I wanted to start a thread for hosts to discuss the various ways of disinviting players from a home game, and the complications around that unpleasant task... This topic has come up in a lot of places but I’m not aware of a thread devoted just to the specific diplomatic and other considerations around this often uncomfortable situation.
Here are three specific examples from recent memory, before considering any more general principles... I would just say up front that there are very different reasons for cutting people from an invite list (ranging from disruptive behavior to overt cheating/collusion to really just being “bad for the game” in some other way). And each may require very different approaches. So:
Here are three specific examples from recent memory, before considering any more general principles... I would just say up front that there are very different reasons for cutting people from an invite list (ranging from disruptive behavior to overt cheating/collusion to really just being “bad for the game” in some other way). And each may require very different approaches. So:
- Disruptors: We all have experienced players in casinos or home/private games who constantly make problems. This can come in many forms, from berating dealers or other players, to ignoring house rules or requests, even hygiene issues. This year I had to disinvite an older female player who I find pretty entertaining to be around, but who constantly antagonized regs in my game, as well as my dealer. About half the time she played in my game, there would be some major blow-up between her and at least one other person at the time. Over time, I started to realize that in addition to having a lot of anger issues, she sometimes staged these arguments as a way of hitting-and-running when she was up in chips: She’d get in a big fight with someone, and escalate until she could yell, “That’s it, cash me out” and storm out with her winnings. I just stopped inviting her at some point. Once in a while she still asks if I have a game that night (she knows the rough schedule) but I just always tell her it’s full up.
- Cheaters/Colluders: In 2024, I stopped inviting two guys who are best friends since childhood, who had been accused of either outright cheating (manipulating decks) or softer collusion (e.g. running squeeze plays) at various games, including mine. I had ejected the more offending of the pair several years before, but allowed his meek buddy to remain as he was not capable of running such schemes alone and seemed to be more under the thumb of his old friend... When I axed the one guy, I explicitly confronted him about what had been observed over several sessions by multiple players. He never really admitted it, but it was telling that he didn’t fight the accusations. After the death of a mutual poker friend seemed to have caused a “come to jesus” moment for him. But eventually he and his sidekick reverted to form and I just stopped inviting them. When finally they inquired about why they hadn’t been invited to the game for a while, I just said “You know perfectly well why,” and that was the end of it.
- Bad for the Game: The other, less explosive situation I sometimes encounter is a player who does not make trouble, but who just doesn't add anything to the game. For example, there is one OMC guy who was brought initially by one of my regs. He buys in for the minimum, rarely if ever tops off or rebuys, and plays very few hands. He will stay all night milking that first buy-in, going up a little bit or down a little bit. Since he plays almost nothing but ultra-premium hands, he can’t have a good night unless he wakes up with AA and someone else has QQ/KK or AKs, since no one is calling him without a premium hand. Also, this guy eats about three times what anyone else in the game does. If I get two pizzas and a salad, he’ll have 5-6 slices and three bowls of salad. It’s crazy, because he is actually pretty skinny... A similar player is someone who used to play regularly in my tournaments, and now is giving cash a go. He, too, only buys in for the minimum, never tops off, and only very occasionally will rebuy when he busts. If he gets up by even a half-buyin, he concocts a reason to leave. So at most he is adding about 60-120 BB to the box on a bad night, and leaving with 30BB on a good one... A net win for the game, I guess, but in a game where others are bringing 400-600BBs to the game and getting their chips in play regularly, it really doesn't make sense to waste a seat on him a seat unless I’m desperate for one more player. Neither is a bad guy, they’re just bad for the game; so in both cases, I have not formally disinvited them; I just don’t tell them about the game unless I really really need a player. However, sometimes they inquire about whether I’m hosting on a given week, and I have to get creative to dodge their inquires. I have considered telling each of them whey they don’t get invited more often, but I don’t see either changing so there is little upside to having the conversation, IMHO.