| This is a discussion on In an all in situation... within the online poker forums, in the General Poker section; Hi all. In a tournament I was playing earlier, somebody pushed all in on the flop. I called and told him what I had. He ... |
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#1 | ||||
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| In an all in situation... Hi all. In a tournament I was playing earlier, somebody pushed all in on the flop. I called and told him what I had. He said I was good and the dealer started turning the next card. I asked the dealer to slow down and to let the other guy turn his cards over first and the player refused and said that there was no point as he was drawing dead. I would of prefered him to turn his cards over regardless, but he wouldn't and so the dealer dealt the remaining cards. The player then mucked his hand and then said 'oh wait a minute, I had a straight' and then tried to retrieve his cards from the muck to take the pot. If you raise all in on the flop and get a caller, do you not have to show your cards regardless of whether you believe you are drawing dead? And if after all the cards are dealt, you tell the other person that they have won and then muck your hand, is your hand not dead, regardless of what you had? Any help on this would be greatly appreciated as it ruffled a few feathers. Cheers. Trevor |
| Play Texas Hold'em Online Poker | In an all in situation... | |
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#4 | ||||
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| absoultely. in a tournament the cards must be turned up before the dealer continues. im a dealer. however cash games are different and the players do not have to show there cards until the showdown. but if ur in a tournament and the player mucked his cards like u said. the hand is dead and u would win the pot |
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#6 | ||||
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| If the tournament follows TDA rules (or has a similar rule of their own) the hands are supposed to be turned face up as soon as there is no more betting action to be completed - the dealer shouldn't have turned another card until this was done and the players don't have any say in it. The rule is in place to prevent collusion and chip dumping. If the player refuses you can actually insist on seeing the hand (the same goes for cash games FWIW, since the hand went to showdown). You paid to see the cards, you can insist. There are situations in which a "dead" hand can be retrieved from the muck with the approval of the floor or tournament supervisor but this situation sounds dodgy enough that I'd be surprised if a TD would allow it. It's not as if the guy turned over a hand that showed a straight and then had the dealer muck it by accident or anything. |
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#7 | ||||
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| @ Mooby72 , Man If I didn't know better I would say you was at a game with me last night. It was a house game and TWO different situation occured similar to this. First a player was all in and the other player watched as the river was turned over and said " Im playing the board" and the all in guy did the same. As the other player was about to muck he notice his hand was better then the board and said "hold up, I won" I thought since he claim he was playing the board and the all in guy already mucked his hand that the hand should have been over. Also the second situation a guy told the other player " you won" and tossed his cards to the deck ( mucking ) but as the board was being cleared he quickly grab his hand only to find out his hand was better. Once again I believe once you forfeit or claim a hand in anyway the hand final results should be complete. |
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#8 | ||||
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| To my understanding, in a tourney, you have to show at that point. In a live cash game, not always. I do believe you have the right to make him show after all cards are out, but If you'd have done that, you woulda lost. As for the muck, then realize he had the st, the hand is dead as soon as it was mucked. |
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#10 | ||||
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| re: In an all in situation... poker Quote:
the first hand was "almost" mucked, and cards best hand taken over verbal hand called. Once the cards are shown, It's the dealers job to identify the best hand. His hand good. The second guy's hand is dead as soon as he mucks them. |
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#11 | ||||
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| Hi all. Thanks for your replies. In the hand, I explained that his hand was dead and that I had won the pot and 1 other player at the table agreed with me so the guy with the straight let me take it but wasn't happy about it. I should point out that it was a cash game and not a tourny though. I was half asleep when I wrote the original post. I am confused about the difference between tourny and cash in terms of this rule though... Surely, the last aggressor always has to show his cards in both tourny and cash game play? Thanks again for all the replies. Trevor |
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#13 | ||||
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| In a cash game, the cards don't HAVE to be shown. If the hand is mucked, it's dead. In a tourney, the cards do have to be shown in most places, but some card rooms, especially where there's a lot of regulars won't always enforce this. However, in my experience, if you ask for the cards to be shown, they will be. Sounds like it worked out ok for you in the end though! |
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#16 | ||||
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| I'm certainly not complaining that he didn't turn his cards over in this scenario as if he did, I wouldn't have won, but I am still unclear on the cash game ruling of having, or not having to turn your cards over... In my experience, the last agressor ALWAYS has to show his hand if requested by the other player. I used to work as a dealer in a poker club and I have never heard of the rule that protects his hand in a cash game. Sounds like a very odd rule to me and it surely defeats the purpose of 'paying for information'. I'm not even really talking about my original post any more, but is this definately a rule? |
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#18 | ||||
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| Quote:
The actual rule is just that a player wanting to claim any part of the pot has to show all their cards and that any hand that goes to showdown has to be shown on request: http://www.homepokertourney.com/robe...m#THE_SHOWDOWN Tournaments force you to turn the hands over to avoid problems with collusion and chip dumping. Those issues (chip dumping in particular) aren't such a big issue in cash games which is why the rule is somewhat relaxed in its application. |
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#20 | ||||
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| re: In an all in situation... poker Quote:
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Number of Posts: 20
Number of Authors: 16