johnjohn
Full House
the "friend of a friend" you described...what a douche.
Hot dog roller for sure.
Hot dog roller for sure.
Yeah I can see how Player 1 making change from Player 2's bet can cause confusion, namely by making Player 1's bet appear bigger than it is and Player 2's bet smaller.It can cause confusion. Say you're playing a $1/$3 game, player to the left of the BB calls by putting in a $5, and he takes two of the BB $1 chips to make his own change. If the BB and/or dealer don't see this happen it becomes very confusing.
EDIT: Just realized you were asking about making change out of the pot, which is a slightly different scenario than the one I described.
Because the proper bet amount is no longer represented when this is immediately done by the player. Other players yet to act may look at that amount to determine their action, plus anytime the bet amount changes (due to a raise), now the original altered 'bet' is not an actual representation of what that player has put in (nor how much more they owe). Plus, if they get their own change immediately, the dealer (who is supposed to be making change) may erroneously give them change a second time, when he collects the bets.What's the reason for not making change out of the pot?
Don't have change? Verbalize your action, place a high denom chip in front of you.
Because the proper bet amount is no longer represented when this is immediately done by the player. Other players yet to act may look at that amount to determine their action
It's a time wasting issue, plus what BG said about the dealer being the only one handling chips in the pot, plus preparing your players and yourself for how it's done in a casino.However, if a player exchanges his 1 x T500 for 5 x T100s from the pot then the pot amount hasn't changed. Is it purely a time wasting issue then? I
I think he was referring to if you place a T500 in front of you and then take chips from the pot. The pot is now wrong, and further action in this street can leed to confusion, more so than my scenario above. But if I understood you correctly, your question was about making complete change, keeping the pot intact and the wagered chips representing the actual amount wagered on this street.As BG says the proper bet amounts are no longer represented
No, I wouldn't say the same reasons. Making change with someone else may slow down the flow, but it isn't (what I know) against any rules.It's probably more common for one of our players to make change from another player rather than the pot, for the same reason of wanting to have the right bet amount in from of him, but I suppose the same reasons apply for not doing this as for not swapping out the pot.
Not only ok, but encouraged (IMO). Instead of counting out another 400 it's quicker to just replace the T100 with a T500 (plus, if you lose the pot, you now still have a bunch of lower denom chips and won't need to make change just yet).It's also quite common for the SB or someone calling a bigger bet to take back his small chips and replace with a big one, eg A limps with 100, B raises to 500. A calls and takes back his T100 and replaces it with a T500. Do I understand correctly that this is OK?
- I’ll always sit in the middle of the table and run the game, keep the hands moving, count pots, shuffle for players who won the pot on their deal, etc. It’s especially helpful for less experienced players. I’m seat 1, and everyone else draws for seats 2-10. Anyone else do this as a policy?
Ugh... I feel your pain, I have some momories of a similar tourney.Well done. Every game you host you will learn what works and what doesn't. Always looking for ways to improve the overall experience is a good thing.
Ultimately you want everyone to have a good time and hopefully keep your game going on a regular basis. As you host more and have more regular players it will run more smoothly and be more enjoyable for all.
To deal with the friend of a friend, next time a simple poster of the rules will quickly eliminate his antics. It will also be available for all the players in attendance. You can point to the rule and then enforce it acccordingly. If he still gives you lip then you can ask him to cool it or leave. He will get the message quick. His lack of respect to the host at that point is completely out of line. I would also address his behavior to your friend that you will not put up with that crap. You want good friendly people in your home, not strange know it alls who have no clue how a tournament is run.
For next time, if you have a bunch of players who do not regularly play tournaments and or new players to your group you can simply quickly go over the basic rules quickly before the tourney starts and then say most of all have fun.
A hot dog roller will be a big hit. Highly recommended.
You are the Tourney Director. You need to have complete control.
...When I was doing color-ups, he snapped at me for touching his chips, and told me I was doing it wrong.
They are not his chips. They are markers you are letting him use to facilitate the game. Sounds like Maverick needs to ride back out in the range and get some lessons.new guy, friend-of-a-friend came. Pretty decent player, and was a pretty nice guy, but he acted like he knew everything. When I was doing color-ups, he snapped at me for touching his chips, and told me I was doing it wrong.
was that custom or can it be purchased somewhere?You need a button like mine:
View attachment 281471
Answer when someone questions the floor "read the side of the button".
L
Yup, and there was a hand where one player had 66 and another 77 so the 77 won at showdown, then he tossed a hundred chip to the other player...…...IN A TOURNAMENT! and they let him keep it.
My tongue was bleeding from me biting it so much around those damned casuals
...but why? I don't understand the logic.
You can't apply logic to recreational players like this, for them it's "fun"
So it was a pity 100 chips? Like I beat you, but barely, so here's 100 chips? Did it keep him in the tourney or something?
"We don't take kindly to string bets 'round these here parts"“That’s not how we do it here” is music to my ears.