Tuesday, October 27, 2009

New Obsession

I go through phases with musical groups, but every now and again I'll find - or in this case, rediscover - a new band. This time it's Umphrey's McGee. They've been around for about 10 years, but they're just beginning to hit their stride. They've always been known for their technical mastery, yet they've now grown into their musical chops to really begin to inject feeling into the music, as well as allow themselves the freedom to let the music take them wherever it may go.

Here's Wizard Burrial Ground, which is an impressive thing to watch live. One thing helping them along big time is Lighting Designer Jeff Waful. MOST impressive.



For some reason this doesn't seem to be embedding as I'd expected. So here's the link to the youtube video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uKcJL4rjM8

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Move the "check" checkbox Full Tilt!

Twice in the last 5 days, I had this happen, thanks to a bad design by Full Tilt and incredibly bad (or good, depending on your POV) timing from my opponent.

It's the river, I'm next to act, and I simply want to check behind -- I hover my house over the "check" checkbox, and am about to click it to enable it. Just as I'm pressing the mouse button down, I mean the exact, the very same instant, my opponent goes All In. In the blink of an eye, the "call" button appears in the very spot where the "check" checkbox was1 I then inadvertently end up calling an all-in bet, and loosing over one buy in each time.

I sent the issue in as a bug report to FT, calling it a design bug, because really that's exactly what it is: due to a poor design, users will at times, under the right circumstance, mistakenly click "call." The action for "check" and the action for "call" should never be in the exact same spot.

Now, at the stakes I dick around at online it's no big deal - after having this happen twice, I'm down the equivalent of a standard preflop raise in the live games I play. However, money's money, and I'd rather not give ten bucks to some idiot because fulltilt made a bad design choice. I'm sure if I was playing for larger sums this would have severely pissed me off. As it stands now, my only recourse is to never use the "check" checkbox.

Submit this as a bug to Full Tilt! http://www.fulltiltpoker.com/submitabug.php

Thursday, August 20, 2009

online card rack

Been playing 30-60 minutes/day online the past couple weeks. Just for fun. Eases the casino-itch a bit. Here are some highlights from a session last night I played at the laundromat (thank you for free VERY fast WiFi!):

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"Thanks for the set-up FT!"

First hand at a new 0.02/0.05 table - I watched the guy who's now UTG go all-in preflop 3 times in a row at this point.

I get dealt AA, and watch him open push $0.96, then button smooth-calls. I make a small-raise to $2.25; button pushes, I insta-call.

Awesome!!




-----------------------------------

"Why open-limping OTB with AA at a passive table is a bad move:"


Flop got checked around, I bet / called a raise on the turn, I check/called the push on the river:



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"How to crack a set of Kings"


I called a min-raise from the BB with J8 soooted. Loose call, of course, but I won't lay down 2 suited cards from the BB to a min-raise.

Flop goes check/check. Turn I under-bet the pot /call a min-raise. Flop I bet / call a push:




Thursday, June 18, 2009

Quick

Grandpa passed away overnight. Amazing how fast he went. Monday I was on the phone with him, ready to book a flight the following week to visit, and when I told him flights were $950 he said "I'm not THAT sick - check later dates." Tuesday afternoon he was put in the hospital, in a lot of pain and difficulty breathing. He was heavily sedated, and comfortable. Wednesday afternoon my mom arrived and reported he was still heavily sedated, and was going to ask the doctor today to keep him less sedated so he could at least talk and visit. 4am local time, he passed away.

Cancer's a bitch. 48 hours after telling me he's not that sick, he's dead. I'm still in shock I think. Heading to Florida tomorrow for the funeral and to be with family.

*sigh*

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Vegas mini-report + life stuff

No extended Vegas trip report yet - had a lot going on, a lot on my mind since Vegas.

Finishing up school for the quarter, and been doing some soul-searching, trying to decide whether chemical dependency counseling really is the road I want to walk down. Haven't decided, but have decided to continue with classes through at least summer quarter.

Grandpa's been battling pancreatic cancer for over a year now. Did radiation, then a brief round of chemo which he stopped due to unbearable side effects. Things have been a roller coaster: 2 awesome weeks, followed by 3 horrible ones, 3 good days then 2 bad then 5 good then 6 bad....etc.... had what we thought was a routine procedure scheduled for this week (fluid build-up in the abdomen, which is very typical in pancreatic cancer, which was going to be removed either via drugs or otherwise), but once he hit the hospital he had great difficulty breathing, and since he's been kept overnight he's been heavily sedated and unaware of his surroundings. Talk about a bad beat...

I had been planning a trip next week to visit; unfortunately I may be going there earlier to say goodbye.

------------

Had a great time in Vegas. Venetian is a wonderful place to stay - awesome rooms, nice pools, great food - we didn't leave the Venetian/Palazzo complex for the first 36 hours of the trip.

KA was one of the most awe-inspiring, breathtaking shows I've ever experienced. Simply amazing. Even setting aside the story and the performances, just the technical feat that is the Ka stage and theatre is just -- well, stunning. I'd recommend it to anyone at anytime. I'd go see it again; hell if the tickets were cheaper I'd have stayed for the 2nd show. Unreal, and marvelous.

As far as poker -- had fun playing. I ended the trip down due to a guy making a great call and my draw not making it. It was my last day, my last short session, and check-raised all in on the turn with an OESD + flush draw, the guy tanked for what seemed like 5 minutes before calling with bottom-two pair. I honestly didn't think he was as strong as that even, but he made the call and won the pot, kudos to him.

Rest of the play was totally uneventful -- the place was swarming with poker players, the Venetian poker room was even packed at 3am Saturday night/Sunday morning when I went down. Unreal. The late night action was super-loose and quite passive. I chipped up a bit each night, never any huge hands or big scores.

------------

Been playing online micro-stakes the past week or so ($0.02/$0.05), playing super-loose and making a ton of VERY loose calls with middle and sometimes only bottom-pair. I was the Calling Station at the table, though these were often against players who had been showing a penchant for over-bluffing. I also got some big pots (for the stakes) that allowed me to gambool a bit more than was likely prudent. My FT account took about a $6 hit over the past 7 days, much of which happened 2 nights ago.

Had some really, really sick beats too. Big-time coolers, too - like the blind-vs-blind hand where I flop top 2 and opponent flops a set, I flop a set with AA and get run down by a flush draw with Qs7s... oh, well. If I'm not in Florida I'll be headed to Tulalip for a live-session this Friday; I sometimes feel like I'm easily bluffed, and so don't mind taking a small hit online by getting the "calling-station syndrome" out of my system.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

VEGAS THURSDAY!!

That's right, it's time to get back to Vegas! Just checked the weather report, and it's gonna be gorgeous Thurs-Sat, with temps in the mid-80's. Talk about perfect vacation weather!

I'm excited -- I've been going through major life-stress, with a crap-ton of schoolwork to do, a close relative in the declining stages of a fight with cancer, deciding what I really want to do with my future, and having my workload nearly doubled with no increase in hours or pay. I can't get awa soon enough! Thank god I don't drink anymore, because if I did I'm certain I would have looked forward to a 3-day blackout, and who knows where I would come to. I do think, though, I'll be looking to gambool it up a bit more than last time, though this could be partly from watching too much durrrr on HSP and PAD cash game...

I'm hoping to play some longer sessions this time around -- since we'll be staying at Venetian, I think I'll be playing a bit more, as we'll be spending less time traveling from the south-end of the strip to the central part, plus between the Venetian and Palazo it's likely we won't be wandering out of that complex for too much of the time.

At this point I wish we had booked through Sunday. But, I do have to get back and study for my finals. And we don't leave until 8:30pm Saturday, so we almost have 3 full days there.

Vegas!! Woo-hoo-hoo!!!

Monday, May 18, 2009

Vegas in 2 weeks, Tulalip 2 weeks ago...

Rebecca and I booked another Vegas trip a few weeks back; we'll be there June 4-6. Gonna be hot as balls, but if we didn't go then we were looking at 7 weeks later, when it will be hotter than balls. I'll chose "hot as" over "hotter than" any day.

Staying at Venetian - pricier than I would opt for, but the chick is all about feeling like a queen on our little mini-vacation. I'm totally fine with it, and we did end up getting an OK deal. I also found other ways to save money over our last trip (mostly on transport to/from the airports), so we'll be spending less overall on this trip than last one. It'll also be nice staying in the same hotel where I'll likely want to play most of my poker (save for a little bit at MGM before or after we se Ka).

SO looking forward to getting away from work again. I'll still have one more day of school the next week, and a final exam to study for, but the little Thurs-Sat jaunt will be a nice mind-break before the final.

-----------------------------

Couple Saturday's back I played some $1/$3 in the afternoon while Rebecca shopped. Glad there's an outlet mall right by Tulalip :)

I was playing loose and gambly, knowing I only had a few hours to play and hoping to make a nice score, willing to put a couple buy-ins on the line against weak-passive players. Much more passive than night time games IMO.

Only hand I remember vividly was one where I called on the button with A7o vs a player I was sure I could play and represent and push them off a hand. After hitting a 7 on the flop I called a flop bet, checked behind on the turn, and folded to a $100 river bet. The board was innoccuous, but I could likely only beat a bluff (or 88+). I said to him "I think I'm supposed to call you here," and then asked him whether he wanted a call or if he was happy with the pot as it is, etc. There was something - the speed of his river bet, his tone of voice, the way he moved, etc - that screamed "BLUFF" to me.

I turned over my 7 and said "I want to call you with just this, but I have to fold," and mucked my hand. He tables AT for no pair, and takes down the $100-ish pot.

If only I could consistently follow my instincts... of course when you play once/month it's hard to have much faith in your instincts. Still, it's something of which I need to be aware.

(for those curious, I ended up one buy-in after about 3 hours...not bad for a Saturday afternoon)

Friday, April 10, 2009

Vegas day 2-3

Late night Saturday night/Sunday morning: Mandalay Bay $1/$2

Luxor poker room was kind of dingy looking (don't like the black/gray look to the room), so we wandered to Mandalay Bay. Nice place, pretty (and easy to access) poker room. Very short wait (2am and 4 $1/$2 tables and 2 $2/$5 tables going). One guy at my table has $1400 in front of him; a number of $600 stacks; large, $15-20 preflop opening raises seemed standard.

Plusses: pretty room; easy to find; $300 buy-in; loose, seemingly rich crowd.

Minusses: high-hand jackpot = additional $0.50-$1 rake; the first two tables are close enough to the entrance that anyone standing just at the edge smoking will fill the area with cigarette smoke; no chopping blinds (?!!?!)

I flopped a set and turned a boat at one point and somehow couldn't get the guy who couldn't ever let go of top pair to call me. Still not sure what he called my large flop raise and turn bets with that he couldn't pay off the value-bet on the river (it was 3am, I had been up for 21 hours and don't recall the board).

I had a fairly standard session here. The table was SO so loose - most every hand, raised or limped, was multi-way. I was involved in a couple 5-way hands after raising in EP to $12. No hands stand out, no players seemed exceptionally good/bad. Liked it, but didn't like the rake or the no-chop deal.

Ended this session down $30.

-------------------------------

Sunday afternoon: $1/$2 MGM

Nice room, though also the slowest dealers so far - they seemed more interested in recounting stories with the 2 regulars at the table than dealing the game. Mix of experienced and new players; very loose action. $200 buy-in, which is fine, but I appreciate the $300 deeper games.

2 hands of note:

1. I call a $12 preflop raise OTB with 7d 8d. 3-way action. FLOP: 8s 5d 6d. 2 checks to me, I bet $35, 1 call. Original raiser check-raises all-in for another $115. I'm obviously behind now, but I like the fact that I have 20 outs to a flush, straight, trips, or two pair, so I call. Somehow I miss half the deck on the turn and river, and QQ wins the hand unimproved.

2. Tight, tight player open raises to $20 from CO-1; I raise to $40 OTB with AA; sb insta-calls. Original raiser raises an additional $100 (leaving only $100 behind). I figured he's committed, and don't know what insta-caller would smooth with from SB, so I push. SB folds. After SB folds, I have a brain-fart and think the original raiser was already all-in, and I table my hand. He shows me KK and tosses them into the muck. I drag a $180 pot w/o seeing a
flop, but probably lost out on another $100 due to lack-of-sleep killing my attention span and me brain-farting. SB had QQ, btw (he folded but dealer let him keep his cards near him to show after the hand).

End the session +$45

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Monday afternoon: $1/$2 Mandalay bay

We checked out at 10:30, gave our bags to the Luxor folks, and went about our day. Becca wanted to do some shopping in the area between Luxor and Mandalay, so I was going to play at Luxor but they only had 1 table and 2 names on the list, floor guy said they wouldn't get a new game going in all likelihood for another hour or 2 = Mandalay Bay again.

About 15 minute wait for a seat at one of the tables. Number of $5-600 stacks, lots of action. LOTs of loose action. Both tables going look juicy. They actually start to sit me at a new table they were opening, but then move me to one already going (which makes me wonder if this was the same day Pauly wrote this; I didn't look at anyone over there though).

2 hands of note:

1. I join 3 limpers and limp OTB with 8d9d. SB raises to $10, only 1 other call, I call.
FLOP: 7J7 rainbow.
SB bets $20, folds to me. I sensed weakness, and thought I could take it away, as he likely won't have a 7 here - I raised to $65. He takes a lot of time, and just calls.

TURN: (7J7) Q
SB checks. I still have the straight draw, so I used position and took a free card.

RIVER: (7J7Q) 2
SB checks. I think I can take it away with a big bet - say $125. But I wimp out, all the sudden afraid he may have flopped a boat with JJ, and give up. I say nice hand, I check, and he shows KK. I know a big bet would have taken it down.

2. UTG raises to $10, 1 call; I reraise to $45 OTB with AA. UTG calls, other folds.
FLOP: 5J5.
UTG checks, I lead out $75, UTG check-raises all-in to $200ish. I instacall and table KK. He shows J4 clubs. Turn and river blank out.

I wish I were more awake, because that guy bought in twice already, and is rebuying again. Calling $45 preflop with only $250 holding J4 soooted? JUICY! As it stands, I was near the 2 hour mark, and struggling to keep my focus. I decided to play two more rounds or so, and get outta there before my decision making totally deteriorated.

End the session: +$350

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Vegas recap - Saturday

My 2nd trip to Vegas, will vastly different than my first trip, was a lot of fun. I love that city. Becca and I have already decided to go back, probably in July after the WS0P.

My first trip was poker dotted with a couple hours of sleep and a couple shows at night; this trip was much more centered on spending time with the SO, dotted by a little poker and a couple shows.

Uneventful flight on Saturday, and we were able to check in right around noon, which was nice. After a little lunch we walked through the Luxor, over through Mandalay bay, gazed at the pool, checked out menus for possible dinners. I couldn't believe how many chicks in wedding dresses we saw. Thankfully they didn't cause Rebecca to start seeing a wedding chapel in our future. Phew.

She wanted to play some slots, so she put $5 into a quarter machine and started spinning. When she was done I put $1 into the quarter machine next to her; played all 4 credits on one spin and won 2 credits. I played all 5 credits on the next spin and won $22.25 and immediately cashed out. I've never won on a slot machine before.

-EV games: +$21.25.

We walked over through MGM, and to the monorail, off at the Flamingo to pick up our tickets to X-Burlesque. From there we walked to Venetian so I could play some poker. Was a really gorgeous afternoon - 65 degrees, sunny, a touch of a breeze... especially compared to the 45-degree rainy gray we've gotten used to in Seattle, it was perfect!

I played at the Venetian briefly my last trip, and remember the game feeling small - but that was probably because I had come from playing the $1/$3 at Caesars.

This trip, it felt much like the Tulalip game I usually play, but with a little better players (probably due to a couple Vegas regulars that were at the table). The game was strange for a while - I won way more hands than I should have the first hour, with no show downs. I was getting more respect than I expected, and definitely more than I deserved. There were weak players who would buckle to pressure (like when I reraised from position with air on a paired raggy board and the original raiser folded queens face-up), a calling station that didn't fold anything preflop (literally - played 100% of hands at least to the flop)...

I lost one fairly decent sized pot to an opponent with Qh3h after I flopped top two; turn put 2 hearts on the board and the 3rd heart came on the river. I didn't mind much losing the pot since he chased a backdoor flush draw. The guy was "helpful" enough to tell me that I didn't bet enough on the turn for him to lay it down, that even if he got an extra $30 on the river it was worth calling. I didn't bother telling him that he only had 7 of the 9 outs he thought he did (as the Ah or Kh would've boated me up), or asking how he called on the flop with undercards and a backdoor draw - I want those calls all the time.

I left after a couple hours, down $115 (which was a bummer as I was up about $100 at one point - the flush hand actually cost me $140). Small losses don't phase me anymore, though my girlfriend seemed surprised I was so casual about losing that amount. No, she's not a poker player, or really much of a gambler.

--------------
Saturday evening - X Burlesque at the Flamingo.

Well.

Their production video is really great - show looks good, dancers look energetic and hot.

Sadly, the 60-second video was much better than the show itself. Tucked into this tiny little theater, the tacky-factor is sky-high. And unfortunately, the dancers are just -- not that good. Shakeera carried the show: her dancing was engaging, energetic, fun to watch - she was committed to every move she made. The others? Not-so-hot. Bec and I after the show referred to one as "the comotose blonde," but really all (save for Shakeera and the one with the biggest and most obvious fake tits) lacked so much energy and sex appeal.

All had awesome bodies - awesome bodies, so that wasn't hard to take. But - watching hot women who appear bored and dead-tired prance around a cheesey-looking stage with crappy set decoration just isn't my idea of fun. Add to that the really bad comedian that did a too-long routine half way through the show (James Bean), and being charged $5.77 for a sprite (no vodka, just sprite), that part of the evening was quite a let down.

The good part? Bec and I were able to sit in the back of the theatre, side-by-side, so we were able to talk to each other throughout the show, making fun of the dancers (except Shakeera, who we both thought was hot), laughing, etc. That part was fun. The show? Not so much.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Vegas recap

...details coming soon...

Brief overview:
- short sessions all-around
- played at Venetian, MGM, and Mandalay Bay
- spa suite at Luxor is awesome, with hot tub overlooking the mountains to the east
- Saw David Benyamine in and around Bobby's room, on the phone, probably trying to get a game together
- wasted money (and time) at X Burlesque (which included paying $5.77 for a frackin' Sprite!)
- enjoyed Zumanity, though the close (and more expensive) seats were tough on the neck, and would've been better in the upper orchestra, or even balcony (i.e. the "cheap seats")

All-in-all, fun fun FUN times. We've already started figuring out when our next Vegas jaunt will be; likely June or July. I ended the weekend up in poker, and up $0.50 on -EV games (slot, roulette, blackjack).

Friday, April 3, 2009

Vegas Tomorrow!!!

I'm SO incredibly psyched to get to Vegas tomorrow! As much for the weather as for the action; it's been cold as balls in the Emerald City so far this spring (snow twice this week).

I've briefly contemplated playing $2/$5, but I don't think I'm psychologically ready for that; nor do I have the roll for that. According to some Vegas regulars, the $1/$3 at Wynn plays similarly to a loose AC $2/$5, so I may check that out. Last trip to Vegas I played the $1/$3 at Ceasars and found it to be quite action-packed. I'll start small, though, with an afternoon session at Venetian $1/$2.

We've got a couple shows lined up, too. X-Burlesque at Flamingo (girlfriend's request), and Zumanity at NY NY (my request). I think we're skipping the strip clubs this trip: the girlfriend didn't like the sounds of the non-fully-nude hands-off rules that sounded pretty standard there.

This is my second trip to Vegas, and the first time I'll be in a gambling situation with a girlfriend, who doesn't really gamble that much (she'll lose some money on nickle slots it sounds like). My other trip was solo, and I just played as much poker as I could stand, and used some of the profit to buy high-end show tickets, slept very little, and ate at random times. This trip may become a balancing act with spending time with the SO and playing poker, especially if the games are good.

On the other hand, having a set time to meet later in the afternoon/evening could make for a better time, too: as much as I love long sessions, breaking it up into a couple 4 hour sessions may be better for my mental health (and maybe even for my game). I mean - this is a vacation to enjoy myself, and rest, and have fun; my brain becoming mush because I've sat at the tables for 16 hours straight is hardly a way to relax before spring quarter starts on Wednesday.

It's so far a boring, boring workday with little to do. If I could get away with leaving early, I'd be outta here after lunch. Or now.

We shoulda left today...

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Deciding and acting

I've been mulling this over for months now. I've been back in school for a year; I'm half-way through the program, and 1/4 way to being certified by WA state as a CDP (chemical dependency professional). And I'm sick of it.

I'm done. I'm done with school. I'm done with it all.

I've hated my job for the past 1.5 years. I'm sick and tired of computers and managers and all that crap.

Tomorrow, I'm quitting my job.

I'm moving to Vegas, and going to be a professional poker player.

I've been saving money for the past year, theoretically so I can do a CDP internship and still be able to pay rent. Instead, I'll be using that as my $1/$2 bankroll.

This weekend in Vegas with the girlfriend will still be 'vacation,' but once I get back to Seattle I'll be selling my things, packing a few belongings, and gettin' outta the Emerald City! I should be there permanently next weekend (4/11).

To those who say you can't make a living at $1/$2 - I plan to prove you wrong!

Friday, March 27, 2009

Vegas bound!

I'm heading to Vegas next weekend, (4/4-6). SO looking forward to it! I'm excited to get to the warmth, to see some sun, and of course to play some poker.

I've only been to Vegas once, thanks to my RPT TOC win a couple years back, and I had a blast. I think I slept a grand total of 6 hours the whole weekend, played a ton of poker, and used the profits to see a couple big-ticket shows.

This is going to be a bit of a different trip, though -- I'm going with my girlfriend. On her suggestion. She loves going to Vegas -- though it's still not entirely clear to me why: she plays nickel-slots, can never get the hand signals right in black jack, doesn't play poker, and rarely drink (and almost never to excess). She does like the shopping, and the 'vibe.' OK.

She likes going to strip clubs, too. So we're going to one of 'em -- not sure which yet. The big name ones are only topless, and she's interested in full-nude. No, I'm not kidding.

Should be fun. We're staying at the Luxor; hopefully it's nice. Don't know whether they have a poker room or not, but it's just down the block from MGM which I've heard is great for low-limit action. And a walk up to Caesar's or Venetian is definitely not out of the question.

I have no idea how many ppl actually read my blog, but if you have low-limit ($1/$2 or $1/$3 NL) poker room suggestions, please let me know.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

short session = profit

I played last Friday night. I'll write about one hand (not much excitement), but man was the game soft for a couple hours. Granted, I also ran good, hitting some flops, making some draws, etc; but it's insane how much I got paid off. I was playing pretty tight too! I started playing at 7pm and left the table at 10:50; I cashed out of a $1/$3 $200-max buy in table with $636 in profit. Yea, I bought in for $200 and cashed out $836. In less than 4 hours. Insane.

I'm obv not an amazing player; I just took advantage of weak, bad, or dumb players when I had hands.

I left when I did for 2 reasons:
1 - The biggest stack at the table by this time was only $150, with a number of $100 stacks
2 - I found myself becoming unwilling to put my chips in without a lock on a hand. Scared money.

So I took my profit and left.

----------
So I'm sitting on about $450 at this point; I'm in the cut-off. I've been playing tight: really only raising with premiums. I'll call preflop a bit light, in position, against raises from EP raisers with big stacks, but if I don't connect with the flop I'm gone.

A couple limpers, and I look down at 5c 6c. I haven't raised all night with these hands, but I wanted to mix-it-up (number of players are still here from when I sat down), so I raise it to $12. The SB calls, the limpers fold (at which I almost laughed out loud! How can you limp / fold in EP when it only costs another $9 to play for at least $24?). SB had been at the table for about 1 orbit, and came across as not really knowing what he was doing. I was happy for his call!

Flop: 2c Qc 7c

SB checks; I bet $20, SB calls.

Turn: [2c Qc 7c] 6d

SB leads out $30. I think this is a bit strange; I ask how much he has left, he counts out about $130 more.

Either he's sandbagging a flush, or he's trying to name his price for a river card.

Then, I look at him, and realize that he seriously looks confused. I'm not sure what to make of this, but it certainly doesn't strike me as confident. And it doesn't appear to be an act. I feel like he hasn't sat at a poker table very often.

I raise. I put two $100 stacks into the pot, and take a deep breath.

SB thinks. "Phew," I'm thinking, "no flush."

Then he says, "ah, I don't think you have the flush, I call," and turns over Qs 3c.

I say "flush," and turn over my cards. River was meaningless, I rake in a nice pot with a baby flush.

Guy next to me says "That was ballsy with a 6-high flush." I agreed. I trusted my read, though. Thankfully confusion != strength for this guy.

Maybe the confusion was because he surprised himself that he called a raise OOP with Q3o!

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Easy, peasy

Tulalip $1/$3

I had been at a super-nit table all night. Should have put in for a table change, but - eh, I didn't mind taking advantage of the nits at the table to take down a number of small pots. I was at about $400 (in for $320) when our table broke, and I shuffled over to another table with stacks between $300-$800, which is a nice amount of cash for a $1/$3 game, and very VERY loose action!


BB: LAGGY-donk, $300ish
UTG: loose, passive, $175ish (shortest stack at the table)
Hero: MP, $400

I decide to limp with 8c Tc. I'll raise with suited gappers and suited connectors maybe 40%, limp 40%, and chuck the rest (usually due to position, stack sizes, etc). 6 of us see a flop; $18 in the pot.


FLOP: 9c Qc Jc

OK, I just flopped the stone-cold nuts, no higher straight flush out there due to the Tc in my hand. I'm praying someone's got a hand of some sort.

Blinds check; UTG bets $20. Folds to me.


What to do here? I could just smooth call and hope to trap someone else in, but the same time I don't want another club to come off and kill any action. If UTG has a real hand, he may be willing to get more money in now; if he doesn't have a hand then this pot is likely not going to get any bigger.

I decide to take a chance here, following one of my mantras "If you want to play a big pot, you've got to build a big pot."


I raise to $60. Folds to the BB who calls. (SWEET!). UTG then goes all-in for another $100.

I pinch myself to make sure I'm not dreaming.

Now, the trick is to make sure BB comes along. I need to sell being on a draw, or a hand I'm not sure about. I take some time, ask how much it will cost, take a look over at the big blind, kind of smile and sigh (like "crap, what do I do here with you still to act), and say "I'll call."

As I slide the chips in, BB declares all-in, for about another $200!!!!!

Of course, I snap call, wait for the dealer to ask to turn the cards over, and then turn my cards over first saying "I've got the nuts."

BB had Kc 10h, for a flopped straight with king-high flush redraw, UTG had Ac xc for the ace-high flush.

Without doing much work, I rake in a pot close to $500.

Easy game ;)

Raising with the straight flush, I know, isn't always recommended. Slow playing is the "typical" course of action with this hand. In the moment, though, what I thought of was this: if someone's got a hand, they're coming with me no matter what; if no one has a hand I'll likely not be getting any more money anyway, so let's try to build the pot.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

At the tables again

Finally, after playing only once since September, I got out to Tulalip for some $1/$3 action last night. It may be the last time I'll play in the next few months too, as I have school starting up tomorrow night.

My biggest issue was trying to remain patient. I forgot how boring poker can be: fold, fold, fold, fold, fold...

Most of the table, most of the night, was either tight-passive or loose-passive. I was mostly tight-aggressive, but made a number of loose preflop calls when in position against passive preflop raisers: 90% of the time they'll check if they don't hit, I'll bet and take it down.

I was blessed with good cards at the right moments. Presto worked out for me nicely here:

MP: Loose-passive, $200. Plays suited anythings.
Button: Tightish. Almost aggressive. $120.
Me (BB): should have a tight-aggressive image; I've had a few bluffs picked off, too, which should throw some measure of doubt into the works too.

MP limps, button raises to $12. Folds to me, I make the call with 5c 5d; MP calls.

Pot: $37
FLOP: 6c 6s 5s

Floppin' a boat is sweet! I don't check-raise here: that's too big of a give away. I want to play a big pot, so I've got to build a pot.

I bet $15, hoping a weak-lead will encourage both players to at least call.
MP calls. Button immediately goes all-in.

Dream situation! My only issue now is how to get MP to come along. I do have a theatre degree, and did win best actor award at college, so hopefully I'm putting that to good use here.

I ask for a count, count out the chips, separate them from my stack, sit back... I may have pushed it too far when I said "Man, this would be a lot easier if you weren't behind me," though in all honesty I've said that exact same thing in situations where I really meant that too.

I make the call, hoping MP has something he can com along with. Unfortunately, he does the smart thing and folds.

Button flips over Th Td. Turn and river blank out, I win a nice pot.


Hand 2:
I rarely check-raise, but there are times it's the perfect thing to do.

Bunch of limpers, I look down at AKo in the SB, and just complete. AK totally out of position in a cash game isn't that great, so I won't think twice about just limping here. In position I raise 90% of the time.

BB (tight player, $250) raises to $12; MP calls (same MP from last hand); I call.

Flop: Ad 6h 3c

I check. BB bets $30. MP looks pained, and makes the call. I raise to $130; if either of them flopped a set - so be it, but chances are I'm good here.

BB takes quite a while, then folds, MP folds. After MP folds, BB says to me "I guess you have one pair beat." I say, "Which pair?" We laugh, then I ask if he had AK, which he confirms. My check-raise won me the pot instead of a chop. Sweet.

This is one of the few places I will check-raise liberally: TPTK on a dry board, if I lead out it's likely no one without an A will call. My check can look weak, and because I so rarely check-raise, against thinking and observant oponents they'll likely fold, and I'll take down a decent pot on the flop.