Macau Poker Low Stakes



It’s hard to remember life before PokerStars existed but there was once a time when you had to handle real cards and chips to play a game of poker. However, many poker players will have never stepped foot inside of a card room or casino to play a hand of live poker. Next time you get the opportunity though, there are many reasons why you should take a seat at a live poker table and play some cash games.
Depending on the location, most card rooms will have cash games at relatively low stakes that should suit all poker bankrolls. Take your seat and take a look around the table to see who you are up against. One of the most important skills you must use in live cash games is profiling your opponents; are they drinking? Are they comfortable handling chips and cards? Are they revealing their strategies in the way they speak about poker? Do they look nervous? Pay attention to these questions and more – the information that they reveal should help guide how you play your hands.

Typically, players will be a bit looser in a live cash game environment than they would be on PokerStars. After all, nobody chooses to sit in a poker game and fold hand after hand! If your intention is to make the best decisions and win some money, you should adopt a tight-aggressive strategy. While everyone around you is gambling with weak starting hands you should look to enter pots where it is likely you have the best hand. This means playing strong Aces like Ace-Ten and better, rather than hands like Ace-Two that are likely to be dominated. Slow playing is also hugely overrated in live cash games and should generally be ignored. If you pick up a big hand, either pre-flop or post-flop, then it usually pays to play it fast. Unless you’re unfortunate you will usually find one player on the table that is more than happy to pay you off.

In live cash games there are other factors you should be aware of that differ from playing on PokerStars too. Unlike online you will have to calculate how much money each player has in their stack yourself. Make sure you have at least an educated guess as to how much money each player in front of them has as this should dictate the way that you play. For example, there’s a big difference shoving with pocket Tens versus a player who has 30BBs to one who has 200BBs! It also makes sense to try and hit a set with a small pair versus an opponent who is playing 100BB+, but it’s a poor play versus someone with just 20BBs in front of them. If you make silly errors like these then you could live to regret it!

Poker

This second installment in my poker capital series will focus on up-‘n’-coming poker capital Macau, long-time holder of the title for gambling capital of Asia. MACAU LOW ROLLER GUIDE The city of dreams may be better known for being a high stakes paradise, which you can read all about in my Macau high roller guide. Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube. Low Stakes Poker FAQ How Low do Low Stakes Go? Low stakes poker can be played as low as the 5-cent level, which would fit into an area that has become known as 'micro stakes' poker. There is no set range to classify micro stakes, but most experts consider anything from 5 cents to around $2 stakes to fit into the micro category. The high-stakes cash games in Macau that featured many of poker’s biggest names have apparently wrapped up for the time being, and now questions are swirling around the final results. I played during the day looked like night would have been better or the bigger games had the gamblers the solid regs were playing low stakes. The poker room staff were a great help. They had an American poker room supervisor when I was there 4 years ago but he said they were fazing out non citizens for locals.

Different casinos and card rooms will often have slightly varied rules and etiquette. One common rule most clubs will allow is the option to straddle. If you’re not familiar with this rule, it means that the player to the left of the big blind has the optional choice to add in a third blind that is double the size. So, for example, in a £1/£2 cash game the straddle would be £4. While it can get expensive, there are benefits to straddling. If the game is tight and a bit boring, it encourages players to gamble a bit more as there is extra cash in the middle to steal. It will also give you an aggressive image in the eyes of the other players, which can be very valuable if you are a tighter player, because it will help you get paid off when you hit something big. Also, all straddles are live, which means that you will have the option to raise (if there hasn’t been a raise before it gets to you) or re-raise once it’s your turn to act. If you are lucky enough to have been dealt a strong hand – which will happen on occasion – then this can be hugely profitable. Many players will simply think you are defending your straddle and not believe you!

For many players, nothing will ever beat the convenience and joy of playing online poker on PokerStars. However, if you are after something a little different then live cash games are a great alternative. They are fun, potentially profitable and you may even make some friends at the table too.

21:54
08 Sep

(Photo: Casinorelease.com)

They are the stuff of legends, millions of dollars won and lost on a hand, the Phil Ivey’s and Tom Dwan’s of the poker world encountering bluffs from mega-rich businessman which would make your eyes bleed, and all with a mysterious Eastern element shrouding the games in a cloak of secrecy, with triads thrown in for free – they are, of course, the Macau high stakes games!

For many years they have hosted the nosebleed stakes, and for years the details haven’t made their way out of the former-Portuguese colony - but over the last 2 or 3 years more and more of the ‘secrets’ have been revealed.

Poker

Of course, you can’t just rock up the Macau Wynn and sit down with the multi-millionaire businessmen. You need an ‘in’ and high stakes pro Andrew Moseley explains how it generally happens.


Who you know AND what you know

'To get involved in the biggest games you need to have some contacts and get invited. I met a few of the regs playing in the Wynn, I gave them some action and then one day they needed a player and I got invited.”

Other big name pros have had to wait sometimes weeks in their hotel rooms for that elusive call, the invite to perhaps make millions at the expense of huge whales. But to skin them you have to put out as well.

Tom ‘Hong Kong Tom’ Hall is another regular invitee to the biggest games in town and explained:

'Certain wealthy local beginners will request to look at a pros cards if they have folded to a big turn/river bet and the pros are pretty much obliged to show that specific player who will look at the cards and not comment further.'

He backs up Moseley’s invitation-only point, saying:

'It is a quasi-private game, so you shouldn't turn up and expect to be allowed to play, particularly as a pro…there can be a crazy waiting list even amongst the ‘regulars’. Naturally, when there are big names, massive pots and true gamblers at the table things can get crazy sometimes.'

Moseley stated in an interview a couple of years ago:

'I have played with a lot of the poker players who are heavily in the media’s eye in Macau but would not want to comment on who.”

He did, however, reveal that the language barrier had caused some amusing incidents.


Chinese whispers

'Once I didn’t hear/understand someone say “all in” when they bet just one chip and proclaimed “all in” into a massive pot on the river, so I snap called it off with my one pair thinking I was calling about 1% of the pot. I then look up and see the guy flip a bluff, shake his head in disbelief, and then push his whole stack towards me!”

Fellow high-stakes pro Brian Rast related a story that involving a local businessman Rono Lo which illustrates just why the rich ‘fish’ welcome top pros into their ‘home game’. Rast won a few big pots from Lo but was then challenged to a heads-up match. Lo finished the heads up match in profit and left the game with a story to tell, having beaten a top class pro.

The Biggest pot in history?

When rumors come out from Macau they are often unbelievable ones about multi-million dollar bluffs, and then bricks of cash part ways – with the loser ending up in hock to the triads! This was Tom ‘durrrr’ Dwan’s fate according to many online fans who couldn’t work out why he was still in Macau and missing the rest of the world’s poker offerings.

Brian Rast, the biggest pot he saw was very juicy indeed, explaining it “had a fairly quiet start on a KH 10S 7S board, which exploded with a 10D on the turn and a 5s on the river. After an unusual amount of tanking both a local and a pro, both ended up all in for a HK$40m (US$5.1m) pot. Lot of excitement ended up in a chop with both holding A 10.” He adds he “saw some pretty sick river bluffs with river bets of US$700-800k going in which were treated with much amusement at the expense of the folding player.”

$20million x2?

But a chopped $5million pot pales into insignificance if you believe Daniel Jungleman12 Cates whose AskMeAnything (AMA), confirmed that:

Dwan once lost a staggering US$20,000,000 pot in a set-over-set situation.”

Cates said it was the biggest pot he has ever witnessed but wouldn’t reveal who the other player involved in the hand was.

Englishman Sam Trickett has also described a $20million pot in Macau, one which sounds rather different, with the hand ‘ending in a huge river bet bluff by a professional poker player against amateur player’. The amateur called the bluff and ended up winning the $20 million pot-although this also sounds like a typical pot Dwan might well have been involved in!


Lose some, win some

Not that ‘durrr’ was always on the losing side of such monumental pots, Finnish player Joni 'Jouhki' Jouhkimainen's writing in 2011 that Dwan took down a pot worth HKD 89 million ($11 million).

Dwan and a few other players were playing with $20,000/$40,000 blinds when Dwan and two other players went all-in pre-flop. Dwan tabled AK, the others JJ and 1010. Dwan hit an ace and scooped the massive pot.

Scary situations?

The joke going around since last year that Tom Dwan was in hick to the local triads and was being forced to play in order to make good his huge debt were not entirely jocular. The well-organised and documented gang method of debt collection in the Far East has always lent itself to exaggeration and scare stories.

Still, if you don’t pay your debts – or your opponent doesn’t pay theirs – who you gonna call in deepest, darkest Macau?

For one pro it led to a protracted battle to get his dues. Imagine you’re at a table in Macau, a local player goes all–in for $HK344,000 and you’re sitting with pocket aces! Instacall, only to see your opponent dragging his chips back claiming he was joking? Well, seriously, what the actual fuck?

Macau Poker Low Stakes Poker

This was no backstreet game, this was at the Wynn Macau – a supposedly regulated establishment where such things simply shouldn’t happen.

Poker

The player in question, who only identified himself as dhlrPdls on 2+2 back in 2011, posted:

'The following situation happened recently at the Wynn Macau in a 500/1kHKD game (~$60/$120USD): BigFish opens to $14k, 1 call, I 3b to $84k, BigFish instantly says all in and pushes chips over betting line, other player folds, I snap call with AA for $344k HKD.”

Macau Poker Low Stakes Horse Racing

'The BigFish looked scared then tried to take back his chips and pretend that it was a joke. Then the fish mucked his hand and picked up his chips and tried to walk away. Eventually security and the floor staff came over and told the fish that he had to pay. The fish then tried to retrieve his cards from the muck and showed ATs but the floor declared the hand dead.”

Macau Poker Low Stakes Odds

A horrible situation wherever you play, but against a local in the Macao high-stakes games? Bottom of anyone’s wish-list, unless you absolutely know the guy has no connections to the local triads.


You’re good to go…

Macau Poker Low Stakes

The all-in welcher somehow managed to leave the casino with his money, and according to our poster:

'He didn't return and sent two guys, either his friends or bodyguards, who talked to a manager in Chinese and said that the fish said that if I apologized he would pay me the money. I talked to him on the phone and said 'Sorry' in Chinese.”

This didn’t have the desired effect and numerous other approaches to get the money due were discussed, including police involvement – also not a good option if your plan is to continue playing in such groups.

A fruitless meeting with the fish ensued, and the following day – after keeping the wronged player in a room for two hours! – “the casino denied any responsibility for getting the money. I complained to the big manager and he said he would talk to the Wynn lawyer but said that it didn't look good and the Wynn probably wouldn't be able to help me.” What a horrible state of affairs, and what can you do?

Let’s do a deal

A friend of the villain in this story eventually stumped up $200k in a deal, but:

'The OP was really shocked and frustrated with Wynn casinos attitude with regard to the situation.They shouldn't have let him go and they shouldn't have made me have to negotiate with the player myself or wait around for hours every day missing out on good games.”

The Macau casino, of course, are in a tight spot in such situations too, and as the poster pointed out himself:

Macau Low Stakes Poker

'They gave him all the power because he's a big player and attracts players to the poker games,” adding, “I hope this story is known by Steve Wynn and all upper-level management so the rules and procedures can be changed.”


All’s well that ends well

Macau Poker Low Stakes Results

An update appeared on 2+2 shortly after posting, stating:

'I met an assistant vice president of the Wynn Macau half hour ago. I got an officially apology and the rest of my money, $144k as well. I could feel her sincere. Now i am fine. I settled with Wynn.”

Of course, for those of us who have never had to deal with such spots in distant lands, it might seem standard – but I personally would be sweating buckets!

So, absolutely massive pots and very strange situations seem to be the norm in the back-rooms of Macau where the high-rollers and sick gamblers ply their trade. Even Tom ‘durrrr’ Dwan has apparently made his escape from the clutches of the Triads. But you know what? I think I’ll just stick to my $1/2 games – I doubt my heart could deal with the Macau poker lifestyle!