you can wait a half hour B4 they pick up your comp card. At the Trop they
are right there for you.  I have never EVER seen a better card room floor.
Outstanding among a great group was &#34;T.K.&#34; who treated me like his best
friend.
&lt;p&gt;
One small concern.  I like to take a poker break and (usually) pay heavily for
it in the pits.  I do wish there were crap and blackjack tables closer to the
poker room.  
&lt;p&gt;
I started out at $5-10 hold&#39;em while waiting for a seat to open up in $10-20,
which happened in about 15 minutes.  Don&#39;t you love it when your first session
is a winning one?  After a few hours I was up about $700, a very respectable
win at those stakes.
&lt;p&gt;
The best thing about RGP events, of course, is the huge number of people you
know there.  George Wattman, in his trip report, said it perfectly: &#34;At dinner
Saturday night, Nolan and I talked about why these are so much fun.
I told him that I thought each one was an investment in the next event as the
more people you know, the better each event becomes.&#34;  So it was for me. As a
Thursday arrival I was there earlier than many others and I delighted in
seeing old friends as they first walked into the room.  And, of course, we all
kept looking for ways to get an &#34;all-RGP&#34; event going.
&lt;p&gt;
It happened in a major fun way:  I believe it was Fold&#39;em (Who else?) who got
a magnificent $1-5 hi-lo stud game going. And, since Peter always buys in for
$500 in white checks to build his incredible castles, we ALL did. We must have
had at least $3000 in whites on the table.  It became apparent that we would
have a castle-building competition when Steve &#34;PAIN&#34; Smith started going head
to head with Fold&#39;em.  I tried for a while but I&#39;m not in their league . . .
so I simply kept a huge mound of whites in front of me.  Not pretty, but still
impressive.
&lt;p&gt;
&#34;Toke the dealers!&#34; is the rule in Rocks &amp; Beers but I&#39;d never seen it B4 in a
quasi-real ring game.  We soon began to mass toke the dealers as they entered
and left their downs, giving them a $16 base to build on for each down.
Fold&#39;em came up with a major innovation:  Cut $1 from every pot to award to
the dealer who made Ming Lee the bring-in.  It took a while.  I think the
tally was in the teens B4 Ming caught a deuce of clubs . . . and the then-
current dealer got toked all of it.  
&lt;p&gt;
We look, of course, for any kind of silly reason to toke.  &#34;Toke the pretty
dealer!&#34; &#34;Toke the short dealer!&#34;  &#34;Toke the tall dealer!&#34;  But, gentlemen
all, nobody ever ventured to embarrass or insult a dealer with something like
&#34;Toke the shitty dealer!&#34;  Such behavior is cause for being drum-rolled out of
RGP events.
&lt;p&gt;
Finally I just had to leave all this fun to get in some serious negative EV
play.  You don&#39;t cash (or color) in on a white check game; you sell your
checks to someone else in the game to keep them IN the game.  I ended up with
about $300, and I truly believe half of the $200 I left behind ended up in the
dealer toke box.  Wonderful fun!
&lt;p&gt;
Dan Benjamin, a new friend, and I made the long schlepp over to the dice pit
where we were both playing line &amp; come bets for $10 and taking $50 odds.  I
had a very decent run . . . maybe + $800 or so . . . when Dan decided to call
it a night and pocket his considerable winnings.  So I moved over to Blackjack
to test a betting system I&#39;ve been thinking about:  Start with 3 units.  If
you win, pull back 2 . . . increasing your bet to 4.  Keep progressing with a
one-unit addition to your bet until you break, then start the procedure over
again.  Of course you play basic strategy, but I have long since given up
counting as it takes the fun out of the game for me and gives me a headache.
&lt;p&gt;
Now I know this progression is (a) too conservative and (b) as doomed as any
other progressive betting system.  But I had a hell of run. At one point, for
instance, I had progressed up to an 8-unit bet and I split 8&#39;s and drew a 3 on
each . . . doubled on both of them and ended up winning 32 units.
&lt;p&gt;
Then something sad happened.
&lt;p&gt;
There were two young men playing, with one of them on third base. Both of them
were obviously deaf mutes.  The guy on 3rd base knocked over a clear soft
drink and left a big puddle on the bet circle so the floor had to close down
that spot until it dried out.  He asked the young man to move to another table
since this one was full and, of course, the young man couldn&#39;t understand him.
(He thought, I suppose, that he was being punished for spilling the drink.)
Then a big hassle developed with the player (a big guy) getting very upset.
Finally they called security.  In the meantime I got up and gave the young man
my seat and everything was calmed down.  When security got there the floor and
the dealer told him the problem was solved.
&lt;p&gt;
I spoke to security and told him what had happened, with a pretty strong
suggestion that both the floor and the dealer had behaved like assholes by not
realizing that this poor guy simply could not understand what they were
saying.  A few minutes later a &#34;suit&#34; came to the table, apologized to the
young man, and the dealer and floorperson apparently were asked to leave the
pit.
&lt;p&gt;
It&#39;s now about 4 AM and I leave the action for the day.  Up about $1300.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;FRIDAY, MARCH 19&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Have you ever had a $32 breakfast?
&lt;p&gt;
I am a room service nut, so at 4 AM I order a rather ordinary breakfast to be
served at 11 AM.  I didn&#39;t even look at the menu, but just asked for eggs,
bacon, home fries, croissants, OJ &amp; coffee . . . items you expect to find on
any menu.  Service was exactly on time, everything was hot and quite good, but
the tab was $32.
&lt;p&gt;
Wow!!!  So much for room service!  The next 3 mornings I got a danish, coffee,
&amp; juice for about $5 at the cart in the lounge just off the poker room.
&lt;p&gt;
I played $10-20 hold&#39;em until 4 PM and left to play in the Trop&#39;s NL Hold&#39;em
tournament ($100 + $15 buy-in).  Did poorly, but didn&#39;t really have my heart
in it because I didn&#39;t want to miss the smoker at 7:30.
&lt;p&gt;
To the smoker, then, with about 35 people attending. I sat next to Mitch
Kramer who has become one of my best poker friends ever since the first FARGO.
Across from us were Alan Richter and his lovely friend Nanette. The food was
delicious in the extreme.  There is no place on earth you can get a true
Chesapeake Bay crab cake unless you are reasonably close to the Bay itself.
Small sad note:  I took the over on the total tab which Nolan &amp; Fold&#39;em had
set at $1700.  It came in at about half that.
&lt;p&gt;
Back to the Trop poker room and we got a baby pot limit hold&#39;em game going . .
. $1 - $2 - $5 to go.
&lt;p&gt;
Almost immediately I went on a wild ride.  I had bought in at $500 and, within
an hour, had tripled that amount.  It got to the point where I was seeing
virtually every flop and connecting on many of them.  But then my pot limit
nemesis, Raydon, got into the game.  I did fake him out of one or two pots,
but nobody I play with plays this game better than Ray. Remembering how he
skunked me for about $1400 on just two hands at the last FARGO I had enough
sense to get out B4 he took all my checks.  But I still cashed out about $800
winners.
&lt;p&gt;
And, needless to say, Fold&#39;em and I had to shoot some dice. Memory fails me
but I must have taken a bad beat because when we quit at about 0430 I counted
down my stash up in the room and was ahead by only $1100.  I think I will
speak to my shrink about my perverse obsession for the bones.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;SATURDAY, MARCH 20&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Of course there was little sleep after yesternight&#39;s craps action.  A hot soak
and a quick shower, plus a hit of Gingko and a lot of black coffee got me
going though.
&lt;p&gt;
I should, at this point, make it clear that I am not good at remembering hand
details unless I am making notes . . . which I never do unless I am reporting.
But tiger&#39;s excellent coverage, posted earlier, would make my poor efforts
redundant so I refer you back to him and will only post some personal
observations here.
&lt;p&gt;
The Hold&#39;em tournament started out very well for me. Early on, I caught a
monster hand against PRM and ??? and managed to nearly triple through  and
eliminate both of them.  I think it was quad aces, which I did river at some
point in the tournament, but I&#39;m not certain.
&lt;p&gt;
Things went quite smoothly after that but after the break I got involved with
a flopped set I simply couldn&#39;t lay down and it was curtains for Billy.  By
this time the tournament was down to two tables so I stuck around to watch the
fascinating final table.
&lt;p&gt;
Tiger made mention of Pete &#34;Tray Racer&#34; Segal&#39;s tenacious play.  At one point
Pete was down to a single black chip.  Fifteen minutes later he had a double
stack . . . roughly $4000.  Never has &#34;a chip and a chair&#34; been so perfectly
demonstrated to me.  Pete has made the final table at more RGP events I&#39;ve
attended than anyone else, including BOTH final tables at the first FARGO in
1997.  But alas, he couldn&#39;t sustain it.
&lt;p&gt;
When it got down to the final 3 LLew was in a commanding lead over Tom Goodwin
and Dave Trinidad.  A deal was made.  LLew wanted $1100 out of the $2627
available, and Tom &amp; Dave agreed to split the balance even though Tom had a
slight edge over Dave.  LLew also offered to throw in the TOC qualification
since she was already qualified.  So was Tom.
&lt;p&gt;
This is as good a place as any to mention that Tom Goodwin gets my vote for
Mr. Congeniality in our group.  He has never appeared to me to be a &#34;money&#34;
player so much as he is in it for the pure pleasure of playing.  It&#39;s
contagious.  Whenever you sit at a table, including a dinner table, with Tom
you are bound to have a swell time.
&lt;p&gt;
LLew&#39;s offer to throw in the TOC qualification presented an interesting
ethics situation.  The qualification cannot be sold or transferred . . . thus
it MUST be won.  And, since LLew and Tom both had an existing qualification,
it would have been an easy call to say &#34;What the hell; give it to Dave&#34;. But,
of course, both LLew and Tom were honor-bound to play their hearts out and
make Dave EARN the qualification by winning all the checks. (Plus there was
one more thing at stake . . . the freeroll with Kate Dumas for $500, which
would go to the &#34;official&#34; winner.) As it turned out it didn&#39;t matter, and I
am certain none of the players involved would ever give (or take) an edge in
the highly competitive spirit of RGP.
&lt;p&gt;
As it turned out LLew did win it and went on to play Kate heads-up and win
another $500.  NOTE that I may be mistaken about the &#34;Must be won&#34; rule cited
above.  I&#39;ve asked Mike Sexton for a confirmation which I will post later.
&lt;p&gt;
The rest of the day was rather horrible for me at the $10-20 hold&#39;em table (We
could not get a pot-limit game going in the afternoon.)  I must have sat in
the same seat and gone through $600 - $700 without EVER seeing a turn card.
We&#39;ve all had such days and they go a long ways toward ruining an otherwise
perfect day.
&lt;p&gt;
But nothing can spoil the camaraderie of ATLARGE.  The banquet was on for 6 PM
and, as Kristofferson wrote, &#34;I reached into my closet for my clothes and
found my cleanest dirty shirt&#34;.
&lt;p&gt;
I had the great good fortune to be seated at a table with Fold&#39;em, Mitch K,
Tom Goodwin (and his knockout/beautiful friend, Barbara), Nolan &amp; the ever-
delightful Marieta (I would kill for her, too, but I would have to kill Nolan
first which presents an enigma.).   If I&#39;ve left anybody out it is because
beautiful women easily distract me.  Indeed, I turn into jelly in their
presence.  Would that my lovely lady/wife were there.  She would have given
those half her age courage to believe that true beauty is not a transient
thing.  
&lt;p&gt;
Good conversation and bad jokes made the evening fly.  My system rejects pasta
in any form and chicken, to me, has always been an adjective. But the salad
was excellent, as were the martinis.
&lt;p&gt;
Kate, Patrice, Marie, and (I hope I didn&#39;t forget anyone) graced us with their
presence and a bunch of neat gifts.  I will presume that everyone involved
realizes that all those casino rate rooms, the $1,000 freerolls, and the gift
items add up to a 5-figure sum, which is generous in the extreme.  Thanks have
been given by others and I add my own here.
&lt;p&gt;
Next on the fun-seekers list was still more poker until a few of us decided we
truly could defy the odds at the crap table. Chuck, Fold&#39;em, David Croson &amp; I
left the poker room in search of David&#39;s wife, Rachel who, according to David,
&#34;will be easy to find; she&#39;s playing slot machines&#34;.  I find it strange that
people of genuinely superior intellect can approach life&#39;s vicissitudes with
such unquestionable confidence.  
&lt;p&gt;
Of course what really happened was that Rachel found us . . . where logic
dictated we would be . . . at the crap table.
&lt;p&gt;
Fold&#39;em has devised some sort of arcane method by which he uses other people&#39;s
money to beat the crap tables.  It involves putting chips in either the front
tray or the rear tray, I forget which, and I believe it ultimately yields
about $1 to a determined and disciplined player.
&lt;p&gt;
Chuck stood back, constantly regaling us with details of how he was going to
take &#34;the family&#34; to Las Vegas soon, but unwilling to risk one engraved image
of the son of the late Nancy Hanks on the crap table.
&lt;p&gt;
The only truly good thing about this session is that I saw no reason to
further destroy my rapidly dwindling bankroll since I could thoroughly enjoy
myself observing the weird habits of my fellow fun-seekers.
&lt;p&gt;
Since everyone else had pigged out at the banquet I was determined to get some
real honest-to-goodness American food into my constantly demanding system and
got them to join me at the Surfside (?) café for burgers and whatnot.
&lt;p&gt;
An aside . . .
&lt;p&gt;
I have been much impressed, over several meetings, with David and Rachel.
They are, I believe we can all agree, people of superior intellect.  From time
to time I need an intellectual fix.  Let&#39;s face it:  One does not usually run
into such people at a poker (or, lord knows, crap) table.  Indeed, most of
those we do meet pronounce words like &#34;them&#34; differently than Dr. Johnson did.
But David &amp; Rachel have a delightful and mannerly way of adjusting their
conversation to suit the people they are with at the moment.  Earlier in the
evening I had been listening in on a conversation between Rachel and Andy
Latto which was largely way over my head.  Mind you, they were not ignoring me
. . . any more than two people speaking in Swahili would be.  But in a cozy
booth in a place where you could get a good burger they adapted themselves to
a different place and other people.  Earlier in this long diatribe I wrote
about beautiful women.  Rachel need give no ground to others in purely
physical beauty, but exudes what . . . to me . . . is a beauty unto itself:
Beauty of the mind.
&lt;p&gt;
I felt compelled, on our way to the elevator, to say to all &#34;I had a good time
just now&#34;.  Chuck, who I greatly admire for a whole bunch of things, said &#34;So
did I&#34;.
&lt;p&gt;
Lest I forget:
&lt;p&gt;
Peter picked up the check.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;SUNDAY, MARCH 21&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Tiger&#39;s notes on the Hold&#39;em tournament are infinitely better than mine on the
Stud tournament which follow.  But I will attempt to be as complete as I am
able to be in reporting on another truly exciting final table.
&lt;p&gt;
Those who fought there way to get there included . . .
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;table border=0 cellpadding=5&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;Jazbo&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;with $200 in chips&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;Eric Holtman&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;with $575 in chips&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;Morgan Bjorkander&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;with $725 in chips&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;Dave Wheeler&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;with $1425 in chips&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;Dave Fruchter&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;with $1525 in chips&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;Tom Goodwin&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;with $2500 in chips&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;Mitch Kramer&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;with $2875 in chips&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;Clark Olson&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;with $6825 in chips&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;/table&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
First to fall was Jazbo.  WTG just getting there Jazbo.  You really had just
one hand left to play.
&lt;p&gt;
Morgan, who came all the way from Sweden to play, was also short stacked.
&lt;p&gt;
ADB Jaeger didn&#39;t have enough either and fell third.
&lt;p&gt;
Tom, who was certainly a favorite on the morning line, failed in the stretch.
Clark, who looks as youthful &amp; harmless as Matt Damon, simply couldn&#39;t get a
hand. Look for him in future meetings.  He has class.
&lt;p&gt;
The final three were all, each in their own way, serious contenders.  To my
knowledge, no deal was made.  They came here to play.
&lt;p&gt;
I started handicapping Dave Wheeler at ATLARGE II, when we both showed up
early for the Thursday smoker and had a chance to chat.  I recall that he is
an engineer in the auto industry and a fearsome player in a pot limit game.
&lt;p&gt;
I don&#39;t know Dave Fruchter&#39;s play very well, but he showed himself to be a
very ballsy player . . . not afraid to move it all in.
&lt;p&gt;
Mitch I know well.  I watched him slowly destroy two very brilliant players
from the Boston area at FARGO &#39;97 and, if I were a betting man, would have set
the line on him as a favorite.
&lt;p&gt;
Dave Wheeler, short stacked, was first to go.  He&#39;ll get there one of these
days as he is a truly fine player.
&lt;p&gt;
At this point I would have laid at least 2-1 on Mitch, acknowledging both his
dominant stack and his card sense, which I have observed on several occasions,
particularly when he won the Hold&#39;em tournament at FARGO &#39;97.  But Dave
Fruchter proved to be a survivor.
&lt;p&gt;
All-in at one point, Dave played brilliantly and gradually whittled away at
Mitch&#39;s stack to take the trophy.  WTG Dave!
&lt;p&gt;
The money was distributed to the winners as follows
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;table border=0&gt;
   &lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;1st&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;David Fruchter&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;$1140.00&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;
   &lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;2nd&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;Mitch Kramer&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;$655.50&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;
   &lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;3rd&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;David Wheeler&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;$342.00&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;

   &lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;4th&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;Clark Olson&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;$199.50&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;

   &lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;5th&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;Thomas Goodwin&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;$171.00&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;
   &lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;6th&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;Eric Holtman&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;$142.50&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;
   &lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;7th&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;Morgan Bjorkander&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;$114.00&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;

   &lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;8th&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;Jazbo Burns&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;TD&gt;$85.50&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;
   &lt;/TABLE&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Kudos to The Trop&#39;s Aimee Thompson who ran a perfectly organized tournament
and &#34;T.K&#34; who did the same the day before.  These are quality people and I am
pleased to see that The Trop recognizes that fact.
&lt;p&gt;
Another so-so afternoon at the tables, during which I managed to further
diminish my earlier winnings in yet another $10-20 hold&#39;em game, was
(gratefully) cut short by LLew&#39;s invitation to dinner.
&lt;p&gt;
She, in the meantime, had taken down yet another big prize, this time in the
Trop&#39;s $40 buy-in 7-stud hi-lo game.  Is there no limit to this gal&#39;s
dominance over the rest of us?
&lt;p&gt;
LLew, who by this time had more money than God, wanted to share some of it
with her friends.  Clark Olson, Jim (Bulbar) Bullard, Fold&#39;em, Dave Trinidad,
and I were her guests at a marvelous Italian restaurant (Angellino&#39;s?) in
Ducktown.
&lt;p&gt;
I had one of my most memorable meals in recent times . . . a superb dish of
Lobster Ravioli.  I am not particularly fond of Italian food, as noted, but
this was more of a continental dish.  And now, with the official joustings
over, I allowed myself to have a second ultra-dry martini . . . which was
essentially gin on the rocks.
&lt;p&gt;
Back, stuffed, to the Trop where I bled a little bit more but managed to get
to bed at a decent hour.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;MONDAY, MARCH 22&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Needing sustenance for the long drive home I slept until 11 AM, took another
soak and shower and down to the poker room for one last fling.
&lt;p&gt;
There was no $10-20 hold&#39;em going but I managed to get into a $10-20 stud game
seated next to my buddy Tom McHugh.  Once again I couldn&#39;t catch diddly.
Apart from one hand when I drew rolled up 8s it was a pretty dull session.
&lt;p&gt;
The final tally for me was not great, but I wouldn&#39;t trade a huge win for the
excellence of the best RGP event I have ever attended.  It&#39;s hard to invent
new ways to say WTG to the great Jazbo but, having put on two FARGOs myself, I
have a feel for all he goes through.  Believe me folks . . . you don&#39;t have
enough money to pay someone to organize one of these events.  It&#39;s truly a
labor of love and Jazbo . . . we LOVE you for it.
&lt;p&gt;
One quick, obligatory, stop at the White House for a cheese steak fix and I am
on my way back to Connecticut.  Took the Tappan Zee this time to avoid NYC
traffic and was home without any problems by about 9 PM.
&lt;p&gt;
Many thanks to everyone who contributed to my marvelous weekend, be they RGP
or Trop people.
&lt;p&gt;
I am off to Las Vegas on Saturday for a week.  Marcelle &amp; I are seriously
considering relocating there and Tom Sims has asked us to dinner on Sunday
night to, among other things, tell us about &#34;normal&#34; life there.
&lt;p&gt;
I hope to see many of you at FARGO in early October.
&lt;p&gt;
Bill Alan</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: George Wattman</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_george_wattman/</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_george_wattman/</guid>
      <description>This was my fourth RGE event, two BARGE&#39;s, one FARGO, and this my first
ATLARGE.  Although short, it was probably my best.  As BOBBY D put it in his
trip report, everyone is so welcoming and fun to talk to that you are
comfortable as soon as you arrive.  All hail Jazbo for excellent coordination
and event planning!
&lt;p&gt;
At dinner Saturday night, Nolan and I talked about why these are so much fun.
I told him that I thought each one was an investment in the next event as the
more people you know, the better each event becomes.  It is great to sit down
at a table and be familiar with several of the folks there. Although your EV
may drop due to the skills of this group, the fun factor increases!
&lt;p&gt;
I arrived Friday about noon and went to the Taj to build up the bankroll.  Noon
on Friday is nothing but the local rocks that continually trade dollars and
know each other.  I, the ever-present rookie, picked up a couple hundred for
ATLARGE.  One guy had such a classic reverse tell it should have been in CARO&#39;s
book (if he had only been wearing 1960&#39;s clothes).   He would get excited when
missing and feign disappointment when hitting.  Thanks for the donation.
&lt;p&gt;
About 3pm, I went over to the Trop to sign up for the limit holdem tourney.
Checked in and put my stuff in the room.  Went down to sign up for 5-10 and
10-20 before the tourney.  I got into the 5-10 game at 4pm thinking I wouldn&#39;t
play due to the tourney beginning immediately.  Got seated by PRM and found out
that the tourney wouldn&#39;t start until 4:15.  Won the first two or three hands
and cashed out late for the tourney up $65!.  Sat down and found that I missed
the first several hands, didn&#39;t have to pay blinds yet and had Bwana, Jaeger,
and Peter Segal at my table.  OK, I also found out the hard way that it was no
limit when the guy in #1 went all in against me about the fifth hand.  I called
and my QQ held against his JJ, and set me up for the day.  I got broken out to
another table soon there after and didn&#39;t have to play these tough guys for
long.  Did pretty well in the games, finishing tenth, to much in the way of
sympathy of others.  You can&#39;t imagine the fun of knowing half the tourney and
doing fairly well, it&#39;s like being famous!  Thanks Tom Mc Hugh for giving me
the hang tough speech! The downside is that I played until about 9:45 and
totally missed the smoker.  Damn, I was looking forward to that!
&lt;p&gt;
Went pretty much on tilt in the side games after that, pissing away a couple
hundred and going to bed at 3am.  Played with some great guys, gave away a
cigar to Bobby D, talked with PRM again, and met some RGE newbes that were
surprised that the group wasn&#39;t a bunch of geeks.  Far from it.
&lt;p&gt;
I got at a tough table in the ATLARGE tourney, LLEW, ADB BK among others.  Did
fairly poorly, got no cards and watched LLEW put on a tourney winning demo.
Hey LLEW my chips gave you the edge at both FARGO and ATLARGE, I need a
percentage for BARGE this year!  Tilted around after that and played some
negative EV table games to pass some time.  Considered just going the hell
home, but got into a 10-20 game about 1pm.  After a while, Tom McHugh, Bruce
Kramer, Scott &#34;Bwana&#34; and Russell Rosenbloom came and left. In the last hour
or two, Russell, Bruce and I went on a total combined rush and tilted the local
rocks to the tune of cashing out at banquet time up a combined $2300.  Bruce,
way to go for reaching one of your poker goals with a big win!  I guess we
exceeded the one big bet an hour rate!
&lt;p&gt;
The more poker I play, the less interest I have in table games.  I guess this
is all part of my continuing gambling education.  I tell you, I learn more at
an RGE event than a year of books and self-analysis at the tables.  I wish I
had a strong local home game to learn from, but a quarterly visit to the AC
rocks doesn&#39;t help much.  Thanks again to all of those who discussed strategy,
playing conditions, places to play and how to attack situations.  I especially
want to publicly again thank Nolan for answering my emails about where to play,
how to approach others in the RGE community, and hopefully reassembling the
TEXAS team at this year&#39;s BARGE. Lets raise the stakes and make it winner take
all!
&lt;p&gt;
I had a great ATLAGE dinner, not so much the food, but the company. Sat by
Muriel and Nolan, Bruce, Mitch, Foldem (Peter, thanks again for the drink), and
Peter, among others.  What a great group to discuss the finer points of keeping
track of wins, where to play, when and all that other stuff no one else in your
life understands.  I got home and started  telling my wife about flopping the
nuts in the big blind with a flush draw and no full houses possible and her
eyes glazed over immediately.  
&lt;p&gt;
There are about exactly a hundred other people I talked to, played against, and
helped me over the one and one half days that were all fun, accessible and a
better group that you usually see in AC.  I feel like my continuing poker
education was improved this trip.  I can&#39;t wait for BARGE, looking forward to
seeing all these guys (and obviously gals) and more there.  Who cares the
location, it will be great!
&lt;p&gt;
George</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Jim Tolliver</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_jim_tolliver/</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_jim_tolliver/</guid>
      <description>Took Friday off from work as its a long drive from Connecticut and its
nice to beat the rush hour traffic.  Shared a room with my brother who
plays poker but stays out of RGP activities.  This was my third
Atlarge, and must concur with Bill Alan that the Tropicana is the best
poker room in the country.  Lots of great ideas have been put into
practice.  Lots of credit to Will Espin and the Trop Staff. Will had
told me of his ideas before the room was constructed, and a lot of
thought and hard work went into it.  
&lt;p&gt;
Friday night after check in, I played some 10-20 Stud and won about
$200.  Wanted to play pot-limit holdem, but was not very sharp after
the long drive.   Saturday I bust out quick in the holdem tournament
with pocket 10s which became three tens on the turn losing to a flush
on the river.  Most of the rest of the day is spent playing pot-limit,
its $3-5 blinds and about half the players are veterans of previous
RGP PL games.  Even very good players often get crushed in this kind
of game, but I manage to win about $700 before dinner.    Dinner was
nice, more for the company than the food.   In future RGP outings I
would like to branch out into playing craps or do silly drinking
things, instead of just poker.
&lt;p&gt;
After dinner Saturday, I am on the list for pot-limit, but play 10-20
holdem.  Nice game with several RGP players,  one interesting hand I
am dealt KQd on the button. Flop is 10-J of Diamonds and a blank. Two
bets to me, I raise. Turn is a blank only one bet two callers. River
is the 9 of diamonds giving me the nut staight flush. Guy to my left
bets, call, I raise, he raises, other guy folds, raise, raise, raise,
raise.  Finally I am all in.  I had originally thought he had the nut
flush on the first first two raises.  The guy was a regular fat guy
poker player with big gold jewelry so he looks like he hangs out at
the casinos.   By the third raise I put him on the straight flush
which is what he had when he happily turned over 7-8 of diamonds
announcing straight flush. I  meekly say me too, and show him my nuts.
&lt;p&gt;
Sunday  I bust out of the stud tournament and head straight home. I
would have played all day but my brother had to testify in a trial.  I
will be in Vegas May 5-12 for the world series, hope to see some of
you there. Also looking forward to Fargo and maybe Barge.
&lt;p&gt;
Jim Tolliver (JT)</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: TIGER123</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_tiger/</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_tiger/</guid>
      <description>hiya, folks!
&lt;p&gt;
here is my report about the no-limit texas hold &#39;em tourney, held this last
saturday as part of &#34;atlarge iv&#34; at tropicana hotel and casino, atlantic
city, new jersey.  $50 of the buy-in went to prizes, and each player
started with T500.
&lt;p&gt;
i&#39;ll post a separate trip report about some of my various adventures
this weekend, including the 1-5 &#34;white chip&#34; high-low 7-card/eight-or-
better game, and including the &#34;mats&#34; mini-satellite.  
&lt;p&gt;
my name isn&#39;t tom sims, and my name isn&#39;t mike paulle, and i&#39;ve got my
very own particular style of writing.  i don&#39;t do this to earn my living,
and your opinions about my reports will vary.  i write this stuff to tell
you all about what happened, and (if i&#39;m lucky) to entertain you to a
small degree.
&lt;p&gt;
enjoy!!
&lt;p&gt;
tiger&lt;br&gt;
-------------------&lt;br&gt;
late friday night, your doughty reporter was busy consuming multiple scotch
units while whiling away the hours chatting with nanette (alan richter&#39;s
ladyfriend) in a 1-5 no-smoking game of 7-card stud. i also won $44 before
staggering off to bed at 7 am.  but as i was leaving the poker room, i saw
tom goodwin dug in at a lively 10/20 hold &#39;em game.  tom had won the trop&#39;s
regular friday no-limit game several hours earlier, and he was practicing
his usual routine of collecting all the chips on the table. he promised
to get a little bit of sleep before the tourney....
&lt;p&gt;
although 72 people registered for the no=limit texas hold &#39;em event,  only
71 people showed up.  i am advised that the no-show was yuri sorkin.  i
don&#39;t know yuri, so i can&#39;t tell you if he was there or not.  the tourney
started roughly on time at 10:00 am (no, i wasn&#39;t there.  &#34;i don&#39;t play
hold &#39;em!&#34;).  the tropicana tournament director was tom &#34;tk&#34; kraus.  tk
told me later that he&#39;d never seen a better-played tourney! i finally
wandered down to the poker room around 1 pm, just before the remaining
players took their final break.  there were only 11 people left, and the
two tables played &#34;hand for hand&#34; until they got down to the final 9.  
the big stacks were dave trinidad, herbie allen and tom goodwin.  pete
segal and rob jarman were &#34;on the bubble.&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
barry kornspan became a new acquaintance of mine.  unfortunately, i met
him as he busted out in 11th place, losing to local tournament pro herbie
&#34;hollywood&#34; allen.  herbie and patty allen lurk at rgp, and i&#39;ve mentioned
both of them on several occasions.  after barry went down, the short stacks
were bob jarman and wes tilly.  bob was all-in and survived with a KQo
against dave croson. however two or three hands later,  wes took two red
nines against dave;  this time, dave turned a jack to leave wes one place
short of the money.  wes was also a new acquaintance.  :(
&lt;p&gt;
the dealers at the final table were tina and john.  both of them did a
terrific job!!  tk also told me that all the players at the final table
were quite generous to the dealers, and i&#39;m glad that we didn&#39;t have any
mavericks around to sully rgp&#39;s reputation.
&lt;p&gt;
here is the lineup and stack sizes of the final table:
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;table border=0 cellpadding=4&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;bob jarman&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;1000&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;mordechai schwartz&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;3375&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;dave trinidad&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;8525&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;tom goodwin&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;4850&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;herbie allen&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;2500&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;pete segal&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;1250&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;franky casino&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;2500&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;dave croson&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;5625&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;tr&gt;&lt;td align=left&gt;llew213&lt;/td&gt;&lt;td&gt;6075&lt;/td&gt;&lt;/tr&gt;
&lt;/table&gt;

here are the scheduled payoffs:

1           $1420.00
2                 816.50
3         390.50
4         248.50
5         195.25
6         159.75
7         124.25
8         106.50
9           88.75

play at the final table began with an ante of T25 and blinds of  100/200.
in the first big hand, only mordechai and dave saw the flop, which came
Qc 6s Jh.  mordechai checked; dave bet 500 and mordechai raised to T2000,
which put him all-in.  dave called, and showed a KQo.  mordechai had QJo
for two pair. 5d on the turn and 4s on the river didn&#39;t help either player.
mordechai won a big pot to challenge dave trinidad for the chip lead.

soon thereafter, mordechai raised with an offsuit slick.  herbie allen
called all-in with a pair of tens.  the flop hung &#34;hollywood&#34; out to dry:
7s Qs Ah.  Jh on the turn and 9h on the river ended herbie&#39;s tourney.

[in a no-limit game, your entire stack is always in jeopardy.  players
thrust, parry and feint, and you&#39;re never really sure of where you&#39;re at
until someone is all-in and the cards go face-up on the table.  so, there
were several hands where an all-in thrust by one player ended the hand.]
for example:
tom goodwin raised.  it was folded to dave croson who thought a long time.
he pushed his entire stack into the middle of the table, and it was tom&#39;s
turn to think.  discretion became the better part of valor; tom mucked;
and we never got to see either hand.

franky casino came all the way from the netherlands to attend atlarge!
he and his wife had a great time and were enormously popular during the
weekend!  franky found an A8o and bet.  mordechai, holding two queens,
raised him.  franky called all-in, hoping for a good flop.  he surely
got one with 2s Ah 8h.  the turn was a meaningless 7d, and franky got
even more help with the 8d on the river.

franky decided that he was on a roll, and raised pete segal&#39;s big blind.
earlier, when there were only 15 players remaining, pete was the short stack.
he went all-in about six times, coming off the floor each time to get to the
final table.  pete is a true veteran of atlarge final table play, and he
likes to say that he&#39;s got the best fingernails at rgp!  he&#39;s certainly
got the most experience in hanging on to his last chips!  this experience
served him well, and pete folded to franky&#39;s raise.

then came the strangest hand at the final table.  short-stacked bob jarman
raised T725 all-in under the gun.  pete called.  franky called.  dave croson
called. llew called.  hey!  did bob get maximum action for his all-in bet??
the flop was 2d 8h 2c.  llew (who was the big blind) bet T1000.  bob was
all-in; pete folded; franky folded; and dave croson (little blind) called.
the turn was 6s.  dave checked and llew bet T1500.  dave folded.  the river
was 4d.  llew&#39;s As 8s stomped on bob&#39;s K10o.  bob got 8th place.

the antes went up to T50 and the blinds were 200/400.  dave trinidad,
holding the ace and 10 of clubs, raised.  pete used up most of his chips
to call with a pair of tens.  dave croson, with the 6 8 of hearts, also
called.  the flop was 3s 4h 9c.  dave croson checked; dave trinidad bet
T225, which just happened to be the rest of pete&#39;s stack.  he called, and
so did the other dave.  the turn of 7h gave the wharton school professor
a gut-shot straightflush draw, but nobody bet.  the Ks on the river gave
the pot to the guy with fingernails of steel and tens in the pocket.  the
professor was seriously short-stacked.

dave croson was the little blind on the next hand, and the blind cost
him the rest of his chips.  nobody called llew&#39;s big blind. the flop
didn&#39;t help either player;  llew turned a pair of kings; dave rivered
a pair of jacks, and that was good enough for seventh place in the
tourney.

tom made a big raise.  llew and mordechai mucked.

franky made a big raise, but dave trinidad in the big blind came back
at him to win the pot.

tom raised T1200.  franky re=raised all-in and tom called all-in.  tom
had As Kd and franky had the Q9 of spades.  the cards on the board were
the ace, four, ten and queen of diamonds, and the jack of clubs.  tom
had a flush.  franky had T800 left.

within one or two hands, franky put it all-in, with a KQo.  &#34;iceman&#34;
trinidad was there with the 10 9 of clubs.  the board was 9d 3h 5s Ad 7h,
and dave&#39;s nines were the winner.  franky stood up to a big round of
applause as the sixth place finisher.

mordechai raised on the button.   small blind iceman came over the top,
and big blind tom and mordechai mucked.

on the next hand, llew had the button, so she raised.  mordechai
re-raised all-in.  llew called with the J 10 of diamonds.  mordechai
showed a KQo.  three diamonds, a spade and the Qh gave llew a flush,
and gave mordechai fifth place money.

[a note about llew.  she started this tourney with a couple stacks of
real white chips.  each time she won a significant pot, she would toke
the dealer!!  the dealers had never seen this before!!  wtg llew!!!]

llew raised T1500.  pete called with a significant portion of his chips.
the flop came Ad 5d 10d.  pete checked; llew bet T2000.  pete consulted
the list of payoffs, and called.  the club ace on the turn gave llew trips.
pete checked with a flush draw and a gutshot broadway draw. if llew knew
how many outs pete had, she probably would not have slow-played.  perhaps
she thought that pete was slow-playing a flush.  the club jack on the
river gave pete a pair of jacks, and he put the rest of his chips in
the pot.  llew called with three sharp-tops to file mr. fingernails away
into fourth place.

the three remaining players asked tk to stop the clock, and the players
counted down their stacks.  llew had T21675; dave had T7725; tom had
T5900.  llew and tom already had qualified for mike sexton&#39;s tournament
of champions.  there was $2627 in prize money available to be chopped.
they reached a deal:  llew got $1100; dave and tom split the rest 60/40,
or $916.20/600.80.  you math whizzes will notice that, as between dave
and tom, the ratio of chips was 57/43, so tom may have short-changed
himself by a few bucks.  the balance of the deal was that llew got to
play poker room manager kate dumas in a $500 &#34;beat the boss&#34; freeroll,
and dave got the entry to the tournament of champions.  :)

back to the game!  dave raised; llew called.  llew made a big bet on
the flop and dave mucked.

llew made a medium raise.  dave re-raised and llew mucked.

llew raised and dave called.  the flop was 9c 3h 9s.  llew made a big
bet and dave mucked.

llew raised on the button, and tom called her.  after the flop of 3c 3h 6d,
tom&#39;s all-in bet won the pot.

tom raised.  llew re-raised to win the pot.

llew was in the little blind and raised.  dave in the big blind re-raised;
tom mucked and llew called.  the flop was 3h 9d 7c.  dave thought his
pair of fours in the pocket were enough, and he went all=in for T2250.
llew called him with a K8o.  the Kc on the turn meant trouble for dave,
and the Qs on the river was the end.  they were now down to head-to=head.

the antes went up to T75 and the blinds were 300/600.  tom only had
about T3000.  it didn&#39;t take very long.

tom raised all-in with the A4 of hearts.  llew called him with the
QJ of diamonds.  the flop came 4d 5h 4s; the turn was 8d; the river
gave llew a pair of queens.  not enough, yet.  tom was still alive.

but, pretty soon, tom had the Ah 9s and committed all his chips to a
raise from llew.   she had a big lead with a pair of kings, and they
held up!  wtg to both!!

what a great tournament!!  congrats to all who played!!  special
congrats to those who won!!  :)
and many many thanks to tk and the rest of the tropicana staff for one
terrific no-limit tourney!!

tiger

p.s.
a couple final notes:  at 7 am, when i went to bed, tom had promised
me that he would get some sleep before the 10 am scheduled tourney start.
yeah....he got about an hour&#39;s worth, showered and shaved....and picked
up second place!  all right!!

although llew is a frequent visitor to the tropicana poker room (and
can sometimes be seen in front of the video slots....), she and kate
dumas had never actually met.  the &#34;beat the boss&#34; freeroll solidified
the instant bond between the two of them!  :)
and llew&#39;s quads gave her an extra $500.  :D

bill alan was seen hanging around the final table.  he claimed to be
reporting about this tourney for &#34;cardplayer&#34; magazine.  despite the fact
that this was a &#34;no-smoking tourney&#34;, i saw him smoking lots of cigarettes,
taking lots of drinks from cocktail waitresses, and chatting with lots of
people.  but i didn&#39;t see him taking many notes. if any stats or description
of hands appear in his &#34;report&#34;, we&#39;ll all know where he got them......</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Wes Tilley</title>
      <link>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_wes_tilley/</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://test.bjrge.org/atlarge/1999/1999_trip_report_wes_tilley/</guid>
      <description>I wasn&#39;t planning on writing a big trip report, but thought now I might
just to give other potential lurker/newcomers the idea that attending
these events are worthwhile.  Short Answer:  YES!
&lt;p&gt;
First things first..
&lt;p&gt;
I&#39;ll have to thank my wife (cue Academy Awards music...) for &#34;letting&#34;
me come.  I&#39;m already away from home too much for work-travel, which is
not a good thing with 6 and 3 year-olds.  So, it was much to my surprise
when a couple months ago that she innocently said &#34;Why don&#39;t you go?&#34;
when I was describing these &#34;ARGE&#34; things to her.  This was, of course,
after having to explain that I really was just playing cards with
someone named &#34;NewJane&#34; on IRC.  [Hint:  Never leave incriminating
bookmarks around to attractive fellow IRC&#39;ers web pages for the spouse
to find without &#39;splaining yourself first].
&lt;p&gt;
So, I cashed in a free ticket on Midway Airlines [freeroll?, just
learning poker parlance] that was about to expire and made plans to
go...
&lt;p&gt;
The trip to the Trop was my 2nd ever casino poker experience, having
tried out some poker in Las Vegas in February during a business trip.
My only other poker education was the hundreds of hours I&#39;ve played on
IRC after discovering it about a year ago.  I&#39;d also never met anyone
else of the group in person before.  So, I had a little nervousness on a
couple of fronts.  Medium Answer:  Not to worry!  The poker room at the
Trop is great, even for newbies.  Patrice is a fantastic hostess.  I met
lots and lots of ATLargers both at the ring game tables and in the
tournaments, and everybody was really friendly and helpful.
&lt;p&gt;
Flew into Philadelphia from Raleigh/Durham on Friday and rented a car.
Arrived at the Trop at about 2:30 pm.  Next time, I think it would be
worth it to fly directly into AC.  The extra time/hassle/money of
driving from Philly (esp. during the torrential downpour on Sunday) was
not worth it.
&lt;p&gt;
Went to poker room and picked up the poker room card.  Really nice and
organized system.  Soon got into a 3-6 HE non-smoking game. 10 hours
later (Yes, I&#39;m hooked), I got up -$130.  I was disappointed in losing
(I played 4 times in Vegas, and never lost money) but had a great time.
Several ATLargers played at various times.  I think most of my money was
lost while the ATLarge quotient at the table was high, which was a trend
for the whole weekend for me.  Went to bed about 3 am Sat.
&lt;p&gt;
Up by 9 on Saturday morning and head for the HE tourney.  I quite
literally have no idea what to do.  After getting a duplicate seat
assignment resolved, I end up at seat 9 at the same table as eventual
winner Llew (who was seat 1).  My goal was to last through the first
break.  I don&#39;t even bother eating breakfast.My first big blind (99) is
un-raised with Llew only caller.  Flop 9-9-x.  I check.  Nothing.
Check  turn.  Nothing.  Bet 100 on the river, Llew folds against my
first ever quads.    Fast forward...   5 hours later, I&#39;m still in the
same seat, with about T1000 (started with T500).  I had only been all-in
once (JJ in blind, called big raise), and won with a fluke flush.  Only
other memorable hand:  AQo in big blind, called medium raise from Llew
(UTG) after everybody else folded.  Flop A-high ragged.  Llew bets T400
(well over half my stack at that point).  I agonize.... and fold face-up
to some audible responses from the table.  Never found out what Llew had
(I figured AA or AK given the UTG raise and big bet after).
&lt;p&gt;
Anyway, I finally get moved to another table when we were down to 14(?)
players.  Get down to 10 players (9 places pay).  Run to gift shop to
get some crackers (it&#39;s 4 pm and I still hadn&#39;t eaten).  I was 2nd
smallest stack.  Small stack went all-in and lived.  Few hands later was
my big mistake:  I still had about T700 (blinds 100-200).  On the
button, everybody folds to me with J9s.  I raise T300.  Small blind
counts my remaining chips and re-raises.  I had to fold, I not going
down with J9.  In retrospect, I learned that trying to steal without
enough chips to back it up is a bad idea.  Another round goes by and I&#39;m
big blind.  Get 99 [remember the quad story above???].  Button raises
enough to put me all-in, I go for it.  He turns up QJo, J flops and
IGHN.  In hindsight, I could have most likely made the final table by
not even looking at my cards once we got down to 10 or 11.  I had enough
for 4-5 orbits at that point in the blinds.  (Fast forward, I watched
Jazbo the next day in the stud tourney survive with 2 chips to the final
table by waiting, waiting...).   Anyway, this was probably the best $60
poker lesson I&#39;ll ever get.
&lt;p&gt;
Banquet saturday night was very nice.  I got there a little late, and
&#34;had&#34; to sit next to Patrice, tough duty.  Won a Trop Poker Room jacket,
a nice consolation prize for the 1 out of the money finish earlier (was
this rigged???).
&lt;p&gt;
Went back to the poker room and got into 1-3 non-smoking stud.  I had
never played stud (except against my computer).  Figure a little
practice before the Sunday tourney would be good.  Played for 2 hours,
+$10 (woohoo).  This is not a money game.  Dealer commented to me once
that I was basically splitting my pots with her (I was toking 50c-$1).
Went back to 3-6 HE for a while, and did better +$70.  Also tried
&#34;Double Joker&#34; Video Poker after buying one of Jazbo&#39;s cards.  Hit
five-of-a-kind FIVES! Calls of Presto! brought only stares in the video
poker room...Turned in at 3am again.
&lt;p&gt;
Sunday stud tourney.  Finish 42nd, resolve that I like Holdem much, much
better.  I went into this tourney with the idea that I would be
ultra-conservative (and I ate breakfast).  After being the bringin for
what seemed like the 50th time, I eventually had to play a hand.  Went
down with (AK)Q which improved to exactly (AK)Q-c-r-a-p.
&lt;p&gt;
Tried 2-4 HE for a while.  Amazingly different game from 3-6, these
people were wild!  3 straight capped pots before the flop (I was in one
with AKs, lost).  Quickly -$40.  Decide to go back to 3-6 (+$80, nice
way to end).  Stayed there with some very nice ATLargers until about 3
pm, when it was time to start the drive back to PHL.  Flight delayed 3
hours due to the weather, but I was home by 11 pm.
&lt;p&gt;
Long Answer:  Overall, just a great, great weekend.  Something very
different for this 34-year old, pretty quiet and close-to-home dad.
Adrenaline was still flowing until about Tuesday.  I don&#39;t know how
often I&#39;ll get to do the &#34;ARGE&#34; stuff, but I definitely want to do it
again.  To all the lurkers/newbies out there, I can&#39;t imagine a better
way to get into poker in a friendly atmosphere than what ATLARGE at the
TROP is.
&lt;p&gt;
Wes&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;wtil...@nortelnetworks.com</description>
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  </channel>
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