Yikes!
I guess I called that. I had kind of a nasty session today, and most all of it was of my own making. I dropped about $70 today. Today was the first day I had a really substantial loss in a hand and not to put a too fine of a point on it: it sucks. I guess it takes lots more experience than I have to be able to take these kinds of hits gracefully. I guess my only goal right now is to not let it affect the way I play tomorrow. What really bites is that it's all my fault, and could've been avoided.
Really quickly, here's what happened in that hand (and as a sort of "what not to do in this situation" type of thing).
I had
on the CO. It's folded to me. I just limp. First mistake? Button and both blinds call. Flop
[5h][4c]. SB checks. BB bets $1. Here's where I screw up bad. I look at the board and it doesn't look too threatening to me (completely overlooking that the blinds could have anything). I fear that if I raise it up at this point everyone will fold because I can't put anyone on a really strong ace after they limped. So I just call, button folds and SB calls. 3 players left. Turn
. Threatening right? Not to me. I misread the board and don't even see the straight draw. In fact at the time, to me, it couldn't have looked less threatening since it gave no flush draws. SB checks again, BB bets $3. Since I don't see the threat I just call again. SB calls. BB is a very loose and aggressive player who doesn't always play the greatest cards; he likes to see showdowns. So I'm figuring that I'll put it to him on the river and I might as well get SB's $3 turn call as well. With the rainbow board a flush was out of the question. River
. Suddenly SB throws out a pot-sized bet of $14. Huh? Oh sure, he must've been slow playing his A8 on the turn, or maybe he was hanging around with a K8 and just hit two pair. Maybe he was even slow playing an AK! As I expected, BB calls the $14. I have them where I want them. My set will come out of nowhere. I go all-in; I've got both covered. SB calls, BB actually folds. Imagine my surprise when his little chair started blinking to indicate a win. He had, as you can probably guess by now,
[6c], a straight. I lost $50.10 on that hand and it could've probably been avoided with a preflop raise, or at the very least a large postflop reraise. I watched him later and he wasn't very aggressive, and I'm 90% sure he wouldn't've chased that straight if I'd raised it a decent amount.
But doesn't Doyle tell you to never lose most of your stack in an unraised pot? I should've heeded those words.
Damn, I'd rather be bad beat out of $50 than lose it through dumb play.
Aside from that I lost a modest amount on two different hands with two pair. Losing once to a larger two pair and once to a flush. On the latter it was just me in the BB and the SB in the hand on the flop. I had K5, flop came up with K52, two hearts. I even overbet the pot here, he called and a heart came on the turn. I just couldn't believe, when he bet on the turn, that the only player against me just happened to have two hearts in his hand. Well of course he did and I called both the turn and river (not too big of amounts on each).
On the flip side my only decent win was a no-brainer sort of hand when I got dealt AA and somebody pushed all in with AK. If not for that I would've lost about $14 more.
So to sum up my day, I was getting lousy cards most of the time (had VP$IP of 13% and 14% at each table), but when I did get decent cards I made the wrong move in almost every instance. Momma told me there'd be days like this. Should've listened to her too.
But I'll be back at it tomorrow hopefully and we'll just have to see what happens.