Throughout poker's storied history, billions upon billions of hands have been dealt. Amidst those many billions, we can safely assume that a player somewhere in the world has been dealt four-of-a-kind in several million instances – but how many times has that player gone on to fold their quads by the river?
Probably not too often. After all, it's incredibly difficult to make a hand that beats quads.
In a live-streamed game at Texas Card House Dallas, however, a player – known as 'QQQ' – did exactly that.
'You're never folding'
It was a four-way pot that lead to the madness seen in the video below. Ryan kicked off the action with a raise to $150 with and picked up calls from Zak with
, Spooky with
, and QQQ with
.
With $625 in the middle, the flop delivered a brutal cooler as Spooky improved to top full house while QQQ now held all the fours in the deck. Interestingly enough, the action checked through as both Spooky and QQQ opted to slow-play their monsters, and neither Zak nor Ryan felt inclined to bluff at the small pot.
The on the turn saw Ryan improve to top pair whilst drawing dead while Zak, also drawing dead, picked up a flush draw. Still, no bets went in on the turn as the action checked through to the
river.
QQQ decided it was time to get some value with all of his fours and bet $400 into the $625. Ryan called with his top pair before Spooky raised to $1,300. With the action back on him, QQQ opted to re-raise to $2,400 rather than move all-in as the covering stack.
Ryan fled the scene, but Spooky sent the entirety of his $7,565 stack into the middle.
As you may have guessed by now, QQQ didn't snap call like most players would. Instead, he went deep into the tank, even exposing his cards to the table – most of whom responded with silent incredulity at the notion of even considering a fold in this spot.
"You're never folding. You're never folding, flick the chip in, let's move on," said one of the show's commentators. "What are we doing here?"
And then QQQ picked up his cards and returned them to the dealer. Never say never.
Around the table murmurs of disbelief rang out and in the commentary booth all hell broke loose. Then Spooky slammed his cards down on the table face up, pulled in his chips, and sighed in relief.
"I don't know what to say, folks," came the response from the commentary booth.