playing a live game last night and it got a bit heated to say the least ( thank god this happened in first 20mins and not too many beers had been consumed or it could have got nasty) . 3 people got to see a flop, player1 sb player 2 bb and me (3) mid postion. no raises preflop. (i got pocket 3s). flop comes 9 10 3. i check player 1 raises to 600 player 2 calls i re raise to 3k. player 1 pushes all in for 6k. now at this point (dont ask me why) the dealer flips over the turn card with player 2 and myself still to act. player 2, after seeing the card (8) pushes all in for 7.5k. at this point i react quite badly as this player knew that card shouldn't have been shown and still acted on it. as it turns out player 1 had ace 10, player2 had jq. what should of happened next in the hand, and what should have happened to player2. not to bias any comments too much, player2 had been allowed to play after serving a 2yr ban for being caught dealing off the bottom of the deck in a cash game 2.5 yrs ago. phil
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Some casinos and tournaments will allow it, however, in mine and most situations the chips will be giver back to their rightful owners and the hand re-delt.
Hope this helps for future referance guys.
As soon as the turn is dealt prematurely, halt ALL action, call over the tournament director. The correct procedure is to return the card (8) to the deck, and complete betting action on the T93 board. Then, the deck is reshuffled thoroughly, and the turn is dealt (without burning another card). Action continues as normal.
After player 2 acts on the turn, it is still possible to ignore his action and return his all-in bet, and continue from the flop as outlined above. Betting on the turn is pretty bad etiquette, knowing that you are going to cause problems for everyone involved in the pot.
This is the what Im used to whenever I have seen it happen.
in my casino,the 8 would be a burn card and the turn card is the 3rd card off the bottom,so thats 4 different solutions to to one problem........
dave
Well done Phil.