Quote:
Originally Posted by LowKicker
This is how the stories where told to me. I did not witness them. Yes the players take blame if they saw that happen.
So you’re complaining about something by exaggerating a well know story (the color-up snafu), or repeating a story you didn’t experience first-hand (the light deck), which was likely not reported accurately in the first place.
The point is, and this is what I said in my original remarks… you are commenting from the point of view of someone who has never played the WSOP before, and comparing to what is likely a different experience in a completely different scope of event.
The congested hallway situation at Ballys was no different than the congested hallway situation at the Rio. In fact the Rio was in many ways worse since the registration line added to the hallway congestion and chaos.
And the dealers were BETTER overall this year than they have been in recent years. Maybe in over a decade. That’s the story. You are never going to get broad-based great dealers for an event like this. Never. It isn’t reasonable to expect it. I witnessed dealer mistakes too. What I also witnessed is players behaving poorly towards dealers and making a tough situation even worse. I understand player frustrations, but that doesn’t mean they should be condoned for their own actions.
There were literally millions of hands dealt at the WSOP this summer. And yes, there were mistakes made in some of them, including an infinitesimally small percentage of major screw ups. Players can actually make the dealers job easier instead of harder. Or they can bitch and moan about things which are baked into the event and little can be done about. Apparently making things harder and bitching and moaning are the preferred line.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LowKicker
I did not check in late. I was not rude. Your assumptions are incorrect.
Ok, that is very odd, but like I said I have never stayed at that property. If it went exactly as you said you should write and file a complaint. Maybe you get some future compensation. I do agree that your treatment will vary based on your status, but I think Vegas casinos may be starting to see the writing on the wall and will be more eager to try and get/keep customers in the foreseeable future.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LowKicker
I have been to Vegas multiple times, and never seen a line like this. Yes I have been to MGM properties with out elevated status.
I don’t think you said exactly how long the line was, but I have routinely seen the standard check-in line at Ballys be 30-40 deep with 2 counter agents, and I visit Vegas 3-4 times a year. I have also seen the same at PH, Aria and TI. The point being, if you show up at the right (wrong) time, the non priority lines can be crazy long. If you go to Vegas often enough and have never experienced this, then you are truly fortunate and should count that as a win.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LowKicker
What is it that makes you think I am making stuff up? I'm not. Mayo and Sriracha situation is absolutely inexplicable, and most certainly falls under CZE food and beverage.
It wasn’t the situation. It was the idea that you think it’s under Ballys jurisdiction. There’s plenty of legit stuff to gripe about at the WSOP, including stuff having to do with food/beverage. But this is obviously a Subway issue. You should take it up with them, or in a general Vegas restaurant comment thread. Your experience there had nothing to do with the WSOP.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LowKicker
I don't see how my gripes are limited to a first time experience. There were experienced players at the table who were expecting seats to be filled quicker, or level changes to be announced on time.
Yes I understand that it is hard to staff an event like this. That does not change the fact that more staff would make the events run smoother.
The notion that other players also griped is no justification for griping about most things. Poker player bitch about everything. They bitch about reasonable things and unreasonable things. The level announcement timeliness is probably something which can be improved without too much difficulty. I don’t know why there were delays.
As for seating players, they have a certain amount of floor staff responsible for lots of things. I have never looked up at the floor and thought to myself, gee, that person is doing nothing. Maybe they could double their floor staff so that things like seating happen more efficiently. But then the rake will go up and players will have something else to complain about. In terms of improvement, the WSOP should focus on either big problems, or problems which have easily implemented solutions. The pace of seating doesn’t fit in either category, IMO.