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    <title>Nolandalla on BARGE.org</title>
    <link>https://www.barge.org/tags/nolandalla/</link>
    <description>Recent content in Nolandalla on BARGE.org</description>
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    <lastBuildDate>Tue, 02 Apr 1996 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Nolan Dalla</title>
      <link>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/1996/1996_trip_report_nolan_dalla/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 02 Apr 1996 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/1996/1996_trip_report_nolan_dalla/</guid>
      <description>&lt;b&gt;Title:&lt;/b&gt;&#34;My Guardian Angel&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Thurs. 28th:&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Preliminaries -- Worked full day at the Embassy.  Afternoon was hectic due
to Prime Minister&#39;s arrival the previous day and his scheduled meeting
with President Klinton in the afternoon.  The pressue builds.  Please!
Get me out of here!  5:30 finally comes.  I&#39;m off!  Free at last!
Atlantic City --- here I come!
&lt;p&gt;
The journey -- Road conditions....rainy, slippery, foggy, cold....all the
makings of a good accident, which is JUST WHAT HAPPENED at 8:00 pm on
I-95, the Deleware Turnpike.  I&#39;m coasting along, got Van Morrson in the
cassette player....WHAM!  I hear my self scream an expletive which shall
not be repeated here (can&#39;t recall if it was the &#34;F&#34; or the &#34;S&#34; one).  A
92 year old man is sitting in his car in the middle of the highway, no
lights, no blinkers -- just sitting there.  He was driving from -- you
guessed it -- Florida, back to NJ.  He just  &#34;thought something was
wrong,&#34; so he stopped.  Stopped cold.  Stopped smack in the middle of one
of the busiest highways in the United States.  Parts of our cars a strawn
all over the pavement.  My &#39;90 Caddy SDV (just spent a grand getting the
70K servicing done) is demolished.  Frame bent.  I feel like that Kerrigan
skater after she got clubbed in the legs, &#34;Why me?  Why me,&#34; I ask.  No
real reason to complain though.  I (and the old man, too) walk away
without a scratch -- and I wasn&#39;t even wearing my seat belt.  I look for a
guardian angel on my shoulder.  A fleeting image seems to appear.  I feel
a glow.  I must be blessed, maybe today is my day, that certain moment in
time that comes just once in a lifetime.  Ah destiny.  I rumble through
the legal paperwork and jump on the train in Wilmington.  One way ticket
to A.C.  Nothing&#39;s gonna stop me now.
Arrival -- Destiny?  I buy a 2 rolls of quarters and head for the
progressive slots.  God please, I hope nobody sees me here. What
credibility I do have would be shot..  Cling, cling cling.  Silence.
Cling cling, cling.  Silience.  In 3 and a half minutes the twenty dollars
is gone.  I guess I wasn&#39;t &#34;destined&#34; after all.  Stupid superstions, I
should know better.
&lt;p&gt;
$10-20 at the Taj: Everyone at the table is a semi-pro or above.  Depart
an hour later down a C-note.&lt;br&gt;
$5-10-15 at Resorts: Much friendlier game.  Not being a regular stud
player, I don&#39;t know much who the pros are or are not.  It takes me two
hours to recognize I AM NOT.  Down another $200.  Are we having fun yet?
$20-40 at the Taj:  Against my better instincts (tired, still shaken up a
bit), I decide to play a few rounds -- maybe win one pot and I&#39;m back to
even.  Nothing comes my way but J-6, 6-3, 7-2....oh I did get a pair of
tens once but folded when the board came A-A-Q.  Stay to catch the middle
buster in a 20/40 game.  Noooooooo way Jackson.  Fold.  What a day.  What
happened to the angel?  She must have went to sleep long before me.
Bedtime for Bonzo (me). Zzzzzzzzzzzz.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Fri. 29th&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Three hours of shut eye.  Dreams of twisted metal and broken glass.  Phone
rings,  &#34;Wake up call.&#34;  Awaken.&lt;br&gt;
AT-LARGE begins!  All old nighmares forgotten.&lt;br&gt;
Patch up a few wounds with Eric.  Say hello to Brucie.  Tiger Alan
arrives.&lt;br&gt;
Luncheon -- See some old friends and meet plenty of new ones.  Good
conversation.  See Peter Secor for the first time, which will become
something of an omen.  Hi Don &#34;Chinese Poker&#34; Smolen.  Arti mysteriously
arrives late.  &lt;br&gt;
4:00 Tourney begins -- $115 buy-ins with 72 entrants.  Nothing dramatic.&lt;br&gt;
Just poor starting hands.  Chips begin to dwindle.  I must commit
somewhere.  At the $50-100 level, I go all in with J-10 suited.  No help
comes.  Busted out.  I look over in the corner.  I think I see the angel
laughing.&lt;br&gt;
9:00 -- I haven&#39;t had a drink in two months.  Such was the power of Nick
Cage&#39;s fine performance.  I join Art Santella at the Bengal Club which
turns out to be an incredibly enlightening experience.  The man permeates
gambling theory (and vodka).  Not neccesarily in that order.  I look into
Arti&#39;s eyes and see myself.  A scary thought.  My soul brother (to be
played in movie version by Al Pacino).&lt;br&gt;
10:00 --  At Resorts.  I play poorly.  Try to run to many mediocre hands
to victory, that in the end crash in defeat.  There&#39;s a monster $10-20
game at the other table.  A preminition.  When I sit down, I know I&#39;m
going to make $1,000 in this game.  Every bet -- and I mean EVERY FRIGGIN
BET is capped pre-flop by two maniacs (one is crazy Charlie, the other a
rich tourist).  Four hours later, I&#39;m up a grand.  Four hours beyong that,
I&#39;ve lost $800 of it back.  Such is the roller coaster of poker life.  I
thought I heard the Angel whisper into my ear, &#34;it&#39;s time to leave,
Nolan,&#34; when I was way ahead.  The ear wax buildup must have distorted her
message.  I did have Peter Secor approach me and tell me about his Red Dog
experience.  I love the guy.  His bourbon breath made Arti&#39;s seem like
sweet perfume.  My God, this guy&#39;s drinking and stammering around without
sleep whatsoever.  I thought I was bad.  And he&#39;s got to play in a
tournament in a couple of hours.  Poor fool doesn&#39;t stand a chance (the
next day he wins the tournament, naturally -- see future Card Player
article on this subject).
For me, it&#39;s three more hours of sleep.  No nighmares tonight, just the
thoughts of flushes and full houses (getting delusional now).  I&#39;m dead
even ($) for the trip.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Saturday&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
10:00 am -- No limit tourney begins.  Bam.  Bluff.  Win $40.  Bam.  Bluff.
Win $70.  Bam...stone-cold bluff called all the way down.  Busted out in
38th place.  Crash and burn.  I guess I can now put the portrait of the
poker-playing dogs back up on my living room wall, where I had intended
the &#34;Best All Around&#34; poker trophy to go.  Surely my wife will be more
upset about this than me.&lt;br&gt;
1:00 -- Pink chip hold&#39;em.  In 10 minutes I win one good pot and lose half
of it back with a stupid bluff.  Still, a win is a win.  Lunch with Arti
and Old Al, who&#39;s on tilt at the Bengal Club.  &lt;br&gt;
4:00 -- Pot limit Texas hold &#39;em commences.  I&#39;d prepared myself for this
for nearly three weeks.  Watched 5 WSP events on tape (again).  Re-read
Bobby Baldwin&#39;s book.  Still, my skills were rusty.  A little history --
I&#39;d played pot limit almost exclusively back in Texas after I graduated
from college (no jobs, so gambling became a way of life).  Really, that&#39;s
pretty much all I did from 85-89.  Carsinigen-filled backrooms, I
discovered however, were not the places to engratiate one&#39;s social skills.&lt;br&gt;
 The move to DC took me away from pot limit entirely.  So going in, I had
a mixed level of confidence.  Sitting down, I didn&#39;t like Don Smolen at my
table, so I vowed to stay out of his way.  &#34;Crazy hat&#34; Jonathon sat on my
immediate left, who I had/have great respect for.  Others in the game (you
know who you are) also looked like a challenge.  10 munites into Pot
limit, with $300 in front of me, the drama unfolded.
Late Position -- I&#39;m dealt K - Q  Not a great hand, but with no raises
yet, certainly a good value bet and raise here.  Jonathon on my left
calls.&lt;br&gt;
Flop comes K- Q - 10.  Almost perfect for me, unless someone&#39;s got trips
or the straight.  A mandatory pot bet.  I bet the max.  Jonathon gets this
&#34;sh*t eating grin on his face.  He pushes his entire stack ($300) into the
pot.  Now, I&#39;ve got a really tough decision.  Jon and I do go back a
little and are somewhat familiar with each other&#39;s tendancies.  He knows I
bluff frequently.  Is he simply chopping of my presumed bluff?  Does he
have trip Kings or trip Jacks (unlikely, as he didn&#39;t re-raise pre-flop).
I narrowed it to four possible hands:&lt;br&gt;
A-K (Jon, with top pair best kicker might re-raise in this situation)&lt;br&gt;
K-Q (we have a matching hand, also a re-raise would be called for perhaps)&lt;br&gt;
K-10 (very unlikely, but possible)&lt;br&gt;
A-J (my worst possible nightmare.  Jon&#39;s already flopped the straight).&lt;br&gt;
Unless you&#39;re playing for grocery money, this is a mandatory call.  So, I
call.  We&#39;re both all-in.&lt;br&gt;
&#34;You there already, Jon?&#34; I ask.  Jon&#39;s sh*t eating grin grows even
bigger.  He doesn&#39;t need to answer.  I already know.  He&#39;s caught the
perfect flop -- a straight.  Now, I&#39;m a 20-1 dog.  The turn.......A QUEEN.
 A beautiful sweet Queen.  My angel has returned.  Jon shows his true
class and departs with a handshake.&lt;br&gt;
Chuck &#34;Congelco Publishing&#34; Weinstock joins the poker party.  Gee, the
competition sure isn&#39;t getting any easier.  &lt;br&gt;
Later I cash out with a nice profit.  Forgot to write down the amount.
My buddy Peter Secor is hammering a low-limit game at the Taj.  We hit the
Bengal together and shoot the breeze.  Another very intriguing gentleman
with alot of b*lls and street smarts.  We hit the crap table.  Buy-in for
$200 each.  A preminition comes over me (I swear).  I tell Peter he&#39;s
going to hold the friggin&#39; dice for 10 minutes.  He says, NO, TWENTY.  Now
I&#39;m usually a wrong (Dont Pass) better.  But I join with Peter, who is on
a massive roll after winning the tourney that morning.  17 minutes later,
he&#39;s still got the cubes.  That man threw more tens and fours than you
would believe.  Man, I wish I&#39;d been betting quarters.  Finally after 20
min (Peter was right), he sevened-out to table applause.  Now it&#39;s my
turn.  Like I said, I&#39;m a DONT better.  I lay $20 against myself.  Bam.
Eleven.  $20 more.  Bam.  Seven.  Peter lays $5 on YO....Wham.  There it
is &#34;ELEVEN&#34;  I&#39;m getting buried.  I lay $100 on the Don&#39;t.  Point comes
NINE.  $150 odds.  Twenty rolls later (everyone else may big money off the
COME), there it is, NINE.  I pass the dice voluntarily.  I buy-in again
for another $100.  Lay it all on DONT COME.  Point for me becomes SIX.  I
take $120 odds against.  Stickman yells &#34;six the hard way.&#34; Super.  $500
gone in 5 minutes.  And Peter&#39;s getting rich.  I laugh it off while my
stomach acid churns inside.  Time to go.  Peter stays.  
Meanwhile I paying $75 a night solo for a room at the Taj.  I stayed
exactly 3 hours in the last two days.  I consider calling it a night.  AM
I CRAZY?  WHILE THERE&#39;S A POT LIMIT GAME IN PROGRESS????  NO &#34;F***ing WAY
MAN!!!  I run across from the Taj and nearly bowl over five grandma&#39;s
playing quarter slots (they must have preminitions, too).  I pass by the
dice table again and Peter&#39;s still there --- and the same guy on my left
STILL HAS THE DICE !!!  Good night, I&#39;ve missed the chance of a lifetime.
Grind it out again.  Buy-in the pot limit game for $300.  Early in, I
catch bullets in the hole.  Max bet.  One caller.  Flop comes
9-blank-blank.  I max bet.  An all-in raise.  Maybe he&#39;s got Kings or
Queens in the pocket.  Worse, he&#39;s got trips.  Now I&#39;m trapped, but it&#39;s
only going to cost me my last $100 to see what happens.  Another mandatory
call.  Trip nines.  Now only an ace saves me.  The ace comes, on the
river.  How sweat it is.  YES!  YES!  I  do my best Marv Albert
impression.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Sunday&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
5:00 in the morning.  Eyes start to close themselves.  Decision time.
Break for some sleep?  The tourney&#39;s gonna&#39; start in 5 hours.  It&#39;s now or
never.  I decide to sleep between hands.  &#34;Wake me when it&#39;s my turn to
raise,&#34; I say -- as I slide my head on the rail. Zzzzzzzzzzz.
A couple of hard asses come over from the Taj (good middle limit players),
which doesn&#39;t give me a chance to play to casually.  Still, I feel
refreshed when 10:00 comes and the tournament begins.  I leave my stake on
the table.&lt;br&gt;
1:00 -- Break time in the middle of the tournament, and I&#39;m still avive in
middle position.  Got $1,000 which won&#39;t last long at the $100-200 level.
During break, I go back to play pot limit.  A little bluff here and there
takes the money.  Time to go back again to tourney.  20 minutes later, I&#39;m
busted out in 11th place.  Damn.  I really wanted this one in the money.
I guess the second potrait of poker playing dogs has to be put up again,
too.  Back at pot limit.  On my final hand of the trip I get pocket Aces.
Bet the max.  One caller.  A scary board comes....K-J-blank.  I&#39;ve got to
check.  Bet is $100.  Trip Kings?  No...he didn&#39;t bet the max pre-flop,
unless he&#39;s now trying to reel me in.  It&#39;s a must call.  At the showdown
I look across and see pocket Queens.  The aces hold up.
A good time to leave with New Mexico James (the $30-60 master).  The
Caddy&#39;s gone, so it&#39;s James Rankin or Amtrak for the ride home.  Easy
choice.  On the trip we speak for 3 hours about our experiences.  I learn
more and more from each player I meet, especially someone like James, who
has been around and played almost everywhere.
Arrive back in DC just in time for &#34;60 minutes&#34; and a loving hug from my
wife.  Ain&#39;t life grand?  
&#34;How did you do honey,&#34; she asked.  &#34;Sit down dear, have I got a story for
you.&#34;&lt;br&gt;
(&#34;Oh, and by the way, did you remember to mail-in that auto insurance bill
last month?&#34;)
&lt;p&gt;
-- Nolan Dalla
&lt;p&gt;
(Thank you to everyone I met.  I wanted to use even more stories and
names, but space doesn&#39;t allow, as we don&#39;t want &#34;War and Peace&#34; length
postings)</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Nolan Dalla (part 2)</title>
      <link>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/1996/1996_trip_report_nolan_dalla2/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 02 Apr 1996 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/1996/1996_trip_report_nolan_dalla2/</guid>
      <description>Peter Secor…had done positvely everything wrong…Stayed up all night.  Drank. Drank some more.  When the tourney began, I again looked for Pete…couldn&amp;rsquo;t find him.  Poor guy, missed the friggin&amp;rsquo; tournament.…</description>
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