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  #11  
Old 06-12-2007, 01:18 PM
WoodPaneling WoodPaneling is offline
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Default Re: \"Un-mucking\" a mucked hand

[ QUOTE ]

Wonder what the OP means by "shows". Flashes one card? Tables both cards but then picks up and tosses face down?

[/ QUOTE ]

She flashed both cards, but didn't turn them face up on the table. She flashed them, then tossed them toward the muck face down. Dealer then swept them into the muck.
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  #12  
Old 06-12-2007, 01:18 PM
tourney guy tourney guy is offline
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Default Re: \"Un-mucking\" a mucked hand

[ QUOTE ]
I was at Foxwoods the other night and a situation came up that I think was extremely questionable, was wondering how you guys would feel about it.

There was a 4 spade board, including the 4, 5, 6, and 8 of spades. Two older ladies went to showdown, one of them flipped some high spade, and the other showed the table her 7 of spades, made a :/ face, and mucked face down, obviously thinking she only had a 7 high flush. Dealer swept her cards into the muck and actually put the muck pile onto the deck and started squeezing the cards into a clean formation.

Someone decided that NOW they'd speak up and yells out "7 spades, she had a straight flush!" and the dealer grabs what seems to be a totally random card from the deck without looking and miraculously tables the 7 of spades. She then pushes the pot to the woman who mucked it, while the woman who showed the high spade just stared at the floor (as in the ground) shaking her head and looking absolutely crushed.

First off, she mucked her hand. Shouldn't it be dead the second it touches the muck, unless swept into the muck by dealer error? Second off, it wasn't even clearly identifiable in the muck, I have no idea how the dealer managed to table that card. And also, don't you have to show both cards to win a pot at a showdown? I believe she flashed her other hole card prior to mucking but it wasn't involved at all when the 7s came out. This just seems really ridiculous to me and I think the woman who didn't muck should have gotten the pot.

[/ QUOTE ]

WOW - This is first and formost horrible dealer technique. The dealer, when having each player flashed one card, should strenly ask the players to show their cards,

Second, if a player releases her cards to the dealer, they should be SLID INTO THE MUCK in order to be mixed in and not revealed.

Third, I still don't know if the player with the 7SP ever showed her other card. Far as I know, she had an UNO DRAW FOUR as the other card.

As a floor, it is hard to make these decisions, but I cannot see how the lady with the 7 spades gets the pot. She did not table 2 cards, she did not protect her interest in the hand, and she surely did notask for her cards back.

If the other lady has 2 live cards, she gets the pot. Simple.

As to 'touching the muck', most stores have a retrieve rule iif the PLAYER can retrieve the card and it is obviously the card in question.

If the dealer would only do their job properly and muck the cards when released, there would be no issue.

Finally, I think an issue greater that IWTSTH is one player to a hand, which would render another player calling the lady's 7SP invalid since she DID NOT TABLE 2 CARDS.
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  #13  
Old 06-12-2007, 02:55 PM
Diana Ross Fan Diana Ross Fan is offline
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Default Re: \"Un-mucking\" a mucked hand

[ QUOTE ]
Finally, I think an issue greater that IWTSTH is one player to a hand, which would render another player calling the lady's 7SP invalid since she DID NOT TABLE 2 CARDS.

[/ QUOTE ]

I think it is a rule of card's speak. She showed a str8 flush and the pot is hers.
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  #14  
Old 06-12-2007, 04:59 PM
KipBond KipBond is offline
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Default Re: \"Un-mucking\" a mucked hand

[ QUOTE ]
I think it is a rule of card's speak. She showed a str8 flush and the pot is hers.

[/ QUOTE ]

[ QUOTE ]
THE SHOWDOWN

1. To win any part of a pot, a player must show all of his cards faceup on the table, whether they were used in the final hand played or not.

[/ QUOTE ]

She didn't do that. She folded.
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  #15  
Old 06-12-2007, 05:11 PM
PokerDealerSTL PokerDealerSTL is offline
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Default Re: \"Un-mucking\" a mucked hand

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Finally, I think an issue greater that IWTSTH is one player to a hand, which would render another player calling the lady's 7SP invalid since she DID NOT TABLE 2 CARDS.

[/ QUOTE ]

I think it is a rule of card's speak. She showed a str8 flush and the pot is hers.

[/ QUOTE ]

But in this instance the cards do not speak, because the hand was not "tabeled" properly. There are specific things you must do in casino poker for a hand to be read. The hand must be face up on the table, with BOTH cards there to be read.

From what the OP has said, neither of these things had happened. She flashes her one card to another player, throws her hand in, dealer mucks them, then a player says that she has a straight flush.

IMO, that hand should have never come out of the muck.
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  #16  
Old 06-12-2007, 05:22 PM
HOWMANY HOWMANY is offline
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Default Re: \"Un-mucking\" a mucked hand

[ QUOTE ]
I do believe there is a rule that if a hand is clearly shown and is the winner, all reasonable effort should be made to award that player the pot.

[/ QUOTE ]

Yeah, I tabled my 4 card hand in Omaha 8 once and then mucked it but the dealer saw what I had and that it beat the villain (I didn't even realize it) and pushed me the pot.

However if the woman did not table both her cards in this situation then she is not entitled to the pot as far as I know.
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  #17  
Old 06-12-2007, 05:23 PM
Rick Nebiolo Rick Nebiolo is offline
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Default Re: \"Un-mucking\" a mucked hand

[ QUOTE ]
Also, this breaks the one player to a hand rule in a big way because another player is the one that spoke up about the lady being the winner of the pot. It says she just flashes a card, which is different than tabeling the hand then getting the cards mucked accidentally. That would be no different than a player looking at his hand in omaha h/l, not knowing he has a low, and another player saying something like... oh you have a eighty-five low then the player tabeling the hand for half the pot.

This should probably be a dead hand every time.

[/ QUOTE ]

Regarding your later point either I misread or perhaps you have two harsh an interpretation of when "one player to a hand trumps "cards speak".

For example if a player appears to not know he has the pot (or in your O/8 example the low half) and gets help while holding his cards up how does a competent floor know he wouldn't have eventually figured it out before tossing his hand in? His hand shouldn't be ruled dead in this case.

Now let's say the player looked for this sort of commiseration from a neighbor and then tossed his hand forward and face down toward the muck (assuming all action is complete) and then the neighbor tells him he had a low/back door flush/straight whatever and the player now retrieves it while it's still discernible. Here we have quite a different situation. That hand should be ruled dead by a reasonable floor (thinking that it would be highly unlikely that the player would have retrieved the hand on its own).

~ Rick
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  #18  
Old 06-12-2007, 05:31 PM
PokerDealerSTL PokerDealerSTL is offline
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Default Re: \"Un-mucking\" a mucked hand

what I meant there is a player holding his hand *not tabled* in his hand, another player looking at his hand and mentioning that he has a 85 low, then the player tabeling his hand for half the pot.

No matter if a player would figure that out on his own or not, another player cannot assist a player in this way.

Maybe I wrote it a little unclear. But above is what I meant.
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  #19  
Old 06-12-2007, 05:40 PM
AngusThermopyle AngusThermopyle is offline
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Default Re: \"Un-mucking\" a mucked hand

[ QUOTE ]
what I meant there is a player holding his hand *not tabled* in his hand, another player looking at his hand and mentioning that he has a 85 low, then the player tabling his hand for half the pot.

No matter if a player would figure that out on his own or not, another player cannot assist a player in this way.



[/ QUOTE ]

But you cannot kill his hand because of his neighbor. Otherwise I can "kill" the hand of the jerk next to me by "telling" him what he has before he has a chance to table it. The penalty, if any, should be on the neighbor who doesn't keep his mouth shut.
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  #20  
Old 06-12-2007, 05:49 PM
PokerDealerSTL PokerDealerSTL is offline
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Default Re: \"Un-mucking\" a mucked hand



[/ QUOTE ]

But you cannot kill his hand because of his neighbor. Otherwise I can "kill" the hand of the jerk next to me by "telling" him what he has before he has a chance to table it. The penalty, if any, should be on the neighbor who doesn't keep his mouth shut.

[/ QUOTE ]

We are not talking about killing a live hand where that happens... I am just saying it is not allowed... espically when a hand is in the muck already where a neibhor says you have a low hand... you cannot retrieve that hand and table it.

In the instance of the neibhor telling a player who is trying to figure out his hand telling him what he has, we will warn that player that he cannot do that, and if he keeps reading other players hands for them when they are not tabled he will not be playing for the day.

We had a very bad incident of this happening in our 5-5 pot limit a while back where a player had no idea he had a full house, he is getting ready to throw his hand in, and his neibhor says turn your cards over you have a full house. He turns over the full house and scoops a 7,000 dollar pot.
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