I hope everyone that stops by reads the entries in order. That is why I went back and added the (please read the other post first). I want to set the level first. I want to tell everyone where I want to be now and for the future.
I want to come to the place where poker is and have control of the tournament at hand either at the front of the room or at the tables. At the tables is a debatable thing because I haven't played so much in the past year and I am rusty. In the front of the room however, I should be in control. Either way I want to have a good time. If everyone was committed to playing the best they could and having a good time it would follow that everyone SHOULD have a good time.
I would think that the people who come to play would want me to be in control. I think some of them DEPEND on my being in place. I say "me" but I mean anyone who has agreed to assume the role of Tournament Director.
In my mind I have a set of rule that define a Tournament Director from a player that is running a game. This would be a good time to define the difference and explain WHY I feel the way I do.
Tournament Director
In my mind a tournament director should have knowledge of the players in the game they are in control of. The players are the tournament. If a director doesn't understand this they are fighting an uphill battle. Understanding players is essential because you should have an idea of why they think the way they do and how they may react to different situations. WTP is played in bars where alcohol is being served. This will ALWAYS be a factor. A bad beat after a few hours of Coor's Light could be like walking in a mine field. Most of the players I am exposed to are people I know. There are always new folks coming around so I feel it necessary to keep tabs on them. It is my duty because I don't want these unknowns to become known for the wrong reasons.
In my mind the tournament director can never be a player and a director at the same time. There is just too much responsibility to be consumed in an all-in situation and be needed to make a critical decision at the same time. I know the WTP situations are "usually" friendly but you may be surprised how many times people have approached me and complained that other players have seemed overly aggressive. Maybe it is a small part of the game strategy but in this situation it is mostly uncalled for. If you were there for the Regional event at Cheers bar and grille a few seasons ago remember how that whole situation fell apart so quickly. In that situation a real tournament director would have intervened and held that aggressive action to a minimum.
A tournament director should know the game. I don't necessarily mean you have to know how to play as good as the players we all see on television but you should have a working knowledge of the mechanics of Texas Hold'em. How the cards should be dealt, the flop should be completed and the how's and why's of the game at hand. Everyone has heard some know it all player say "it's in the rules." Who knows? Last week when we were in Las Vegas I heard of a situation that was completly new to me. The tournament director there actually had a dealer reshuffle the cards after the hole cards had been dealt. I'll explain that later. Anyone that has been in attendance at an event where I was in control may know that I carry a rule book with me. I don't just carry it around so I can say "Show me where it is in the rules." I have read this book so that I can make a better informed decision when asked to do so. I have also supplemented this with a copy of "Robert's Rules of Poker" which I found online took the time and expense to read and print myself for the good of poker in Baltimore.
In short a good tournament director should be committed to keeping all the games they run either tournament or ring style, fair, exciting and fun for everyone involved in them.
My commitment is clearly stated in the previous writing so if you didn't read it please go back and check it out. If you have a tournament coming up think about these principles and try to apply them to the play at hand.
By the way:
the reshuffle was done because a bet had been made before the flop which the dealer missed (they are only human after all) and after he threw the flop a player complained so the tournament director had the dealer return the burn card and the flopped cards to the deck and reshuffle them. No big deal, the cards were returned to their randomization.
11 November 2007
09 November 2007
The Afterglow of the WTP Open at Binion's 2007
Hello to everyone who happens by. I have been back from Las Vegas for about a week now and some of the things that didn't seem to have any meaning are beginning to gel now.
I have to say I LOVED my time at Binion's Gambling Hall and Hotel. Poker brought me to Las Vegas. Not so much my own play but the play of my family. That's okay though because for the two years I have been involved in poker I have loved the game. I have had a friend come to my house to prepare my wife and I for our big splash into the murky waters of poker. I really, REALLY want to improve my game. I have been acting primarily as a Tournament Director in the local poker league and as a result my game has suffered.
Enough about that; back to Binion's. When I completed my reservations for the trip from Dundalk to Las Vegas I began to anticipate going to the land of poker. I wanted to see the Poker hall of Fame. I hoped to see a star or two but that wasn't the point.
I was in the land that all gamblers yearn to visit. I was there in LAS VEGAS, NEVADA.
I watched daily as round after round of cards flew through the air to all who would dare to sit down at the tables.
I could do this I think to myself. I could take one hundred dollars from my pocket, sit my tired butt down and play real live event poker with the modern grinders like a modern day gladiator or bull fighter.
"That's bull," I thought to myself shortly after the fantasy reeled through my head. These guys aren't here to play league poker for points in a bar in Baltimore. These guys are playing for their mortgage money, their gas and electric bills their car payments. The old guys might even be playing for cash to pay for the perscription the doctor just ordered.
Now that I have had time to let all this settle I have to admit that although we kid ourselves into believing that we can play poker most of the people in Baltimore haven't got a freaking clue what it would really be like to grind it out for lights in your house or gas in your car or maybe the choice between your next six pack or drinking water for the evening.
I forced myself to take a hard look at what was going on at the tables as the week progressed. As a tournament director in my league and being a bit anal about things like rules and directions I realized that I was at least partially to blame. I watched as the Directors in Binion's drew cards for the players that were registered each assigned a table and seat completely at random. The players each moved to those assigned seats without question, comment, or whining about not liking to play against so and so. As the play began everything went off seamlessly. When players were taken out of play the dealers would call out "open seat on seventy-two." The directors would report to that table and remove the seat card for the next table to be broken.
If I had known perhaps things would be different now. Now that I DO know I promise I will make the changes to assure that the tournaments I am in control of are operated in a more professional manner. I am open to suggestions on how to make my tournaments better (read more professionally).
I want to make a written commitment to everyone that knows me in Dundalk and in the city of Baltimore:
I am fully committed to bringing big league style poker to this area. I want to commit myself to being the absolute best Tournament Director in this area. When I am not in the act of directing I plan to do the very best I can to play as professionally as this limited environment allows.
Stick with me this could be a great ride. Even if the results aren't so great right off the bat the games will still be a great time.
Have a great time and enjoy the draw.
Tom Dishon Sr.
Tom_from_Dundalk
I have to say I LOVED my time at Binion's Gambling Hall and Hotel. Poker brought me to Las Vegas. Not so much my own play but the play of my family. That's okay though because for the two years I have been involved in poker I have loved the game. I have had a friend come to my house to prepare my wife and I for our big splash into the murky waters of poker. I really, REALLY want to improve my game. I have been acting primarily as a Tournament Director in the local poker league and as a result my game has suffered.
Enough about that; back to Binion's. When I completed my reservations for the trip from Dundalk to Las Vegas I began to anticipate going to the land of poker. I wanted to see the Poker hall of Fame. I hoped to see a star or two but that wasn't the point.
I was in the land that all gamblers yearn to visit. I was there in LAS VEGAS, NEVADA.
I watched daily as round after round of cards flew through the air to all who would dare to sit down at the tables.
I could do this I think to myself. I could take one hundred dollars from my pocket, sit my tired butt down and play real live event poker with the modern grinders like a modern day gladiator or bull fighter.
"That's bull," I thought to myself shortly after the fantasy reeled through my head. These guys aren't here to play league poker for points in a bar in Baltimore. These guys are playing for their mortgage money, their gas and electric bills their car payments. The old guys might even be playing for cash to pay for the perscription the doctor just ordered.
Now that I have had time to let all this settle I have to admit that although we kid ourselves into believing that we can play poker most of the people in Baltimore haven't got a freaking clue what it would really be like to grind it out for lights in your house or gas in your car or maybe the choice between your next six pack or drinking water for the evening.
I forced myself to take a hard look at what was going on at the tables as the week progressed. As a tournament director in my league and being a bit anal about things like rules and directions I realized that I was at least partially to blame. I watched as the Directors in Binion's drew cards for the players that were registered each assigned a table and seat completely at random. The players each moved to those assigned seats without question, comment, or whining about not liking to play against so and so. As the play began everything went off seamlessly. When players were taken out of play the dealers would call out "open seat on seventy-two." The directors would report to that table and remove the seat card for the next table to be broken.
If I had known perhaps things would be different now. Now that I DO know I promise I will make the changes to assure that the tournaments I am in control of are operated in a more professional manner. I am open to suggestions on how to make my tournaments better (read more professionally).
I want to make a written commitment to everyone that knows me in Dundalk and in the city of Baltimore:
I am fully committed to bringing big league style poker to this area. I want to commit myself to being the absolute best Tournament Director in this area. When I am not in the act of directing I plan to do the very best I can to play as professionally as this limited environment allows.
Stick with me this could be a great ride. Even if the results aren't so great right off the bat the games will still be a great time.
Have a great time and enjoy the draw.
Tom Dishon Sr.
Tom_from_Dundalk
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