Casino San Pablo
2 tables
13255 San Pablo Avenue
510-215-7888

Poker room closed
Casino San Pablo Review Thread
Casino San Pablo Review
Currently in the process of being renamed to San Pablo Lytton Casino. Only ten miles away from San Francisco, in the East Bay, just north of Oakland. They have a huge lit sign high in the air right next to the freeway (I-80), situated next to the exit you need to use (San Pablo Dam Road), but the sign is not at the casino itself (it's in the parking lot of a Holiday Inn a couple blocks away), which can throw you off if you try to "drive to the sign". Instead, take San Pable Dam Road west until it dead ends a couple blocks in from the freeway; it ends right in front of the casino -- just drive straight through the fancy arches and you're there. One can also reach the casino via public transportation by the El Cerrito del Norte BART station and the 72 or 72R bus.

20 poker tables (plus a dozen or so tables of pseudo-blackjack, pai-gow, etc). If they eventually get certified as a valid Indian casino, presumably they will have real blackjack, let-it-ride, craps, etc.


No-limit hold 'em: 2/2/2, 100-100 buyin ($100 both min and max). The three amounts in the listing are the blind amounts (first amount is paid by the button, second by the small blind, third by the big blind). The big blind is still not in for a full bet, though; anyone who opens must put in a bet of 4, minimum, to see the flop. Number of tables of NLHE at CSP is limited. To maximize the total drop, they limit NLHE to one table on weekdays, two on weekends and weekday evenings.

7-Stud: 3/6 ($1 ante; $1 bring-in).

Rake: Rake for 3/6 is $3+$1 jackpot for 7-9 players, $2+$1 for 6 players, $1+$1 for 5 or fewer players, $1 if no flop. For 2/4 Stud, rake is $2 per hand, paid by the player who is holding the rotating "collection" button for that hand (player with the button pays the rake, but $1 of it counts towards the bring in). For NLHE, $4 is raked pre-flop.

Posting: New players do not need to post.

Shuffling: Hand shuffled on all tables.

Wait Time: There is almost always a list on the board; waits for any particular game can range from 15 minutes to an hour or, for the NLHE, even more (two hours or longer).

Tournaments

    * Saturday, 10:15am NLHE: (registration starts at 9:30am). $50 + $5 buyin, no rebuys. 50 max players; alternates allowed.
    * Sunday, 10:15am NLHE: (registration starts at 9:30am). $50 + $5 buyin, no rebuys. 50 max players; alternates allowed.

Jackpots and Promotions

Bad beat jackpots (50% paid to losing hand; 10% to winning hand, rest split among other players). Both hole cards must play in both hands to qualify (for HE).

    * Super 7-Stud jackpot: quad 10's or better beaten. $30000 as of Feb 12 2006.
    * Super Hold 'em jackpot: quad 6's or better beaten. $104000 as of Feb 12 2006.
    * Regular 7-Stud jackpot: AAA99 or better beaten by quads or better. $4200 as of Feb 12 2006.
    * Regular Hold 'em jackpot: AAAJJ or better beaten by quads or better. $6700 as of Feb 12 2006.

Royal Flush Jackpot: $250 to the holder of a royal flush at showdown (both hole cards must play), in either Stud or Hold 'Em.

High Hand Jackpot:

    * Weekdays, periods of 1-2 hours between 2am and 1pm every weekday. $100 to holder of high hand for that period.
    * Sundays, periods of 1-2 hours between 11am and 1am at night (Mon morning). $100 to holder of high hand for the period.

Atmosphere

    My personal pick as the most pleasant place to play poker in the Bay Area. A small club of about two dozen tables with your normal assortment of California games on top of it. They are currently going through the legislative process to become a full fledged Indian casino with slot machines and table games.

    I'd pick any of the larger standalone poker halls over CSP, frankly. While they have a fairly nice poker area, it is still connected to the smoke-filled slot-machine-filled main casino area, so it's not particularly quiet, and the smoke drifts over into the poker area. CSP is nice, but wouldn't be my choice as a favorite. Good food, though.

Neighborhood: Standard "business area" of town, with fast food restaurants, gas stations, etc, right next to it. Looks almost like a resort or a nice hotel from the street.

Parking: Lots of parking (many hundreds of spaces) available on site.

Tables and Chairs: Large 10-player tables. Felt is nice, soft felt with good padding. Player chairs are standard wood-frame chairs with nice padding; no wheels. CSP is currently undergoing construction for a new California table games section, so the poker wing is more cramped, but not to any extreme.

Service and Comps

Good food at reasonably good prices. I wish their sodas were larger, but it was OK. The meatloaf dinner I had was very tasty, good sized portions, and only cost about $6. People next to me had nice-looking steak-topped salads and so forth, all reasonably priced. Only downside was that some of the wait staff was new or incompetent; couldn't understand simple orders and would either bring the wrong thing or would not bring anything at all. One must also guard food and drink against sneaky bussers. Free self-serve coffee, tea.
Artist/Author: PokerWiki     April 2, 2007
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