Nuts On The Flop

Poker stories from an Irish player...tournament reports, thoughts and goals

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

A foolish move - 25/05/2006 - 28/05/2006

Online Poker

I have registered to play in the PokerStars World Blogger Championship of Online Poker!

This Online Poker Tournament is a No Limit Texas Holdem event exclusive to Bloggers.

Registration code: 4250797



A few things to cover this time:

SE Double Chance - €50+5 25/05/2006

Not much to say about this tournament: I turned up at 9pm on the dot and this week they made a good effort to start on time...only 10 minutes late. There were about 80 runners, the Thursday night is far and away the SE's most popular tournament. After my previous week's run-in with Chief Brody, it was inevitable that he was on my starting table! I really wanted to get involved in the big pot with him, but was completely card dead and didn't get the opportunity. To make a long story short, I was in trouble from immediately after the break and pushed on the button with 67s, was called by KJs (I think) and off I went.

I went to Galway for my brother's stag last weekend, so didn't get to play any live poker, and only managed a few hours online, hitting the Party low-limit cash tables as part of the challenge I've set myself. An update on that later.

Pokerevents Red Cow Satellite - €50+25 Rebuy 28/05/2006

After getting back to Dublin mid-day on Monday, I took it easy (needed to recharge the batteries and help the liver recover!) and headed over the Red Cow that evening for Pokerevent's weekly game (which I had never played before). It usually was a €50+15, one rebuy / topup at €50+10, satellite for their €500 super-satellite tournaments (such as the Leinster / Ulster / Munster / Connaught Cups), but with the super-satellites finished for the moment and the IPT Final (€3000+300 buy-in) the following weekend, Pokerevents changed to format to a €50+25 game with two rebuys / one rebuy one topup at €50. This was to build a bigger prizepool, as there were 3 tickets guaranteed to the IPT Final. 112 players started, I was on an interesting table with a few recognisable faces, no-one stuck me as amazingly strong, most of us were of equal experience I thought. I didn't get involved in many big pots during the 6 levels before the break, barring the following:

I was on the button with approx 2.7k (starting stack + early bird chips were 4.5k). Blinds were 100/200. It was folded to me and I limped with K3o. The SB completed and the BB raised to 500. I decided to flat call to see if I got lucky on the flop. The flop was KQ6 rainbow. The BB immediately bet 1k, which really seemed like he didn't want me to stick around. I believed I was in front and pushed my remaining 2.2k in. He enquired how much I had left, and I made a mistake - I knew now I was in front and should have stayed quiet or given a false tell to induce his call. Instead I decided to show the rest of the table I knew how to make him fold via speech play and smiled, saying 'oh, its only a little bit more'. The others smiled and the BB eventually folded, showing 99. I felt like a fool while raking in the chips, I should have let him call, I still had my rebuy chips.

I top my 5k topup at the break and had a little over 9k going into the freezeout period. However, it all fell apart during the first level after the break - see this boards thread for a description of how it happened: http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=2054939092. I just shouldn't have gotten involved, but hindsight is 20/20 I guess. I was almost happy to be leaving with enough time to get to bed before midnight - I wasn't up for the tournament enough and probably should have skipped it to get an early night in.

Party Poker Free-to-$500 challenge:

As mentioned last update, I have set myself the challenge of turning the free $50 I got last month from Party Poker (as an inticement to attract me back to their site after a long period of inactivity) in $500 via their low-limit cash tables. I am not a cash game player (never played live, though this will surely change at some point), but am interested in gaining more experience and giving it ago online over the summer. On Party I multi-table the $.10/$.25 6-handed tables ($25 buy-in) or single-table the $.25/$.50 6-handed tables - I know this is terrible bankroll management, but come on, it's only a silly challenge! In any case, after a run of good luck / tight play, I am currently up to approx. $230, and hope to get to $500 before the middle of June. I have found the best way to make money on these tables is to let your opponents bet into you when you have hit top pair or better - you will get occasionally outdrawn as a result but on balance it seems to be a winning strategy. We'll see what I say in a few weeks!

Thursday, May 25, 2006

SE Double Chance - €75+5 24/05/2006

The Fitz is having a big festival this week to co-incide with their hosting of the Dublin leg of the Showdown Poker Tour, a €5000 buy-in European tournament series. As a result, the Fitz End Of Month tournament, €250+20 buy-in, was scheduled on a Wednesday night instead of the usual Thursday night, to allow a main event satellite tournament take place on the Thursday. I wandered down to the Fitz, not sure whether I would play or not, but willing to take a STT for a ticket. €30 to play, 9 of us at the table, with 1500 starting stack and 5 minute blinds, true turbo style! I was knocked out in 4th when my BB was raised, I found A7s and pushed, the raiser called with KJo and flopped a K to send me packing. I missed the infamous 1-handed blind Omaha STTs and decided I didn't feel like tackling the strong field this time, preferring to play one of the Citywest side events (€800, €400 and €300 buy-ins) the following Bank Holiday weekend, running simultaneously with the big €3000 main event out there. Lots of poker this time of year!

So I went over to the SE, where I expected a new €60+10+5 Scalps freezeout tournament was starting. As it turned out, the new SE schedule (interesting mix of smaller buy-in events) was not coming in until early June, so the old €75+5 DC was on. Some of the usual suspects were playing, Ianmc and HalfBaked (Peter), as well as Nick from Vegasnights and his brother Chris. No Chief Brody in sight - but I still didn't play well. I bluffed when I should have checked, I folded when I should have pushed, and I ran my AQs into Peter's KTo when we both were shortstacked and he hit a K on the flop. All in all not a good starting 3 levels.

After the break wasn't much better, down to 1800 chips with blinds now at 100/200, I had to double up. There were only 15 or so runners, with 3 gone by this stage, but it looked like I couldn't even hope to make the final table, let alone get paid! I was button+1, when Nick made it 800 UTG+1. Folded around to me, I looked down at AQo. Argh. I knew he wasn't making a move from there without a hand. Could he be doing it with AJ? Unlikely but possible. A mid-pair? Very possible. A hand that had me dominated? Also, very possible. The smart thing here would have been to fold and wait for a better moment to risk my tournament life. But I needed to double up and told myself he had a mid-pair and I was 50/50 - funny the things we tell ourselves when we know we're in trouble and want to gamble!

I pushed my remaining 1600 and he called the 800 more with AKc. The flop came down A77 rainbow...one of the better flops for me, giving me 6 outs (the final A or one of the two 7s to split the pot, one of the three Qs to win it outright)...I still only had a 23% chance of avoiding elimination though! No help on the turn or the river and out I go. Hopefully Nick went on to cash, he deserves it, seen him get very unlucky in that place. I'm off to the West for another stag this weekend so no poker (barring maybe tonight in the SE) for a few days - probably good to take a nice rest. Been playing a lot online these days, though the days I make money on the STTs I lose on the cash tables, and vice versa! Turned the €50 'please come back' free cash on Party into €110 on the cash tables over the past month, gotta come up with some objectives with what to do with this. Turn it into €500 via the lowest stakes cash games?

Friday, May 19, 2006

Double Chances and Positive Variance - 16-18/05/2006

I played two Double Chance NL Holdem tournaments this week, the second one much more interesting than the first. In both I came across players enjoying, briefly in the first case and seemingly continuously in the second case, the all-important benefits of a run of positive variance.

The Fitz, €50+5 16/05/2006

Not a whole lot to say about my play in this tournament. I started off on table 3, a quite passive table, which I enjoyed for the first two levels. I won a few small pots and seemed to be motoring away, until the following setback during level 2 (blinds 25/50). I found 77 in early position and limped, along with 4 others. The flop came down J87 rainbow. Checked to me, I threw out a pot-sized bet. The chap to my right, table chip leader, re-raised to 900. He had a huge stack, which he had built by being a calling station and hitting most of the flops. His range here was huge, and I would be pot-committed if I called his re-raise. Certainly, it was possible he had the nut straight or a higher set, but equally he could have two pair, TPTK, top pair pickure kicker, middle pair ace kicker, virtually any part of the flop. So it was a clear decision, and I pushed. He called with 9T for the nuts. The board didn't pair and I didn't see another 7, so I need my topup!

He went on limping into every pot and hitting almost every flop, and was the tournament chip leader when he was moved off our table 5 minutes before the break. A Fitz regular turned to me and said she wondered how long it would take for the sharks at the other table to take *our*chips off him! With the blinds at 75/150 and going to 100/200 after the break, I needed to double my 1500 as soon as possible. The final three hands (pre-break) were called, and I found AQo UTG+1. UTG folded - now, what to do? I wanted to double up and was happy to get into a race. Despite it being a passive enough table, I decided to limp and hope for a button raise or similar. No such luck, 3 other limpers and I had to fold to a bet on a raggy flop. The very next hand, AA UTG. I really needed to take down a nice sized pot, not just the blinds! Hmm...min raise? Nah, I'll limp again. Again, no luck with a LP raise and 5 of us see a safe-ish flop, no flush or straight out there, though both draws could have been out there. The blinds check and I pushed my remaining 1400 or so, hoping for a call from someone who had a part of it. No bites and I reach the break with 1750, with an average stack of approx 4k I'd say.

Not a lot to report after the break, brianmc was moved to my table with a decent stack and proceeded to build his way up by playing a tight, smart game. With blinds at 100/200, I found AKs in LP. Scarily, an absolute rock (think Harold equivalent) to my immediate right raised to 900. Now I knew he would only make this bet with a premium pair or AK, nothing else. I had to think about it for a minute, but I only had 7.5xBB left and really would have been foolish not to take a probable 50/50. I pushed, it was folded around to him and he called (please not aces or kings, please not aces or kings) he flipped jacks and I hit a K on the flop to double up. A level later I found AA again on the BB, made a nice raise to scare away most of the limpers, the table shortstack called and called my bet on a scary picture-heavy board, he had AJo for mid-pair and out he went. I was in decent enough shape, but with the blinds increasing I needed to continue winning these sized pots to stay in contention. I went card dead, however, and went out in 25th or so (approx. 75 runners) when I pushed for 3.2k or so with J9o on the SB and was called by the BB with 22 (blinds were 400/800), no help for me.

As an aside (and to link in with the theme of the effects of periods of positive variance), the player who I had contributed my first stack to earlier in the tournament was knocked out in 50th or so, during the 1st blind level after the break. He had donkeyed away his massive stack on the table he had been moved to - hopefully he had learned a lesson or two about the pitfalls of being a calling station and lack of discipline / patience - obviously it is more fun to try and see each and every flop, but for most players it isn't the best strategy.

The SE, €50+5 18/05/2006

I didn't head in on the Wednesday night for the €75+5 Double Chance due to the Champions League final being on - doubt they got much of a crowd because of this. Being a Spurs man, I thought to myself that despite my dislike for Arsenal, I wouldn't mind seeing a British team win the trophy...I found out that I actually wanted the gooners to lose after Eboue dived and Campbell scored their only goal, and I felt my traditional feelings of disgust rise within me. Come on Barca! Deserving winners in the end.

Anyhow, since I'm off to Westport this weekend for a stag do (and despite needing a good night's sleep last night to properly prepare for tonight's boozing!) and won't get to play poker for a good few days, I really was up for the tournament last night. There were almost 60 runners, including such greats as Culchie (Mick), Nick from Vegasnights, Ianmc and DocO. I also got to met a new boardster or two over the course of the game. The tournament finally kicked off at 9.20, they really, really need to get time-management under control, everyone had been sitting down for at least 10 minutes before the first hand was dealt.

Thankfully, it was worth waiting for. I was sitting on table 7, seat 9. Folded around to an experienced player in LP, he made it 150 to go (blinds 25/50). I finded QQ as my first hand, on the button no less. I raise to 400. The SB folds. The BB dwells...and goes all in. ACTION! Good for the table buzz, that sort of thing. The initial bettor in LP dwells a bit himself, shakes his head (he really wanted to see a flop) and folds. I have to have a think myself, but the pot is nice and big and I'm only behind two hands. Not knowing the player in the BB, I have to assume he is of pub player standard and as a result could have a big enough range. I call. He has AKs, so almost a 50/50. However, the player in LP says to me before the flop is dealt that he had AK himself, so it is no longer a 50/50, I'm way in front. No help for the BB and I double up first hand. I proceed to go on a run, dominating the table (some good, experienced players there, happy to say!) and, after the table is broken up and I'm moved to table 1, I go into the break with approx 6.5k after taking my top-up, starting stack 3k.

I really was enjoying my poker, and headed into the post-break period as I ended the 1st session, playing well and continuously accumulating. When 5 players limped on my BB (blinds 200/400), I raised to 4k - limpers tax - and scared them all away. I raised 1200 into the table chip leader (another one of these calling stations who hit a few flops) with A6d, SB folded and he called. Flop was Q64 with one diamond. He checked - I put him on Ax or a mid pair, he hadn't hit that Q as he certainly would have bet it. He also would definitely pot it on the turn if I checked it, that was how he played when faced with weakness. I wanted to take the pot then and there, and confidently threw out a bet of 1500. He hummed and hawed for a while, then relucantly folded. I showed him my hand to get a reaction and hopefully find out what he had - he had folded 77. I was now really motoring, table chip leader and throwing out bluffs, semi-bluffs and tricky play to steadily accumulate chips. With three tables left and 21 players surviving, I was moved to table 3, where it seemed all the tournament chips were sitting. I went from chip leader on table 1 to joint shortstack on the new table!

Who had all the chips? Well, two good players had nice stacks in the high-teens / mid-20ks (I had 12k I think), but the ubiquitous, salmon-jumper wearing Chief Brody (a shout out to rounders123 for naming this legend) had all the rest. He probably had a good 40k, a good 25% of the chips in play! I asked the chap on my left how he did it (like I didn't know) - a series of inprobably and sickening outdraws, this man loves to gamble, is very agressive, knows nothing of odds, and a 2:1 shot for the rest of us is an odds-on favourite for him - he must have sold his soul to the Turn and River Gods for their eternal blessing. I have played against him many times, and despite some players I respect sticking up for him, I think without his obscene outdraws he would be regarded as one of the poorest players around (ok, maybe that is overdoing it). To him, middle pair is king, he'll stick his entire stack on it. K8s is worth calling almost every pre-flop raise with, in case he hits. The one thing he is good at, the one thing that saves his bacon (other than the suicide-inducing outdraws - hmm, may have mentioned these earlier, now I seem to think of it?) is his appreciation of agressive play - if he senses weakness, he will always ask the question with a big bet. Most other players are not willing to risk their tournament on top or middle pair, and as such he has a second way of adding to his stack. In addition to his playing style, I find him a dislikable character for a number of reasons I won't go into - it is funny to dislike someone you don't know and very unlike me, but these various little things (mostly non-poker related) add up and it just rubs me the wrong way.

Anyhow, knowing his style (but wary of the size of his stack), I hoped to get a chance to double up against him. I took down a nice pot during the 400/800 level when the button raised to 2k on my BB - the button was a good player, good enough to make this bet with nothing and good enough to lay his hand down if he thought he was behind (he is a SE dealer I think). I looked down at A7s, and pushed my 12.5k. After a brief dwell he folded. A few hands later the table was broken, as we were down to 18 players. Unfortunately, the Chief and his big stack went to table 1, as I went to table 2. I continued to play well, really I felt I played better than at any time since my final table in City West in January. I was patient when I needed to and agressive when appropriate, using my stack like a baseball bat at times.

Still I only had 15k when the Chief returned to our table, this time with only 4.3k after giving the other 40k away in 15 minutes on table 1. He doesn't know how to keep a big stack but somehow is always seen on the final table, and certainly must be a quite profitable tournament player (don't know about cash games). Again, the explanation for this can be laid at the feat of the Turn, River and above all All-Powerful Outdraw Gods, who have chosen the Chief as their earthly messiah and prophet. First hand after his sits down, he limps (1k of his 4.3k stack?) on my BB, the SB completes and I check with 8To. Flop is Q98 rainbow. The SB checks. Now, what to do? I am probably ahead of him, he limps most of the time with a big stack, but with so little left, I can safely assume he either has Ax, Kx or maybe a pocket pair. He will push if I check, that's the only move he knows. I check, he pushes for 3.3k, 6.3k in the pot in total, I'm probably in front so I call, yep, he had A6o and is in serious trouble.

But wait! I hear a fiendish voice from the heavens! Not the...not the Outdraw God...AGAIN...! Yes, one of his three aces hits on the turn and he's back in business, and I'm down to 9k myself. I very, very rarely suffer from tilt or anger playing poker (to me it is only a game, the stakes are low for a non-student - by comparison the value of my stock portfolio fell by €2k this week and it didn't bother me really - and I'm just not the aggressive, emotion type at all), but suddenly I feel a real rush of anger about the way the cards came down. To make it worse, amid the 'good call - unlucky' comments from the other players, the Chief himself decides to impart some wisdom as he's raking in MY (that's how I felt) chips - 'you shouldn't have even called, did you see the Q on the board?'. WHAT? WHAT? I've never, ever gotten into verbals at a table but was 1 inch away from madness at this point. I angrily snapped at him (something else I've never done) 'I called because I've played with you before and knew you didn't have anything!'. I really was tilting now. The only thought in my head for the next few minutes was - 'how can I get into a pot with him and get him to double me up?'. Honestly, I didn't want anyone else's chips, only his.

Luckily, I pulled it together. We were down to 10 players now, on the final table bubble and playing hand-for-hand. I still had 9k, joint short stack at the 5-handed table with blinds of 800/1500. UTG I find QQ, pushed, and was called by the BB. Uh-oh, he was tight so was calling with a hand. Uh-oh, his hand were the cowboys. Off I go, at 1:30 and still very, very upset with the world for that hand versus Chief Brody.

Back to my thoughts on positive variance - with so many people playing poker at the moment, I believe (someone who actually knows statistics probably needs to take me aside and correct me! anyone?) that it is possible to enjoy a 'wave' of positive variance, winning the vast majority of the 2:1 shots, for months and years on end. There may be some famous pros out there who are where they are simply because of this - getting lucky when it counts, again and again. Chief Brody is a local version of this - he is very often in the money in the tournaments I see him in, despite his predictable, albeit agressive, play, and often will have a huge stack in front of him. I have never seen anyone else in my life hit so many 3, 4 and 5-outers multiple times per night, it almost beggars belief. Am I wrong to be extremely jealous of this positive variance? Does it not happen to me tournament-after-tournament (it happens to all of us every once in a while!) because I am making the mistake of NOT getting all the chips in when behind? What am I missing?

Looking at my tournament history this year (very positive as it is), one of my problems is my style of play - I like getting it all in there when I'm confident of being ahead. However, this means when I'm outdrawn, it is often for my tournament life. I need to work on applying pressure, building pots, and outplaying opponents WITHOUT risking my tournament life so much - even going all-in as 2:1 or 3:1 favourite, if my opponents cover me, I shouldn't risk my tournament life so many times per tournament. Last night I didn't, ironically enough, as most pots were won without showdown, but I need to take a good look at my tournament play.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

SE Double Chance - €75+5 10/05/2006

Finally getting around to writing up a report on this!

Wandered in to the SE last Wednesday night, as I often do, ready for a spot of double chance action. A few of the usual suspects were in attendance, Olly and ocallagh (Niall) from boards and the rest of the runners I recognised as regulars. Only 23 runners in the end, less than usual but enough to make it an enjoyable enjoy game of poker.

I started off well (as I often do in these double chance tournaments, for some reason) and had increased my starting stack of 2k to about 2.8k within the first level. I was on table one, with ocallagh two seats to my left. I consider him a strong player, better than I am, so am very wary of tangling with him. However, I did just this a while after calling for my topup, bringing my stack up to 5k or so. I limped with AT of clubs, an initial mistake, as I should have raised being the button +1 and with only 1 limper in front of me. Ocallagh completed from the small blind and the BB checked. The flop was 99x, two clubs. It was checked around to me, I took a stab at the pot, only ocallagh called. Danger danger! The turn was an Ace, we both checked (I think), I being wary of trip nines. The river was the 10 of clubs, giving me the nut flush. Ocallagh checked, I was confident of being infront so made a 1/2 pot sized bet. He raised fairly quickly to 1.5k. Alarms were definitely going off in my head. He must know I hit a draw with that 10. However, I had to flat call just in case...he had 9T and his house crushed my weak nut flush. Damn that 10 of clubs! :) I had lost 2k and was down to approx. 3k, less than my starting stack. I managed to win a small pot or two (mainly stealing the blinds) before the break started to get back to 4k.

We were down to 2 tables soon after the break, I avoided both Olly and ocallagh (thankfully) and was sitting with some SE and Fitz regulars, most of whom I had played with a good few times before and knew their games (as they knew mine, I'm sure). I started motoring on this table right when I needed to, as the blinds started to move up, catching some premium hands to grind my way up the ladder. I knocked Eamonn (Fitz / SE regular) out when he made a move on my BB with 88, I had 99 and he didn't get any help. I knocked out another two players from that table to make it to the final table in good shape, with approx. 13k. Only 4 were getting paid, so a long way to go.

Both Olly and ocallagh were also there, both with pretty big stacks. Olly was chip leader I think, sitting two to my right, with ocallagh to his immediate right. My blinds were going to be terrorised! Ocallagh in particular is an asute positional raiser, and one of those players you know is probably robbing you, BUT could also be making the same move with a premium hand, so you really have to be sure when you defend your blinds against him! There are a number of players like this who I face regularly, and I hate having them two or three seats to my right. Anyhow, I went card dead as the blinds kept on increasing, with Olly maintaining his chip lead with some strong play. With blinds at 400/800 (or 500/1k), ocallagh made another attempt to take my blinds, raising to 2.2k on my BB (he was on the button, down to 7 at this stage). Olly folded. I had Kx suited, and had quite a decision to make. I only had 8k or so left, and needed to double up. I also needed to show I wouldn't be pushed around that easily. BUT again, although it may be button steal, he may actually have something, he had been fairly quiet recently! I decided to flat call and see where I stood. The flop came down KJx rainbow I think. Jackpot. I checked, he bet 3k and I pushed my remaining 6k in without hesitation. Despite the size of the pot, he knew he was well beaten and folded, showing 98s. I was now back to being healthy for the time being.

Down to 6, Olly was still doing well but myself and ocallagh were really in trouble, as were some of the others. Ocallagh was next to go, and now we were on the button. I was being blinded away so had to start playing my typical shortstack game - get 'em in when you can and hope for a double up! I was extremely lucky when my A5 faced AJ and escaped with a split pot, and tried to keep the pressure on pushing with position and whenever I saw decent cards. Olly made a nice laydown when I pushed UTG with AQ and he folded AJ after dwell up. I wonder would he have done the same if I had been on the button and not UTG - guess we'll never know! A SE regular, an English guy who called my all in with the AJ, and I kept on butting heads during this period, as he called a few of my all ins with Ax hands.

At one point 5-handed I noticed all of us had similar sized stacks, but didn't suggest a deal, with 5 of us it would have been difficult to agree I think. My night finally came to an end when I pushed with AQs from MP, the English guy calls again from the SB, he has TT and I don't improve. Damnit anyway, I would have definitely cashed if I had won that race, after surviving that long with my shortstack I was feeling very confident.

Oh well, home I go, only to receive a text from Olly 10 minutes later telling me the remaining 4 agreed to a split, €400 apiece! Double damnit. Still, not as bad as the 1st Vegasnights monthly €50+50 I played earlier this year, I was knocked out in 5th for €350 odd after playing a blinder, two of the remaining 4 players were absolutely rubbish, and the remaining 4 did a deal netting each of them a cool grand apiece. That really left a sour taste in my mouth!

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Vegasnights Team Event - €20+5 08/05/2006

I actually played in a poker tournie on Saturday night, but as it was for charity, I didn't particularly want to be there (boss organised it and I had given my word to turn up) and very, very bad value (only about 20% of the buy-in would be paid out, if that), I won't take the time to give a report. Only to say I was knocked out after two hours play in the biggest pot seen in the tournie so far - I flopped a straight on the BB, the SB flopped middle set and the UTG raiser flopped the nut flush and gutshot straight draw. Suffice to say, after a betting round on the flop that went: check, check, bet, raise, re-raise all in, call, re-raise all in, call, there was 70k in the pot...and the big draw hit on the turn. At least I was home for midnight...on a Saturday night :(

After many weeks of planning, Vegasnights' 2nd team event was scheduled for Sunday, May 8th out at the Angler's Rest in Chapelizod, Co. Dublin. I wasn't sure I'd be able to make it, and the F.O.S. weren't fielding a team this time (despite our great display last time!), so I couldn't commit to any other team until the day of the event. At which point almost all were full up! Despite that, after picking Dom (5starpool) up from town and getting to the Angler's Rest about 5 minutes before the 1pm start, I managed to bag a place on the Galway team, handy as I'm pretty much a Galwegian (other than my very early years in Kerry, which is the cause of my supporting the Kingdom in the championship each year, at least it gives me something to cheer about every other September!). Loads of boardsters and Fitz / SE regulars about, particularly in the BoardsStupids team (last event's winners) and in the Fitz Breakeveners.

I sat down on the same table as Marq (Fitz dealer, F.O.S. member and Breakeveners runner) and Brianmc (boardster and Breakeveners runner). Fun table, we started with a stack of 5000 I think, with a nice slow (thanks Vegasnights!) blinds structure, so lots of play. I won a few small pots near the start, and built my stack up to 6k before the end of the second level. During the third blind level (75/150), Shane (DeDeraco) was moved to my table, to my immediate right. He is a strong player and one I'm wary of tangling with. However, I found AA on my big blind, and after Shane and 4 others tried to limp, I raised it up to 900, and they all folded bar Shane on my SB. The flop came down 98x, with two diamonds. He checked, and I raised it up to 2k, which he relucantly called. I had him on a flush draw - little did I know he was on the straight draw as well! The turn was a non-diamond rag, he checked and I insta-pushed for my final 3k or so. He folded with a sigh, and I showed him the bullets to let him know he was behind. Probably shouldn't show my monsters so much, but as he is a nice guy I thought why not.

I had a decent sized stack now and could afford to play a little. After the break the table got a few new players, Mick (Culchie) the BoardsStupids team captain and a few Vegasnights regulars sat down. At this stage Marq was running over the table, he was catching some nice cards but also outplaying all others there, at least he was outplaying me with ease! I dropped some chips to him when I found AK clubs on the button, he made a big UTG raise, which I flat called (almost definitely should have raised, I could have afforded to at that point). The flop was fairly raggy, but with two clubs. I foolishly called a pot sized bet fishing for a third club, but folded to a bigger bet on the turn. Bad play from me. A few hands later action was folded around to me on the button with KQ, I made a 3xBB raise, the SB thought for a second and pushed all-in and the BB folded. I could tell the SB did this as he did not believe my raise...I could be facing Ax...but decided I was in front and should call (I had him covered by a mere 1100, blinds were 150/300 I think). Sure enough, he had KJ, and was dominated...so why didn't the poker gods agree? Flop came down Jxx (and I was dealing!), no Q on the turn or river and I'm down to the felt. Ugh, to make the proper call and get dogged, never feels too great. I would have been set up with a nice stack had the board been jack free.

Anyhow, I pushed with A6c a few hands later and hand two callers, hit my flush and came back into it, an orbit later found KK in mid position and pushed after a player UTG raised to 2k (blinds were 400/800). He was extremely loose, loved a gamble, and decided to call with 98s. No help for him and I was back in business. Won a great pot a while later against another pub player, I raised in MP with AQo, he called from the BB, raggy flop, he checks I bet he calls. raggy turn, he checks I checks, river is a blank, he checks and I can tell he missed his draw or didn't improve his low PP, so I push and stare at him (but not glare, didn't want to act too strong! I leave that sort of mischief up to Olly) and he predicably folds. Nice one.

Down to the final 25 or so, blinds are really increasing and I soon need to double up or head home. Marq is still running over the table, having knocked Mick out and put another good young player with a big stack in his place with a nice OTT move. I find AKs in LP, push for 7.5k or so (blinds 500/1k I think), Marq calls with 44 in the SB, no help for me and I'm out in 19th or so. No points for team Galway, the points start at 18th! I mention to the lads as I'm leaving that I'd be surprised if Marq didn't go on and win it - and win it he did! A fun day out, great value (hours and hours of poker for €25!) and fair play to Nick and Vegasnights for yet again putting on a good show.

Monday, May 08, 2006

SE Double Chance - €50+5 04/05/2006

After my Chinese language class on Thursday, I like to head out of Trinity and up the road to the Sporting Emporium's €50 Double Chance tournament, providing I'm not wrecked tired after the long day I've had! Last Thursday saw a very impressive turnout of lots of players I've known for a while, Fitz / SE / boards.ie regulars the lot of them. We decided to have a €10 last longest bet amongst 10 of us, €100 to whomever was knocked out closest to the money. Little did we realise that almost half of the runners in this bet would be out before the end of the 2nd level!

There were 6 or 7 tables starting off, an average crowd for this tournament. I was on the same table as Ian, a regular poster on boards and one of the other runners in the last longest bet. I had a great start to the game, working my 1500 starting stack up to 3500 in very short order, perhaps one or two orbits. I took down a big pot slowplaying TPTK on a very safe board, and a few hands later won another sizable pot limping with Ax suited in late position and being priced into calling each subsequent bet, hitting the nut flush on the river.

However, this is where the dream start goes wrong! I limp with KJs in mid position, and with two other limpers see a nice flop of KKQ, two clubs. Folded around to me, I make a 2/3 pot sized bet. The SB calls (I classified him as someone who knew what he was doing, but a real gambler who didn't bother with pot odds or any of that old jazz!), as does the other lad. The turn is the evil ace of clubs. The SB instantly pushes, the player in MP insta-calls! My trips must be behind. I show two older Fitz regulars beside me my hand as I lay it down, which surprised them, the SB flips 86c (very speculative call after my flop bet! lots of higher clubs could have been out there), the MP flips A 10.

A few hands later Ian is crippled after he made a mistake and goes all in UTG+1 for 375 or so on my BB (blinds 50/100 at this point). He gets 4 or so flat callers, I look down at 77. Hmm, no-one re-raised him, that's a big pot, I think I'm ahead of Ian (he seemed tilty!), yep, gotta push for over 2500. A young (inexperienced) player in MP decides to call, he has about 1750 or so. Ian has QQ and the MP has A9h, of course a 9 hits on the river to cripple me. Happy enough with this play (please comment if you feel I made a mistake), I read Ian wrong but it was very likely I would have gotten into a HU situation for a big pot with my 77 with that move. I had only shown very big hands at this point, and was not sure what the player with A9 thought I had - I doubt he gave it even a second's consideration, actually.

Now I was in trouble, I pushed with AJ a few hands later and was outdrawn by A10, so called for my 2nd set of chips. With blinds of 50/100, even with only 30 minutes of the tournament gone I couldn't afford to limp really, so hoped for a quick double up. Took 400 in blinds on the BB a few hands later when I pushed with A9o. Some mad action on our table, one player has AA cracked by JJ for a huge pot and then KK cracked by 1010 by the exact same player a minute or two later to knock him out. That particular villain was the one who hit his mediocre flush against my three Kings in the previous level. A minute or two before the end of the level, I found A10 in the SB, four limpers (these players love to limp!), I decided to push, mr. villian decides to call with his slow-played AK and off I go.

I wasn't even the first out of the last longest bet, as rounders123, ian and culchie were out before me! A pity to go out so soon after my dream start, I felt I didn't make any big mistakes and was ready to take the tournament by the scruff of its need, but that's poker I suppose.

I played another fun tournament yesterday - here's hoping I manage to post up a report before I get another one under my belt - getting hard to remember all the action a few days on - I must be getting old(er)

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

Various - 26/4/2006 - 3/5/2006

I've been a very lazy blogger over the past week and haven't bothered posting at all. Probably have spared any readers from some boring bad beat stories, as now I can't really remember any of the action that occurred last week. On a more positive note, I went home to Galway from Friday to Monday and really had a nice weekend, extremely relaxing, recharged the batteries and so on. As I've recently made the decision to leave my job, my parents were naturally curious as to what I planned to do with myself in the future - as I have no idea at present, I couldn't really enlighten them! I think it takes a lifetime for many people to figure out what they want to achieve in their life, so I am not particularly worried about being in this interesting situation at almost 30 years old.

SE Double Chance - €75+5 26/5/2006

One of my favourite tournaments, and certainly one of my most profitable. Four tables to start, just over 30 runners by my reckoning, was on table 1 with DocO (Donal). Called for my top up almost immediately, so had 4k to play around with. During the first orbit I found K9o on the SB and limped in with 4 others. The flop showed 964 rainbow, which I promptly checked. UTG+1 raised to 300 (total pot 550), folded around to me. I had been thinking of my play over the past week and promising to myself that I would take some time, maybe a few weeks, trying a more agressive game in the sub-€100 buy in tournaments. I'm having reasonable success with my ABC poker, but want to mix it up a little to see how it goes. Anyhow, when action got back to me I didn't fold immediately, as I would sometimes do, or simply flat call, I thought about it for a while, evaluated my opponent, decided he was semi-bluffing and that I'd put the question back to him. I push all in. He thinks about it for a while, and calls with 44 for bottom set! Oops, worst read ever by me. I'm left with approx. 1300. Still in the opening 25/50 level, I find 10 10 in early mid position. I raise to 250 and get three callers (lots of respect after my move a few hands previously!), flop came down 955 rainbow. I had told myself that I was going in on any low flop, there was 1k in the pot and I had exactly 1k left, so in I went. A player in late position dwelt for a while, then flat called, others folded, I turned over my tens and he turned over his nines for a nice flopped house! Out before the end of the first level in a double chance, it don't get much better than that! Olly had just sat down at a different table prior to my exit, I didn't particularly want to discuss my exit so kept my head down on the way out.

SE Double Chance - €50+5 27/4/2006

There were 65+ runner for this tournament, and I promised myself that while I hoped to mix my play up again, I wouldn't be first out two nights in a row! I luckily drew a table with 50% experienced and 50% inexperienced players, with two poor players to my left, ready to have their blinds stolen. I managed to make it to the break without much excitement, though I had built my stack to a very respectable 7k from a starting 3.5k (should have been 3k, but they made a mistake I think. Hopefully they will see the positive difference this made and continue to do it). By the second level after the break we were down to 4 tables, and I was moved to table 3, I had 11k and there were a few big stacks on this table. The following pivotal hand happened during the 300/600 level. Two players on the table had bigger stacks than me and were bullying whenever they could, applying pressure whenever they sensed weakness. I was on the BB with J4o, four limpers including the two big stacks. Flop was J73 rainbow, I checked (with my kicker I just couldn't face a raise if I bet, so checking was the right move here I think) and it was checked around. Turn was a 10, still no flush draw. I bet 2k, folded around to the 1st big stack, who dwelt for a minute than pushed all in, well covering me. The other big stack folded, leaving me with a decision. Was he holding 98 for the nut straight? Maybe a J with a better kicker? Unlikely. How about two pair? Even a set? He was experienced enough to push with a set, hoping that I'd interpret it as a sign of weakness. No, he was weak! Trusting my read, I called, he flipped Q 10 or similar, the river was meaningless and I double up and cripple him. Felt really good to have a read confirmed! Went on a bit of a run in the aftermath and started to bully a little myself, ended up knocking the crippled player out a few orbits later with QQ vs Ax, no A on the board. With 25 players left, I was now the tournament chip leader by a way, having approx. 30k out of 230k total chips.

Unfortunately, this is where my luck ran out, as I went card dead. I also donked off 4k just before the final table formed, when I didn't believe a player's flop bet, believed his turn bet and was shown the nuts! At least I didn't compounded my mistake. Two players were knocked out simultaneously when we were down to 5 and 5 on the two tables, so the final table formed with 8 players. I was shortstacked, and was knocked out in 7th when I pushed with 77 on Willow's big blind, she called with A8o and caught an 8 to send me packing. Received €100 for 7th, a pity as I should have done a lot better considering my situation with 25 to go. Happy with most of my play though.

4 Aces €60+5 29/4/2006

Decided to visit Galway's own 4 Aces on Saturday night, never had been there before. The place was quite nice, but practically empty when I arrived at 9.25pm. Tournament was due to start at 9.30, but due to low numbers and no sense of an anxiousness to get started, cards were in the air at 10:10, with an eventual 22 runners. For some reason, although it was a €60+5 tournament, I only paid €55 in total, this must have been a mistake, only realised later when I went through my change. Anyhow, strange tournament structure, we got 9500 chips, but the 20 minutes levels were as follows: 25/50, 50/100, 100/200, 200/400, 300/600. That's as far as I got, I was home by 11:30. The players were 50% good 50% poor, but the 50% poor were really, really bad. I should have taken their chips but others got there before me, I didn't play well and was knocked out when I found 99 on the button, a MP player raised to 3k (1/5 of his stack) pre-flop, I read him for AK/AQ/AJ and pushed my 3.5k, he actually had QQ. Didn't cover myself in glory in my home town!

Fitz Double Chance €50+5 2/5/2006

Hadn't played in the Fitz for a while so really enjoyed playing with the usual suspects again. My starting table included DocO and NTLbell and a few others I half knew. Not many interesting moments, as I didn't play well and was completely card dead in any case. During level 2 (25/50) I limped in on the button with KJs, five players in total saw the magical Q 10 9 rainbow flop. I checked with the nuts, BB checks, UTG+1 throws in a bet of 300, folded to me. I give it loads, staring at the bettor for information, dwelling, rubbing my nose, the whole hog, and flat call. BB folds. Turn is the K...BOLLOX. I check again, he bets 500, I push my remaining 1300, he calls with his J2s to split the pot. God damn it! My theatrical efforts were for nought! Motherfungling sweater monkey! On the 2nd last hand before the break, there were 4 limpers before me sitting in Button +1, I find AQo, I had not yet received my topup so I pushed with 1300, happy to either take the blinds or have a single caller. NTLbell thought about it but folded and I made a tidy 550 profit. Took the topup and went into the break with 3275, the starting stack had been 3300 including bonus chips and topup. Olly gave me a review of his recent home game downstairs during the break, gotta make the next one, sounded like a lot of fun.

Played terribly after the break, gave away chips, particularly to the villain who jammed that K to destroy my nut straight earlier. I got the feeling he thought he was shít hot, which slightly grated on me and unfortunately contributed to my happiness to call his bets. When the table broke I was left with 1150 with the blinds at 150/300, downstairs to table 1, I was in on the BB, one limper, Olly raised to 1200 from the button, I found K10o and pushed, the limper called. Flop was K rag rag rainbow, limper checked, Olly bet (protection for my top pair!), limper folded, he turned over KJ, no 10 on the turn or river and I'm home for half eleven. On a positive note I got to see a good bit of the Gary Lineker / Diego Maradona interview on BBC.

Still going to mix it up slightly in my play over the next few weeks, after which I'll re-evaluate. Online play going well, back to making a tidy profit on the STTs, also playing some of the PokerStars double chance low buy-ins to win super sat WSOP or weekly €1m tournament tickets, as long as you win your first table you should make a profit on the final table of these tournaments, buyins are $15+1 or $10+1 and the standard is very soft. I also was given $50 free from PartyPoker, mine if I played 500 raked hands over 7 days. I got through the 500 raked hands in 3 days (little to do down in Galway!) and turned the $50 into $60 multi-tabling the $.10/$/25 cash games! Free money is always nice. Will keep it in Party for the moment, probably continuing to play the low limit cash games for experience.