Quote:
Originally Posted by Shadyshuffler
I want to share my personal experience and observation when I played the 2016 summer classic $1600 NLH $750K GTD on July 16-19 at W*** in Las Vegas. I remember when day 2 ended the floor man provided the slips and told players to write down first and last name, tournament chip count. That was it. My question is why did we have to wait until next day to get the new seat? How did we know it was random? When I played in another casino and by the end of the day, the floor man shuffled the slips in front of all players and handed it to each player before bagging. The slip clearly stated restart date, restart time, new table # and new seat #, name and chip count.
Additionally, the tournament shuffled by hand in day 1 and 2. Going to Day 3 (final day) with 55 players left, the floor man announced “We are going to use shuffling machines today.” I was surprised to hear that because I didn’t expect that they were using machines. I really wanted to ask him why he used machines when real money was in play but I was afraid I could become a target so I stayed quiet. After playing about 30 minutes, the floor man started breaking tables and gave the seat card to each player. It was very interesting to see that six A*** guys were assigned to sit at the same table (table 24). I thought kinda strange. All of sudden bad beats started to happen very quickly. This is when I started to take notes while playing. For example:
Hand # 1: seat # 3 (66s) vs seat # 9 (KsQc). There’s a rise pre flop and a call. Flop comes QhQd6s. Both players go all in. Turn comes 10s. River comes 10d giving seat # 9 better full house. (Time: 4:35pm)
Hand # 2: seat # 1 (pocket 10s) vs seat # 4 (4h2h), this guy was a new player coming to table with short stack and decided to go crazy first hand with 42 for all his chips with bottom pair and flush drawn. Flop comes 4sKh10h. He bets and his opponent calls. Turn card is a 6c. He goes all in. His opponent quickly calls turning over set of 10s. River comes a 9h giving him K high flush. (Time: 5pm)
It’s very suspicious how those Wh*** guys kept sucking out every big pot and it always happened on the river. Unbelievable. I would never risk my money playing if I knew they were using shufflers in the end.
This is crazy, and I am glad you were able to discover this. Could you tell if the shufflers used optical sensors to determine the melanin content of each player before stacking the deck, or do you think the floor was doing it remotely?
Also, good on you to discover the secret plan of putting all (I assume) Asian players at a table, and then send in one white guy to wipe them out. I mean, if you are going to rig the game (both setting up the tables, and then stacking the deck), it makes much more sense to be very obvious about it rather than subtle by spreading the Asians out and then having them coolered. Nope, any good rigged game will put all the pigeons at one table, then use ridiculously bad stacked decks with play that makes no sense.
Or, you know, bad players and variance.