“The Mad Genius” gives his shortest poker answers
Hold 'em, Other games, POKER, Strategy
A very important poker secret
Hold 'em, Other games, POKER, Strategy
All-in with big slick (1-minute audio)
Audio, AUDIO AND VIDEO, Hold 'em, POKER
Bad poker decision illustrated
General, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Being brave when an ace flops in hold ’em
Hold 'em
Brunson: Accepting a gift
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: Finding the courage to raise
General, Hold 'em
Brunson: Hold ’em early schooling
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: How to bluff constantly and win
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: Intimidation at a world-class level
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: No-Limit Confusion
Calculation, Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: Playing small hold ’em pairs early
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: Switching between limit and no-limit poker
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: The advantages of aggressive play
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: The flop isn’t your friend
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: The path to power poker
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: The truth about small cards
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: The wrong reasons to bluff
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: When calling doesn’t make sense
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Image
Brunson: Why raise if you don’t want a call?
Entries by others, General, Hold 'em
1 2 3 10

Everything is everywhere

Any Poker1 page takes you anyplace you want to go!

Poker1 

Megadex

Poker1 universe —
all in one place.

→ Collections
Special Poker1 groups

Poker1 Megadex tools

— main navigation departments —

Collections

Related groups of Poker1 content

↓ Major collections ↓

Gambling  •  Hold 'em  •  Info  •  Life beyond poker

Poker (all)  •  Poker dictionary  •  Poker psychology

Poker statistics  •  Poker strategy  •  Poker tells

Prediction*  •  Shopping  •  Zone 2*

↓ Tip collections ↓

All*  •  Gambling*  •  Life*  •  Poker*  •  Various*

↓ Contributor collections ↓

Brunson  •  Caro  •  McHaffie  •  Wiesenberg  •  Others*

↓ More collections ↓

Poker1 FAQ  •  Poker-tell videos  •  Review of poker lessons

Sunday sessions*  •  Targeted poker quizzes  •  Tuesday sessions

* Any collection followed by an asterisk ( * ) has no entries yet.

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 everything

Browse alphabetically

 

[a-z-listing display=”posts” post-type=”post”]

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 library

Content in categories

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home




≡ Content above: Poker1 Phase2a specification ≡

Brunson: More chips than you bargained for


Note: Not at the old Poker1 site. A version of this entry was first published in the London Telegraph in 2005.

Doyle Brunson index.

Historical note: The following explanatory note didn’t appear in the series, but was sent with each column as submitted.

Doyle “Texas Dolly” Brunson stands unchallenged as the most celebrated poker player who ever lived. In 2005, at age 72, he won an unprecedented 10th championship gold bracelet at the World Series of Poker. He is among the few living members of the Poker Hall of Fame, and his books  are the bibles for poker professionals.. Through www.poker1.com and www.doylesroom.com, Brunson has teamed with Mike Caro, today’s premiere poker educator, to offer a free learning experience to players worldwide. This column is founded on  those collaborative teachings.


Doyle Brunson

We were all kids, working for meager wages. So the stakes we played poker for were quite small, but they meant something to us.

A friend named Tripper had hosted tonight’s game and now prepared to cash me out. Everyone else had already exchanged their chips for money and departed. That left just two of us, and one was very upset. It wasn’t me.

I wasn’t upset because I had $92 in chips to cash in and most of that was profit. Now, you’d think that Tripper wouldn’t be upset, either, because he’d been the biggest winner, scoring a profit of almost $100. That’s enough to make a kid like him mighty happy.

But when I announced that I had $92 in chips, he stammered, “Ninety what?” and walked briskly across the room as if in a trance. He slapped his head, strode back my way, tripped on the rug, and amazingly landed right back in his chair. We didn’t call him Tripper for nothing. He was probably the most awkward friend I ever had.

Didn’t add up

Something was wrong. The chips didn’t add up. There wasn’t enough cash remaining in front of Tripper to cover both my chips and his profit. “Doyle, this doesn’t make sense,” he whined. “You saw me. I counted out everyone’s chips exactly. And I double checked each time I paid them.”

“I think you counted right,” I told him, a horrible truth forming in my head.

He flung my money in the air, and it rained down on the table, where I quickly pocketed it. There was enough left for Tripper to make a profit, but nowhere near the $100 he’d thought he’d won.

“What happened?” he mumbled as he continued to place the cheap, plastic chips in the revolving rack, not bothering to sort them by colors as he usually did. Then, he filled up the last column halfway. There were still enough chips in front of him to complete that column and another one.

Extra chips

Someone had brought in extra chips! And that’s the problem with using the plastic chips you can buy anywhere. Anyone can find those same chips for sale and add them to their stacks. That’s why, if you’re serious about hosting a home poker game, you need to invest in registered chips, incorporating your own design, with your initials or logo. Nobody is likely to duplicate them.

But even that can be dangerous. Most chips don’t have denominations on them. It’s up to the host to declare which colors have what values – and that might not be the same from game to game. I’ve known big-limit games where unscrupulous players held back chips on nights when the limits were small and cashed them in later, when the limits were larger.

So, it boils down to this: You can’t have a friendly home game if you can’t trust your friends. — DB

Next entry in this Doyle Brunson series

“The Mad Genius” gives his shortest poker answers
Hold 'em, Other games, POKER, Strategy
A very important poker secret
Hold 'em, Other games, POKER, Strategy
All-in with big slick (1-minute audio)
Audio, AUDIO AND VIDEO, Hold 'em, POKER
Bad poker decision illustrated
General, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Being brave when an ace flops in hold ’em
Hold 'em
Brunson: Accepting a gift
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: Finding the courage to raise
General, Hold 'em
Brunson: Hold ’em early schooling
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: How to bluff constantly and win
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: Intimidation at a world-class level
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: No-Limit Confusion
Calculation, Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: Playing small hold ’em pairs early
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: Switching between limit and no-limit poker
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: The advantages of aggressive play
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Manipulation
Brunson: The flop isn’t your friend
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: The path to power poker
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: The truth about small cards
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: The wrong reasons to bluff
Entries by others, Hold 'em
Brunson: When calling doesn’t make sense
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Image
Brunson: Why raise if you don’t want a call?
Entries by others, General, Hold 'em
1 2 3 10

Everything is everywhere

Any Poker1 page takes you anyplace you want to go!

Poker1 

Megadex

Poker1 universe —
all in one place.

→ Collections
Special Poker1 groups

Poker1 Megadex tools

— main navigation departments —

Collections

Related groups of Poker1 content

↓ Major collections ↓

Gambling  •  Hold 'em  •  Info  •  Life beyond poker

Poker (all)  •  Poker dictionary  •  Poker psychology

Poker statistics  •  Poker strategy  •  Poker tells

Prediction*  •  Shopping  •  Zone 2*

↓ Tip collections ↓

All*  •  Gambling*  •  Life*  •  Poker*  •  Various*

↓ Contributor collections ↓

Brunson  •  Caro  •  McHaffie  •  Wiesenberg  •  Others*

↓ More collections ↓

Poker1 FAQ  •  Poker-tell videos  •  Review of poker lessons

Sunday sessions*  •  Targeted poker quizzes  •  Tuesday sessions

* Any collection followed by an asterisk ( * ) has no entries yet.

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 everything

Browse alphabetically

 

[a-z-listing display=”posts” post-type=”post”]

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 library

Content in categories

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home




≡ Content above: Poker1 Phase2a specification ≡

2 thoughts on “Brunson: More chips than you bargained for”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Let's make sure it's really you and not a bot. Please type digits (without spaces) that best match what you see. (Example: 71353)

  1. One of the games here in Corpus was using the same chips as the bar poker game out on the island. No one ever mentioned it to the game runner. His game did not last long.

  2. This happened to me the very first game I ever hosted. The people I bought the “custom” chips from had some spares they decided to cash in on the 1st night. That was a big ouch… and not lucky enough still see a profit. And then of course, the cost of an actually new set of chips, just incase there were more spares out there. :-/

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Let's make sure it's really you and not a bot. Please type digits (without spaces) that best match what you see. (Example: 71353)