Throwback Thursday: Chipping Through the Ages (1 Viewer)

jbutler

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Okay, "the ages" really means about ten years, but still. It occurred to me when I was chatting with another member that lots of folks on here weren't around for some of the formative threads that got us to where we are now. Some threads were substantive, some silly, most positive, maybe a couple negative, but all will be memorable to those involved and will have informed at least some aspect of the current community.

On Thursdays (at least until I run out memorable threads) I'll post a link to an old thread and try to give some context as to why I think it's notable.

Feel free to crank your appropriate jam in the background as you reminisce. A couple of options:


 
For the inaugural entry, we will revisit the one, the only.....................NOOKER. In truth, Nooker himself was the focus of the discussion that gave rise to this thread. Someone commented that some probably did not realize the greatness of @Toby's most recent avatar:

O7OKw9v.png


It's a sort of airbursh, Shepard Fairey version of Nooker's classic, celebratory photo:

bUaDIv7.png


Nooker is very pleased with himself. As he should be since he just won the 2009 Twin Cities Poker Tournament. And the wonders would not cease there. But I'll let the thread tell the rest of the story, so I give you the classic ChipTalk thread: Nooker wins 2009 Twin Cities Poker Tournament.

Thread title: Nooker wins 2009 Twin Cities Poker Tournament
OP: Nooker1958
Date of OP: February 15, 2010
Notable for: third person bragging, sponscers, bum puppets, rhbergman's middle name
 
For the inaugural entry, we will revisit the one, the only.....................NOOKER. In truth, Nooker himself was the focus of the discussion that gave rise to this thread. Someone commented that some probably did not realize the greatness of @Toby's most recent avatar:

O7OKw9v.png


It's a sort of airbursh, Shepard Fairey version of Nooker's classic, celebratory photo:

bUaDIv7.png


Nooker is very pleased with himself. As he should be since he just won the 2009 Twin Cities Poker Tournament. And the wonders would not cease there. But I'll let the thread tell the rest of the story, so I give you the classic ChipTalk thread: Nooker wins 2009 Twin Cities Poker Tournament.

Thread title: Nooker wins 2009 Twin Cities Poker Tournament
OP: Nooker1958
Date of OP: February 15, 2010
Notable for: third person bragging, sponscers, bum puppets, rhbergman's middle name

I was talking to Poker Zombie recently and he remembered this thread extremely well. Poker Zombie has a great memory, and I would rank his memory in the top 57th percentile of memories.

The sad part with talking Nooker-style, is how easy it would be to slip into talking Trump-style...
 
I was talking to Poker Zombie recently and he remembered this thread extremely well. Poker Zombie has a great memory, and I would rank his memory in the top 57th percentile of memories.

The sad part with talking Nooker-style, is how easy it would be to slip into talking Trump-style...
Nah, the sad part is we (you) have to bring Trump into another thread.
 
Gopher likes this thread even though he has not "liked" this thread. Gopher expects to like many more threads even though he may not "like" them.
 
jbutler says for the inaugural entry, jbutler will revisit the one, the only.....................NOOKER. In truth, jbutler thinks Nooker himself was the focus of the discussion that gave rise to this thread. jbutler reports someone commented that some probably did not realize the greatness of @Toby's most recent avatar:

O7OKw9v.png


jbutler thinks it's a sort of airbursh, Shepard Fairey version of Nooker's classic, celebratory photo:

bUaDIv7.png


jbutler feels Nooker is very pleased with himself. As he should be since he just won the 2009 Twin Cities Poker Tournament. And the wonders would not cease there. jbutler will let the thread tell the rest of the story, so jbutler gives you the classic ChipTalk thread: Nooker wins 2009 Twin Cities Poker Tournament.

Thread title: Nooker wins 2009 Twin Cities Poker Tournament
OP: Nooker1958
Date of OP: February 15, 2010
Notable for: third person bragging, sponscers, bum puppets, rhbergman's middle name

^sfyp
 
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Sixspeedfury says Nooker should join PCF just for more shits and giggles.
 
OMG. Couga just read through that whole thread again. Laughing with tears in his eyes.

Although Couga has to point out that it was our own Abby99 that shut that thread down. Shame, SHAME!
 
Sixspeedfury just realized that he will never play in a big name tournament because he neither has a sponscer nor the skillto (n) :thumbsdown:
 
@Toby's most recent avatar:

O7OKw9v.png


It's a sort of airbursh, Shepard Fairey version of Nooker's classic, celebratory photo:

bUaDIv7.png

Toby didn't think anyone guessed his avatar but jbutler nailed it!

Nooker took 1495th place down like a pro.

Although a much more recent episode, Toby also very much enjoyed the many faces of John Boy. Chip theft, trolling, multiple personalities, threats of violence... It was like Sherlock, only online and shit.
 
David O wonders what happened to Nookie. David O often plays poker and even wins cash. Wow is David O special?

Love it. And glad to see some of you haven't changed a bit
 
Bum Puppets of the World Unite

BGinGA has the T-shirt, but could never convince Nooker to autograph it. :(
 
Well only week 2 and we're already breaking the rules. Going with a combination of three threads for this week's entry.

Thread titles (and links):
OPs: @guinness and @bergs
Dates of OPs: October 1, 2009; December 2, 2009; June 24, 2010
Notable for: Igniting meetup madness (also notable for being the first and last time I've folded a flopped flush to Tim).

These events happening in such quick succession started the trend of dozens of degens flying around the country multiple times to play low stakes (um...sort of) home poker with people far better than the average casino reg (trust me, it makes sense if you don't try to rationalize it at all). What is now the default culture of chipping meetups would likely not have developed as fully as it has to this day without this chain of tourneys. To that end, we all have to thank (and our wives can blame) @guinness and @bergs for kicking off an amazing tradition.

Certainly we have to concede from the outset that there had been several meetups prior to November 7, 2009. There had been a couple of Lone Star Roundups, a couple of Windy City Blowouts, and a Sin City Showdown, but no one had done anything like the BBQ Classic as evidenced by Tim's reference in the OP to the northeast's previous meetup, which, big for its time, brought in 26 players.

This was clearly different. As the Fall Classic approached, reservations ballooned until we ended up with a field of 58 players. It was the first Chiptalk game for a ton of current regs and the first time many had made it to the northeast. It was the first time I met @krafticus, @Chicken Rob, @Josh, and a bunch more Chiptalk folks I'm sure in addition to the surprise visit (to me at least) of Jim Blanchard and Jamie from ASM. They drove down from Portland and brought the (amazing) commemorative chips as well as the 300-piece FDL (then a newly available mold) set Tim got for winning the damn thing (Pow! He did it!). It had it all: amazing BBQ, a guy in a dress (first elimination prize), anonymous explosive diarrhea all over Tim's guest bathroom, and the first in what is now a tradition of being at the last table standing at the end of the night playing short-handed.

@bergs had found Chiptalk in October of 2008, but somehow didn't make the Fall Classic. But he did make a couple games at @dolomite128's place and decided, in his always measured judgment, to have not one, but two giant events within six months of one another in his modest condo. His wife was thrilled, I'm sure. So next up was the MMMM. I confess I've completely forgotten what MMMM was supposed to stand for. Massachusetts March Madness...Moker Tournament? Does it matter? Thus began the trademark alliterative meetups. It became clear that hitting capacity was no longer a problem. And attendance it wasn't an issue either for the following Bounty Battle at the Border inaugural event less than five months later.

Needless to say, these forums and poker life generally wouldn't be the same had these events not gone down as they did - with such smashing success and in such quick succession. Now we have the pleasure of jumping on a plan in almost any month to throw our money at each other. Other events have established themselves as the cornerstones of the chipping calendar alongside the annual Bounty Battle and certainly deserve that designation, but these - the Fall BBQ Classic, MMMM, and Bounty Battle No. 1 - were the originators of the genre.
 
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Well only week 2 and we're already breaking the rules. Going with a combination of three threads for this week's entry.

Thread titles (and links to said threads): November 7th! New England Fall BBQ Classic...; MARCH 19th - MMMM - OFFICIALLY OVER AND A SUCCCESS!; Bounty Battle at the Border - Saturday August 14th
OPs: @guinness and @bergs
Dates of OPs: October 1, 2009; December 2, 2009; June 24, 2010
Notable for: Igniting meetup madness (also notable for being the first and last time I've folded a flopped flush to Tim).

These events happening in such quick succession started the trend of dozens of degens flying around the country multiple times to play low stakes (um...sort of) home poker with people far better than the average casino reg (trust me, it makes sense if you don't try to rationalize it at all). What is now the default culture of chipping meetups would likely not have developed as fully as it has to this day without this chain of tourneys. To that end, we all have to thank (and our wives can blame) @guinness and @bergs for kicking off an amazing tradition.

Certainly we have to concede from the outset that there had been several meetups prior to November 7, 2009. There had been a couple of Lone Star Roundups, a couple of Windy City Blowouts, and a Sin City Showdown, but no one had done anything like the BBQ Classic as evidenced by Tim's reference in the OP to the northeast's previous meetup, which, big for its time, brought in 26 players.

This was clearly different. As the Fall Classic approached, reservations ballooned until we ended up with a field of 58 players. It was the first Chiptalk game for a ton of current regs and the first time many had made it to the northeast. It was the first time I met @krafticus, @Chicken Rob, @Josh, and a bunch more Chiptalk folks I'm sure in addition to the surprise visit (to me at least) of Jim Blanchard and Jamie from ASM. They drove down from Portland and brought the (amazing) commemorative chips as well as the 300-piece FDL (then a newly available mold) set Tim got for winning the damn thing (Pow! He did it!). It had it all: amazing BBQ, a guy in a dress (first elimination prize), anonymous explosive diarrhea all over Tim's guest bathroom, and the first in what is now a tradition of being at the last table standing at the end of the night playing short-handed.

@bergs had found Chiptalk in October of 2008, but somehow didn't make the Fall Classic. But he did make a couple games at @dolomite128's place and decided, in his always measured judgment, to have not one, but two giant events within six months of one another in his modest condo. His wife was thrilled, I'm sure. So next up was the MMMM. I confess I've completely forgotten what MMMM was supposed to stand for. Massachusetts March Madness...Moker Tournament? Does it matter? Thus began the trademark alliterative meetups. It became clear that hitting capacity was no longer a problem. And attendance it wasn't an issue either for the following Bounty Battle at the Border inaugural event less than five months later.

Needless to say, these forums and poker life generally wouldn't be the same had these events not gone down as they did - with such smashing success and in such quick succession. Now we have the pleasure of jumping on a plan in almost any month to throw our money at each other. Other events have established themselves as the cornerstones of the chipping calendar alongside the annual Bounty Battle and certainly deserve that designation, but these - the Fall BBQ Classic, MMMM, and Bounty Battle No. 1 - were the originators of the genre.


That event at @guinness' was my first event. I guess I'm confusing it with my next event at guinness', but I don't think so. I think @bergs was there. I remember being at the game with my friends Broccoli Rob and New Frankshire, and making my first of many hero calls against berg when facing a river shove on a paired board, and getting berated by guinness as he thought a naked 7 was totally in bergs range. Any way you slice it, I was hooked. I hit all 3 events in that post I think.
 
That event at @guinness' was my first event. I guess I'm confusing it with my next event at guinness', but I don't think so. I think @bergs was there. I remember being at the game with my friends Broccoli Rob and New Frankshire, and making my first of many hero calls against berg when facing a river shove on a paired board, and getting berated by guinness as he thought a naked 7 was totally in bergs range. Any way you slice it, I was hooked. I hit all 3 events in that post I think.

I would have sworn on a stack of bibles that Berg wasn't there, but I haven't paged through the thread to confirm. I've been more sure about things I was more wrong about in the past...
 
I would have sworn on a stack of bibles that Berg wasn't there, but I haven't paged through the thread to confirm. I've been more sure about things I was more wrong about in the past...

And I may be confusing the events. I didn't read the thread again today, but this was the big 5-6 table event with Jamie and JimB showing up, right?
 
And I may be confusing the events. I didn't read the thread again today, but this was the big 5-6 table event with Jamie and JimB showing up, right?
Correct. Bergs was not there.
Tim won the tournament, and he and I played heads up until 6am, when, I think it was Whitey, drove me to the airport

IIRC, Tim netted about $3 in our cash game. I was up $700 and was as tight as could be. Sorry, but that is still the best meetup to date.

Also, there was a little group of us (@JoseRijo dolomite, PhiltheThrill, and a few others) that never got the BBQ. The meat guy felt so bad that he drove about 30 min each way to get some pizzas.

Mark
 
LOL'ed at @guinness excitement: "The multi-table cash games certainly happen after the tournament! Can you say P-L-O??? "

I dare say that now, PLO would be the tame table.
 
I was up till 2 in the morning reading the "Nooker" thread on CT. and had a much needed laugh. Thanks @jbutler :)

Turns out you guys ARE a bunch of Window Licking Bum-puppets ....!!
 
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Bivey never read the Nooker thread, well, until now. Bivey really appreciates @jbutler bringing the past to life for all to enjoy. Bivey also plans a commemorative thread in June for the monster stack at WSOP although he hopes he can improve upon Nooker's result and finish in the top 50% of participants. Bivey regrets that he will have to use a WSOP satellite as his only way to truly make his way down memory lane.
 
Took a couple weeks off of this thing because...I forgot it existed. Nevertheless, we are back with yet another installment in this thrilling and acclaimed series. While the past have been comedy (nooker) and historical docudrama (history of meetups), this week we'll tackle a mystery.

Thread Title: What to do with reads? (OR, 'How I got 86'd from the Casino Arizona)
OP: @bergs
Dates of OPs: May 11, 2011
Notable for: Haffing it, noodle slurping, origin of boomfish

It's a strat post in structure, but I could not care less about the strat. The story is amazing. So to skip over all the (well-meaning and mostly well thought out) strat posts, just hit the OP here and then post #29 here. Without this story we would not have such great things as Berg's twitter handle and the cup o noodles people would have sold at least 10 or so fewer cups o noodles that people have used to try to troll Berg at past games.
 
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Just a reminder that as you peruse the threads linked to here, you are kindly requested to be playing Garth Brooks' "The Dance" or Ahmad's "Back in the Day." Thank you.
 
@jbutler - ray's back.... should dig up some of the old related classics.
 

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