Poker dealer

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A poker dealer distributes cards to players and manages the action at a poker table.

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[edit] Professional dealers

Any casino with a poker room must hire a staff of dealers. Casinos generally pay dealers minimum wage. However, a dealer's primary source of income is not salary, but tips from players. Tip income may be substantial for dealers who can deal hands quickly and efficiently, and are selected by the casino to deal in higher limit games.

To become employable by a casino, applicants without prior experience are typically required to complete a 4-6 week training program at a dealing school. Dealing in a casino may require working late hours and remaining seated for long periods of time. Dealers also commonly work holidays, since these are especially busy days for casinos. Having to deal with difficult individuals may be another drawback to dealing at a casino—some players are abusive to dealers.

Major poker tournaments also hire dealers. For a given tournament stop, the tournament coordinator will hire dealers on contract for the duration of the tournament, which may be a few days to a few weeks. Room and board may or may not be provided by the tournament management; the dealer is typically responsible for his own travel expenses.

[edit] Mechanics of dealing

Dealers must be proficient in shuffling the deck, distributing the cards to the players, and, if required by the game being dealt, turning up the community cards in the center of the table. There are two methods of distributing the cards, "American"-style and "European"-style.

[edit] Shuffling

To shuffle the cards, the dealer follows a sequence defined by the casino. First all cards are spread out on the table and pushed around randomly. This is called "scrambling" or "washing" the cards. Then the cards are collected and squared into a deck. At this point a typical shuffling sequence might be: riffle, riffle, box, riffle. Professional dealers always keep both halves of the deck very low to the table while shuffling.

Finally, a cut card is placed on the table and the deck is cut onto the card. The cut card is held on the bottom of the deck for the entire hand, to keep the bottom card from being exposed.

Shuffling machines have been introduced in some poker rooms. Two decks are constantly in play; one is dealt while the other is shuffled in the machine. To begin a new deal, the dealer removes the shuffled deck from the machine, cuts it, and begins dealing. The machines speed up play, simplify the dealer's work, and also add some security to the game, since the machine counts the cards between every hand.

[edit] American-style dealing

In American-style dealing, the deck is held in one hand, and the dealer pinches the front-right corner of the top card between the other thumb and index finger. The card is then thrown to the player, with a wrist extending motion.

The positioning of the throwing wrist is critical, since the cards must be maintained low and level with the table surface, so that players at the table can not see the undersides of the cards.

American-style dealers may use a completely different dealing motion to deliver cards to the one-seat (the player seated immediately to the dealer's left), and sometimes the two-seat (two seats to the dealer's left), since these are awkward to reach for a right handed dealer with the dealing motion described above.

[edit] European-style dealing

European-style dealers touch only the top of each card being dealt. The card is pushed off the top of the deck to the table surface in front of the dealer. The dealer then propels the card toward the recipient, usually imparting some spin to the card for stability.

[edit] Burning and turning

Before dealing a community card, the top card off the deck is burned, or thrown in the discard pile. The rationale for burning is that the top card on the deck is visible to players during the previous betting round, so that a cheat might be able to spot a mark on the top card and therefore gain an advantage on his opponents.

When burning, the deck must be held low and the burn card kept level with the table surface. Casinos watch carefully to make sure a dealer does not "flash", or inadvertently expose, the burn cards to players at the table.

In flop games, the three community cards comprising the flop are turned up simultaneously, never one at a time.

[edit] Responsibilities during a hand

Dealers control the action during a hand. This may include prodding players to act, verbally announcing actions of players to the rest of the table, and correcting players who act out of turn.

Dealers also must manage the pot. The dealer must verify the amount of bets and raises by players, collect folded hands, maintain side pots, and read player's hands at showdown to identify the winner or winners. In games with a rake, the dealer also must keep track of the amount of money in the pot and remove the appropriate cut for the house.

At times the dealer needs to communicate with the floor, or other casino staff. Some casinos equip the dealers with a headset or walkie-talkie for this purpose, while in other casinos the dealer must shout over the ambient noise. The following table shows some common calls a dealer may make, and their meanings:

Call Meaning
"Floor" or "Decision" Requests the floor manager to come to resolve a dispute.
"Seat open" Announces that a player has left the game and a seat is now available.
"Player in" Notifies the pit boss that a vacant seat has been filled.
"Players checks" Requests a chip runner to retrieve chips for a player.
"Fill" Requests a chip runner to bring chips to fill the dealer tray. This tray must be kept full of low denomination chips in a high limit game, so that change may be made in the pot so that the rake may be taken out.
"Set up" Requests replacement decks be brought to the table.
"Pick up" For cash games, used when an absent player's chips should be removed from the table to free the seat. Also, for single-table satellites, used to request the staff to come collect the cash entry fees from the table.
"Winner" Used in single-table satellites to announce that the game has completed and the prize is to be paid.
"Brush" Calls pit boss to deal with a game participation problem, for example if a game must be broken due to insufficient players.

[edit] References

[edit] See also

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