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Is this story true \"Fossilman\"
I read this on RGP.
"This past weekend I made my way to Foxwoods to try and win a seat at the NEPC this upcoming weekend. I found the act 1 competition fairly easy to wade through. I expected the act 2 to be a bit more competitive. I wasn’t disappointed. I sat down at the table next to guy wearing his best poker uniform; sunglasses, hat, and a Pokerstars.com leather jacket. As I sat down he let me know that there were a lot of good players at the table. He gestured to the other end and told me who each of the four older gentlemen were and their recent poker playing achievements. Great, I’m thinking… this should be quick and painless. Things went better than I had hoped for. After and hour and a half all but four of us had been eliminated. Interestingly enough only one of the heavy hitters remained. On one particular hand I was dealt pocket J’s. I put in a $300 bet and was called by the heavy. The flop came 10s Jd 5d. I took another peek at my cards to give the impression I was unsure of what I had. When I looked up, Greg Raymer had taken the seat right next to the guy and was staring at me (apparently they were friends as they chit chatted through the rest of the round). Man was I surprised. Not awestruck or anything like that just a bit surprised, this being only the second tournament table I’ve ever been at,(the act 1 an hour before was the first) even if it was just an Act 2. So he was looking me over and I noticed his eyes shifted down to my hands. It’s important to note that I had only gotten about 3 hours sleep the night before and had had way too much caffeine and very little to eat in the past 12 hours. At this point I realized my hands were shaking ever so slightly. I checked it back to the heavy and he put up $600 which I called. The turn came the 3s. Right before the card hit the table I noticed Raymer had leaned over and was whispering something in the guys ear. I knew what he was telling the guy. I knew it plain as day “His hands shake when he has a monster hand.” I put up another $600 and the guy folds and says nothing. Twenty minutes later it’s me and the heavy again. He raises $200 pre-flop and I call him with rags (4d 7h or something equally as shitty), being sure my hands are resting on the table as not to give anything away. The flop comes 10s 9h Ad. He raises another $1200. At this point I lift my hands up off the table surface and allow them to shake a bit while I contemplate a move here. I make sure he notices my hands. Once I’m sure he has seen them, I think for another minute or two and push everything I have into the middle. He thinks for a minute and mucks it. As I’m scooping up the chips I tell the guy “I wish you had called me”. He shoots back “I wish your hands didn’t shake so much when you had a great hand.”. “Heh yeah” was my reply. Soon after that, one of the other two at the table busted out and we collected our Act 3 coupons from the floor guy. After everything was sorted I went over and shook the heavies hand, complimented him on his play and then I shook Raymers hand and told him I just wanted to shake his hand. I busted out 2 hours into the Act 3 that night, after making a stupid rookie mistake, going all in with pocket 7’s preflop then getting called by pocket A’s. I was always careful to keep the hands from shaking though. Good lesson to everyone. Get plenty of sleep and stay away from the caffeine. I can’t think of another time I’ve ever had so much fun for a mere $60 buy in. Good luck to everyone who made it through the Act 3’s. If you happen to read this Greg, thanks for the lesson." JD |
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