First
Time in a Casino
Ten Questions You Should Ask
BY:
Ashley Adams
Contact at: (Asha34@aol.com)
Author of Winning 7-Card Stud
I've
been getting some feedback on my Baby
No Limit articles and my Stud articles.
One of the questions I've been asked is
what my first experiences were in a casino.
I guess many of the players in these games
are folks who really never played casino
poker before. They find the experience
a bit intimidating and were curious to
know how I dealt with my "first time jitters".
Let
me start by saying that the best first
step in getting over the anxiety of playing
in a casino is to ask questions. Questions,
questions and more questions will put
you in the right frame of mind to enter
a casino poker room for the first time.
Why? Because once you arrive you'll be
asking questions right off the bat. So
being inquisitive in advance gives you
a head start.
Here
is an initial list of questions you should
be asking as you enter the casino. Some
answers are obvious. Some, less so. Make
sure you have the answers before you sit
down for your first casino poker game.
I'll follow this with a run down of my
first couple of visits and problems I
ran into and learned from. I'll add some
general ideas of how to prepare mentally
for your first session. And then I'll
give you a good list of do's and don'ts.
Where
is the poker room?
Silly,
I know. But in casinos, poker rooms are
usually not located in an obvious and
visible place. That's because they usually
don't make nearly as much money for the
casino as the slots, the table games or
even the BINGO and KENO lounge. So just
because you don't spot it right away doesn't
mean that the casino you're in doesn't
have a poker room. Make sure to ask. Now
especially, many casinos are starting
to spread poker. And with charity, Indian,
and riverboat gaming, many free standing
poker rooms are sprouting up all over
the place. You might be pleasantly surprised.
What
games do you offer?
Nearly
every casino that offers poker will spread
Hold 'Em. Find out what else they offer.
Some have an Omaha game, an Omaha Hi Lo
game, 7-Card Stud, 7-Card Stud Hi Lo,
Razz (Stud Low only) even Draw, LoBall,
Pineapple and combinations of all of those
games are offered in some casinos. Some
poker rooms offer certain games only during
certain hours. Make sure you know the
exact game that is being spread before
you sit down. This is especially important
if the casino spreads mixed games - that
rotate among a few games. I remember waiting
for two hours to play in what I thought
was a great Pot Limit Hold Em game. I
finally got a seat only to find out three
hands later that it was a Dealer's Choice
game that had just been changed to Omaha
- a game I didn't know how to play. If
you want to avoid looking like the moron
I appeared to be - ask first.
What
stakes do you spread?
Poker
rooms frequently have many different stakes
of the same game. Where I play most often,
Foxwoods Resort Casino in Ledyard, Connecticut,
they spread the following Hold Em games:
$2/4, $4/8, $5/10, $10/20 and $20/40.
They also offer No Limit Hold Em with
$1/2 blinds and a $100 maximum buy-in
as well as No Limit with $5/5 blinds and
no maximum buy-in. During tournaments
they'll spread a $5/10/25 blind and a
$25/50 blind game of No Limit as well.
They even offered a $75/150, $200/400
and $2,000/4,000 mixed game of Hold Em,
Stud, Omaha and Stud8. They offer a similarly
broad array of 7-Card Stud games. So make
sure you know what is offered before you
try to pick the game that you think is
best for your level of skill and the size
of your bankroll.
Are any of the games
played with a Kill?
A
"kill" means that the limits double when
the pot is a certain size and there is
a single winner. Typically, for example,
the $5/10 Omaha8 (Omaha Hi Lo with an
8 qualifier for low) game at Foxwoods
is played with a kill when the pot reaches
$100 and there is a single winner. The
next hand is played at $10/20. The limit
returns to $5/10 unless the next pot is
also a single winner with a value of $100.
Make sure that you understand which games
are "kill" games and how the "kill" is
triggered.
Where
do you buy chips?
Another
question that may seem silly. But it isn't.
In some poker rooms you can buy chips
right at the table. Just sit down with
your cash and buy your chips from the
dealer. In other places you must go to
the cashier. Find this out ahead of time.
If there's a wait for a table, it often
makes sense to stand in line at the cashier
and buy in for a game while you're waiting
to be assigned to a table. It will save
you the annoyance of having to wait twice
before you can actually play a hand.
Does
cash play on the table?
All
standard poker room games are played "table
stakes". That means that you may only
bet or raise with the chips that you have
in front of you when the hand begins.
There is no going into your wallet during
the play of the hand; nor may you "go
light" and make up the amount after the
hand is over. In some casinos you can
have bills in addition to your chips on
the table before the hand begins. These
bills can be used to call and raise if
you run out of chips. Other poker rooms
don't allow you to use these bills - they
"don't play" in the parlance of the poker
room. Find this out ahead of time, before
you are in a position where you'd like
to raise or call with your cash. Nothing
worse than being caught short when you
mistakenly thought you could use the cash
you had sitting next to your chips.
Do I have to post
a blind to get a hand?
Some
places deal you a hand as soon as you
sit down even if you haven't posted a
blind. Other places require that you put
up an amount equal to the Big Blind if
you want a hand. If that's the case then
you might as well wait for the Big Blind
to come to you before you play your first
hand. Find this out first, before you
sit down. If you have to post, you can
take a few minutes after you get seated
to buy your chips, go to the bathroom,
etc. while you wait for the Big Blind
to come to you. If not, then plan to play
as soon as you sit down.
In
Stud, what is the maximum initial raise?
In
Stud there are limit games and spread
limit games. Some spread limit games,
like $1-5 for example, allow you to raise
the $1 bring-in bet by the maximum amount
of $5.00 to $6.00. Other poker rooms limit
your initial raise of the bring-in to
$5.00. It may seem like a small thing,
but it's important to know this before
you attempt to raise the maximum.
What
is the maximum number of raises?
In some poker rooms it is three, in others
it is four. Know this before you sit down.
Similarly, in some rooms there is an unlimited
number of raises if only two players remain
in a betting round. In other rooms there
is an unlimited number of raises only
if the betting round began with
two players. Though the situation of continued
re-raising comes up infrequently, it does
come up from time to time. Know what the
rules are before you find yourself in
a situation where you need the answer.
What is the rake
or time charge and how is it taken?
This
may be the most important question of
them all - as it affects your ability
to make money and it faces you on every
hand. You need to know when the rake is
taken and what the maximum amount is that
can be taken from the pot. You need to
know if the rake is reduced if the game
is shorthanded. Some poker rooms will
reduce the rake if there are fewer than
six players - others don't cut the rake
unless there are four or fewer players.
You need to know if there is a smaller
maximum on the rake in a split pot game
if the pot is heads up. Some places cut
the rake in half in these situations -
making the games like Omaha8 and Stud8
more attractive. Different poker rooms
have widely different policies. Find out
the answers precisely so you can play
where it is most advantageous and so you
can tailor your game to suit the rake.
Oh,
you don't think the rake matters much
to your game? You're wrong. Consider this
example. In one casino the rake is 10%
with a $4.00 max. $3.00 is taken out of
the blinds/antes and the fourth buck comes
out when the pot hits $40.00. Another
room has the same % and the same $4.00
max. But there policy is that they don't
rake until the pot hits $10. They then
take out $1 for every additional $10 that's
in the pot. Do you think that a thoughtful
player might have different ante-stealing
strategies for each room?
Similarly, some poker rooms rake their
$20/40 game. Other rooms have each player
pay $7 per half hour of play - and they
don't touch the pots. This could have
a profound effect on your general approach
to the game - generally making players
more aggressive in the game with the time
charge and tighter in the raked game.
Summary:
Get the answers to all of these questions
and any others you can think of before
you play your first hand. That's what
floor people and poker room personnel
are for.
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