by Cactus Jack » Tue Jan 30, 2007 8:22 am
Whew. I was beginning to think I cannot get any cards to play at $4/$8.
3 hours of playing at Caesar's Palace and I'm stuck almost a hundred bucks and starting to wonder how I cannot be embarrassed at posting such a loser on this journal. Worst run of cards I'd ever seen. At one point, I was only down $60, and managed to get back with $7 simply by making moves. I had no cards, but with aggression in the right spots, I took down enough small pots and blinds to claw my way back.
Finally, I get AA, and get cracked when this asshat rivers his straight and I hit a 22:1 loser. My aces were good until I make a set. Go figure.
Then, KK hand in LP. Flop comes middle cards, all spades. EP caller bets out, the guy who cracked my AA when he rivered a straight and I got my set. He's terrible, on a rush, and has thus infuriating smirk when he drags a pot he didn't deserve. He thinks he knows how to play.
So I call his bet on the flop. I really, really wanted to pop it, but if he'd re-raised me, I'd have a tough decision.
He bets the brick on the turn and I call.
Ace comes on the river, he checks and I check behind. Again, I know it's weak, but I cannot bet into this board with no spade at all.
He says he has no spade at all and mucks his hand when he sees my KK (doing his usual slow roll, he doesn't show his garbage hand he thought was good). He was behind the whole time, again. Not surprising. A total shock. Not.
So, I finish the sit $37 ahead.
It's small stakes, and I couldn't possibly make a living at them. But, it's days like these that are really encouraging. Not because you're making much, you're not, but because you are playing really, really well. I controlled the table--as much as possible at 4/8--made some moves that would have impressed the players if they'd known, and climbed back out of a pretty good hole with patience and timing.
Some days, you know what it feels like to be a real pro. This was one of them.
(Sorry for the bragging, but it did feel good.)
"Are the players better as the stakes go up? It's not an exam; it's a buyin." Barry Tanenbaum