Re-Stacker - NEW Tournament
Build your Stack into a City of Chips

Everyone knows the Starship song "We Built this city".... Well poker players sing it a bit different, 'We built this stack.... We built this stack... with all your chips ;-)"
Come out to Fat Rickys located at 646 N Independence Blvd, Romeoville, IL 60446 on January 11th at 6PM for our NEW Re-Stacker Tournament.
This is a fun tournament I played in at Binion's, the original home of the WSOP in Vegas. I liked it so much I 'Borrowed" the format for PPC. You start with 10,000 chips for your $60.00 buy-in and you can add-on ($20.00), another 10,000 chips anytime your stack is less than 10,001 chips. (So when you first sit down you can add-on and make your starting stack 20,000). There is also a check-in add on available for an additional 5,000 chips for $10.00 this is only available for your first buy-in and will not affect your ability to buy the first table add-on when you first sit down. So you could have a 25,000 chip starting stack with the buy-in and add-ons.
If you bust out, you stay in the same seat and can re-buy a new starting stack of 10,000 chips for $20.00 and do the 10,000 add-on because you're under 10,001 chips for another $20.00. So you'll be back up to a 20,000 chip stack for only another $40.00.... it's a great buy! There will also be a first break add-on available for $20.00 for 10,000 chips no mater what your chip stack is.
It's a great player friendly blind structure with 20 minute levels and we will be using the big blind ante.
Remember the best part of charity poker is you help a good cause, American Legion Post #52 in this case, and you can win cold hard cash! And for those younger players you only have to be 18 to play in Illinois.
Hope to see you on the felt building a city of chips...... just not with mine ;-)
PRE-REGISTER HERE

The Situation: At the 1/2 cash table over the weekend we had a situation regarding if cards were mucked and dead or not. When I came over to the table there was a lot of yelling and emotions were running high. I walked into an all-in with a player on the 7 seat insisting that the pot was his because the player in the 5 seat mucked and folded his hand.
Talked to my dealer and she explained what had transpired: The player in the 5 seat went all in, the player in the 7 seat must have called without a lot of fanfare, which is perfectly fine, action moved around the table to players on the other side and they folded. The player in seat 5 thought he won the hand and tossed his cards face down on the flopped cards. Before the dealer took the cards the player realized he was facing a call and retrieved his cards to show two pair on the flop and he was ahead…… and this is where I came into the scene of the crime.
The Rules:
1: Floor Decisions
The best interest of the game and fairness are top priorities in decision-making. Unusual circumstances
occasionally dictate that common-sense decisions in the interest of fairness take priority over technical
rules. Floor decisions are final.
15: Showdown and Discarding Irregularities
A: If a player tables one card that would make a winning hand, the dealer should advise the player to
table all cards. If the player refuses, the floor should be called.
B: If a player bets then discards thinking they have won (forgetting another player is still in the hand), the
dealer should hold the cards and call the floor (a Rule 58 exception). If cards are mucked and not
retrievable and identifiable to 100% certainty, the player is out and not entitled to a refund of called bets. If
cards are mucked and the player initiated a bet or raise not yet called, the uncalled amount will be
returned.
65: Accidentally Killed / Fouled / Exposed Hands
A: Players must protect their hands at all times, including at showdown while waiting for hands to be read.
If the dealer kills a hand by mistake or if in TDs judgement a hand is fouled and cannot be identified to
100% certainty, the player has no redress and is not entitled to a refund of called bets. If the player
initiated a bet or raise and hasn’t been called, the uncalled amount will be returned.
B: If a hand is fouled but can be identified, it remains in play despite any cards exposed.
13: Tabling Cards and Killing Winning Hand
A: Proper tabling is both 1) turning all cards face up on the table and 2) allowing the dealer and players to
read the hand clearly. “All cards” means both hole cards in hold’em, all 4 hole cards in Omaha, all 7 cards
in 7-stud, etc.
B: At showdown players must protect their hands while waiting for cards to be read (See also Rule 65).
Players who don’t fully table all cards, then muck thinking they’ve won, do so at their own risk. If a hand is
not 100% retrievable and identifiable and the TD rules it was not clearly read, the player has no claim to
the pot. The TDs decision on whether a hand was sufficiently tabled is final.
C: Dealers cannot kill a properly tabled hand that was obviously the winner.
14: Live Cards at Showdown
Discarding non-tabled cards face down does not automatically kill them; players may change their minds
and table cards that remain 100% identifiable and retrievable. Cards are killed by the dealer when pushed
into the muck or otherwise rendered irretrievable and unidentifiable.
The Thought Process: Every time I walk over to a table ‘Rule 1’ is always flopping around in my head. There is always going to be someone that likes my ruling and someone that doesn’t like it. So, I always take personal feelings out and strive to make a fair ruling that’s in the best interest of fairness and the game.
I listened to the dealer, then I had an earful from the player that wanted the cards mucked. I reviewed the TDA Rules about mucked cards, and killed hands in my head. I also though, could this be some sort of angle shoot, to muck the cards and then retrieve them, of some sort. You have to go in with a totally open mind and look at it from every side.
The Decision: It was really an easy one. The cards never touched the muck and were fully retrievable and totally identifiable and there was no reason the player would be trying any sort of angle as the bets were already out and there was no additional action to come, so I ruled that the cards were live and instructed the dealer to run out the turn and the river. The pot was awarded. I had one happy player and one not so happy player. In the end the rules are pretty clear on what to do in this situation.
The Takeaway: Always always protect your hand and be fully aware of the action around you. If the cards were actually in the muck the ruling may have been different - They need to be fully retrievable and totally identifiable, so the player got lucky. The losing player left the room but did come back to discuss the ruling I made. I sat with him and showed him the TDA Rules I used to make the call. I don’t think he was totally convinced but at lease he heard me out outside the heat of the moment.

The other day I was called over to the table and walked into a small cluster. A tournament table called for the floor and as I arrived I was met with a chorus of voices shouting "misdeal, misdeal, misdeal.” The biggest thing you should takeaway from this post is NEVER toss your cards into a muck until you know that they should be mucked.
The Situation: Seat 1 and 2 had no cards (Fold, Fold), Seat 4 was All-In, Seat 6 was thinking, Seat 8 was the small blind and had 3 cards and Seat 9 was being blinded out but was big blind. Just as I began to assess the situation, the player in Seat 6 mistakenly mucked their cards, believing it was a misdeal.
The Rules: This situation required the entire TDA rule book to work out.
TDA Rule 35 Section A states “A misdeal occurs if “The wrong number of cards is dealt to a player” - so it’s simple right; declare a misdeal and move on, but….
TDA Rule 35 Section D states “Once substantial action occurs a misdeal cannot be declared, the hand must proceed unless the deck is fouled.”
TDA Rule 36 defines “Substantial Actions” as: “A” Any 2 actions in turn at least one of which puts in chips in the pot or “B” any combination of three actions in turn (check, bet, rise call, fold) Posted blinds do not count towards substantial action.
TDA Rule 1 states the floor decisions should always be made with the “best interest of the game and fairness to the players”
TDA Rule 2 talks about players responsibilities and states “Players should VERIFY they are dealt the correct number of cards before Substantial action occurs”
The Thought Process: My first thought was how the hell did a player in the middle of the action wind up with three cards; either two cards stuck together as they were dealt or he grabbed one of the dead cards from the player being blinded out so I had to figure out if it should be a misdeal because a player in the hand had too many cards. So, I looked at the action that occurred before I was called over; I had two folds and an All-In, so there was substantial action. With the action that occurred I could not declare a misdeal. Then I looked at what was left. I had a player all-in, I had a player that mucked his cards AFTER the floor was called because he assumed there was a misdeal, a player with three cards and a big blind with no player at the seat.
The Decision: I ruled that because of the substantial action that it was NOT a misdeal and that the player with three cards had the responsibility the verify his cards were incorrect before substantial action occurred. His hand was dead. Because no one at the table had live cards except the all-in player I awarded him the pot. The player in the 6 seat would have had live cards and could have called the all-in or folded, but because he assumed that it was a misdeal and his cards were not retrievable his hand was also dead.
The Takeaway: The players and the dealer made a mistake, once the floor is called or in any situation where you think there is a misdeal or something is off at the table HOLD YOUR CARDS and wait for the floor to arrive and access the situation. In this case the player in the 6 seat lost his chance to act because he folded after the flood was called.
In our next dealer meeting we will address how we as a room could have prevented this from happening and work to make sure we never make the same mistake twice. But, always hold your cards until you get a ruling.


Kyle went into the tournament ranked 42nd with most of his cashes coming in our DoorBuster tournaments. He outlasted a great stacked field to take down the honor and the Player of the Year Trophy. As part of his prize package he will be cruising on the Ante Up Poker Cruise in October with his Main Event included.
The 2024 Player of the Year is starting..... Don't miss your chance to join Kyle as a PPC Champion.
The Play Poker Chicago Player of there Year Final Table consisted of:





