Archive for the ‘Poker’ Category

Validation

Tuesday, August 10th, 2004

It’s always nice to follow up a bad session with some solid cards. Monday night I got right back in the saddle at Pacific and posted a +17BB run at 2/4 in a little over an hour to bring my overall Pacific numbers back to the green (if only barely, and far too little for the amount of games I’ve played there).

I also two tabled (and eventually three tabled) 1/2 at Pokerstars. The clearing rate is 50% better than at .5/1, but I was worried that the better players at Stars compared to Party would cause me some difficulties. Not so. I managed a nice 15BB performance in a few hours. The CNE charity casino is coming in a few weeks and I’m trying to play more limit poker to prepare myself for the reportedly crazy games there. They only spread 5/10 and 10/20, so it’s a bit more than I’ve played for. But it’s well within my bankroll and I’ve read this games can be very lucrative (though very swing-y). I’m very much looking forward to it.

A blow to the ego

Monday, August 9th, 2004

I was just going through the daily slate of blogs and over at College and Poker I read about a site he stumbled across (Poker Portal) that has links for just about every poker site under the sun, including many of the poker blogs out there. Unfortunately for my own ego, my blog was not listed. I will have to comfort myself with the fact that my webstats are hovering around the 90 daily visits mark for August, so while many of those probably come from me dropping by checking comments and posting, I probably more than five people who read this on a regular basis, regardless of what some cheesy tripod site might indicate.

Sunday, Bloody Sunday

Monday, August 9th, 2004

Pauly, what does someone get when they have their pocket aces cracked by the Hilton sisters? On the river no less. Lost more than a buy-in worth at the 50PL table at Multi and it was a sign of the way my day was going to go.

For once I can lay my woes at the feet of bad cards. Nothing was holding up and I took a beating. I managed to claw my way back as the day wore on to post a small profit after the $125 Multi bonus was taken into account.

But then I decided to play a table of 2/4 at Pacific and 2 1/2 tables at Stars. I got slapped around pretty bad at the Pacific table and managed to throw good money after bad trying to get people to lay down their hands. I eventually recovered from a bad start at the Stars table, but managed to dump a full $100 bucks at Pacific, ruining any chance of a profitable day. This is the second weekend closer in a row where I posted a huge loss that was bearable only because of large bonus. And these bonuses were even on Party skins, where I’ve made a large chunk of my profit. Oh well, everyone is supposed to have bad runs. Hopefully these are some of mine.

Saturday poker

Saturday, August 7th, 2004

Started in today on my new bonus at Multi Poker. I told myself I was going to stop chasing bonuses, but since it’s a Party skin I won’t be giving up any of my usual juicy games to work off the bonus.

Unfortunately my usual juicy games were a little tougher than usual. Actually, the games were normal but my play was substandard. I was struggling with my decisions and played impatiently when cards didn’t hit. I quickly went through 4 buy-ins at the 25PL tables.

So, for a change of pace I joined one of the daily $100 freerolls. The payout wasn’t great, but I figured it would be good practice. And it definitely was, even if the level of play wasn’t that high. I went from T2500 when the chip average was T10000 with 20 left in the tournament to heads up with nearly a 3-1 chip advantage.

The third hand heads-up was the last. I was in the small blind with 89o and I decide to limp and try to see the flop. My opponent obliges and the flop comes 2Q2. Check, check. Turn is a J. Check, check. The river is a T and my opponent quickly pushes all-in. I waste no time calling with my straight and he flips A2 for the flopped set played a little too slowly. Only $30 for first, but it’s always nice to beat a large field (241 in the case) in tournament play. If only I could contrive to get one of these final table finishes in a real tournament.

The later afternoon/evening went a bit better for me as I continued to run well on the Pacific 2/4 tables and I waited for a spot at the sole 50PL table. It was there that I managed to win my largest ever pot.

I was sitting with about $75 in the big blind. I’m dealt KK and five of the first six players limp into the pot. Then the seventh player raises to $4. It’s folded to me and I decide I want to make things simple and re-raise the pot ($17.50) . UTG calls my re-raise and everyone else folds. The flop comes perfect, Kxx rainbow. Only trouble now is how to get him to call me. The one thing I had noticed about this player was that he was very suspicious. If he thought you were bluffing, he would call you down. So, I wait about 20 seconds and throw $20 into the $43 pot. He pauses only a second before re-raising me another $20 and I nearly beat him into the pot with an all-in re-raise. He calls and shows 8c5c for second pair. No miracles for him and I rake $159, my biggest pot to date.

I’m slowly getting more comfortable at the 50PL tables, now if only they’d spread just a few more of them at once.

The Experte

Saturday, August 7th, 2004

I forgot another funny incident from the game last night. At one point, shortly after midnight, the security guard for the building came by on his rounds and we asked him if he wanted to play.

“Wait, how much do you know about poker?” asks one of the other players, laughing.

“I am an experte,” he answers, with a bit of a French accent. Everyone laughs. “I play online,” he continues.

“What sites do you play?” I ask.

“Party and Pacific,” he replies. “I like Pacific. I just cashed out $2000 yesterday.” Suddenly we aren’t laughing quite so loud and we’re a bit glad that he’s on the job and can’t sit down with us (though I suppose that might have made for the better story). Still, I was drunk enough that I would have wanted to take a shot at anyone over the green – well, blue in our case – felt. Probably an even better reason to appreciate his dedication to his job, at least for that night.

Friday night poker

Saturday, August 7th, 2004

It’s Friday night. It’s been two weeks. My ten two regular readers know what I’m talking about. Except it didn’t happen. With a lot of last minute bail outs, my bi-weekly home PLHE tournament didn’t happen this week. Not enough people, so I had to pull the plug. But one of the regulars was really jonesing for poker and kept pinging me on IM all afternoon. So, at 5:30 I made one last concerted effort to try to get enough to at least play a little dealer’s choice. In the end I could only line up four guys, but they were the hardest of the hardcore in our group, so I figured we could get a few hours of poker in before people decided to bail.

Instead, we had the most fun I’ve had at the poker table in a long time. Part of that may have been the beers that were flowing freely (often during the tournaments I’ll drink a couple beforehand while I wait for people to arrive and then a bunch afterwards, but I try to stay pretty sober during the actual tournament). Part of it may have been trying out some new games (we ran the gamut of WSOP event games with a few specialty dealer’s choice thrown in)

The most interesting hand of the night, by far, was an Omaha HiLo hand. I had AA27, triple suited if I recall correctly and I raised and was called by the three others. The flop came A55 and I was giddy. I call the flop bet in front of me and it’s called by one other to take it to three-way. The turn is a second ace. I’ve hit quads and there may not even be a qualifying low. I just called the opening bet (a mistake) and we were again three heading to the river. It came with the third five, which was potentially the best card I could have hoped for. I expected the guy behind me to have the case five after his previous, so I checked the bet to me. I realized that was a huge mistake when he simply called the single bet.

But here is where things got interested. I started moaning about not raising and the first guy in the pot said he would have re-raised. I said “Really? Well, I’ll bet a side-pot that I’ve got you beat.” He immediately agreed and re-raised me in the side pot. I re-raised him and asked how far he wanted to go and he pushed the rest of his chips into the middle. At this point I felt I may have been taking advantage and said we could just bet on the first $2 after his re-raise (we generally play .50-1.50 stakes). He was adamant that he wanted to play like this and then flipped his hand, declaring that he only needed one card. Of course he had the five. I told him I actually needed two cards and turned my aces. The stunned look on his face was classic. Thankfully he was satisfied with the way the hand turned out (unorthodox side-bet and all) and he bought right back in to continue the night. The other player in the regular hand had KK, which was certainly a reasonable call with the size of the pot (though I guess he should have expected at least one ace out there, in which case he was drawing dead, well, except to the low. Lord, there’s too much to think about in Omaha HiLo)

So, in the end it was a great night of beer, pizza and cards. I was the victor for the night, even after a brutal game of Murder By 7s early on (which we vowed we would never play again) It was a combination that it is difficult to beat, particularly with the great core of guys I have in my regular game. And it reminded us how much fun it could be to toss the cards without the constraints of a tournament. (Special curses go to Pauly for the Anaconda rules I kept reading about. We had a simpler version we tended to play but when I told them I read about some other rules online, we adopted something similar to the Blue Parrot version which we quickly dubbed Fuckedaconda. I leave it to the reader to fill in the details)

Pacific 10K

Thursday, August 5th, 2004

I’ve had this post half-written in my queue for the past couple days, but this is the first chance I’ve had to finish it off.

I haven’t played much at Pacific Poker recently. I still have a $100 bonus sitting there that requires a lot more play before I can withdraw it. I had a great run at the 2/4 HE tables when I started, but after giving much of it back in a string of losing sessions (courtesy of some extremely cold cards) I hadn’t visited in a while. Monday changed that when I stopped by for a little Omaha Hi action in my quest to master learn a new poker variant. A $20 profit in less than an hour at .5/1 reminded me of how crazy the fish can be.

Of course, that lead me to the $15+$1.50 Pacific 10K guaranteed NLHE tournament. Pacific holds one of these every night at 10 and I played a couple back when they were still giving a small overlay on them. Now they tend to get 700+ entrants so the overlay is gone, but the bad players remain.

After playing for one night, I was reminded of why I stopped playing these tournaments months ago (and why they are still tempting for all that)

My very first hand is dealt and the client freezes, leaving me unable to see any cards. But neither can I exit because that message may go through and I’ll lose my entry fee. For the first time since I started playing poker online over 6 months ago, I called support. I explained my problem and the CS rep told me they had just received a call from someone with the same problem, they said someone would be with me shortly and then put me on hold. For 20 minutes. Then someone comes on the line and tells me that I need to go in and stop the application in Task Manager (basically circumventing the regular exit procedure, a tactic of choice for all-in protection abusers) Then restart the client and I should be fine, if not, send them an email and they’ll refund my entry money. Then she hangs up. Of course, this has to be the worst “fix” I’ve ever heard of, but I don’t want to lose my entry fee, so I give it a shot.

That’s all well and good, and a restart gets me connected back to the tournament. But by that point we’re a few levels in and I’ve already lost more than 10% of my stack. And the limits are rising fast.

The structure for these tournaments are ridiculous. T800 to start, blinds going up every ten minutes. And not only do blinds go up that quickly, there’s a break 55 minutes in that takes the last 5 minutes of the 5th limit. That’s just ridiculous. Now, I might understand this when they were still giving an overlay on the tournament and they just want to get the tournament over quickly so that people head back to the ring games, but now that they are getting full entry fees, they could run the tournament at a more reasonable pace.

But even with all that nonsense, it’s still very tempting to play. The play is generally awful and there is potential to make the money (as long as you hit a few hands). Unfortunately, the small hit I took to my stack combined with the fact that blinds were already getting significant meant I had to play my whole tournament in “short-handed mode”. I managed to steal a few blinds and even doubled up to keep ahead of the blinds. At the 150/300 level with only T1350 chips UTG, I went all-in with 77. When it folded around to the big blind, I was feeling pretty good because he had just doubled up on the previous hand and had only a few hundred more in chips then I did. Unfortunately he decided to call with AT and hit two pair on the flop. And I was out 165 of 720. Not horrible, but still a ways from the money.

165 of 720 If I’d had an opportunity to play a few hands before I was in a short stack situation, I may have actually made the money. But my 77 was called down by AT in the big blind with myself UTG with T1350 at 150/300. The structure at these tournaments is awful, but so is the level of play, so it’s still a very tempting opportunity.

I feel a bit better now that I’ve aired my grievances. I’ve since been playing Pacific a bit more and have been having good success at the 2/4 HE tables. But I cannot help but hear the siren call of the 4-digit payday and horrible players of the Pacfic 10K guaranteed, despite all these issues.

Holiday poker

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2004

Monday was a statutory holiday here in Canada, so since I’d gotten my chores taken care of earlier in the weekend, I was going to take advantage of the opportunity to play some cards and maybe blast through the 700 hands I needed to unlock my new $100 Party bonus.

I spend the early afternoon pounding the 25PL tables, but I just can’t seem to get it together and the cards certainly aren’t helping. So, after posting a smallish loss, I opted for a change of pace and decided it was time for me to learn a new game.

So, that’s how I found myself 3-tabling .5/1 limit Omaha Hi. I’ve been meaning to try the game out and with bonuses to work out, I figured I couldn’t lose too much. I had intended to play at Pokerstars, but when they didn’t have any limit tables going, I opened a couple at Party and one at Pacific. Unfortunately I was wrong about losing too much and managed to drop a decent chunk at Party in an hour or two. Made half of it back at the Pacific table, but in the end it was a nice change of pace. But it did whet my appetite for some more poker, so I decided to return to the tables after an early dinner. My plan was to open a couple 50PL tables and enter the nightly 10K guaranteed at Pacific (more on that in another post, maybe).

Now, generally I’ve been killing the 25PL tables at Party and I’ve read many bloggers that have been consistently beating those games up to 200NL. So, it’s probably well past time that I move up to try my hand at 50PL. I did venture there once before and got my ass handed to me as I adjusted to the different dollar amounts. Losing a $50 buy-in seems to hurt far more than twice as much as losing $25 for me, even though it is well within my bankroll. And the dollar amounts have become so second nature to me at $25 that I have a good feel for what certain sized bets mean. And even though intellectually I know just to cut all the bets at 50PL in half to read them, I don’t seem to have the same feel…yet. But I did have one read on Monday that I was proud of.

I have AKo UTG+1. Sometimes I limp with, sometimes I raise, this time I raise the pot. I get called in two places. I check the jack high flop and it’s checked around. The turn comes with another rag so I bet the pot, figuring there’s a decent chance my hand is good. I get called in one spot. Another rag on the river, but there is a straight chance out there. I’m still playing a bit too cautious at 50PL as I get used to the potential swings so I check. My opponent proceeds to raise the pot, $33 at this point, putting me virtually all-in. My first reaction is to fold but then I think for a second. If he had the J, he would have bet on the flop. And I just don’t believe he came into the pot with A-low and hit anything else. I realize there’s a very good chance I have him beat so I call and my AK holds up over his AQ for a decent sized pot. Nothing feels quite as good as analyzing a hand like this and coming up with the correct read.

Of course, this read was counteracted by a poor read on another table where I re-raised the made flush on the flopwith my two pair (I just couldn’t believe he’d seen the pre-flop raise with 2 low clubs to match the high club board). The poker gods bailed me out with the boat on the river, but that was a small favour they bestowed in a day full of cruel cards.

I’m up and down throughout the evening, but when I finish the Pacific tourney (I’ll talk about their support and structure in another post) I decide that’s it’s probably a good time to shut it down, hanging on to the 30 or 40 I’m up so far.
One of the tables is breaking and it’s my last hand before the blinds and it’s down to 3 handed. Button folds and I raise with K2 from the small blind. He throws a small re-raise in and I call. Flop comes K-high and I think I’m good. Through in a pot size bet, I get raised. For some reason I figure it for a steal from a big stack and re-raise all-in. He has AA and there goes $60.

On the other table on the very next hand; I limp with JJ and instead of the full table, only 2 others see the pot. The flop comes 3JJ rainbow. I let it run hoping for some kind of action but when the two-flush hits on the turn and it’s checked around to me, I throw a dollar in the pot just so there’s something to play with at the river, but both others fold. Neither of those hands was a bad beat per se, but they were not likely outcomes that can throw a man off his game.

99 on the very next hand and I’m tilting, though I don’t realize it quite yet. Pot bet on the rag flop, one caller. Turn is a K and I bet the pot again. I’m re-raised and somehow think the size of the raise (about 1/4 of the pot) justifies my call. He shows K9 and I’m down again. I can feel the wheels coming off at this point and disengage from the tables quickly. I even abandoned this post halfway through.

It’s too bad, as I was having a decent night testing the waters at the 50PL tables until those two hands lost me nearly $100. Combined with the losses earlier in the day in the 25PL and the money spent learning Omaha, even the $100 bonus at Party was not enough to make up for the day’s bleeding.

I’ll just need to get back on the horse again and try not to get bucked again..

Speaking of getting back on the horse, I was wondering if anyone plays, or has played, the NL games at Pokerstars? I’d love to be able to work on my bonus there, but the limit games are trying my patience and I’d like to be able to stick to the NL/PL games. If anyone has any experience there, particularly at the .25/.50 tables, I’d love to hear about the quality of play.

Poker mishap

Monday, August 2nd, 2004

I was working on my evening post to sum up the day’s play, but I just had a terribly disheartening sequence of hands and I just need to get away from the computer. I’ll finish writing up from my notes tomorrow.

Argh!

Monday, August 2nd, 2004

I got my dates confused for the monthly $3000 and $1500 freerolls at Intertops. Now, I would have been busy for this evening’s 9pm $1500, but I could definitely have played in the 3K at midnight yesterday. I just went with the unthinking assumption that it would be at midnight on the Sunday and 9 on the Monday like it was last month. Really should have thought to look a little closer. Oh well, at least I have the $100 bonus to work off at Party.

Better lucky than good…

Sunday, August 1st, 2004

Saturday afternoon I got my internet back again (hopefully for good this time) so I was able to take advantage of the $100 reload at Empire. I then proceeded to play some of the poorest poker I’ve played in a long time. The cards were cold and I was impatient so I pushed second best more than once. But I was getting lucky. The combination of hungry fish and lucky rivers helped me to post an extra $136 for the 500+ hands it took me to unlock the bonus. And this was after being down $75 early.

The worst was when I pushed someone all-in with AQ on a KJxx board on a bluff. I’m called quickly and when I see no A or T on the river, I figure I’ve just donated a healthy chunk of change. Except that my A high was good enough to take the pot. He called me down with AT and the flush draw. Biggest pot I’ve ever won with only A-high.

Don’t get cocky, kid!

Wednesday, July 28th, 2004

You really would think I’d learn my lesson one of these days. I continued my confident play on Tuesday by winning some big hands early and then having my sense of invulnerability severely battered. I only ended up down 12BB in the 150 or so hands that I played, but that was after being up nearly 40BB at one point. Each time I think I have my game in good shape, I surprise myself with another session of undisciplined play. You’d think I’d learn.

Poker Weekend

Tuesday, July 27th, 2004

Managed to get some decent games in over the weekend. Played the 500 hands necessary to unlock my Empire reload bonus and managed to snatch another 100+BB from the 25PL tables. I’m feeling very strong in my game there – then again, that could just be because I am winning. But, most times when I sit at the table I can get a pretty good read on how other people are playing and can avoid most unprofitable situations. That’s not to say I don’t make some boneheaded plays (like pushing my AK pre-flop when I *knew* my opponent had the KK) but most of the large pots I’ve lost I’ve known that I was making a questionable. Now, if I could couple that knowledge with the discipline to fold in those last few situations, I’d be golden.

Didn’t play much Sunday, but I had a good session Monday night, hitting 130+BB in about 400 hands. I probably should be exploring the 50PL and 100PL games at this point, but with win rates like that, it’s hard to justify leaving the table. It’s also getting harder and harder to justify bonus hunting at non-Party sites. I’ve got $270 waiting for me at Pokerstars after the last reload bonus, but while I am still in the black there, it’s a pretty low win rate, considering the time invested. And I’ve only got 186 of the first 750 FPPs that I need. Still, I suppose I am planning on hitting some casino tables any time soon, some of the higher caliber play at Stars could be good practice. Not that I expect top players at the casino (or the charity casino that I hope is running at the CNE again this year) but my limit game is getting a bit rusty.

The felt is greener…

Saturday, July 24th, 2004

I finally got my internet problems sorted out earlier this week (fingers crossed) so I was looking forward to getting back to the virtual felt this weekend. June was a short month because of my vacation and July has been slow because of Internet outages, so I have not been growing my bankroll at the pace I had expected back at the beginning of June. So, when I logged in on Thursday to a few different clients and noticed I had a 15% reload bonus available at Empire, I was stoked to get back to the tables.

But first I had my bi-weekly PLHE tournament on Friday. Unfortunately the summer months continue to be slow and we again only had 10 people show up. But that’s still ok, a full table and a nice $100 payout to the winner.

The game starts slow as usual. Between chatting, slow deals and slow calls, we usually don’t get through much more than one orbit in the first half hour. Of course, I didn’t see any kind of playable hands until my first big blind (I started the night on the button). Even still, it was only K9d, where I got to see the flop for free. The flop comes queen high with two diamonds, so I throw in a small bet. Only get called in one place, and it’s a hesitant call, so I’m thinking he doesn’t even have the queen. The turn brings another diamond, so now I don’t even have to worry about that. I check

A few hands later I’m looking at JTd on the button. Blinds are at 20/40. It’s folded to me, so I raise. I know I’m going to get called by the aggressive player to my left, but I figure I can work with it after the flop.

Now, just to set this up a bit, I run through tournaments in a season format. There are 10 events in the season, and the top five players at every tournament earn points towards winning the season championship. Last season one of our players – Alex ‘The Roti’, a name he earned for his meal choice in his first victory – won the second and third events and was in a commanding point lead for the majority of the season. I managed to bring it back to even by the 8th event, but he pulled ahead for good in the ninth week. So, there is bit of rivalry between the two of us. He is a super-aggressive player that will sometimes go on his gut, so he can be a bit unpredictable. But his aggression can sometimes be used against him.

Back to the action. I’m in the hand heads-up with JTd and the flop comes 9oQdKd and I barely catch myself before I start chuckling. I throw in a small bet, just T50. My hopes are fulfilled when it’s made T200 back to me. I hem and haw for a few seconds and everyone starts making comments that I’m doing the math to see if I should call. Really the only thinking I’m doing is about how I can extract the most money from this hand. Eventually I throw in my T150 and we see the turn.

It’s a rag and I quickly throw in another small bet. Again, my opponent comes over the top of me, this time for even more chips. I almost beat him into the pot with my all-in call. He quickly calls my re-raise with top pair. No help for him on the river and he is down to the felt. After our hard-fought battle for the points championship last season it was very satisfying to knock him out first tonight.

Unfortunately I’m not nearly so lucky when my pocket threes dont’t get much action on a 993 flop. Probably should have let it ride until the river, but I wanted a decent pot to bet against when we got there and scared everyone out on the turn.

The rest of the night was a bit of blur down to the final two. I was playing very aggressive but got caught when pocket sixes called my all-in bet with A5o on a 983 board. I don’t think my read was completely off on this play, as he wasn’t really sure about the call, but I still lost the chip lead and put myself in a precarious position. But I kept the pressure up, sticking to large bets and forcing him to make the decisions. After nearly doubling my stack grinding, I managed to double it again into a serious chip lead when my 9 outkicked his 6 when we both hit a pair of kings on the flop. After a few more small bites out of his stack, he went in with K5 and I was forced to call with 92. The first card flipped is a 2 and the third was a 9 and my unlikely two pair holds up for the win.

So, that puts me at 8 money finishes in 12 tournaments, with 4 victories. I’m beginning to get a bit concerned that people are going to stop coming out. Also, with two wins in the first two events of our second season (ah, All About the Twos, just like one our homebrew dealer’s choice games) that puts me well into the points lead for the second season, which can’t be a bad thing.

We played some rather sedate limit hold’em after that for a while, but when everyone was getting ready to leave for the night, the gamblers started coming out. It was time for a little high card action. People were playing for nearly 10 minutes and at the peak of the action we had five players trying to draw the highest card. And even though we set the rule that you could only bet with chips, that was quickly circumvented when players started buying chips off other players. One of the more entertaining finishes we’ve had in a while even if it was a bit crazy.

Saturday night poker

Saturday, July 10th, 2004

Yesterday I got back to the real felt, tonight I renewed acquaintances with the virtual variety. I hit a few small hour-long sessions throughout the afternoon in between doing chores, posting reasonable gains in both. Then this evening I played a longer session this evening while watching a movie. I made some seriously bone-headed plays, but the fish at Intertops were kind enough to keep me afloat. But near the end of the evening I started finding my rhythm and felt like I was playing a very strong game. I managed to avoid any mistakes and posted a nice 100BB victory on the day, renewing my confidence. Now, if only I can find my rhythm for writing, then I’ll be set.

Back in the saddle

Saturday, July 10th, 2004

Well, after nearly two weeks without seeing a single card dealt, I finally had the opportunity to sit back down at the felt tonight. The bi-weekly tournament I run was thrown a bit off-kilter by the Canada Day long weekend, but we were back at it this week. Unfortunately, things are slowing down because it’s summer so we only had ten people show, including a buddy of mine who I was backing for his (belated) birthday. It’s a $20 buy-in for T1000 in chips, blinds starting at 10/20 and going from there.

Things started off not too bad, saw a few big aces in the first few hands for some small pots and then limped in with ducks. The table was pretty passive, so it was fit or fold. But the flop came KJ2 rainbow so it was definitely fit. I bet the whole way down and ended up losing a good chunk of my stack when someone showed pocket jacks for the overset (that he never bet or raised with). I was not pleased with the result, but was actually pretty happy I didn’t end up losing more money on the hand. I was visibly tilting for a few hands after that, right down to the bit of steam coming out my ears, but I calmed down soon after and began to work at building my stack back up.

Later on I peel KK and hit KJx on the 3-suit flop. People had started to get suspicious that I was stealing pots, particularly the guy still in the pot, who believed I bought him out of a hand earlier. I bet the pot, trying to play it like a bluff. I get the call and the next when I go all-in on the turn. The hand holds up and for the first time in the tournament, I’m in comfortable chip position. Not quite the big stack yet, but not too far off.

But the big surprise is the friend I was backing, who is doing pretty well for himself. He’s been working the play money tables for the past while as he works on finding his game. He hit a few good hands, but he was certainly holding his own at the table. Only made one mistake all night, though it unfortunately put him out on the bubble when he called the bluff I wasn’t making. Oh well, I’m sure he’ll be back and making a play at the prize money in the future.

His exit brought it down to three and I had a reasonable chip lead on second place and the third man at the table was going all-in at every opportunity to try to turn his small stack into some real ammunition. It doesn’t take long for him to run into a real hand and I’m heads-up with blinds at 100/200.

I have a small chip lead, but it was close. After trading the blinds back and forth for 10 minutes or so, I manage to squander my lead with a couple of ill-advised bluffs and am outstacked about T6000 to T4000. The big handwas a J2 of clubs in a passive pot where I made a 1000 bet at the turn with a four-flush. I really expected to take the pot after the passive flop play, but my opponent was smart enough to call and I had to hope for a club to avoid the uphill climb with my dwindling stack. Fortunately another club came on the river and my opponent wasn’t quite smart enough not to call my all-in bet and suddenly I was in the driver’s seat. Everything ended up in the coming down to my QT against his 33. The flop came 9xx, turn J and river 8 for the unlikely flush and the victory. That puts my record at 3 victories and 7 money finishes in the 11 tournaments I’ve held. Not too shabby, but I just need to hope that everyone else will keep coming out.

Pissed

Wednesday, June 16th, 2004

Ok, I’m pissed. Or maybe I’m actually not. We’ll see where I am by the end of this post.

But I started out pissed. I was just perusing my web stats as I am sometimes wont to do and I discovered a new referring site called Poker reBlog. As I’m always curious to see who has linked to me, I hopped on over to check it out and discovered a meta-blog that was listing posts from all the usual suspects in the poker blogging world. It provides a short blurb and then a link to read the post at the corresponding site. I was little iffy that this person was running a site driven by other people’s content (without even asking) but then I noticed that they were also advertising. Not only that, they were taking offers for additional advertising. At this I got really pissed off and immediately started this post.

Now, in the few minutes it took me to write this post, I’m a little less certain that it’s clearcut wrong. Certainly many sites (such as Slashdot) make their living referring to stories posted at other sources. And many of them have paid advertisements. I know Iggy doesn’t publish an RSS feed because he fears his content being reused in this way. But the site is up front about it reusing others’ blog posts and only provides a small introductory paragraph and a link to the originating site, even if the RSS feed provides the full story. So people using the service will still be driven to the appropriate blogs, who can choose to use that traffic to endeavor to profit themselves.

My first reaction was to send an angry email asking for all references to my site be removed and follow it with an angry post here pointing out this site. On closer examination, I can see that the sitemaster actually points out some of the higher quality posts from across the poker blogging community and tries to categorize them appropriately. It’s not just an RSS parser that rips other people’s content off the web trying to make a quick buck. There is an actual service – that some people may even find valuable – being offered. And if it nets me a few additional readers visiting the site, I’m not going to complain

However, I am curious to see what other people think of it. Or if anyone has been using it for their poker fix.

ho hum

Wednesday, June 16th, 2004

    “Announcing your plans is a good way to hear god laugh.”
      – Al Swearengen, “Deadwood”

Not much new happening at the tp table. Played some 25PL last night and had a decent $60 night. But nothing much to write about – though I did hit two more quads, making it three in two days.

What I have been doing is working on a longer post about poker, gambling and addiction. I’ve always been a bit worried about addiction, whether it be alcohol or gambling, because I’ve known a few people who’ve had problems. So, I’ve been working on putting together a bit of a self-analysis/commentary on the subject. And to prevent myself from putting it off too long, I’m mentioning it here to force myself to get it done. Of course, I’m not too worried about having a poker “problem”, but I am becoming a bit concerned about my blog addiction.

Miscellaneous

Tuesday, June 15th, 2004

Not much new to report here. Hit quad aces last night and was able to extract some money from them. That was in the middle of two hours or so of pretty solid, if a bit cautious, 25PL play. Then I managed to throw away most of my profit in 10 minutes of truly foolish play.

I read the second volume of 100 Bullets last night and it was even better than the first, if only because many more aspects of the mystery are revealed and many more questions posed.

I also watched the season finale of Deadwood last night. A truly excellent show. At the end of the episode when the camera briefly touched on all the characters, highlighting various relationships, you had to admire the excellent job the cast and crew has done in establishing the thriving community of Deadwood in the minds of the audience. A remarkable task.

Sunday poker

Sunday, June 13th, 2004

Another so-so day at the tables. Thankfully I had an old friend come say hello on IM and had a good time chatting, so it wasn’t a complete write-off. The deck contiues to be cold for me at Pacific 2/4 and I dropped another 12BB there before I gave up and focused on the 25PL at Intertops. I don’t know that I have ever been cold decked quite like this before. I think I won 2 in 2 hours, and they were pretty marginal hands.

My hands at 25PL were a different story. I received back-to-back pocket rockets for the first time ever and though I was able to hit a big pot with the first one, I only managed a few dollars with the second. I would have thought my betting would get no respect just after having the buried aces, but alas, people weren’t even willing to call bets for 2/3 the pot.

I hit another milestone however, as my bankroll now officially sits at 2008.53. That’s keeping to the pace I set in May (or a little ahead) so hopefully I’m looking at another good month. *knock on wood* But I am heading to a cottage for a week later in the month, so I may not reach the same mark. But as long as I continue to play solid poker, I’ll be happy.