The flop is KQJ all different suits giving me a 10 to straight but not
much else. I bet 1000 chips (pretty big bet for the chip count). The other
better calls. Next card is 10 of different suit.
I bet 2000 and the better calls. Last card is 2. No help to either.
With the A high straight I go all in..... this is where it gets
interesting.
The other better thinks for about two mintues.... and then suddenly
without saying anything turns over his cards, NO CALL MENTIONED.
Not thinking (cause it was odd to see before making a call or fold
statment) I turn my cards over.
The better then proceeds to say that he didn't decided whether he was
going to call or not and he was just turning his cards over to get a
reaction out of me.
He physically flipped the cards up in front of him without saying anything.
Is this a muck? Should that be an automatic fold? It doesn't matter cause
it saved him his chips but if i was bluffing it would have been a
interesting scenario.
Just curious cause it was the oddest thing i have ever seen.
Thanks,
Adam
_________________________________________________________________
Posted using RecPoker.com - http://www.recpoker.com
As you've described your hand, you had the nuts, so there's no REAL risk to
you whatever happens next, but you should get a full set of rules codified
before your next tournament.
Matthew
"Adam Ehrenworth" <anon...@ehrenworth.com> wrote in message
news:dxwgc.2484895$iA2.2...@news.easynews.com...
If he does that, he's done. Most places would call your hand dead and
might ask ya to leave.
--
Jim C
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Thanks for the info
Standard practice in no-limit cash games to elicit information from
your reaction to seeing his hand.
Totally illegal in tournaments. his hand should have been declared
dead when he turned it over.
Dennis
The next time I was in a casino I asked about it and the dealer said he
would regard that as a call. The floor manager said that if the player
were to preface the flipping by saying "I'm still thinking." that he might
be able to do it, but if the other player had iterrepeted it as a call and
flipped his cards over then that would make it a call. It is not somthing
I will ever try when real money is involved.
Anybody else have experience with this?
Jan Fisher
Just pack - We'll do the rest!
Card Player Cruises
http://www.cardplayercruises.com/
the Don
Everything I've read said exposed cards like this are live until
mucked.
If he didn't say anything or make any "all in" motions, I think he
hadn't yet made a decision.
Mike
"Adam Ehrenworth" <anon...@ehrenworth.com> wrote in message news:<dxwgc.2484895$iA2.2...@news.easynews.com>...
Adam
A penalty should have been assessed. From Robert's Rules of Poker
Section 15 - Tournaments ...
------------
21. Showing cards from a live hand during the action injures the rights
of other players still competing in an event, who wish to see
contestants eliminated. A player may not show any cards during a deal
(unless the event has only two remaining players). If a player
deliberately shows a card, the player may be penalized (but his hand
will not be ruled dead). Verbally stating one's hand during the play may
be penalized.
------------
I remember very distinctly David Lamb talking about this type of
situation before that start of our World Poker Open this year.
If a players exposes his cards when it is his turn to act, it is
considered an act of surrender. Hand dead.
Gary (...) Philips
I agree with this rule for a tournament. However, in a ring game I believe
the cards are live, whether turned up or not, until they are put in the
muck.
Irish Mike
"lvdlrs" <lvd...@midsouth.rr.com> wrote in message
news:FgGgc.33753$B%4.2...@fe2.columbus.rr.com...
> "If a players exposes his cards when it is his turn to act, it is
> considered an act of surrender. Hand dead."
>
> I agree with this rule for a tournament. However, in a ring game I believe
> the cards are live, whether turned up or not, until they are put in the
> muck.
Of course, in the quotation above I was referring to tournament
situations only. Live games are a different animal.
Gary (...) Philips
I will ask Dave about this. I certainly didn't know that...
Thanks,