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Tricky decision! \"I put you all-in\"
This was submitted to me by a friend of mine, very interesting case:
Here is a poker ruling problem which occurred at a table I was dealing (I don't actually remember how the floor did rule). 2 5 Blind NL HU. After the turn there is a pot that is probably around $120. Three players remain in the hand. Seat 1 is shortstacked with less than $100 chips remainig. Seat 4 has a deep stack between $600-$700 and has not shut up all night, he has been constantly talking trash directing much of it to the player in seat 1 (nothing abusive). Seat 8 is also deep stacked with a approximately the same size stack as seat 4. Seat 1 is first to act and checks. Seat 4 leans back and announces "I put him all in" immediately seat 8 announces call and starts pushing all his chips out. Seat 4 immediately starts objecting saying that he only meant to bet as much as Seat 1 had. He was facing seat 1 when he said it (seat 4 always faces seat 1). 1) How much did seat 4 bet? 2)If you rule that seat 4 only bet as much as Seat 1 had in front of him, May seat 8 now raise? Tricky one to say the least. I won't give my decision yet, but I will say this: "I put you all-in" is a terribly amateurish phrase, and here's a prime example why you shouldn't say it. al |
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