Showing posts with label live. Show all posts
Showing posts with label live. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Brutal!

In my last live cash-game session, I saw this hand go down (suits aren't relevant, so are omitted):

3 players all-in before the flop. This was a fairly friendly table at the time, so even though it's a cash game, all three turn up their cards.

KK vs ATs vs 77

KK has a big smile as the big favorite. He basically has to dodge two 7s and four As.
Six outs, ~55% to win.

The flop comes with a 7 in the window:

769

So now the guy with the set of 7s is sitting pretty. He has to dodge two Ks and four 8s. ~75% to win.

Turn is an 8:

769 8

Now AT has a straight, and has to dodge a 7, 3 6s, 3 8s, 3 9s for the loss, and 2 Ts for the chop. ~70% to win.

River: a TEN. Everybody gets their money back.

I loved it, because every action of the dealer crushed a different player's hopes of winning the big pot.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Over!

I hereby declare my losing streak to be over. My February and March were really bad (down 1k and 1.5k, respectively which is bad at my bankroll level), and I decided to stop playing online until I was winning again. I played 5 sessions in April and May for an average loss of $110. In June, I finally started at least breaking even in the cash games, though I was down 1.7k on the month, due to the WSOP and Binions tournament buyins.

Things finally turned around in July, where I had 7 winning sessions, and my only losing sessions were tournaments. In August, I've had 2 up sessions and 2 down sessions, but my average result is $260 in profit. In cash games, I'm now nearly back to even for the year.

I'm starting to feel like I'm ready to play online again, but I'm thinking of closing out my Full Tilt account, since I don't have rakeback. Chad's been extolling the virtues of rakeback in relation to his Sit-n-go challenge, and I'd like to find a place to play that offers that.

Saturday, June 9, 2007

I'm out

I felt pretty comfortable at my first table, and though I had a rough start, by the first break (2 hours in), I had chipped up to 4.5k from my 3k starting stack. Shortly before the break, who should walk in and sit two seats to my left, but Phil Hellmuth. I stole (according to him) his blinds a couple times, and I called an all-in bet from him with ATs (He was pretty short-stacked). He also had AT, and we chopped.

By the time that table broke (shortly before the 2nd break), I'd chipped up to 7.5k. Unfortunately, I was apparently in the seat-of-death at my new table. (The last 5 guys sitting at that seat had busted.) I stuck around for a while, but every time I raised, the guy two seats behind me went all-in (he had me covered), and I couldn't call (with hands like AJ, JT, 77). That set up the dynamic for the hand I busted on.

By this time, my M was down to about 5, so I was ready to play a hand for all my chips. I found AQ of clubs 3rd to act, and limped in, hoping the guy two seats behind would raise me, as usual. But he just called, and that let in the blinds for cheap. The flop was 378 with two clubs. The small blind bet 1/3 of the pot, and I figured that I had two overcards and the nut flush draw if he had a pair. I push all-in, he calls with a worse flush draw, and an inside straight draw. He pairs his jack on the turn, and there's no A,Q, or club to save me on the river, and I'm out.

I got greedy by just limping before the flop, and I paid for it. In retrospect, I'd rather have pushed all-in pre-flop, and won the blinds and antes with my AQ.

Oh well. It was definitely a fun experience, and I'll come back next year. Now I'm off to find a good cash game, and there are some other smaller tourneys I might play while I'm here.

I'm in

Table 200, seat 7, in case you want to stop by. ;-)

I think I had very good timing for the registration line, and only had to wait about 20 minutes. By the time I was done, there were enough people that the last one in line would probably wait 90 minutes. I pity the fool who waits until tomorrow morning to register.

OK, off to dream of quads, and get up in time to join some folks for brunch. 'night.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

WSOP or Bust!

...or more likely, WSOP and bust. ;-)

I've decided to play in event #15 ($1500 no-limit Hold'em). I'm leaving for Vegas after work tomorrow, and taking Monday off, in case I make the final table.

I didn't decide to play until it was too late to pre-register, so I may have to forgo sleep to stand in line when I get there. We'll see. I'll try to update at the end of each day.

Sunday, September 24, 2006

Important Safety Tip

Never muck the winning hand!

While this wasn't the biggest pot of the night, it was one of the most memorable for me, since I misplayed it.

The game I was in (3-100 spread limit, $100 buy-in) was mostly passive before the flop, so there were several limpers. I was in the cutoff with QJ of spades, so joined the limpfest. The button folded, so I had position, and small blind completes. Pot is now about $15.

The flop comes TT9, with one spade. Small Blind checks, Big Blind goes all-in for $28. Middle Position calls (with only about 25 more behind). I decide I want to gamble, and draw to the open-end straight draw with the backdoor flush draw. I have the big stack in the hand (over $400), so raise $50 more to isolate the short stacks. SB folds. MP calls his last 25.

Now since I often play tournament poker, I'm used to turning over the cards once everyone (or all but one) is all in. But at this table, everyone was waiting to the river to show. Since I was on the draw (I figured at least one of them had a Ten), I didn't show either. Turn and River were both blanks (like a 5 and a 2). Since I made the last aggressive move, the dealer asks me to show first, and since I missed, I just tossed the cards into the muck.

Of course, you already know my Q-high was the winning hand. Turns out the other 2 players were also on straight draws. The original raiser had 87o, and MP had J8o. So, the Jack-high ended up winning. Grr.

I was about to vow to *never* muck my hand before I see another hand that beats me, but I think it's OK to muck if I make a stone-cold bluff (with no showdown value, and no draw) and get called. Since there was no reason to want to conceal my cards this time, there's no reason to muck.

The good news is I only lost $50 this hand, and the rest of my time at the table was fairly productive. I ended up $500 for the day, even though I lost almost $200 at 6-12LHE and 4-8Stud/8 while waiting to get to the spread-limit game.