Sunday, January 28, 2007

WPBT cash

Well, I made the final table and the money in my first Poker Blogger event, the World Poker Blogger Tour event #1.



I went on two nice streaks, one early-on, which put me in the chip lead for a while, where I got AA a couple times and KK a couple of times. Then, when we were down to 2 tables, I got another streak where short stacks were pushing into me, and I would call with a hand *just* good enough to beat them. 66 vs 55, AT vs A9, etc. I was 2nd in chips going into the final table. I lost a race in a blind vs blind situation, and was back down to average stack, then went card dead for a while. Aside from one exciting moment, I basically folded my way into 5th. My M was about 6 when Mean_G, the big stack at the table raised my blind. I had K9, and thought it was a position raise, and pushed. I was wrong, and he called with AT, and IGH 5th.

The exciting moment was one of two times I dropped the hammer in a bluff reraise. I very rarely bluff reraise in my regular game unless I really smell weakness (which I didn't in either case here), and let me tell you, it really gets the heart pumping to put 40% of your chips at risk with the worst hand!

Anyway, I had fun, and it's always nice to finish in the money. I hope I'll get to play in more of these, and get to know some of the folks better, since I already feel like I know many of them from their blogs.

Raveen took it down. Nice going!

Friday, January 19, 2007

STFU

So, I've been watching Poker After Dark, on NBC, and it's not bad. It has the flavor of High Stakes poker, but it's in a tournament format. They show most (all?) of the hands, and most of the time the interactions between the players are featured. Shana Hiatt does exit interviews, and is available throughout if a player feels like getting up to talk to her about what's going on.

All of that is very cool. It even seemed for a while like they were going to not have any commentary, and let the players' conversation and actions be the whole of the entertainment.

But, it turns out there's this annoying announcer, who not only makes informational statements (some of which are useful, but most of which are completely redundant with either the graphics or the obvious actions of the players), but also makes these snarky comments out of the blue, and pretends to be involved in conversations at the table, even though it's obvious he's adding his comments in a studio after-the-fact.)

Here are some examples:

Sheiky rakes in the chips, while Annie's in the middle of a story. The announcer drowns out the story I want to hear to share this pithy thought:
Ann: Shawn wins the pot

Annie: David Grey against Sam [Grizzle] with his crippled hand.
Ann: Sounds like a pay-per-view event.

Sheiky: Don't do that to Steve
Ann: Sheiky the peacemaker.

Gus: Alright, let's try something new [as he pushes all-in].
Ann: Yeah, how about someone calling a raise.

Annie: All-in
Ann: Annie's taking a page out of Gustav's book.

Gus Hansen: I hit my man right away.
Announcer: If Gus keeps hitting men, he may as well sign with Don King.

Gus shows AKs to the hole camera, and we hear the insightful:
Announcer: Another big hand for Gus.

Gus: I guess I could stack them a little bigger.
Ann: Ya think, Gussie?

[Doyle folds T2]
Ann: How do you not play your own hand, Doyle?!?

Mike Matusow: I'm not creative. I'm not here to be creative.
Ann: Oh come on, Mikey, you're a poker artiste.

[out of nowhere]
Ann: David still nursing the tail end of that drink.

David Grey: Wherefor are you Dolly?
Ann: Easy there, Shakespeare.

Ann: Carlos is rockin' the tower of power chip configuration...

[Moneymaker plays his first hand.]
Ann: Nice of you to join us, Moneymaker!

Ann: You think Chris Ferguson wears a suit to bed, like PJs?

Ann: [Johnny Chan] kind of looks like Superman, with that curl. Now we just have to get him a cape.

[After Chan makes a flush (and a straight) on the river]
Ann: Johnny makes a runner-runner straight, and Doyle's stack is now extremely short.


I think the show could be revolutionary, if they just drop any commentary (other than the lead-in for each segment after returning from commercial). If there's silence, so be it. I think the fan base knows how to tell what's going on in a hand without needing to be spoonfed information like:

3 players to the flop.
Daniel's betting with 9-high.
Gus wins the pot.
etc.


I've read other complaints about this, so I hope for next season NBC will either eliminate/replace him, or get him to tone it down.