Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Last Week of February is Mine!!!!



I cannot remember the last time I won a tourney online. Not a qualifier tourney; satellite tourney; or single table SNG. I am talking about a MTT. Oh yes I can - I did it exactly one year ago, when I won the 2nd Razz Guarantee I had ever won within a 5 day span. Since then, I have come close, but had never won anything too big.

Today, I am back in the winners circle. I am busy with work today (that was the crazy part, as I got a bunch of agreements processed and out the door while I was playing the beginning of the tourney). I am not going into a lot of detail now - will save that for a later post. It was a 90 man SNG Knockout tourney. I lost track of exactly how many bounties I collected, but I think it was a total of 13 @ $4 a pop. Plus I got the first place money of $576. Biggest cash I have had in a long time. After I had posted yesterday, the poker gods decided to humble me a bit, and I took a big hit to my bankroll, ending up about $160 down for the day. So needless to say, this win was a huge pick-me-up.

As I said, when I get some more time, I will post more specifics and any interesting hands that came up.

Steak

Monday, February 25, 2008

Razzing an Opponent

I have been just taking things very easy on FTP recently. Slowly building my bankroll on there. So far - so good. I have gotten my roll back to almost $300 on a $50 deposit playing micro limit games and SNGs, and I have started stockpiling $26 tokens for my next trip to NJ for business. Needless to say, evenings in West Orange, NJ mainly consist of me eating room service, drinking Dew and playing FTP. I want at least 5 tokens ready to go so I can play the nightly Razz tourney every night (08:15PM). After that I will start stockpiling tokens for the nightly PLO tourney (09:15PM). And then I will try for 5 more for the nightly Limit Hold 'Em tourney (07:15PM). I try not to start any big tournaments later than the 9:15 while I am gone, simply because I have to be in the office early each morning and I don't want to be up until 4:15 playing the HORSE or O8OB guarantees, as they tend to last a long time. I have to sit through many meetings during these trips, and the last thing I want is to fall asleep in the middle of one. Funny story for another time about a bid defense meeting I flew to London to attend - I will have to remember to share that later.

Anyway, last night I had already had a pretty good day, and then I got online again that night and started playing $1/$2 Heads-Up Razz. This guy was really bad. And then this hand happened:

http://www.pokerhand.org/?2161807

Now call me jaded, but I just thought the entire way the hand played out (plus a previous hand two hands earlier where the same thing played out and my 9 lo beat his 10 lo) it was obvious all the way down that I needed to stay, and by the end I was pot committed. Especially considering what I was putting him on. Since I play these low-level Razz games alot, it just seemed second nature to me. Well, this set off a chat session which went as follows over the next 17 hands:

b1j23: lol
b1j23: what a idiot
JZs72ndProblem: funny
JZs72ndProblem: so obvious
b1j23: u stay broke dont u?
JZs72ndProblem: no - fish like you keep me fed good
b1j23: yea i can tell by way u play
JZs72ndProblem: play all of the time - more than welcome to take it back whenever you feel like you can
b1j23: im here every day only seen u a few times
JZs72ndProblem: i play almost every day too - but I play everything
JZs72ndProblem: not just razz
b1j23: wana up da limit?

This is every good player's dream. A complete fish who thinks he knows what he is doing when he has minimal knowledge of the game he is playing asks to raise the stakes while he is tilting. It actually feels a little dirty. The convo continues:

JZs72ndProblem: 3-6?
b1j23: 510
JZs72ndProblem: waiting

I had signed up for a $5/$10 HU table as fast as I could, and he did not dissappoint me. Let's just say his demeanor changed just a bit after a few hands at $5/$10. Here are all of the hands of this session (all 14 of them - minus the hands that did not get past 3rd street, which pokerhand.org will not let you upload).

First Four Hands: I fold on 3rd the first two hands (including one bring-in by him when we both had Q's showing, but I had QJ buried as well); then he folds after bringing-it the next two hands. I am now up $1.50

Hand 5:
http://www.pokerhand.org/?2165548
(Profit $7.00; Total rake $0.50)

Hand 6 I take on 3rd (Profit $9.50; Total Rake $0.50)

Hand 7:
http://www.pokerhand.org/?2165574
(Profit $12.00; Total rake = $0.50)

Hand 8 he takes (his next to last last pot of the session) when I bring it in and fold. (Profit $9.50; Total Rake $0.50)

Hand 9 he folds when I bring it in. (Profit $10.50; Total Rake $0.50)

Hand 10:
http://www.pokerhand.org/?2165595
(Profit $13.00; Total Rake $0.50)

Hand 11 he wins when I bring it in. (Profit $10.50; Total Rake $0.50)

Hand 12 (the smackdown starts):
http://www.pokerhand.org/?2165617
I actually screw up 6th street here, but at the same time I like to keep him guessing. A check would look fishy, and I think the same result occurs here. Plus, now he has no hole card information for me. Little did I know the match was going to be over 2 hands later.
(Profit $31.00; Total Rake $1.00)

Hand 13 (the humiliation):
http://www.pokerhand.org/?2165992
Is there anything better than someone calling you all the way down with a K9K showing? Absolutely nothing better than having the nuts on the end and still getting called. What a rush.
(Profit $68.00; Total Rake $1.50)

Hand 14 (the smackdown abruptly ends):
http://www.pokerhand.org/?2166026
Just a fitting way to end this guy's day. And mine as well. Ship It.
Final Tally:
- Profit = $98.00
- Rake = $2.00 (not a bad ratio)

14 hands (I take the pot in 10 of those, and the four he took never went past 3rd). Life was very good that evening. And I will be looking for this guy again!!! You should too.

Steak

Friday, February 15, 2008

Patience is a Virtue (or How I Mucked into a Good Cash in Razz)

***Warning - LONG ASS POST***

OK - I did not win a seat into the $322 buy-in Razz tourney tonight. I played in a $26 buy-in satellite earlier in the afternoon to try and get in. There were 25 players, and I was 3rd in chips coming to the final table (but very far behind 1st and 2nd). The top 4 paid, with 1st getting the $322 seat (and 2nd getting $138, 3rd $83, and 4th $55). Since my last post, I had run into some really bad hands playing other tourneys/cash games. So I was down a little for the day coming into this tourney. I really wanted to cash just so that I would be not down very much for the day.

It was a shaky final table for me to start with. The very first hand I have a deuce showing with a K4 buried. Dude with a 7 calls my completion. The whole intention is to take this down on 4th or 5th when he catches bad. Unfortunately, I catch a K and he catches a Q. I know that if I bet I get called, so I check and he checks. I then pair my deuce as well, ensuring the best hand I can make is a K lo. The other guy catches a 5 and bets into me. I release the hand. Not a great start. Down to 3650.

I fold 6 straight hands on 3rd after that (2 of which I was the bring-in). We lost a player in the meantime, so now we are 7-handed, and 3 away from the money. Then this hand came up:

http://www.pokerhand.org/?2105901

There is some history behind this hand. On a previous table, I had tangled (as did many others) with this guy many times. He was notorious for calling with high cards showing when people completed, whether he was the only one left in the pot or not. And then he would proceed to catch perfect cards while you would catch paint and then pair up cards, making it impossible to stay in hands. Luckily, I knew when to get out of the way, while others chased him down to the end, and he would miracuously have made his hand on 6th, and sometimes even improved it even more on 7th. It was gross. So I knew that if the cards came just right, I could nail this guy. And boy did I ever. You may say I was lucky to catch my card on 7th because he made a 6th on 7th. The way I see it, I had my 6 on 6th (not as good as his), so I don't feel too bad about rivering the wheel when he rivered a 6. We both got lucky, but I was already there, and had him in a good spot going to the river. I will say that I am impressed that he actually gave me credit for possibly having him beat with a better 6 and just calling the river bet. His 6 was very well disguised, and he could have easily put me on a much worse hand that I was bluffing with. But it felt good to drag a pot. Up to 6100.

A few hands later, this came up:

http://www.pokerhand.org/?2105957

Two hands prior to this I got involved by calling my nemesis on the wheel hand above when he was all-in on 3rd for about 650. Another player also called. I caught bad, and he caught good and bet into me and the dry sidepot. Like an idiot, I called and gave him a sidepot to shoot for. When I bricked on 5th, I folded this time, but not before I lost about 20% of my stack on the hand. Then this hand came up, and I get caught up in trying to eliminate a player, and go to far, this time losing another 35% or so of my stack. Now I am the short stack at the table with 6 players left. The limits are starting to get higher, and I am in deep shit.

I get all the way down to 1535 with the limits at 500/1000 with a 100 ante and a 150 bring-in. Luckily, I catch a break and collect the antes and bring-in on the second hand of this level (the first level after the 2nd break). I then proceed to catch crap hand after crap hand, and considering I only had 2185 to start this run, you cannot have too many hands like that before you are anted out of the tourney. But I knew if I played these hands, I would get bounced, because no one was going to fold to me unless everyone had face cards and I had a baby. So in succession, here are the next _ hands I had that I folded on 3rd:

J7[7] (with a 2,3, and 5 showing)
JT[5] (with a complete ahead of me from a 7)
Q2[3] (with a complete ahead of me from the chip leader)

I am going to stop for a second right here. I think this was where I cashed. I could have easily shipped in my chips here with 2 babies in the hole. I know I am getting called no matter what by at least the chip leader. Problem was that there were still two others to act behind me - an Ace and a 7. If I raise, and I get called by one of those two, I am pretty sure I will be up against 2 opponents, holding a Q in my hand, and at least one of them with 3 good cards, and possibly both. I decide to wait and take my chances with a better hand, and if something does not come soon then I push with ATC (any 3 cards).

K8[4] (first to act with a 2,5 and 7 left to act)
TQ[3] (chip leader with a 2 completes ahead of me)
47[9] (normally, this is the spot; except I am the bring in, and I am up against an A,2,3,6 and 8 with a complete ahead of me)

Now I am down to 1435. It is now time to rock. Luckily, the next hand affords me the opportunity to do just that:

http://www.pokerhand.org/?2106061

Once I put the first chips in, there was no turning back no matter what I caught. It just so happens that I get called by the only player at the table with less chips than me (after getting involved with speculative hands in the 6 hands I just showed you above) and the chip leder. I hit good on the river, and somehow come out of that hand with over double my stack going in and down a player. Back up to 3741.

Then I rely on patience again. I proceed to fold 17 hands in a row on 3rd.

[Jh 3c] [6c]
[5c Tc] [Kc]
[3c Qc] [8h]
[Qc 7d] [Td]
[4s Jh] [3c]
[Qd Ks] [7h]
[6c 3c] [9c]
[6c Kd] [4h]
[3c 4d] [Jc]
[6h Jd] [Qc]
[Kd 3h] [9h]
[4h 8d] [6h] - this one may look funny. Here is the link for that hand: http://www.pokerhand.org/?2106603 I am short stacked and have an 8-6. The up-cards for the rest of the table were: A,2,3,J. I don't know why, but something did not feel right about this one. The Ace belonged to the other short stack, and I was trying to out live that stack to cash. As you can see, as what usually happens when I have good cards, is that I was supposed to have gotten the T on 4th street. I would probably be out of the tourney if I stayed in here. Sometimes it is all about your gut reaction and not what would normally be a clear-cut decision. Anyway, the folding continued.

[Jc 4s] [Qd]
[Kc 5h] [Tc]
[4h Qs] [6h] (with an A,2,5 up top)
[Kh Qd] [7c]
[7s Td] [Js]

You just have to remember that the chip leaders were so up in points that I would never be able to bluff a hand. And as you can see, in 15 of these 17 hands, I had at least one broadway card (and sometimes 2). I already explained my rationale for the one of the other two hands, and the only other hand had a 9 in it, and it was my up card. I know at some point I probably should have thrown caution to the wind and gone for it. But I truly believe that I would have been trying to suck out, as I very much did not have the best hand in just about everyone of these situations, and there was another stack at the table that was below or near my level in just about all of these hands. They were playing erratically enough that I thought they would flame themselves out during this stretch. Turns out they were a lot luckier than I was at catching hands during this 17 hands stretch, and no one busted the bubble.

So I decide to make my move:
http://www.pokerhand.org/?2106712

Why here and not the last time I had 3 cards to an 8? Look at the up cards for everyone else. Only one good card showing. I knew I had a very good shot at either taking this down (if the Ace had two face cards buried), or at least being heads-up to try and double. That is exactly what happened. It was not pretty in the end, but the hand held up. I am right back where I started, plus now I have built a reputation that I am tight. I fold the next 4 hands, and within that stretch one of the short stacks busts, and my patience pays off and I cash.

Now, cashing is nice. But I wanted the seat. So play continues. Two hands later this hand occurs:
http://www.pokerhand.org/?2106745

I am the short stack again, and with the limits as high as they are now, every hand is pretty much an all-in hand once you complete. Unless you catch horrible and give up on 4th, you are committing yourself to show the hand down if you catch good on 5th. That is exactly what happened here. I had decided, especially since I was in the money, that I was going with this hand no matter what I caught. And I did, and it paid off. Again, it was not pretty, but it got the job done. Now I have some chips, and I am not a big pushover anymore. I am thinking how do I get in contention to win.

Two hands later the chip leader picks off another one, and we are 3-handed. 3 hands later the chip leader picks off the other short stack. So it is heads-up time. I am severely short-stacked. I have just under 9K and he has just under 29K. I did not give up, but this hand came up after several hands of back and forth:
http://www.pokerhand.org/?2106783

First time I had been impatient in quite some time, and you see where it got me. Granted, it was not like he had a great hand either, and I had to make a move eventually if I wanted a chance to win. I took it, and it bit me. Oh well. A few hands later I was out, and 2nd place prize money was mine.

Why this long story? Well - you really have to be patient to do good in tournaments. Blind aggression or giving up because you think you have no other choice but to try and suck out to survive are usually recipes for disaster. Smart patience - learning to read situations, and know when it does not make sense to get mixed up in a multi-way pot when you are short stacked, are essential to making it deep. I hope this little trail down my path on this tourney helps some of you when you find yourself in certain situations. Don't always make the obvious, by-the-book play. Think what you move might cause in terms of reactions, analyze that against what is best to grow your stack, and then proceed accordingly on a hand-by-hand basis.

Steak

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Finally!

The past few days have been a roller coaster for me poker wise. Friday night I played at Hummer Geoff's in a strictly Stud 8OB tourney. While I am playing the best NLHE I have ever played, I still like playing other games. Admiteddly, S8OB is not my best game. I tend to play it better than straight up Stud, but still not my best game in the HORSE rotation. It showed early and late. I played very bad and, of course, had crazy hands call me, with miracle hands befall others (try rivering Jacks full only knowing you were probably up against Queens full, finding out she fourth streeted Quads). Anyway, I recovered after losing half of my large starting stack, only to run it up to over quadruple the original starting stack by the time we got 7 handed (we only had 12 to start with). Then the blinds got huge (after 6 hours of play we were still 7 handed). I lost top pair to relative short stacks rivering 2 pair over and over again. Nut 6 lows counterfeited by wheels. I had a fall from grace of mammoth proportions, and ended losing when on 7th street I missed gaining my second pair for my Aces (and also missing my lo draw when I was 4-to-a-6 lo, the person who was shorter than me all-in caught her second pair on 7th, and then the big stack who called us both hit his second pair as well. Out I go in 7th when I had approximately 40% of the chips in play when we were 7 handed. I played bad, did not read people good at the end, and ended up on the rail after playing for hours with nothing to show for it except experience (which is usually a good byproduct).

So, after that I played a little online. I pretty much have just been holding steady. I win a little playing cash, or I win a token seat. I then play in a FTOPS qualifier and lose. I did make it into the $120 KO FTOPS on Sunday afternoon through a $11+ qualifier. I knocked out enough people in the tourney to more than pay for the tourney, so the FTOPs was truly a freeroll. Of course - what happens? 3 hands into the tourney I get AA, and I get raised and re-re-raised all-in by 99. Flop brings a 9, and I am done just like that. Yippee.

So, after all the craziness, I head over to Dave's for the usual Tuesday night tourney with the regular crew. 19 of us showed up for this $25 buy-in event. I play like I did last time I played with the guys. Aggressive in position. I picked out the guys who were playing passive, and took many hands down on the flop when they checked it to me. Granted, I did not play rags nearly as much as I did two weeks ago at Dave's place. I toned down the aggression just a bit, mainly because many of the gys noticed it. So I could not be too predictable already. But when the times were right, I made moves.

I never gained a huge amount of chips, and was mid-to-low stack by the time we got to the final table. I waited for the right moments, and I took my shots. After the blinds got to the point I had to, I started shoving. I got Geraci to call an all-in with A-rag (he had the chips to absorb a loss) against my KQ. K on the river, and I am back in business. I kept my stack steady, then doubled up through another chip stack again. Now I am holding over 20K in chips and was right in the middle of the pack with about 6 to go. Then Kevin and I mixed it up in a hand where the flop was 666. I checked and Kevin checked. The turn was a T. I bet a decent amount. Kevin goes over the top of me all-in. He has me barely covered at this point. I did not even care if he had a 6 or TT; I was getting my chips in at that point. I insta-called him, and he turns over Tx. He needs a 2-outer to win, and it does not come. I double up again, and now I am a force at the table. We are soon 5 handed. Then 4 handed. Then Tony takes out Ted, and I am in the money. Finally! It had been awhile. Not long after we get 3 handed, I look down at 99. I raise. Jason re-raises. Jason has been re-raising me all night with monster hands (twice with AA), and I had gotten away from those hands relatively unscathed. I just felt he was trying to use that rep to scare me off a legit hand. I go all-in and he shows me how wrong I am. He calls and flips his KK over. But then after the turn there are 3 spades on the board and I am the only one with a spade. Of curse, it did not matter when the 9-ball dropped on the river. Barry was pissed, and rightfully so. But I have been screwed like that so many times online and live that I am actually starting to get a little numb to it at this point. It happens.

So I am heads up with Geraci, and I have a huge chip lead (about 3:1) over him. ANd I just attack. I think I raised 80% of the hands I played. I called a bet on the river with 3rd pair knowing I am good. And I finish him off when he goes all-in on a Queen high board, and I just happen to have a Q in my hand. He was bluffing, and I win the tourney. It has been way too long for that, and it felt good.

Since then I have still been keeping the same even kiel on FTP. I just beat a guy heads-up in PLO - absolutely pwned the guy. It was sweet. My main goal is get into the Razz FTOPS for tonight. Work may suffer a little bit today because of it. Oh well. Happy Valentines Day to myself.

Steak

Friday, February 8, 2008

The Pru Fiasco

OK - I played a couple of Saturday nights ago at my good friend Pru's (We will refer to him as Pru as to not out my friend and possibly hurt his professional reputation).

Anyway, I like Pru's tourneys. They are usually short handed, good blind structure, and a good amount of play. And you get 2 hours to rebuy. Works for me.

So, I get there late because I am running all over the house trying to find something for one of the kids. The life of a guy who likes to play poker and has a family to care for as well. What are you going to do?

Anyway, I get to the table about 15 minutes or so into the match. The seating assignments are as follows (in relation to my seat, going clockwise):

(1) Chip - pretty good player who thinks he is even better than he really is. I have played with him a couple of times, and he won one of those tourneys and final tabled the other. I finished 3rd in both of those tourneys and cashed as well. The first tourney was a large one. It was played in a shootout format, where you had to finish in the top 2 of your table to advance to the final table. The first one, he made the final table as the overwhelming chip leader, after busting two players on the last hand and actually accumulating his entire table's chips to bring to the final table. He was the first one out at the final table. I actually got a bad beat where I flopped broadway in 3-way action and got outdrawn on a runner-runner flush. Oh well. The second tourney was smaller, and chip was playing good that night and catching cards. So he knows what he is doing. And when I got there, he already had about 60% more chips that what we started with, and I was down about two orbits worth of blinds, so he had done some damage early already.

(2) Simon - very solid player, and pretty tight. It is really hard to pry chips away from Simon once he gets a hold of them, so the best course of action with him is to try and not tangle with him too much. He has won Pru's tourneys in the past, so he is a threat.

(3) Pru - host, and he wins this tourney about every other time he has it. He plays random cards all of the time, and up until tonight he was known as "seven-deuce", mainly because of the many times he has busted me with that very hand. I am pretty sure that there has been pocket Aces versus 7-2 at least once where he flopped two pair on me and I never improved. But this helps him get paid off when he has the goods, and he works his magic very well. Obviously, a big time threat.

(4) Greg - probably the weakest player at the table, but very capable of winning (as he has in the past). He sometimes plays bad hands thinking they may be good (A-rag, K-rag). But it is fairly easy to get him off a non-monster hand depending on the texture on the board.

What is so great about this setup is that by far the most aggressive of the players at the table is usually Pru. While Chip is good, he likes to limp a lot and rarely re-raises. He does a lot of min-raising as well. So I am in good position here. Especially now that I am pretty much converting to an aggressive style myself.

Of course, I get my obligatory bad hand out of the way early. I don't remember specifics, except that Chip calls one of my early raises when I have something like A9 suited, and the flop comes something like Q97, and I bet, Chip min-raises me, and I put him on a bluff and was wrong (flips over something like Q8 off). I rebuy, and then go on a tear.

Well, not before Pru got me again. His new new nickname is now QJ. That is because Pru called a pretty decent sized flop bet with QJ when the flop was ATx. I, of course, hold KT. The turn is a K, I am feeling really good about my hand, and get Pru all-in with his nut-straight. Back down to about $12. Yippee.

But I did not change my approach. I was pretty damn aggressive throughout the match. I work my stack all the way up to $60 (which is $10 more than what we started with plus my rebuy - which totaled $50). The blinds we still only $0.50/$1.00, so I had plenty of play. Greg ended up rebuying, only to get knocked out when Chip calls an all-in with K-8 and runner, runners a straight (Greg had something like AT). So we are four handed, and Pru and I get tangled up again. This time, I get him all-in pre-flop when he was short-stacked again when I held KK. He had an Ace with a low kicker, and for once an Ace stayed in the deck and I win with KK versus an Ace. Now we are 3-handed and I am in good shape.

Then I go on a spiral of dismal proportions. I get cooler after cooler. I get up against Chip with Top pair Queen kicker only to be beat by his Top Pair King kicker. Or I hit Two Pair only to have someone hit their inconspicous trips. I finally go broke when I get all-in with a decent Ace versus K8, only for Chip to spike an 8 on the river. It was painful - but when does finishing on the bubble not hurt? It especially hurt because I rebought and still finished on the bubble.

BUT - despite this I know that the way I played was correct. One of these days I will not get sucked out on nearly as much in the same tourney. I will also suck out on someone else as well in that same tournament. And I will win again. I had gotten burned out on NLHE last year, and I focused my attention away from the game for awhile. Well, I think the time away has helped, because I feel like I am playing better than ever. We shall see if my feeling translates to cashes soon.

Steak