I refuse to play poker at the Wynn. That's because they cheated me five years ago, and I refuse to give their poker room any further business.

How did I get cheated?

In February, 2007, I played a $1060-buyin NL event at the Wynn Classic. The Wynn made poor decisions regarding the colors of their tournament chips, to where the $500 chips and $100 chips were of similar colors, and could easily be confused.

I was down to 2200 in chips, and found myself with TT, with the blinds at 50-100. I opened to 300, the button flatted, the SB folded, the BB called. Flop came K-rag-rag, to where the king was the only overcard to my tens. There was also no reasonable draw on the board.

I made a continuation bet of 700 on the flop, and the button threw out 900. The two blinds folded. It came back to me, and the dealer said, "He raised." Before I could respond, Allen Kessler, who was seated next to me, piped up, "That's not a raise, it's a call. A raise has to be 1050."

The player then realized his mistake. He said that he meant to raise to 1700, with three 500 chips and two 100 chips. Because the chips looked alike, he accidentally grabbed one 500 chip and four 100 chips.

It was pretty clear to me that this guy had at least a king, and I was drawing to two outs. From what I had seen of his play, he was pretty straightforward. So calling the raise to 1700 (which virtually put me all-in) wasn't an option.

But was it really a raise? Sure, I believed the guy MEANT to raise me to 1700, but meaning to do something and actually doing it are two different things. For example, if you commit a "string raise" by putting out chips to call and then reaching back for more chips to raise, you are forced to call, regardless of what you "meant" to do. Like any competition, poker is about what you actually did, not what you intended to do.

So back to the hand. The dealer didn't know what to do, so he called over the floorperson. It was a middle-aged woman with a bitchy attitude, and she told me that she was going to rule it a min-raise (to 1400) because he "clearly meant to raise." The table, and especially Kessler, was livid. Nobody had ever seen a ruling like that before. All of us had fallen victim in the past to making accidental motions or actions that cost us chips, and we accepted it as part of the game. Now this guy got a do-over because he "meant" to do something different?

I tried to ask for her supervisor, but she refused to get him. She told me that the ruling was done and that she would order my hand dead if I didn't act within 30 seconds. I folded.

The dude flashed me Ace-King before collecting his chips.

Later, after I busted, I tracked down the tournament director and told him what happened. He agreed that I got screwed, and said he'd look into it. I got a very apologetic phone call from him a few days later, with the generous promise to refund my $1060 buyin as a result of this screwup. Unfortunately, his supervisors must have disagreed with this offer, and suddenly he wouldn't return my phone calls to arrange this. When I finally reached him (by going down to the poker room itself and confronting him), he denied ever having offered it to me. I took it higher to the poker room manager, who gave me the same runaround before ultimately rejecting me and again denying that he had ever made that offer. The whole thing stunk to high heaven and I never went back.

Back to the present.

Ari "Bodog Ari" Engel is a professional tournament player now living abroad. He played in the Pokerstars-backed LAPT, and a very similar situation occurred. He raised to 750 with KK, a guy meant to call with some mediocre hand, but accidentally raised it to over 5000 because the 5000 and 100 chips were similar. Again, the floorman ruled that his opponent "meant" to do something else (call, instead of raise), and allowed him to redo his bet!

Ari was livid, and rightfully so.

Here is Lee Jones' blog about the matter:

http://www.pokerstarsblog.com/lee_jo...te-094892.html

There really needs to be a strict set of rules set up for all tournaments that prevents idiotic floormen from bending standard tournament rules in this fashion. We pay a lot of money (both in buyin and rake) to play these tournaments, and as players we deserve much, much better.