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Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Poker League Season 10, Game #1 Results

Here are the standings after Game #1

Player Week 1 Total Points
Heck12 12
Chris 10 10
Fred9 9
Terri7 8
Jon8 8
Sean6 6
Jaime5 5
Jake4 4
Chivers3 3
Shae2 2
Craig 0 0
Player Knockouts Cashes
Fred 4 1
Heck 3 1
Chris 1 1
Terri 1 0
Chivers 0 0
Craig 0 0
Jaime 0 0
Jake 0 0
Jon 0 0
Sean 0 0
Shae 0 0

Terri got the extra point for Knocking out Jaime, who was the random bounty.

Poker League Season 10, Game #2 is Saturday night!
I'm also planning on playing at the River's Sunday 2pm $55 tournament.
I also may try my luck in Saturday morning's 22.50+2.50 rebuy to get into the 200+20 deepstack but most likely just the Sunday game.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Pittsburgh Poker Open Winter Series Event #13

Jon and I played an event at the Pittsburgh Poker Open last week, Event #13. There looked to be 8 tables setaside for the tournament in a 3X3 set up. Jon was sitting at seat 5 in the exact middle table when I walkedin. My only hope was to not have to sit at his table and/or tangle with him at least until late in the tournament if I could help it. I got my table and seat, table 5, seat 2. I looked at the designated tables and I really hoped table 5 wasn’t in the middle and after walking to 2 other tables I was hoping were table 5 and weren’t, I moseyed myself over to Jon, said “Yo” and realized that, in fact, he was at table 5… at least I was going to be in position most of the time... We started off with about 4-5 players at the table and we filled in about 8 or 9 near the end of the first level(20 minutes). In the end, there were about 65 players, 50+ total with about 10+ re-entries, 6-7 tables of players. 
I guess I have no issue sitting at his table except that we both know each other way too well.  We have history...  It's a rich history, one of me winning large sums of money and KO-ing large amounts of players and him just KO-ing one player and winning trophies like nobody's business...  He also has a string of KOs with my name on them, usually sucking out or just having the slightliest(not a word?) better hand than mine.  Lately, I think I've turned the tables on my luck against him, even though he's won the coveted "Luckiest Bastard" trophy, I've been the beneficiary of most of our recent hands.  I think we'll probably not go out of our way to pick on the each other, mostly because the variance would be too high, however, I have little doubt that we'll probably play a significant hand eventually, and probably for a lot of chips...  It's just kind of our thing...  We mostly ignored each other at first, I was getting pretty nice cards and hitting them insanely and he was mostly folding...which is usually what he does anyway at the start...
 
We started with 15K in chips, 20 minute blinds, fairly tight table-mates and my image appeared to be tight-super-aggressive.  A few of my first hands were crazy good(Jon will attest to that!),
Example: 25-50 blinds, 7 players, 2 callers on an AdJd preflop raise to 175 and hit a J-high board. I bet 250 and get a caller.  A on the turn, I bet again 525, and villain obliges again.  A on the river is a nice one, I overbet to 2200 and villain called...maybe I could've gotten more, Villain didn't show but he must have had some weaker J(KJ?) and I'd hoped the river Ace told him that I couldn't possibly have one.  Next hand he lost to AK with a K high board and A-A for the boat, too.  Needless to say, this guy was on suicide watch after like 3 hands and was KO'd pretty quickly. Unfortunately for me I didn't get anymore chips from him as a parting gift of his uber-tilt. 
 
My nice string of hands continued.  Later, continuing my streak of good luck, I decided to raise UTG with Ad-2d, got 2 callers and an amazing flop of Kd-Qd-8d.  I decided to bet out and made it a slight overbet of the pot, to which both players folded...bummer, I think I wasted that one I should've bet small or check-called to see who was interested or wasn't.  Jon actually played more hands than I thought he would this early and at one point after a few levels, I think we were running the table.  Either he was raising and winning a nice pot or I was.  I think I might have broken my streak of nice hands because I folded one to Jon.  Blinds are 75-150, Jon is in the blind, BB maybe, 1 or 2 callers and I look down at black 5s.  I raise it up to 350 and get 2 callers, Jon and "Thinker" guy.  I'm calling him that because if he was bluffing or weak he'd hold his hand under his chin like "The Thinker" and try not to move.  When he was more comfortable you could easily tell, hands to his side, relaxed, leaning back, etc...  Anyway, he called with Jon, flop was 6-7-8rainbow.  I like this board except Jon, who was the BB could've hit that decently as well, Thinker, probably not so much.  I check, Jon checks, Thinker bets out, I call, Jon raises.  This was strange to me, Thinker calls and I don't like chasing the low straight in a pot that looks like it could get larger in later streets.  Jon doesn't raise as a bluff, or even with a decent hand, nothing is situational here, he's got what is most likely the best hand and he's just check-raised, and checked with only 1 player to go, unheard of...  I fold and even after the turn is a 4, Jon bets, Thinker folds and Jon wins the pot.  I hated that 4 for a few more hands, even though I know my fold was right, it still stings that I could've won that pot and continued my juggernaught-ing of the table... It's actually more probable that Jon flopped the nuts on that hand and I got lucky folding...  Jon had about 25K, I had about 30K and others were really moving up and down a lot.   

Not very much later, however, Jon found himself down to about 9100 on a few too many calls(it appeared) and a couple second best hands at showdown, then...

Jon raised under the gun(200-400 blinds) to 1200 and got 2 callers.  I looked down at A-Qoffsuit and decided to 3-bet it to 3300, Jon 4-bet all-in for 5800 more, 2 others folded.  I think if I could do this again I probably just call with AQ and being in position figure out Jon post-flop.  At the time I figured Jon plays so tight that he’ll probably fold most hands to 2 callers and my 3-bet and only be able to shove really strong hands where at that point I still have decent odds to call.  After he shoved and I owed 5800 more I wondered if I really gave Jon no other option than to fold or shove given his stack.  Also, prior to this hand I folded against his raise a few times and he played one particular hand against me and another player a little strangely(I thought) and I wondered if he was playing slightly differently against me given our history(I probably fabricated that, mostly though…)  I’m also not sure if I can fold 5800 to win 1200+12000+3300+3300+5800=14800, 2.5 to 1 I have to be 28% or better to make this call.  A-Q vs Jon’s perceived range of 10s or better seems to fit that bill…Even against Ks I’m 28%...  I figured he could do this with 10s or Js or better, I’m 25%-ish to win in those cases.  And if I lose, I’m only down to about 17K.  The only bad part of winning this hand is that I knock Jon out of the tournament and feel a little bit bad about it.  I'll feel pretty good about it when I get to tell the story at Poker League, though, conversely pretty horrible if he gets to tell the story of how I doubled him up, though...  If he had more chips I could find a fold, but in this case, even though Jon’s range is fairly tight I think it’s a decent call…

So I call, making a grimacing face and calling him a douche (all in love) as he flips over AKoffsuit, K on the flop, Q on the turn for a not-really-a-sweat sweat and doubling up Jon and nearly cutting my stack in half, though I wasn’t in any kind of tilt or worry as I was crushing the table prior to this hand and figured I should be able to continue this.

The next bunch of hands I got a lot of mid/small pocket pairs and I tried to switch up my style playing them.  A few Calling/set mining, I raised a few and nothing hit, I was 3-bet a few times pre and post-flop and nothing was hitting/working at this point…  I kind of think my AQ hand showed the rest of the table I was human and maybe I looked like a blaster to them... They were either hitting a lot or knocking me off of my hand a lot.  I also folded Ks in a hand where I think I lost the absolute minimum amount possible.  I 3-bet preflop and got 1 caller, flop was A-8-5, guy checked and I bet out knowing he’s gotta fold even a mid-ace to my image and betting at least on the turn.  He thought for a moment and called, turn was a 10 and he bets out appearing really strong.  I felt like the 10 really helped him (10s…or A-10?) and so after mulling it over I folded.  A few more speculative pairs/suited connectors(10Jsuited, etc..) and next thing I know I get to break(re-entry period over)45/ out of 65 players left and I’m sitting on 5900, blinds will be 400-800, 75 ante(I don’t think they were 500-1000 yet, but maybe they were…?) first hand from break Jon makes a comment that we should go play BlackJack after we’re done, so I say ok, I look down at As-5c under the gun so I shove all-in.  It actually folds all the way to the BB who looks at his cards and calls, unfortunately quickly, flipping over 9s.  Jon says, “I didn’t mean we should go right now!?”

I think I had a gut-shot on the flop(2-4-8), turn was another 2 and river was a 9 filling up his boat, not that he needed it.  I’m out around 40th place.  People were falling like flies from this point of the tournament, it’s really when the game starts up in a lot of ways.  The guys who are too aggressive either get mega stacks or go home, the guys who just held on for dear life begin disappearing/blinding down and those who adapt are generally the ones that survive.  Soon after I was eliminated, our table was broken up, Jon went to table 1 or 2 and played for about another half hour when this happened.  Jon had A-10 on a K-10-A flop, not sure who started, but both went all-in and called, Villain shows K-10 for both having 2-pair, Jon having top-bottom, villain having middle-bottom, the turn is a K, brutal…. river is another K(not that it was needed, just that it sucks royally…)

Jon was ousted around 30th.

I think we both played pretty well, I got unlucky for a bunch of hands in a row and Jon got unlucky once, and that’s all it takes sometimes…

I wish I just stayed away from Jon, though, sorry/or you’re welcome buddy!

I didn't get to play another event of this PPO, but I'm planning on playing a few satellites or Sunday Cheap Bastard tournaments again in the near future to try to get into the weekly 200 or the monthly 500 again

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Poker League Season 10 game #1 results

Fairly decent start to Season 10 of Poker League.  There are 10 of us this season(11 with Craig, if he plays, he missed game 1).  We lost Steve and Ashley on the account of them planning a wedding and they just bought a house, etc...  I know, excuses, excuses... ;-)  We were unable to add anyone this season, a few prospects flaked out, but maybe next season.  I think it's pretty awesome we've been able to keep a strong core of players the last many seasons and it's also really interesting that everyone has a really good read on everyone else based on so much playing time with each other.

Prior to my description of game 1, I'll state that Chris and I make a bet every season against each other.  Last season was based on most wins and I'm pretty sure it's always been based on most wins.  I also don't remember that I've ever lost this bet?(Chris can correct me if I'm wrong)  We have tied before, and in those cases we both technically "lose"  This season Chris asked me if we could change it up to some other stat.  I have kept an unhealthy amount of stats over the seasons and I'll tell you that other than finale winnings, I don't think Chris has beaten me ever in any stat that would matter.  He decided to go with most KOs.  I told him that was probably the worst bet to make, however, I also understand that from his point of view, he probably would still have a chance to overtake me up until the final game of the season, whereas, most wins bet could be over prior to the last or 2nd to last game.  I will also let you know that in the last 2 seasons, I've knocked out avg of 20 per season to Chris' 10 per season, so I'm pretty favored, but we'll see...The loser has to wear a costume of the winner's choosing.  I have a really good idea for my costume I'll be picking for Chris so I hope luck and skill shine on me again this season!

Game 1, we started off pretty quickly at our table.  Jaime was the bounty(we're making it public knowledge prior to the start of the game who the bounty is)  it was a 5-6 vote for knowing.  I didn't care either way, I think it's not going to effect much unless/until it's me.  Everyone seems to try to make plays and gun after me a lot more than anyone else anyway.  Jaime played a few larger pots against her hubby and Chivers and wasn't on the winning end for the most part.  Shae called a little too much and found herself short when I looked down at 10sJs and raised up her blind.  We're 5 handed, She called, Jaime called.  Flop was 4-9-K with 2 clubs.  Both checked, I bet out thinking I might just win outright or at least get one off her hand and figure out how to proceed from there.  Shae called, Jaime folded.  Shae always calls quickly, so I figured she had a pair or had at least something, 9 or some small pair probably, so a 10 or J would be good and 8 or Q give me another chance to bet.  Turn was an 8h, Shae checked and I thought I should check as well figuring to get a river call on most cards in this situation.  River was a 7s and Shae announces "all-in"  I did a quick double-check to make sure I didn't misread the board as Shae doesn't go all in unless she has something, meaning there's no bluff there ever.  I made sure nothing beat me and called.  She flipped over 8s for a set and I flipped over my straight and she was the first out. 

Chris vs Fred most KOs bet: Fred 1, Chris 0

Soon after, I raised with Queens, Chivers called and a flop of Kh,Qh,8h, he bet, I raised, he shoved and I called and he flipped over AhKc vs my set of Qs.  He couldn't get a heart and I even hit Quad Qs on the river to get another KO

Chris vs Fred most KOs bet: Fred 2, Chris 0

Sean wittled himself down to about 4-5 bets and shoved all-in on a Q-high flop when myself and Heck both held QJoffsuit and we weren't sure how to decide who gets the KO chip.  I guess this never happened before.  We decided on a high card flip and I grabbed a 10 vs Heck's 5 and won the KO

Chris vs Fred most KOs bet: Fred 3, Chris 0

Sometime later, with Jon, Heck, Chris and myself left in the game, I knocked out Jon.  I believe he was pretty forced to go all-in with 3 bets and I had a better than average hand so I knocked out Jon

Chris vs Fred most KOs bet: Fred 4, Chris 0

2 hands sum up my top 3 finish.  1 hand with Heck, the other with Chris.

Heck:  I limped with 5s and Heck min-raised, I called.  flop was Kh-4s-2h.  We both check.  turn is a 10s and I bet out, Heck thinks for a while and calls.  River is a Ks and I bet out what I hoped to look somewhere between a bluff and value bet and Heck thought for quite a while before slightly-above doubling my bet.  I really wanted to call, and I thought I probably should've called, but it felt like one of those times Heck hit some rediculous backdoor flush and I'd just feel stupid after calling.  I folded and Heck told me later he had A-high...bleh...
That hand really chopped out my legs and I was really grasping to get back in the game.  Then this hand I limped with K-2suited.  Chris min-raised, which I think was Heck and Chris' strategy against me, which in this case was working because I was card-dead horribly...hence my defend with K-2 suited...  Flop is J-J-2.  Chris checks, I bet out and he raises me all-in.  Chris wouldn't do this with nothing, and I think to him even A-high would be nothing...I kept telling myself.  And I think if it weren't for the hand with Heck and the recent card-dead-ness I would've felt less run over and could've folded as I wanted to, however, I called reluctantly, hoping I'd catch him doing this with a weaker 2, which was more probable than an Ace, but probably the absolute low-end of Chris' range here and he flipped over Qs and I got no help, I think a Q actually hit the turn...

Chris vs Fred most KOs bet: Fred 4, Chris 1

Chris didn't win, but I did give him 1 KO that I shouldn't have...

Congratulations to Heck for the first win of season 10!

I'll post up the official results as soon as Chris sends the results and the game log to me!

The Kids and I have been sick since Sunday(cold), but I'm getting better so I'm pretty sure I'm playing tonight at the Rivers PPO 5K guarantee. Jon said he was going to come down as well, wich us luck!! 

Monday, November 11, 2013

November is the month for Poker!!

Poker League Season 10 is starting, first game is 11/23/13, not sure who's hosting as of yet, but it should be a great season.  10 is a great number for me to finally get my name on the Trophy, right?  Also in November, The Rivers casino is hosting another Pittsburgh Poker Open, Winter Series from November 21st to December 2nd.  I'll be playing in at least 2 tournaments.  My early prospects are Events #2, #8, #10, and/or #13 with the possibility of playing in a 55+7+3 satellite for the Main.  All of these are normal NLHE, except Event 10 is a 6-max.  It would be really awesome to cash in one of these, even more awesome to cash enough that I could buy-in to the Main Event.  Events #2, #8 and #13 have a 5K guarantee, which is nice, but I also want to test out my 6-max ability in Event #10, however it's on a Monday night with no guarantee, so I'll have to gauge how much popularity the other tournaments are bringing in to see if no guarantee would be worth it. 

Also November had the WSOP Champion be crowned, Congratulations to Ryan Riess, who defeated Jay Farber Heads up last Tuesday night.  He's actually who I picked to win the entire thing based on ESPN's November 9 photo.  I actually thought he looked like what I envisioned the 2013 Winner to look like.  And I actually thought, after reading one of ESPNs articles last week that Riess was actually Newhouse.  When I got home Monday night and started watching the coverage, I first saw the list of who was still in and who was knocked out and saw Newhouse 1st out and I was like, crap, I was way wrong...until I saw the actual table and Newhouse was actually Riess.  After watching 4 hours of the footage prior to passing out on the couch I thought I made a good pick, Riess played really well, picking spots, building his stack, letting others make moves against each other and striking when opportunity knocked.

Once Riess got stacks even after the hand he held Jacks I figured there was no easy way Farber would be able to overtake Riess.  I believe Reiss took the lead for a few, then Farber, then Riess whittled him down to 77K vs 113K.  Then arguably, the hand of the night happened: Riess opened to 2.5M, Farber calls, flop is 7c-3s-3 rainbow.  Farber checks, Riess bets out 3M, Farber calls.  2c on the turn and Riess bets out 5M, to which Farber raises to 13M, after some thought, Riess calls.  At this point I really thought with stacks the way they are and the pot the size it is, 38M, Farber either has to give up or make a huge bet.  I also thought it would be tough for Riess to get away from most hands he'd have played this way, too.  9s hits the river and Farber bets out 24M, leaving him with, I think something like 30M+ behind.  I thought that it's a tough call, but it appeared to me that Riess, unless he was hoping to make a similar play on a checked river and had nothing, he'd find it hard to fold.  I also felt like a had a really nice read on Farber and he looked really weak to me, very similar to a couple hands he was weak with the night before.  Farber played his hand like he had a 3 or a boat or nothing.  I suppose it would be easy for me to say I'd be able to call in Riess' shoes, but something just seemed funny and I like to think I could've made that call(though you can't raise there, ever.).  Riess thought for 6+ minutes and folded, he must have thought something smelled funny, too, but didn't want to fall too far behind in case he was wrong and there's merit in that, too. 
Farber had 5-6 for 6-high and Riess had Q-7 for a pair of 7s, top pair until the river 9.

Riess was able to come back from that and retake the chip lead, whittled Farber down a lot faster, and had a few better hands while Farber ended up having a few 2nd best hands when Farber shoved with Q-5 and Riess woke up with AK to make the easy 15BB shove call and become the next WSOP Champion.  It was pretty awesome to see how much it meant to him to win, he teared up.  I believe he'll be a good champion/ambassador for the game in the next year!

Update(11/11/13)
Poker League is on November 23rd and looks like it'll be hosted at Chivers place.  Excited to see his place, he just bought it in the last year I think.

Excited to get the next group of tournaments I'm playing under way!!  Be they Poker League or Rivers PPO Winter Series.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Pittsburgh Poker Open Event #22


I played in Event #22 Friday night.  Wow, was that room packed!  Between the 7pm tournament, the 5pm satellite, 9 pm satellite and lots of cash games going on I think at one point, every table was in use and almost full.

I started out at seat 9, I was a few minutes late due to Pirate game traffic, however I only missed 9 hands as I sat down right after my first BB was folded away.  14950 starting stack.  My table dynamics were a LOT of loose calls.  I expected this would probably be the case, more so than other nights, as it was Friday night.  Lots of hands had 5 players, either limped or 4-5 callers of a preflop raise.  I was going to play tight and have to be more picky about spots.  The guy to my left was a particularly determined calling station.  I don’t think he found a hand he could fold the whole time he lasted… The guy across from me, was the “pro” guy everyone has played with, who talks all about having the odds and a few times berated other’s play.  He had a “partner in crime” who he must play with in other games that they were both talking back and forth about hands and pretty much thinking they’re the best.  I never saw these 2 guys make any “good” plays, just watched them standardly lose chips, probably because it just wasn’t their day, not that they’re playing badly because they are soo much better… Oh well, it was entertaining for me, anyway…

In the first couple orbits and levels I actually had Jacks once, 10s three times and every time I raised I’d get 4-5 callers and I never hit a set and I’d pretty much have to fold after maybe a c-bet.  I was all the way down to about 7800 when I looked down at Ks.  With so many players looking to see flops and calling so much my first instinct was to just shove all-in(13 blinds) and hope someone just called me and I could double up.  I also didn’t want to waste my hand and have everyone fold.  So I raised(300-600) to 2200, almost 4x the blinds.  Guy 2 to my left shoves all in for 1600 and 2 players call.  I wish he’d had enough to open the action…  My hope at this point was no aces on the flop and I can shove.  The door card, however was the Ace of spades, I saw it the whole way from the dealer’s hand to the felt…flop was A-K-6, AHA! This is even better than a no-aces flop.  I can shove here and possibly get called by an ace that might talk themselves into believing I’m one of those guys that doesn’t know the “check it down to eliminate a player” unwritten rule.  I love exploiting this “rule”.  Remember, anytime anyone has a general notion of how you will probably play a hand, you open yourself up to be exploited, and lose your advantage…checks to me and I shove.  So the pot has 1600*4+900=7300,  600*3=1800 in the side-pot and I shove for almost 6K.  Next player tanks, to the point I know she’s got a mid-ace and doesn’t know if I know what I’m doing.  After almost a minute she calls, it’s probably ¾ of her stack.  “Pro” guy was the other caller and he folds after mowing it over a few times.  She flips over A-7, shove guy has A-Q and my set holds up and I’m thinking I’m back in the hunt with 22K in chips. 
 
A few of the looser players at the table were starting to felt off and so I was able to play a little more of my style of poker, plus I was on the stronger side of the chip stacks now so I was able to bully a little bit around.  I had my stack up to about 30K+ when I was in the hijack with K-10diamonds and the pit-boss or whoever comes over to break up the table.  Everyone folded to me and started to leave, so I raised it up to 1600(300-600 50 ante) “pro” guy’s cohort called and “Pro” guy called.  Flop was Qd-9-9.  “Pro” guy checks, I bet out 2200, cohort calls, “Pro” guy folds. I was actually thinking about either bluffing the turn or giving it up if a brick hits, when the Ace of diamonds hits the turn.  I felt like this is a really good card for me.  I can rep the Ace, all while putting out more chips with the nut flush draw and a gut-shot straight draw in case they hit.  Granted, I still have to be careful of the possible monsters this guy could have, but his most likely holdings are mid-pairs, 8-9, 9-10 and A-9.  The Ace hit so it’s less likely that’s his hand.  I’m not favored against a 9, but if I get my draw I’m going to get paid.  Also, the back-door nut flush draw is so hidden that I can get paid off with a lot more than a 9.  I bet out 2800 and he calls…  The river, was an unexciting 5c, I possibly should’ve given up there, but 3-barreling is so often an unused play by anyone bluffing that I’m finding it’s very profitable in most cases so I put out a small “value-ish” bet of 3600.  Cohort actually thought for a few seconds and then just decided to call, flipping over 8-9 and taking the pot.  I wouldn’t have lost that much if the Ace didn’t show up, and I probably just needed to give up on the river, but oh well.  I think if he doesn’t have the 9 there, he’s probably folding… Now I’m sitting on 22K and I’m at a new table.

 
This table... was... awful...  I sat down, looked around to see who had all the chips and it was nobody…I wondered how this could happen, everyone basically had their starting stacks or less.  I would’ve been the chip leader had it not been for another guy from my previous table who sat directly to my right, who only had me slightly covered.  The reason this table was so awful wasn’t yet evident to me.  I just figured the entire table must be playing pretty tight and I figured myself, and probably the guy to my right, who played pretty decently at my other table, would be taking advantage.  Here’s the problem, 2 to my left was a guy I can only describe as a shorter version of that scary family’s kid from The Burbs movie…the one with the sinus-thing going on…he just looked like that guy mixed with Duck Dynasty.  I could smell the beer emanating from his thoughts… First hand after the break it folds around to him.  He stared blankly out into the abyss of his own mind…At first I thought he didn’t know it was his turn.  Then he picked up a few chips, set them down, picked them up as in to make some kind of game-play movement, then to sit them down again.  He then asked what the raise was…there wasn’t any… Then, peculiarly, he just folded… Now this progression of movements and thought or lack thereof lasted about 2 and a half minutes… then an older gentleman limped, he was probably the LEAST interesting man in the world… He played a pot with the guy to his left that kind of looked like what I think Biggie’s little brother might look like.  Every one of these 2 players actions took what seemed like an eternity… This table was right in the middle of the poker room, and it felt like I was in the perfect storm of looooong decisions….  I figured this must be what a poker player’s hell would look like… After only playing 4 hands at this new table I looked up at the clock and we had 3 minutes left(20 minute blind levels)  I was visibly annoyed, looking at the guy to my immediate left a few times as if to ask, is this “EVERY F%$#$ING HAND???” … to his look back at me as if to say “OMG…YEEEEEEEEEEEEEESSSSSSSSSSS!!!”  I wanted to make a table announcement that this table isn’t being televised and that not every decision warrants a tanking… I figured I would either be out by blinding down and killing myself or I was really hoping for a miracle that I could be moved from this table.   Something better happened…maybe...  Burbs and Least Interesting Man both somehow folded…  It was like proof of a higher power.  We were all enlightened.  I heard tidings of good Joy… I’m in the small blind, the button, guy to my right who was at my other table, limps.  I felt his pain, he was feeling the same way I was, finally, a hand we can play and not feel super irritated every street!  I thought the fact the other annoyances folded might also get BB to call a raise more often than he normally might.  So I look down at 2 red Aces…nice!!!  I raise it up to 2500 in the small blind, BB folds, button calls.  Flop is 10-8-4 rainbow.  Now instead of playing this pretty dry board slow, I’m hoping this guy reverts back to the hand he saw me 3 barrel bluff at the other table, just 6 hands(and 35 minutes including the break…) prior.  I bet out 3600.  This is exactly the same bet I made on the river of that hand.  I’m expecting him to call monsters(sets) here because he knows I’m capable of a big bluff, raise me with bluffs/semi bluffs or fold.  With a moment of thought, he raises me to 15K and I shove pretty quickly for like 3-4K more.  He calls and flips over a little sheepishly, Q-9.  He did exactly what I wanted him to do.  He’s pretty much dead except for a Jack to complete his gutter-draw.  I feel pretty good, like now I can survive this horrible table probably at least until we’re broken up.  The turn is a 6c and I actually felt a little sick, thinking it would be really gross to see a 7 hit the river…  Just as I thought it, the 7 appeared and as simple as that, I was out in 60th place…  I don’t know how long I could’ve kept my sanity at that table had I not doubled up or been KO’d though, so maybe it was actually a blessing either way… 

In the end, there were 108 entries, I was KOd 60th.  I really believe I could’ve made it to top 20 had I won that 88%-12% postflop “race”.  Winner took home 3600, prize pool was 9700, which seems low for 108 entries…but 3600 for 125 is still a really nice score without online gaming a viable option anymore…unless you’re Terri :-)

Thursday, August 15, 2013

The Pittsburgh Poker Open: Event #10

Last year, or possibly the year before that...I heard the Rivers casino was hosting what they called The Pittsburgh Poker Open. This is a series of tournaments where they're using a points system, they have trophies for every event and a "MAIN EVENT" with an $1100 buy-in. Well, I swore that I would play in these someday and that day was Monday night. Monday night's tournament was a $100+$25 buy-in NLHE tournament. Blinds are 20 minutes, however they go up pretty steady, giving a decent amount of play. You start with 15K in chips and there's no dealer add-on. 

Well, I was a little weary of playing on a Monday because I thought there might be no players, however, there ended up being 88 entries. This doesn’t mean there were 88 players(I think it was more like 70), however, because nowhere you look says that the Pittsburgh poker open tournaments are re-entries, unless you look at 1 of 2 posters in the poker room… Oh well, re-entries aren’t playing like rebuys, at least that I’ve seen so far. Again, Re-entry is buying in again and getting an already sitting stack that’s been blinded down. The re-entry period is till level 7, so that’s about 2 hours 20 minutes in. Again, I think it sounds worse than it is in actuality, at level 7 you probably have 10 bets or less, not worth 125 buy-in... Anyway, I started off playing well, I had a tournament pro to my right(I bought in behind him and his buddy talking about international poker rooms and they both had a huge roll they were playing from), however, he wasn’t very active and we pretty much stayed away from each other, almost taking turns opening and c-betting it down. He was able to triple up and I was worried he’d start playing big-stack bully but he actually seemed to play a little tighter and more timidly against me. I was pretty glad to be to his left, however, just so that when he folded I was able to raise and I didn’t have to worry about him playing against me. I was up to about 18K and a few flush draws that missed put me down to 15K(starting stack) when 200-400, Construction Bill(that’s what they called him) opens to 1200 utg and gets a caller, I look down at pocket Aces and make it 2800 and the guy 2 to my left shoves for 9 more. Folds around to me and I call, of course. Aces vs Kings and they hold up, actually flopping an Ace was really nice. Next hand folds to me in middle position I raise it up with KQ of hearts to 1k and get 3 callers, flop is 10d-Jd-A, I figured this probably hit one of these guys ranges and there’s too many draws to let anyone get free cards. I also thought check-raising seemed too obvious and I was c-betting most hands I raised pre-flop with. So I put out 2300, 1st caller shoves for like 6K, next guy shoves for 18K, 3rd guy folds and I call, figuring I’m going to have to fade a draw or more. First guy has AJ and flopped top 2, next guy has Ad-6d for a pair and a flush draw. Turn is a K, river is a 6 and just like that I’m up to about 60K in 2 hands! Soon after players started dropping like flies, we went from 70 players to 40 pretty quickly. I got my stack to about 85K at one point. I had a few unlucky hands after that though, but was able to stay at a steady 60K picking a few spots and raising against limping nits when I could. I was moved around a few times, which is sometimes tough because you don’t know the table dynamic right away. Plus I was liking my current table a bunch! The last level before break 2 I was put at table 1, seat 4. It was a nice table, “Construction Bill” was there, lots of guys talking about “PA Poker” were there…some other familiar faces from the other tables. There was this really older gentleman that had a strange accent and a TON of bling…a guy told me at break he owned a few clubs and was one of the richest people in the burgh…that said, this guy was the slowest player imaginable… It was really hard not to tilt having the dealer have to tell him every time to put in his ante and how much and explain so much to him… A redeeming factor was that this guy was a huge foul-mouth, everything was you mother%#%er this and these mother%#$ing cards and that…all with a smile, mind you… I thought he was hurting my chances by taking so long and making every hand really long, at least the ones he was playing in. One hand he limped and 2 more limpers joined and I had pocket 10s so I raised 2.8x and he called. Flop was Q-9-Q, he checked and I bet 4.5x, he called. K on the turn and he bet so I folded. 

I really felt like raising him there, it just seemed like he was repping a Q and it’s just hard to flop trips, however, he definitely didn’t seem to be playing hi-level poker from what I saw, so I figured he wouldn’t bluff all that much, plus all I had was a gut-shot at that point. I think he was getting smacked with the deck a few times.

Sitting at that table, we went from 25 to 14 players in 1 level, 2000-4000, 300 ante. At this point I felt like I should be able to make the final table…Then I was moved to the other table, and now I felt like we were a little handy-capped because we were flying much faster through hands than I was prior, meaning blinds and antes were eating us a lot faster...although the other way to look at it was that I had more opportunity to accumulate more chips at this table prior to the final. I had 60K, blinds are 2500-5000, 500 ante I was able to “survive” winning a few hands preflop uncontested. The guy to my right appeared to be playing to hopefully make the money, and in doing so, was folding even to the point he gave me 2 walks and I once raised on his limp and he folded. He went from almost my stack size 60-ish to 15K just folding his way to the money, hopefully…then he was able to double up with KQ vs A-9, now he’s sitting on 28K. We lost 2 in that level and so now we’re sitting on 12 players, 6 at each table.

3000-6000, 500 ante. I’ve got 53K and just gotten through the BB where short-stack folded to me again. Now he’s the button and it folds to him, he shoves for 28K. I look down at pocket 9s and prior to looking I wanted to just about fold anything, save monsters…well 9s at a 6-handed table where almost everyone’s got about 10 bets give or take I figured I had 2 options, shove or fold. I didn’t feel like calling because it gives the big stack to my left(BB) the option to see a flop cheaper, and I’ll be forced to hopefully check it down or fold to most boards if he bets at any point and now I’ve just chopped my stack in half by calling. I’ll have to shove or fold in –EV situations on just about any flop unless we’d both hit the board. I went with shoving my 58K as the better option. (Fortunately?), Big stack calls quickly and I'm scared until he flips over pocket 3s, which isn’t even in what I thought his calling range in this spot would be, I’m pretty happy with it, though. Even if I lose the flip with short-stack, I will still come out slightly over what I started with (58-28=30*2=60) so even if I lose to k-10, 80% of the time I’m coming out slightly over even. 20% of the time I’m the bubble, and something like 40% of the time I’ll be sitting on a stack of 144K heading into the final table… I think it’s probably very difficult to find as good a spot as this at this point in the tournament, right?

Well, the flop was Q-10-5, giving the short-stack his race-win, however, like I said I was in good shape to come out a little over exactly even, then the turn was a 3 and I couldn’t pull a miracle out of my a$, the river was another 10, giving the entire pot to Big stack 3s… I think 3s make a mistake calling 2 all-ins, however, I can’t complain when someone tries to give me their chips, right?
In the end I probably knocked out 6 players, accumulated at the height of my stack 85K-ish and instead of folding to the money, I feel like I went for a decent shot at winning...and got really, really unlucky...
 
Playing again tomorrow night, I wonder if there’ll be more or less entries? They're also playing satelites for the main at 100+25 re-entry, starting with 5000 chips... I hope they have close to the same amount of entries even with the satellites.

Wish me luck! At least 9s over 3s luck!

FYI: Each event has it’s own “trophy”….I’d really like to get my name on “any” trophy this century…

Almost "Making It"...?

So I played in the satellite to make it into the 550 month-end.  I had to re-enter early($30), however I was playing really well and when we got to top 4(30 players, 48 entries, they paid 3, 2 get entry to $550) I realized these guys were playing way too timidly.  I was able to pick spots to shove while we were all short-stacked and finally the guy to my left went all-in and I had pocket Aces for the first time(Actually 1st time I had anything JJ+ all day)  The rockets held up and a short time later the other 2 stacks tangled and one KOd the other.

I was pretty excited to play in a tournament of this "stature?"  I don't have $550 or anywhere near that lying around to play in a poker tournament(yet...) so I couldn't wait to see what level my competition might be playing at.  I was actually surprised the first couple levels to see everyone playing very ABC and fairly timid.

Blinds in this tournament were 40 minutes(HEAVEN!!), you start with 25K and I put in $5 for another 5K, started with 30K. There were 60 players, I was at table 3, seat 9, Sitting to my left(10) was a guy that had a Brooklyn-esque accent, little guy, and he was talking to who I’d generalize as internet kid gone semi-pro(in Pittsburgh) due to Black Friday about games in AC and how they were both at Borgata, they also talked about playing in the 10/20 that Rivers sometimes has… As soon as I sat down, Brooklyn says, “So, you won the satellite, huh, congratulations!” At first I was like, thanks…now I’ll look like fresh meat to these guys…but it may have worked in my favor as I was able to get respect for my 3bets/4bets and a few(including Brooklyn)times tried to run me over light.

I didn’t really need to force action or anything, it would eventually come if I had the patience to wait for it.So I folded a lot in that first level and a half, watched everyone else, .I 3-bet AQ once and was able to c-bet it down.One other time with A-Q I 3bet in the BB, and had 2 callers, one of which was Internet Kid IK.The flop was K-brick-brick and we all checked, so I was going to bet most turns and it was a K, so my thought was that since we all checked, any pair is going to call a turn bet here, so I’ll bet the river.Unfortunately it was a K and I felt that anyone with a pair is going to still think their hand is probably good (they’re not going to put me on a K…basically) so I checked hoping A-high could still be best.Internet Kid had 3s… In hindsight, if I bet, 1st caller might call with Ace high and IK has to fold, however, 1st caller might fold and I lose a bet, too…oh well, it was a small pot, so no biggie I suppose… I was also able to read one guys soul by calling him down with A-high on a pretty dry board.  Hero calls feel good, but I try not to let them get me in trouble...

One hand in particular Brooklyn tried to bully me. I had As-10s in the big blind, I believe we’re at 100-200, I had about 36K, Brooklyn(25K) limped under the gun. A few others limped and I don’t like playing my mid-ace out of position so I raised it up to 425 hoping to take it down. Brooklyn calls, all else fold(I know, right…?Players folding…?) Flop is not too shabby, 9-J-Q rainbow. I think this flop is nice, it possibly hit my opponent’s range well and I’m open ended. I thought I should be able to call a raise so I bet out 750, he raised me to 2200. I called, turn was an 8d, completing my draw, putting 2 diamonds out there. Based on his raise prior I felt like if he’s got a one pair hand he’ll check here as well, 2 pair hand he might bet and/or either way I felt it would be the only way to get value on the river, so I check, he bets out 5K, I thought about raising but I figured I wouldn’t get anything more from him unless he bets the river so I called. River was another 8. I was pretty ok with this card and thought for sure he’d bet any of his bluffs and maybe his 2 pair hands and I probably wouldn’t get a call from anything I was beating…. I wasn’t worried about any sets-turned-boats as I don’t think he’d limp in early position with 9s, Js or Qs, that would seem like a bad idea as the table wasn’t all that raise-happy preflop. I checked and he bet out 9K, I called instantly and he mucked, nice! Then he was somehow livid at my apparent calling of his flop raise with “only a gut-shot…?” That took about ¾ of Brooklyn’s stack and someone else finished him off for me.(seat 10 was no luck for anyone throughout the day there)

Some-time later I tried to pick on a guy who seemed to get a little too raise-happy.  He was in the hijack position with Supercop sunglasses and I was in the BB(68K).  He opened to 1200 and had about 8K behind(I took a lot of his stack earlier as well).  1 caller in the Internet kid and he was playing really tight so I figured him for a middle pair-type hand, to just call like that.  I looked down at A-3h and decided I could probably take this down, or at least put the 1st player’s tournament life on the line, so I raised it up to 3600.  Unfortunately, Supercop shoved all in for 6K more, Internet Kid folded and I felt like folding, however if I can put supercops range on some 10s,Js,Qs,Ks as well as Aces that have me crushed, I’m not sure calling isn’t an “ok” option.  So I called and he flipped over AK, the board was particularly non-action oriented and I lost pretty quickly.  I’m not sure if that was a mistake or not, but I didn’t really put this guy on wide ranges much afterward.

One hand I made possibly a mistake, I think, on was we’re at 500-1000 blinds, I’m sitting at 65K still.  I look down at Jacks, so I open raise it up to 2600 in mid position.  Player at seat 1(I’m at seat 9) calls, as well as BB.  Flop is K-9-4 rainbow.  BB checks, I’m kind of hoping to take it down at this point and I bet out 3300, seat 1 calls, BB folds.  Turn is a 6, putting 2 spades out there.  I bet out 5K and this guy calls.  The river is a blank and I bet out 6500.  The crazy part is that this guy raises me to 15K and I really can't figure out what he's got that would call the whole way down and only now raise me...AK or nothing... I don't know, maybe it makes sense but it had me fooled at the time so I called and he flipped over KQ.  At this point I realized this guy couldn't be thinking on a high level unless he thought I could fold Aces there... The next hand a guy I'd characterize as Faraz Jaka's possible cousin tried to take advantage of this guy's strange play, except he also tried 3-barrel-bluffing him, which only knocked himself out, bluffing 5s into this guys 10s...he just called the whole way down, almost oblivious to the board...I never got another chance to play against this guy.

So now I'm down to about 45K, 500-1000, 20 players left, and utg(guy recently sat down with 80-100K in chips and said to IK that he'd recently gotten 3rd at HPT) raises to 2500, I reraise to 6K with AKoff.  Folds around to HPT and he asks me how much I got left.  I open my arms to show him my stack and he says "All-in"  I wasn't sure I actually heard him right, a guy at the table behind us was talking loudly about a hand so I asked "You're all in?"  and I got a nod.  He had a weakness about him, I double-checked my cards and I didn't think he'd play Aces this way, it seemed a tad too aggressive with his stack compared to mine, so I called.  He said good call and flipped over K-10suited and I felt like I was in a great spot to double up...until the dealer put out 9-J-Q...HPT said sorry and I told everyone good luck and marched a tired me out the door and back home.  I played from 9am to about 5:30pm and I was surprised at how tired I was...  I hate thinking about the coulda/woulda/shoulda, but when I saw the K-10 I really felt like I was going to make a big splash in my bankroll that day...well, I'll just have to wait...

Friday, July 5, 2013

Poker League Season 9 is over!

--disclaimer: I took waay too long to publish this...sorry...

Well, I worked really hard this season, entered the finale as the chip leader by a large margin, and failed to even cash...

If you've ever sat down and played against a player who just couldn't lose to you than you'll know what happened to me when I played against Ashley.  I started off promising, as chip/points leader I get to pick my table and seat after everyone else.  I naturally picked to have supreme position on Chris.  This is a generally good strategy usually since I would put Chris as a top tier player in our game, but bonus points because I won our season bet of most wins.  Chris would have to make specific statements I created instead of the usual call/fold/raise/all-in/check action words.  If he screws up he has to drink 3.  We also bet on how many times he'd screw up and I even let him set the line, (at 5?) and I knew he'd definately screw it up more than that so I took the over(and eventually won that bet)  Well, I was sitting at the table with the most chips, to the left of one of the best players and also whom I'd get to laugh at every hand: Example: "Fold" equated to him saying "Fred is my poker god" etc...  I also picked Craig to be first out and won that peice of the bet when I think he got a little bit unlucky with flopping a flush vs the nut flush.  I only picked Craig to be first out because I knew with his stack, he was the only one willing early on to risk it for more profit.  So he'd either be out early or be a contender early.  He was at the other table, with most of the players that started with lesser chips and after his elimination (or maybe the next...) there needed to be a rebalancing.  Of course the poker gods can't give me too much satisfaction and the program sent me to fill in Craig's old seat.  Strategically, I was fine with this, with my stack I should be able to just about run over the other shorter stacks.  Unfortunately, I suffered a few set-backs, a couple suck-outs and a few other stacks moved up to my level.  Jon and Heck got their stacks up to over 30K and I had about 45K so I tried to bully them a little and for the most part it worked.  My problems started while trying to eliminate the short-stack in Ashley.  It seemed no matter what the cards were, she hit when she was behind, I didn't get there when I was drawing, etc...  Then I made a huge bluff-gone-horribly-wrong against Jon when I raised preflop with A-3c offsuit. John called and the flop was all clubs, K-high.  He checked, I bet he called.  Turn was a brick and so I continued my betting and he called.  The river bricked as well and he checked, I bet out and he shoved for not much more.  I couldn't even call with Ace high and I know/knew he had something, just not as strong as a flopped flush until he shoved... So I cut myself in half, maybe more that hand and John jumped up to probably the chip leader at the table.  I couldn't beat Ashley in a hand so it was back to the grind of trying to take everyone else's (John and Heck's) chips, slowly but surely.  They were playing a lot of hands, at least Heck was....  Jon kind of went into "coast to the final table mode" I was able to get myself back into a decent size when we got to the final table, however, I ran into some bad luck, doubled a few short-stack players up and then when it was my turn, it wasn't meant to be.  My AK lost to a middle pair to cripple me and 3-4suited shove against 5 limpers lost(after hitting a 4) to A-7.

I'm satisfied with winning (almost) the most money this season.... by far the most during the regular season.  I'll probably get my name on the trophy someday, but that's really not the "complete" goal, right?  It's probably my lot in life to be "that guy" who hasn't gotten "there" yet....(pitty party's over!)  If Chris ever gets me the game log for the finale I'll probably remember a few hands, at least the ones that knocked people out and the order of which they went out.  I can say that Jon ended up winning the trophy again.  That actually hurts a lot more than it should, he's won 3 of the last 6 or something crazy...  I wish I didn't try my 3 barrel bluff on him when he flopped that flush, he was basically on a huge downswing up to that point....  ah well, I did get him to fold Queens against my Jacks earlier, though, live by the sword, die by the sword, I guess...  To another season next fall!!  Please get here quickly!

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Poker League Season 9 Game 7 Results!

So, another regular season of Poker League is in the books and I fell a little short of my desired 80 points with my most recent 2nd place.  I'm actually pretty happy with my season, though.  Poker is about making money and nobody did that as well as I have, or even close this season.  I won $65 this game($50 profit) to add to my $450 for the rest of the season.  I've played 7 games with at least 10 players each game and I've gotten top 3 all but one(paid).  Week 3 my A-8 failed to beat out an all-in call with QJsuited that knocked me out early.  This past game, I was never really in a spot to win the game from about 4-5 players on, though I figured the longer I survived the better chance I had.  I suppose anytime I can get heads up I have a decent chance to win it.  I don't think I was prepared for the large blinds at the time and made a few small mistakes that with such small stacks compared to the blinds, end up magnified.  All in all, I made a few good folds, a few nice plays in some good spots, but the top 5 was really all about survival this game.  I think the top 4 lasted the longest a money-bubble has all season but I'll have to analyze the game first to determine the truth in that.  Here are the final standings.  Unfortunately Ashley made final table and got 6 points and while it doesn't look like she boosted herself all that much from 8000 to 8500, she really hurt everyone else's stacks in the process.  Prior to her 6 points I could've had over 50K with my points and everyone else's stacks suffered, too.  So while it might look like she only gained 500 chips for 6 points, she really kept the gap between her and the other players a lot smaller than they would've been.






Here are the final standings for Poker League Season 9:

PlayerWeek 1Week 2Week 3Week 4Week 5Week 6Week 7BonusDrop TotalChip Total
Fred141431112141217839,000
Jaime81159911825829,000
Chris27121489715829,000
Chivers1091086124 5527,500
Jake9106541014 5427,000
Jon76861459 5025,000
Sean02111010611 5025,000
Shae51141258324924,500
Terri114970710 4824,000
Heck31243114213819,000
Craig12814705 3718,500
Ashley4520006 178,500
Steve6370000 168,000