Author Topic: Chips on chips.Preflop on his action SB silently tosses an overchip: raise/call?  (Read 5301 times)

mooredog

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Blinds are 100 & 200. Small blind throws out a 500 chip, remains silent and doesn't reach for the 100 chip sitting out there. Raise to 600 or call due to single chip rule?
« Last Edit: October 28, 2014, 09:03:36 AM by MikeB »

MikeB

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Hi Moore:

This was the subject of an interesting discussion at the 2013 TDA Summit. The Association tried to codify your scenario and several others related to situations where "chips are added to a bet not yet pulled in". However, when the delegates were polled on various situations the votes were all over the place: "it's a call", "it's a raise"...

At the end of the day, instead of adopting a set of rules addressing each possible scenario, the more general Rule 44 was adopted:

44: Previous Bet Chips Not Pulled In: If a player faces a raise and has chips in front of him not yet pulled in from a prior bet, those chips (and any change due) may affect whether his betting response to the raise is a call or re-raise. Because several possibilities exist, players are encouraged to verbally declare their bet before putting out new chips on top of chips from a prior bet not yet pulled in.

The good news is that your example is one of the few situations where there is near-universal agreement: it's a call. Why? A) the previous bet chips have no change coming from the previous bet (in this case the SB); B) the prior bet chip(s) don't equal a call of the current bet (the BB); and C) the player adds a silent single overchip. Under these conditions it's no different than any other silent overchip bet (Rule 42). Also, some TDs are using Rule 49 "Non-standard and unclear betting" to rule that the action is the "lesser of" the possibilities in cases where there's doubt...

NOW, there is at least one twist to your example: what if the guy puts out the 500 and then "tosses" both the 500 and 100 forward... is that a call or raise? There's just so many possibilities with these add-on bets that writing strict rules for all of them may never work... and even if we did, would dealers know all the variations? Hence Rule 44: "players are encouraged to verbally declare their bet before putting out chips on top of chips from a prior bet"...

I've slightly changed the title of the thread as there are quite a few questions on this topic. Thanks again for the great question.
« Last Edit: October 28, 2014, 09:03:51 AM by MikeB »

Brian Vickers

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I have worded the small blind overchip rule in my room(s) as follows:  "If the small blind places an oversized chip in with his small blind without indication of a raise, it will be ruled a call.  Indication can be verbal or non-verbal, but must be recognized by the dealer.  Pushing both/all chips forward is indication of the intent to raise."

It comes down to this for me: Are we questioning whether it's a call or raise?  Then it's a call.  Did you make it clear that it's a raise?  Then it's a raise.  The player must make the intention clear, if we are questioning between two amounts then the lesser amount applies.


#dropthemic

Nick C

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Brian,

 I like your rule.

Brian Vickers

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As to the why, the reason is twofold: 

First the player is facing a bet of 100 "it's 100 to you sir" so he is placing a 500 chip in the pot in response to a call amount of 100, which becomes an overchip. 

Secondly, the player could be intending to call or he could be intending to raise; nothing about the situation has indicated one way or the other.