(Continued)
The kids went to bed early/on-time last night, so Lindsay and I had some "us" time before my usual tournament. This was composed of us talking about our days and the next few things on our "to do" list. We're still getting ready for the trip to Foxwoods - and every day she comes up with something else she wants to do to prepare - last night it was to get her hair done and to get a couple of excercise videos because she wants to work out more. Believe it or not - there is a connection there.
In any case, she played a little on Pogo and then asked if I minded if she played a SNG (which of course I don't). She sat down and registered for the $5 limit hold'em SNG and it was filled instantly. She's still vastly better than these players and by the time my tournament started, she was first in chips and there were four players left. I took over (also because she had started to get a migraine), and played spectacularly by dropping all of her chips without hitting the money. The word bonehead doens't begin to describe my play there...
My Omaha tournament went well enough - though for most of the time I was struggling to keep my head above water. I will do a report on it later, but here's the pivotal hand to get me knocked out:
I'm on the button with 35TT. UTG (short-stack 4584 chips) raises to 4k (limits are 2k/4k) and it folds to me. This player has proven to raise any Axxx hand with a wheel card, so I felt I was probably ahead with my tens - and my low draw could work if an ace came on the flop to counterfeit my high. I reraised to 6k - he called all in. He shows A259.
As it turns out, with his hand, he had 56% of the pot equity - so I was going to have to win a race here. With the flop of
, he jumped up to 72% of the equity - and hit a deuce on the river to boat up. This was a rough hand for me - but it stemmed from the fact that I over valued my hand - I will do my best not to let that happen again.
I ended up finishing in the money (30th out of 396), but I was disappointed with the way I finished. Shortly after that hand, I finished the night off with 239Tds.
I also played the $10 + rebuys tournament. Here I was doing fairly well as well, but right near the end of the first hour, I hit a bit of a road bump.
This is hand #48: I'm in the BB with J5s (diamonds) and there are 3 limpers plus the SB in already. I check to see the flop and it is
- giving me a solid flush draw. The SB checks, I check, and the first limper checks. The next person bets 500, the last person folds, the SB calls, I call, and now the first limper pushes all in. This player has us all covered and has made this move before. Every time that he has and been called down he had either overcards to the board or a single pair (not necessarily top pair). The original bettor calls, the caller calls and it is back to me. My portion of the pot would be 8720 and it is another 1555 for me to call all-in.
Now this is a rebuy tournament and we're still in the rebuy period here. According to my guess, I'm mostly up against single pairs here - and they are most likely duplicating. However, one or two - possibly three of my diamonds are probably out already. However, I'm getting more than 4:1 on my call here - and I suspect if I hit my hand - it will be good. Even with as few as 6 outs, I'm still at about 3:1 against to hit my hand. Since a big stack can do much more here - and I hadn't rebought yet - I decided the risk for getting a big stack was worth it and called. Unfortunately, an offsuit 5 and an offsuit 2 hit on the turn and river and I was forced to rebuy.
According to twodimes.net, here's the hand:
7d5d 31.5%
As9d 25.9%
Ah9s 25.9%
Kd7h 16.7%
In case you are curious, the guy who moved all in had A9o without the 9d.
So I rebuy twice and it is still before the end of the hour and only three hands later, this one comes up:
I have pocket jacks in the cutoff and it folds to me. I raise to 400 (4xBB) and the button (the same guy who raised in the previous hand) raises me the minimum. The blinds fold and I push - without hesitation. He calls and shows KTo. He doesn't improve enough and I double up to 6k right before the break. I busted him shortly after the break.
Here's the hand that knocked me out. The blinds are 200/400 with a 25 ante. I'm in the BB with pocket jacks. UTG+1 raises to 3xBB and is called once. Both of these players have my 9k stack covered (the raiser has 25k, the caller has 11k). It folds to me and I call.
The flop is 567 rainbow and I push. The raiser calls and the caller folds. He shows pocket kings and I'm out.
In this case, I was a little optimistic that he had AK or AQ and would fold or would have a hard time calling with pocket queens. Running into kings though - there's just nothing I could do here. I'm not even sure if I would've folded to a bet had I checked - so I was most likely going broke here. I finished 380th out of 1065 - at the same time as the other tournament.
I played on a $2/$4 Omaha Hi/Lo ring game and was up anywhere between $20 and $50 for most of the night. At the time I got knocked out of the two tournaments, I was only up $20 or so. I played until my next blind, hitting a hand along the way and finished up $52.
Overall, the night was pretty much break even - but it had the potential to be so much more:
3/21 8:24pm $5+.50 HE SNG (9) 6307013, 4th, 9:28pm, 76 hands, -5.50
3/21 9:15pm $10+1 O8 multi (396) 6255822, 30th, 12:19am, 139 hands, +8.80
3/21 9:38pm $2/$4 O8 ring (10) $80 buyin, 12:30am, 145 hands, +52
3/21 10:15pm $10+1 NL HE multi w/rebuys (1065) 6255826, 2 rebuys, 1 addon, $41 total, 380th, 12:19am, 117 hands, -41
$356.37
Net change for the day: $14.30
Net time for the day: 4.100 hours; 9.067 table-hours
Total Net change for the month: $751.25
Total Net time for the month (actual hours): 49.950 hours
Total Net time for the month (table-hours): 121.383 table-hours
Real-Hourly rate: $15.040/hr
Table-Hourly rate: $6.189/t-hr