CAMP VICTORY NORTH, Iraq
— Five sets of cold, blank eyes stare out of deadpan
faces prepared to give a Baghdad beatdown.
These guys are
aggressive. They’re ready for war. Nothing would make
them feel better than some rolled-up aces over kings.
This battle is
called “No-Limit Texas Holdem,” and the “rounders,” or
players, are deployed medical troops in support of
Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Every couple of
weeks, troops with Headquarters and Headquarters
Company, 1st Cavalry Division’s surgeon section in
Baghdad experience this kind of mini- drama, mimicking
scenes of televised Texas No-Limit Hold ’Em tournament
coverage on DVD.
Capt. David “KGZ”
Zimmerman, medical operations officer for the 1st
Cavalry Division, knows all the angles. The key to
no-limit is to play the man, not the cards.
When the KGZ gets
in poker mode, he pulls out all the stops. He has a
baseball cap pulled down low and some black wraparound
shades he’ll wear in the pitch of night to ensure no one
plays him.
The Cav guys call
Texas Holdem the Cadillac of poker.
“It’s a game that
takes 30 seconds to learn and lifetime to master,” said
Lt. Col. Roberto “Smooth Operator” Nang, the division
surgeon, whose tactic is to up the ante just to test the
water.
They started
playing
Texas HoldEm
downrange after
the KGZ wrote to the World Poker Tour and some Las Vegas
casinos. Simple letters got the captain 400 decks of
cards donated to the troops from the MGM Grand and
Aladdin casinos, five free sets of the first season of
the World Poker Tour, and a box of casino chips from
www.oldvegaschips.com.
Across a cheap,
white plastic table, the KGZ begins to deal. Just behind
the troops, scenes of Vegas and the Bellagio dance
across a television screen.
If it wasn’t for
the missing green felt tables and tinkling of ice cubes,
the KGZ’s air-conditioned trailer could be mistaken for
a casino in the middle of a different desert.
Almost forgetting
the earlier banter of trash talkin’, the game starts
quietly as everyone peeks at their cards. These high
rollers try to make the
Texas HoldEm
game as real as
possible when they get the chance to play. The stakes
are high.
Though gambling is
not authorized, per Army regulation, what these rounders
win is so much better: bragging rights, the honor of
being called “Johnny Chan,” a two-time World Series of
Poker champion, including a framed mug of the legend to
keep until the next game, and exclusion from having to
buy the next round of refreshments and snacks.
Usually the medical
crew plays twice a month, depending on workload,
according to Maj. Jim “Diamond Jim” Kelley, chief of
medical plans and operations.
Diamond Jim said
when the time is finally right to get the game going,
the trash talkin’ begins around noon.
“The Colonel
(Smooth Operator) is a good
Texas HoldEm
poker player in
his own right,” Diamond Jim offered, “but he’s also got
one of the fastest records for being asked to leave the
table. He’s lost all his chips in just two hands.”
Quickly the banter
progresses throughout the day until everyone gets off
work.
The winner of the
last game hosts the evening’s event in their trailer.
This time’s winner is a laid-back guy named Sgt. 1st
Class Steven “Sgt. Harley” Plante, the medical
intelligence noncommissioned officer in charge.
He’s not a trash
talker, but more of a one-liner, throwing in jabs when
necessary, just to keep his competitors in check.
“These three guys,”
Harley said, pointing to KGZ, Smooth Operator and
Diamond Jim, “are the biggest trash talkers. Sometimes
you have to stand on a chair it get so deep in here.”
Sgt. Harley said
the night he won several weeks ago was a typical
Texas HoldEm
poker night in
the hooch, just struggling along, but then his luck
changed and he took it all.
All but one player,
Sgt. 1st Class Buddy “Die Hard” Beavers, has had the
opportunity to be Johnny Chan. Die Hard, medical
operation noncommissioned officer in charge, blames it
on not being able to attend as many games as he would
like.
The truth is, no
one in the medical unit plays as much as they would
like.
“There are no
weekends, no hours, per se,” Diamond Jim said. He
explained that in their section they work around the
clock and are always on call.
With the harrowing
work schedule, the Smooth Operator said from a medical
standpoint it actually makes sense to play cards.
“Number one, it’s
important not to be isolated, lonely, or depressed out
here. By coming together we share in camaraderie,” said
Smooth Operator. “Number two, in terms of an outlet for
stress and other relief, playing games or cards, from a
morale and welfare point of view, is very therapeutic.”
These troops work
hard by helping Iraqi hospitals and clinics get back on
their feet, all the while still taking care of troops.
They also play
hard.
Diamond Jim said
they’re just some guys who like to keep score, no matter
what they’re doing.
He said all the
competition actually helps the poker posse function
better together as a team and keep the deployment from
becoming a daily grind.
With the KGZ
hunkered down in his guise, Diamond Jim with an almost
constant smirk on his face, the Smooth Operator
instigating trouble, Sgt. Harley soaking it all in, and
Die Hard shooting for the prize, the sounds of clinking
poker chips resonates into the Iraqi desert, but in this
room, the dreams don’t end and the sand turns to gold.
It’s just a game
that keeps one office from getting burned out when
deployed.