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Get Back Jojo

Posted by: admin  /  Category: Adventures, Competition, Just Me, Poker Articles, Poker Site, Poker Tips, Tournament

Get back. Get Back. Get back to where you once belong. -NASA

I’ll tell you what’s bothering me lately, players re-raising me on my post flop bet.

Now, let me tell you what I am doing poorly lately. Playing tight. Its just that simple. I was so busy “working on my game” that I was playing TOO MANY HANDS. Too many tough decisions after the flop. I am used to playing SnG games and have discovered, not surprisingly I guess, that you can not be as agressive in a ring game without knowing EXACTLY where you are. Or atleast that is my thinking today…

Just a quick pimp. For those of you like myself who are not going to Vegas in June, the Lord Admiral podcast is excellent and is covering the tournament via their audio correspondents.

Don’t know what a podcast is? Man, that is so 2004. Get off the fricking computer couch and get into the new year, it’s April already. Google up podcast, get a client, hook up the mp3 player and get your first podcast that does not have Adam Curry in it at feeds.feedburner.com/cardclub or their web page at lordadmiral.com/ (do not be put off by the bad photo of a young guy in his grandmothers sunglasses, its an excellent poker program)

Also, Wil Weaton (remember me) backdoored his way into a recent WPT and is a big blogger. You may want to google that up too. Or use this link wilwheaton.net/

The Dealer Giveth…

Posted by: admin  /  Category: Adventures, Campaign, Poker Reviews, Poker Strategy, Spirit, Tournament

Played in a PSO tournament with 75 players. After the first break I was at 8000 chips and the average was 4000. I did it with solid play, and a great call when a bluffer tried to push me off of a flush draw and middle pair with his bottom pair. I normally would have folded, but I calculated the pot odds including the reraise and I had to make the call. I got the flush and a nice chip stack.

The only hand that killed me was when a guy with 77 called my flop bet when I hit an ace. The turn was a 7h and now there were FOUR hearts on the board, but he still called my turn bet. I knew he was not going away, so I was afraid to go all in on the river because I had no heart (in my hand).

Then someone went all in for $2500 and I called with AKs. He flipped 8c9c and the flop had 2 clubs! But the AK held up and I was sitting pretty closing on the chip leader.

…and the dealer taketh away…

First the short stack with only 2k in chips goes all in and I have 12k in chips and KT. I call and he flips over 22. I hit a K and he hits a set on the turn.

My JJ then runs into QQ and another short stack doubles up through me.

Next my AJs runs into AQs and suddenly I am not only the ss, but practically out. All in the course of about 20 minutes.

I thought I had played well, but doubling up the QQ with my JJ crushed me. Am I an idiot?

Under, Over, Sideways, Down…

Posted by: admin  /  Category: Adventures, Campaign, Competition, Just Me, Poker Reviews, Poker Strategy, Poker Tips, Spirit

Backwards, Forwards, Square and round.
When will it end? When will it end? Hey…. Hey…. Hey… (the yardbirds for you young ones)

I get AA and catch KK overbetting and get him all in and I lose AGAIN. Tell me, and I WRONG to try and get KK all-in with AA?!? I am 0 for 2 here.

Players in ring games hitting every conceivable river, sometimes chasing with just an over card! Everyone can draw out on me. Then, when *I* have a st8 AND a flush draw, I miss both.

Just dont put me in a ring game, ever. Quad 4’s? NO action. NONE.

At least my 99 held up aginst A4o. A4o?!?!?! Are you kidding me?

Low Limit Ring game secret? You can make any size bet on the flop (even tiny) and if they are calling, they are drawing. If you are not drawing to a bigger hand than TPTK, expect the others to chase you to the river. and if your TPTK is trumpable, expect someone to chase with with two overs. Ugh.

Funest game this weekend was the blogger tourney. I outlasted some big names, but got no where near a good finsh. Why? Because I was playing timid after a flop, especially with mid pair. I broke out of it by looking for places to punish Post Flop Raisers, sometimes with nothing (like they were doing to me). But when dealt the hammer, I did not understand how to properly bluff with it. I was short stacked, so I raised all-in with it against a single opponent in late position that made a 3xBB raise. I smelled steal, but in reality it was AQs. I could have just reraised and after the flop bet out if no ace fell. I’ll learn. The hammer is a hard hand to play well. Still, I went down in a gloriously bright fireball of self immolation. Sort of like Poker seppuku.

So You Wanna Race?

Posted by: admin  /  Category: Adventures, Campaign, Competition, Just Me, Spirit

I vowed to not limp into any hands in my monthly Friday night game. The field was 23 people, some of them are what I call PFA. They have learned that if you are in a pot, then you must be Post Flop Aggressive if you have the opportunity to bet at the pot first. This takes some finesse, and its something I struggle playing against. But last night, I think I devised a move that would prove to be an interesting foil. Racing. I left my comfort zone and became a move in specialist.

After losing some early hands, I practically folded my way to the final table. I had to be willing to take chances now, so I was pushing all my chips in on any unraised pot when I looked down at a pocket pair. This got me up to 5th with 4 money places. Even though there was a player with less chips than me, I still moved all in with another baby pocket pair and it held up. After making it to third, my luck ran out when I moved all-in against a button raise with A4s, hoping he had 33 or 22 or Kx. He called and flipped over 33. Could not have asked for better since he did not fold, but the flop and cards were all rags and I was out.

Randy was a 3 to 1 chip dog at this point, but came back to take first. His relentless betting after the flop was his key to chip accumulation all night.

My wife lost all her chips on the first hand of the night. She flopped TPTK and got stacked off against a flopped set of 2s.

I wondered all night why I will race when it looks hopeless (and come back on more than one occasion), but not early in the tournament when you could accumulate chips? The answer is, “its how I learned to play”. Early rounds are for survival, late rounds are for either dominating or moving in and doubling up.

The next morning I played in 2 big fields. The first was 450 and I was out 350 when my 88 lost a race to AK. It was over an hour into the tournament and I had slightly LESS than my starting stack. I put a guy all-in with AKo and he calls?! Did not really expect that reaction, especially early, but you need to win races in a big field, so I was glad to not see a higher pair. Still, the K came right away and I lost a race. Still, had I seen his cards, I would have made the same play. In a large field, take some races early. That’s what I was trying this day.

In the giant 6000 person free-roll, I just would not go out. I was on the ropes numerous times, but with 715 players left, I had an avg. stack size (slightly larger). Not great, but defiantly in it. I slow played a lot of hands for value. As expected though, one player had 100k in chips at this point, so you are still looking situations to get chips in the pot with an advantage of any size. Suddenly, there are 480 left and I am behind again. I look for another race… I found a situation that looked like a blind steal from the button. It wasn’t and I was out 416.

I think you need these chips earlier in order to avoid these situations later. Duh.

Nobody Knows… The Trouble I’ve Seen… Nobody Knows…

Posted by: admin  /  Category: Adventures, Campaign, Poker Reviews, Poker Tips, Spirit

I went back to the 2-table SnGs last night because I need to rebuild my bankroll from the pounding it took at the NL cash tables this week. (I played only one and finished 8th/18 after some pretty good beats.)

SnGs have 3 distinct phases.

1. The first is the early rounds or survival rounds. This works very similar to a ring game and its my weakest area and needs improvement.
2. This is the middle rounds or “viper rounds”. You are looking to strike at stacks like a viper. Quick, precise and deadly. Typically you are looking to prey on the weak and short stacked.
3. The final phase or short handed phase. I excell here and can’t wait until we get down to 6 or less.

I have been working on my phase one play and its been costing me a bundle. So many chasers, so many players hitting outs. So many call pre-flop raises of any accountable size. How does one tiptoe through the landmines? Can someone give me an answer OTHER THAN be tight agressive and only play premium hands. This just is not a good enough answer. You still have to accumulate SOME chips.
Here is a good example of me getting pounded at the ring game:

PokerStars Game Hold’em No Limit ($0.25/$0.50)

Seat #5 is the button
Seat 1:($21.95 in chips)
Seat 2:($20.95 in chips)
Seat 5: ($12.65 in chips)
Seat 6:($69.90 in chips)
Seat 7: ($30 in chips)
Seat 9:($11.75 in chips)

S6: posts small blind $0.25
Columbo777: posts big blind $0.50

*** HOLE CARDS ***Dealt to Columbo777 [9d 9s]
S6: folds
S1: raises $0.50 to $1
S2: calls $1
S5: folds
S6: calls $0.75
Columbo777: calls $0.50 [what should I do here? I mean 99 is ok, even a premium type 2 hand. But I got an early raiser (even though its small) and everyone wants to see the flop! Should I put in a big raise?
[pot size $4]

*** FLOP *** [8s 2c 5c]

S6: bets $2.25 <- nice size bet from first to act. Did he hit?
Columbo777: calls $2.25 <-is this a raise too?
S1: folds (original raiser)
S2: calls $2.25 [what would he call with. They all chase something, right?]

*** TURN *** [8s 2c 5c] [6h]
S6: checks
Columbo777: bets $5
S2 calls $5
S6: folds (huh? why now?)

*** RIVER *** [8s 2c 5c 6h] [6d]
Columbo777: checks (I lost 4 hands and 50% of my backroll this week when the board paired]
S2: bets $4
Columbo777: calls $4 (crying call now, right)

*** SHOW DOWN ***
S2: shows [6c 4c] (three of a kind, Sixes)
Columbo777: mucks hand

S2 collected $27.40 from pot
*** SUMMARY ***
I suck. 64 suited called the raise, then he had a weak flush draw, then he had a flush and a little pair, then he hit. In retrospeck, it seems obvious that if you play with 4 callers, its a crap shoot. I must learn this lesson well, but when I do raise I run into big hands. (that’s loser talk). I got to raise pre-flop with ring games! Why can’t I do that? Answer: I am weak. I must fix that.

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