Turning a card over when dealing
- bennymacca
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Re: Turning a card over when dealing
brett kay, the fount of knowledge.
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- Garth Kay
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Re: Turning a card over when dealing
If either of the first two cards in the deal (1st card to SB or BB) then this is a mis deal, if any other card is exposed after that it is treated as a burn card, deal continues as normal and the player receives the burn card as their replacement for the exposed card.
There is no opportunity to keep the exposed card.
Who was the TD?
There is no opportunity to keep the exposed card.
Who was the TD?
Garth Kay
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General Manager – Poker Operations
Full House Group
Mobile: 0438 234 816
Email: garth@fullhousegroup.com.au
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Grant Paynter
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Re: Turning a card over when dealing
Garth Kay wrote:If either of the first two cards in the deal (1st card to SB or BB) then this is a mis deal, if any other card is exposed after that it is treated as a burn card, deal continues as normal and the player receives the burn card as their replacement for the exposed card.
There is no opportunity to keep the exposed card.
Who was the TD?
I would rather not give TD info on public forum but rather have a quiet word back to the TD when i see them next.
No need to embarrass anybody. Thank you for confirmed info.
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Re: Turning a card over when dealing
Or you could PM me.
Garth Kay
General Manager – Poker Operations
Full House Group
Mobile: 0438 234 816
Email: garth@fullhousegroup.com.au
General Manager – Poker Operations
Full House Group
Mobile: 0438 234 816
Email: garth@fullhousegroup.com.au
- AceLosesKing
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Re: Turning a card over when dealing
Grant Paynter wrote:Garth Kay wrote:If either of the first two cards in the deal (1st card to SB or BB) then this is a mis deal, if any other card is exposed after that it is treated as a burn card, deal continues as normal and the player receives the burn card as their replacement for the exposed card.
There is no opportunity to keep the exposed card.
Who was the TD?
I would rather not give TD info on public forum but rather have a quiet word back to the TD when i see them next.
No need to embarrass anybody. Thank you for confirmed info.
Heh, I love that. Well done Grant
Scott wrote:Seriously, how hard is it to get his name right.
Aaron Coleman.
- Garth Kay
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Re: Turning a card over when dealing
Don't worry I know who it was.
Garth Kay
General Manager – Poker Operations
Full House Group
Mobile: 0438 234 816
Email: garth@fullhousegroup.com.au
General Manager – Poker Operations
Full House Group
Mobile: 0438 234 816
Email: garth@fullhousegroup.com.au
- Bacon
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Re: Turning a card over when dealing
We had a turned card (a jack) on Tuesday at TTG, and the girl decided she wanted it.
Can the dealer enforce that the card is burned?
Can the dealer enforce that the card is burned?
I'm not perfect. I'm what perfect aspires to become
- Garth Kay
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Re: Turning a card over when dealing
The dealer, the TD any player. It is a hard and fast rule that this is a burn card, there is no option there. It is exposed so it cannot be used by a player.
Garth Kay
General Manager – Poker Operations
Full House Group
Mobile: 0438 234 816
Email: garth@fullhousegroup.com.au
General Manager – Poker Operations
Full House Group
Mobile: 0438 234 816
Email: garth@fullhousegroup.com.au
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Grant Paynter
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Re: Turning a card over when dealing
Garth Kay wrote:Don't worry I know who it was.
Thank you.
- gundog
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Re: Turning a card over when dealing
I on the other hand would prefer if any card is showen during the deal, THEN redeal the entire table.
A card turned during the deal can dissadvantage a players hand.
Ie during the deal my 1st card is an Ace, somewhere during the deal another Ace is accidently flipped over therefore that Ace reduces my chance of hitting 4 of a kind by 25% and other combinations by a slightly lower %age.
I dont care what the rules say it is an incorrect rule, it the only game of poker where it would not be declared as a missed deal that I know off.
BUT I also can understand the reason for the rule, its basically to prevent or to limit a table to manipulate slow play.
As the dealer if we are at the final 2 tables and close to deciding who goes to final table, I'm short stacked and want to slow the play, it easy wink wink nudge nudge say no more to accidently filp a card during the deal.
A card turned during the deal can dissadvantage a players hand.
Ie during the deal my 1st card is an Ace, somewhere during the deal another Ace is accidently flipped over therefore that Ace reduces my chance of hitting 4 of a kind by 25% and other combinations by a slightly lower %age.
I dont care what the rules say it is an incorrect rule, it the only game of poker where it would not be declared as a missed deal that I know off.
BUT I also can understand the reason for the rule, its basically to prevent or to limit a table to manipulate slow play.
As the dealer if we are at the final 2 tables and close to deciding who goes to final table, I'm short stacked and want to slow the play, it easy wink wink nudge nudge say no more to accidently filp a card during the deal.
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