Monthly Archives: September 2009

Card Night 29-Sep-2009

Mary was the guest of honor this evening as she attended her 200th Card Night.  She received a special Certificate of Achievement, and she registered a win for the night (+$1.00, thanks to a $3.00 showdown win when she hit a pair of 3s in a game of three-card high).

Some of the long-time regulars complained that they never received a certificate for their 200th Card Night.  Shut your pie holes, ya wimps.


Speaking of pie holes that wouldn’t shut, Mike complained all night long about his bad luck and about how much he was losing.  That all changed when he took down a huge Buck ’em pot of more than $60.00.


 

Mark D +$4.00
Mary +$1.00
Paul ‑$31.00
Phil ‑$34.00
Bill ‑$54.00
Lyndon +$14.00
Mike S +$22.00
Glen +$64.00

Leave a comment

Filed under Card Night

Card Night 22-Sep-2009

Paul called a new game tonight: Super Criss-Cross Roll ’em.  (He said that he came up with the name of the game first, then came up with the rules.)  It plays similarly to regular Criss-Cross Roll ’em, but instead of five community cards there are nine community cards.  Players can use any three community cards lined up horizontally, vertically, or diagonally, sort of like tic-tac-toe:
supercrisscrossAs with regular Criss-Cross Roll ’em, the center card is wild and all like it.  However, if a player uses one of the tic-tac-toe lines that does not go through the center card, he has NO wild cards.  (e.g., if the center card is a 4, and a player is using the bottom horizontal line for his three community cards, 4s are NOT wild for him.)

Players receive four hole cards.  The first betting round occurs before any community cards have been revealed.  Following that, the four corner community cards are all revealed at once, and there’s another betting round.  Then the four middle outside community cards are all revealed at once, followed by a betting round.  Finally, the center card is revealed, followed by a betting round.

Play continues just as in regular Criss-Cross Roll ’em.  Remaining players set up their hole cards the way they want to reveal them and turn them over one at a time, with a betting round in between each reveal.  The game is hi-lo declare; declaration occurs before the players’ final hole cards are revealed.  Players make their hands using any combination of their four hole cards and three community cards along a tic-tac-toe line.

The results were a bit surprising in the round we played.  Only one wheel card was revealed as a community card (a 3).  Even so, both Mike and Glen ended up with the wheel to split for low.  Phil won high with a measly full house.

An 8 had been revealed as the center wild card.  No other 8 was within the community cards, and no player had an 8 as a hole card!


Mike had a rough night, dropping $101.00.  Time and again he’d start with a great low hand in Omaha Hi-Lo (e.g., A-2-2-4 with the ace suited) and raise pre-flop only to see no low materialize.

Buck ’em didn’t help Mike either.  During one round, when playing three cards out of five, Mike declared low immediately after Phil had declared high.  Mike then realized that he should have checked Phil off for high (Mike had an ace and the joker) in hopes of winning a pot-sized payoff from Phil.  Instead, because Mike declared low, no money was exchanged, no legs were earned, and play continued. (Phil ended up winning the game.)


 

Mark D +$8.00
Paul +$28.00
Phil +$64.00
Bill +$18.00
Lyndon +$6.00
Mike S ‑$101.00
Glen ‑$25.00

Leave a comment

Filed under Card Night

Card Night 15-Sep-2009

Glen won jackpot.  Finally.

It was on an Omaha Hi-Lo hand.  He held pocket aces, and two aces came on the flop.  $14.25.

Tonight was Glen’s 40th Card Night but just his first jackpot win.  On average, players win jackpot once every eight Card Nights they attend.  Glen definitely beat the odds.


Phil called a variation of Omaha called Courchevel (named after a ski area in the French Alps and pronounced “coo-shuh-VELLE”).  Apparently it is popular in Europe.

Everyone is dealt four hole cards, but before the first betting round, the first card of the flop is dealt face up.  The first betting round occurs, then the final two cards of the flop are dealt.  Play then continues just as in Omaha.

We played it Hi-Lo.  That first exposed flop card can make a difference as to whether or not you want to play your hand.  For example, if you’ve got 2-3-x-x as your hole cards and that first card is a 10, you might consider folding because the chances of a low being possible have decreased.  On the other hand, if you’ve got 2-3-x-x and that first card is an Ace, you might consider raising because the chances of ending up with the nut low have increased.

Still, we didn’t find that the game played much differently than regular Omaha.  And players seemed to like it well enough.  We’ll probably play it again.


 

Mark D +$35.00
Paul ‑$37.00
Phil ‑$41.00
Bill +$42.00
John +$9.00
Lyndon ‑$31.00
Glen +$23.00

Leave a comment

Filed under Card Night

Card Night 08-Sep-2009

The Curse of Warren’s Chair

Paul took a seat in Warren’s chair tonight, and when he quickly dropped $60.00, it appeared that the Curse would be claiming another victim.

However a late comeback pushed Paul to a $22.00 victory, and the Curse was officially broken!

(Mike admitted that it was his fault Paul was able to break the curse.  Mike was losing and went on tilt late in the evening, jamming the pots with as much money as he could.  He didn’t realize that Paul was starting to erase his losses thanks to these big pots.  Mike said that had he known that, he would have held back.)


With only six players tonight, Mike finally took the opportunity to call $2-$4 Hold ’em.  It turned out to be such a hit that other players called it as well.  In fact, the night ended with two rounds of $2-$4 Omaha Hi-Lo.


 

Mark D +$55.00
Paul +$22.00
Bill +$41.00
Lyndon ‑$5.00
Mike S ‑$66.00
Glen ‑$5.00

1 Comment

Filed under Card Night

Card Night 01-Sep-2009

The Curse of Warren’s Chair

Warren, the man himself, slipped into his own chair tonight.  Surely the Curse’s namesake was up to the challenge.

Alas, it was not to be.  The Curse took Warren for $47.00.

Who amongst us has the power to survive the Curse of Warren’s Chair?


Lyndon brought a bag of Strawberried Peanut Butter M&M’s.  Reviews amongst the players were mixed, although admittedly the oppressive heat had softened them a bit too much.


marlboro-mild

Talk turned to Marlboro cigarettes for some reason.  A few facts:

  • Marlboro was originally marketed as a woman’s cigarette.  In 1924, its advertising slogan was “Mild as May.”
  • During the 1960s, radio and TV ads for Marlboro featured the theme music from the movie The Magnificent Seven.
  • Three men who appeared in Marlboro advertisements – Wayne McLaren, David McLean, and Dick Hammer – died of lung cancer.

Everyone who won tonight had lost on his previous Card Night, meaning that the longest current “winning streak” by any player is 1.


 

Mark D +$11.00
Paul ‑$51.00
Warren ‑$47.00
Phil ‑$58.00
Bill ‑$11.00
Lyndon +$48.00
Mike S +$11.00
Glen +$80.00

Leave a comment

Filed under Card Night