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-   -   Home game ruling (http://archives2.twoplustwo.com/showthread.php?t=379458)

Spook 11-18-2005 07:59 AM

Re: Home game ruling
 
why don't we look at a rule book?
[ QUOTE ]
10. Deliberately acting out of turn will not be tolerated. A player who checks out of turn may not bet or raise on the next turn to act. An action or verbal declaration out of turn may be ruled binding if there is no bet , call, or raise by an intervening player acting after the infraction has been committed.

[/ QUOTE ]
thus it is a call.

Lottery Larry 11-18-2005 10:41 AM

Re: Home game ruling
 
[ QUOTE ]
why don't we look at a rule book?
[ QUOTE ]
10. Deliberately acting out of turn will not be tolerated. A player who checks out of turn may not bet or raise on the next turn to act. An action or verbal declaration out of turn may be ruled binding if there is no bet , call, or raise by an intervening player acting after the infraction has been committed.

[/ QUOTE ]
thus it is a call.

[/ QUOTE ]

This works if you don't have someone trying to angle shoot. If you have someone playing games, you commit them to their verbal raise and let the person in front raise first, forcing the mouth to reraise.
One or two times of that, you won't have any more problems.

11-18-2005 01:26 PM

Re: Home game ruling
 
[ QUOTE ]
why don't we look at a rule book?
[ QUOTE ]
10. Deliberately acting out of turn will not be tolerated. A player who checks out of turn may not bet or raise on the next turn to act. An action or verbal declaration out of turn may be ruled binding if there is no bet , call, or raise by an intervening player acting after the infraction has been committed.

[/ QUOTE ]
thus it is a call.

[/ QUOTE ]

Looking at a rule book works, but how do you decide which rulebook?

tubalkain 11-18-2005 01:30 PM

Re: Home game ruling
 
Around here, out of turn actions were stopped by killing the out of turn player's hand and making him call, dead, any action to him. Having to give away $100 or $200 will teach him never to act out of turn again...

Spook 11-18-2005 03:06 PM

Re: Home game ruling
 
Home poker should go by Roberts Rules, or some other widely availible, comprehensive rule set. It isn't like we are at the Palms, and any ruling is subject to how the floor feels because "there is no rule book".

11-18-2005 04:20 PM

Re: Home game ruling
 
Thats all well and fine, but decide the rules first. Not after. there are lots of rule books out there. Picking a rule book to get a ruling after the fact is no better than just making the rule after the fact.

But the problem is that once you start with the "rule Book" you invite legal arguments loopholes from the nits. There is some value to not having a rulebook.

EasilyFound 11-19-2005 08:03 PM

Re: Home game ruling
 
Here's how I think this should be resolved. The out-of-turn is binding only if the interveing player folds. In that situation, there is no valid reason to allow Player 3 to change his mind. His call, out of turn, reveals his intent to call the all-in if nobody else had called or raised before him. So when the intervening player folds, you should make the verbal declaration out of turn binding.

But I don't think it should be binding if Player 2 calls or raises. I agree with psandman on this. Player 2 should be required to act without knowing exactly what Player 3 will do. Sure, Player 2 has got some information about Player 3's intentions, but that is not the same thing as being able to act knowing that Player 3's bet is not part of the pot and that Player 3 cannot raise. That is a huge tactical advantage to give Player 2, and for no good reason.

Plus, depending on the situation, stack sizes and stage of the tournament, it might be detrimental to the player who moved all-in to allow player 2 to call knowing that player's 3 bet is already in the pot and cannot raise. Player 1 might have moved all-in to create certain pot odds for Player 2 to act within, and those odds are destroyed if you now make Player 3's bet binding, perhaps to Player 1's disadvantage. Player 2 can now call and knows that that Player 3 cannot raise. Now Players 2 and 3 can check it down and hope one of them picks up a hand to eliminate Player #1. For such a situation, read the first and last comment on this thread.

Plus, if you do check out some of the rules, you'll see there is no uniformity. An action out of turn may be binding in some situations, but there is no iron-clad rule about when.

I had proposed the following rule for my home group:

A player who checks out of turn may not bet or raise on the next turn to act, but may call if an intervening player bets.

A verbal declaration out of turn is not binding if an intervening player bets, calls, or raises. In that situation, the player who acted out of turn is free to act in any manner when that player's turn to act arrives.

A verbal declaration out of turn is binding if all intervening players fold.

The hand of a player who deliberately acts out of turn shall be declared dead and the verbal declaration out of turn is invalid.




11-19-2005 08:50 PM

Re: Home game ruling
 
[ QUOTE ]
The out-of-turn is binding only if the interveing player folds. In that situation, there is no valid reason to allow Player 3 to change his mind. His call, out of turn, reveals his intent to call the all-in if nobody else had called or raised before him. So when the intervening player folds, you should make the verbal declaration out of turn binding.

[/ QUOTE ]

Well I can think of a scenario where the players out of turn action didn't indicate an intent to call if there was no call or raise before him. Suppose that that player two is thinking about his action, and says something which is misheard by player 3. Player 3 mistakenly believes that player two has called. Player three had decided that if player 2 had called he would call because of the pot odds, but he would not call if player 2 folded. Player three announces his call thinking Player 2 had called. Now player two says hey I didn't act yet. This is particularly prone to happen if there is a player sitting between player 2 and player three who is already out of the hand

11-19-2005 09:00 PM

Re: Home game ruling
 
it's a home game, and no, it's not binding because it was not his action.

EasilyFound 11-20-2005 08:19 PM

Re: Home game ruling
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
The out-of-turn is binding only if the interveing player folds. In that situation, there is no valid reason to allow Player 3 to change his mind. His call, out of turn, reveals his intent to call the all-in if nobody else had called or raised before him. So when the intervening player folds, you should make the verbal declaration out of turn binding.

[/ QUOTE ]

Well I can think of a scenario where the players out of turn action didn't indicate an intent to call if there was no call or raise before him. Suppose that that player two is thinking about his action, and says something which is misheard by player 3. Player 3 mistakenly believes that player two has called. Player three had decided that if player 2 had called he would call because of the pot odds, but he would not call if player 2 folded. Player three announces his call thinking Player 2 had called. Now player two says hey I didn't act yet. This is particularly prone to happen if there is a player sitting between player 2 and player three who is already out of the hand

[/ QUOTE ]

You are correct. I didn't think about the hypothetical that you posited.

Your hypothetical reveals why there shouldn't be an iron-clad rule. As soon as you create a rule, someone can think of a situation where the rule might not apply.

It is much more important to think about the reasons why acting out of turn is prohibited, and to impose a solution that is consistent with those reasons.

In a home game, a person will almost always act out of turn by mistake. They are not trying to gain a tactial advantage or shoot an angle. They forget someone else is supposed to act or they think that the intervening player has acted in a particular way (the hypothetical you posit).

In these situations, the solution to the problem is to do the best that you can to play the hand the way it would have been played if everyone had acted in turn.

So in the hypothetical at the top of this thread, that would mean that the call is binding if the intervening player folded.

In psandman's hypoethetical, I think you should make that action binding. The intervening player pretty much knows now that the out of turn player has no intent to raise. And there is no reason for the out of turn player to raise after calling out of turn, unless he's attempting to influence the action of player 2. Once player 2 knows player 3's intent, there really is no way to have the hand play out according to how it would have played out if everyone had acted in turn. So you should just make the out of turn call binding. Any other ruling opens the door to cheating.


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