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  #1  
Old 05-31-2005, 11:49 AM
beetyjoose beetyjoose is offline
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Default Hunting Rabbits at the Commerce: first trip to LA

A few weeks back I was on a business trip in long beach and had asked for some advice from 2+2ers about card rooms in the Long Beach/LA area. The general consensus was to go to Commerce. I just wanted to thank everyone for the advice.

I ended up mostly playing the 200NL game which was excellent. Very loose, high action, etc. I was able play two sessions and ended up winning about $800 after all said and done. Everything was pretty standard as far as card rooms go, however one thing I found very odd was the amount of rabbit hunting going on.

I had only been playing for about an hour my first night there, and there was a little rivalry going on between two players next to me. Pretty standard stuff. Player 1 outdrew player 2 on a couple flush draws and won about $200 over the course of a few hands. Naturally player 2 is frustrated and the two of them are taking verbal jabs at each other. All standard stuff except for what followed.

Flop comes with two hearts and player 2 bets out. Player 1 calls. Turn comes a spade, player 2 bets out a very large bet relative to the pot. Player 1 thinks about it for a while and ends up folding. Player 1 looks at me and says "I had two hearts, another flush draw". Just as the dealer is about to scramble the deck player 1 exclaims "let me see that last card" and reaches for the deck and goes to flip over the last card himself! Player 2 yells "Don't let him see it!" The dealer stops the card from being turned over and player 2 demands for the floor to be called.

The manager comes over and hears what occurred, he tells player 1 very apologetically that he has to leave. He tells him there is no rabbit hunting allowed and if another player calls him over he has to make him leave. I thought the situation was handled well by both the dealer and the floor.

I had never seen someone take a card and flip it himself at a casino. I was a bit surprised by this and was talking to a regular about it the next day. I told him the entire story and he was really surprised too. The only difference was that he was shocked that they threw him out. I admit that it sucks to be tossed out, but at the same time you can't be having people grabbing cards from the dealer.

Before I can even finish my sentence another player does the same exact thing. This time neither the other players nor the dealer try to stop the player. He continues to flip over the turn and the river. Play continues and now this rabbit hunting is occurring literally every other hand that is not making it to the river. Every time the same thing: the dealer leaves the cards out for the player to sift through.

I don't really mind rabbit hunting but this was getting ridiculous, especially for a place that has a rule posted that states "no rabbit hunting". It got to the point where players were rabbit hunting five cards when the action never made it to the flop. This may sound a bit over the top but it was starting to create a feeling of lawlessness at the table. It was as if the dealer wasn't in control at all. If nothing else it was slowing down the game considerably.

I play regularly at Foxwoods. I've played at a handful of casinos in Vegas. I wouldn't consider myself a seasoned veteran by any means, but I've played quite a bit and never seen anything like this.

Is this something that happens all the time at other casinos? Has anyone else had an experience like this before?
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  #2  
Old 05-31-2005, 04:02 PM
shant shant is offline
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Default Re: Hunting Rabbits at the Commerce: first trip to LA

I see this regularly and have never heard of anyone speaking up against it. Usually the dealer will even fan the deck towards the person who asked to rabbit hunt so they can burn and turn themselves. I'm speaking from experiences in the LA rooms like Commerce and HPC.
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  #3  
Old 05-31-2005, 04:10 PM
Origami Origami is offline
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Default Re: Hunting Rabbits at the Commerce: first trip to LA

What Shant said....happens all the time.
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  #4  
Old 05-31-2005, 04:11 PM
renodoc renodoc is offline
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Default Re: Hunting Rabbits at the Commerce: first trip to LA

I've only played there once (in the 200NL game) and I saw this happen all the time. It bordered on absurd.
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  #5  
Old 05-31-2005, 04:19 PM
Randy_Refeld Randy_Refeld is offline
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Default Re: Hunting Rabbits at the Commerce: first trip to LA

This is why the deler should muck the stub when the hand is over. When peopel have asked me to show them a card I have no card to show them. In some places where they are unfamiliar with correct procedures they tell the delaer to drop the deck so they cn pick it back up.
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  #6  
Old 05-31-2005, 04:44 PM
ChicagoTroy ChicagoTroy is offline
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Default Re: Hunting Rabbits at the Commerce: first trip to LA

I play in East Chicago, I've seen it once, and it was from a west coaster. Thought it was bizarre, didn't know they had a name for it.

If anything, it encourages loose play. I guess.
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  #7  
Old 05-31-2005, 07:09 PM
Rick Nebiolo Rick Nebiolo is offline
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Default Re: Hunting Rabbits at the Commerce: first trip to LA

On a scale of 1 to 100 of "irregularities" (1 being most important) that occur in Los Angeles small no limit games, I'd rate controlling rabit hunting about 98. Generally opponents who rabit hunt are players who you want to play against, and as long as it is done only occasionally and at the end of the hand I wouldn't be that concerned.

That said, some of the games in LA are out of control on the other 99 most improtant things. For example, half the table sometimes appears to be auditioning for Sexton's job on the WPT - they all feel they have the right to speculate about the hand in play. People routinely act out of turn.

Here's an example was from a couple days ago. In a $200 NL game there were a bunch of limpers to me in the small blind. I raise about pot with a big pair, loose player UTG is considering calling but looks left and all five limpers had folded (the problem mostly being caused by seat nine, the second limper who caused the chain reaction). I very politely asked that people take care to act in turn. The players sort of apologized.

About five minutes later I'm watching a big pot. Seat 3 bets into a decent size pot and seat 7 puts in a big raise (both are deep). Naturally there is some verbal speculation about the hand by half the table. Action is on seat 9 who holds his hand so only seat 7 and 8 can see it!!!. This was so over the line I do speak up and get verbally berated by seat 9 (he essentially said I should take my rule book and shove it up my ass). This was an interesting comment considering he is a lawyer by profession. He is also considered one of the "nice guys" at the table by many. I merely replied that this isn't a minor transgression and considering the size of the pot he was out of line. But I let it go, as this is life in LA and I wasn't on home turf.

~ Rick
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  #8  
Old 05-31-2005, 08:46 PM
andyfox andyfox is offline
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Default Re: Hunting Rabbits at the Commerce: first trip to LA

Do you think there are more irregularities in no-limit than in limit?

In my normal limit game, there isn't much rabbit-hunting and what there is is usually good-natured.

When I play in Las Vegas,there's much more speculation about a player's hand while the hand is still in play than I hear in L.A., at least in my game. Usually it'll be multi-way and when somebody check-raises, the first guy to act after the check-rasier says something like "I can't beat your set, nice hand, I'm folding my Ace." Nice.
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  #9  
Old 05-31-2005, 10:44 PM
Rick Nebiolo Rick Nebiolo is offline
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Default Re: Hunting Rabbits at the Commerce: first trip to LA

[ QUOTE ]
Do you think there are more irregularities in no-limit than in limit?

[/ QUOTE ]

Yes, probably as a result of the no limit shown on TV and in a way it is both good and bad.

The good is that most of these new players are very good natured and excited about their poker and it shows in their manner. The bad is that things do at times spin a bit out of control; that said, usually the worse the etiquette the better the game [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img].

The incident I described above was most unusual in that rarely is it my way to get in a quarrel, but on this occasion it was very much over the line and the player in seat 9 was very much into getting under peoples skin and has shown on many occasions his utter disregard for what is fair (I've played with him before and am acquainted with his antics). I forget the exact board and hand but seats 9's cards (that he chose to show to seat 3 and fold) were of great importance. Had they only been known to one party it would have been a great wrong.

[ QUOTE ]
In my normal limit game, there isn't much rabbit-hunting and what there is is usually good-natured.

[/ QUOTE ]

That is my experience also which is why I care so little about it. At the Bike controlling rabbit hunting somehow became somewhat of a major project about a year ago. For example, on every shuffle machine a sticker was affixed proclaiming:

"No abuse.
English only.
No rabbit hunting."

My guess is we both would agree that controlling abuse is quite noble.

How and to what degree controlling the use of languages other than English at the table in multi-cultural LA would be a subject of a long thread or essay. My views have softened, let it suffice to say that I would like to see it controlled within reason while the hand is in play while not offending the perpetrators.

By putting the admonition not to rabbit hunt at the same level as the other two diminishes the others, as I would think most players who understand what makes a good game also understand that rabbit hunting does little harm.

[ QUOTE ]
When I play in Las Vegas,there's much more speculation about a player's hand while the hand is still in play than I hear in L.A., at least in my game. Usually it'll be multi-way and when somebody check-raises, the first guy to act after the check-raiser says something like "I can't beat your set, nice hand, I'm folding my Ace." Nice.

[/ QUOTE ]

That's just the local Las Vegas nit culture we all love to run over on our visits. Years ago when I could visit the land of sin I've made plays that raise eyebrows but barely are noticed here. Yet Clarkmeister thinks I'm a nit. Damn him [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img].

In proofing I just noted a sort of weird tone/style in my response to your post - perhaps it's because I just woke from a short but lovely nap on the porch, lulled to sleep reading the intoxicating adventures of Patrick O'Brien's heroes Aubrey and Maturin.

I'm still six books behind Hero though.

Regards,

Rick
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  #10  
Old 05-31-2005, 11:12 PM
Matt Flynn Matt Flynn is offline
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Default Re: Hunting Rabbits at the Commerce: first trip to LA

first time through the books?

lucky you.
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