by Kramer545 » Mon May 08, 2006 3:41 pm
Yeah I thought about that after I wrote it Golden. The problem is that I didn't really know any alternative sites that were that much better than UB. I've only just begun to branch out into sites other than UB (Party and PokerRoom), and those two places, at certain times, I've found to be just as rocky as UB can be. Maybe it's a matter of poor table selection I've been making, though. I certainly know I've heard laughable stories about Party's players, but except here or there I haven't really come across it yet (at least any more than I come across those types of great games at UB). I'll try Pacific, since you recommend it.
I played a $5 SNG last night for fun. I signed up for an 18 player tournament without realizing it was 3 tables of 6. I'm certainly not used to such a small table, but by the time I realized what sort of a SNG it was I was already seated so there was no backing out. I did well in the beginning. Everybody was playing supertight, so I was stealing just about every pot they would let me take. Once I got up to $2000 (started at $1500), my cards died and the couple I did catch (a flopped nut flush and a KK) I couldn't get anyone to join me into the pot. So I'm hovering right around $2000 for quite a awhile.
Finally it's down to 12 people at two tables (I'm squarely in the middle at 6th place) and I've marked one guy in particular as a juicy catch. I don't believe he ever pushed all-in, but he started calling all-ins left and right. Fortunately people started giving him their money. One hand that I remember (didn't have PT running), two people were in the pot. Flop was JJT. The fish bet a little, gets raised and calls. The next card is a king. Fish checks, the other guy goes all-in and fish calls. The other guy loses with 99 to the fishes K8. Occasionally the fish would lose these so by the time it was down to 12 people he had about the same stack as me. Then a hand where another guy donks off his entire stack to the fish when he bluffed with a straight draw on a TJQ board and the fish called with J5 and it held up.
Now it's my turn. Fish is the chip leader. I have A4o in the BB. Fish and another just call PF and I check. Flop is AA8. I check as do the others. River was a king. I bet and fish raises, the other guy calls, and I reraise all-in. Probably not the brightest move in the world with a weak kicker, but I was pretty sure that the fish would call (and that the king really helped him) and the other guy would fold (he was very weak-tight)...and I guess I got a little greedy wanting half the fishes' stack and turning into the chip leader myself. My plan worked out. Fish called, the other guy folded...and fish turns over A5. Yikes! So I end up being an even bigger donk than the fish and when I don't improve (and he even catches a useless 5 on the river) I'm out the door. Turned out I didn't have as much fun at the SNG as I thought I'd have. *L*
Speaking of trying to enjoy poker, I think I'm going to start branching out on games other than holdem as well. Playing the same game over and over again is probably a contributing factor to why I've been on the edge of poker burnout lately. I've dabbled a little before with PLO and 7-stud in the past. I've had okay success with PLO (but at very, very small stakes), but have only broken even or even a small loss with stud. I really enjoy playing both games, but I've been avoiding them like the plague ever since I got back into poker since I didn't know as much about them as I do about holdem. I didn't want to win at holdem and lose everything back to games where I didn't feel very proficient. But I think it's time to start adding these games into my playing. If I find I absolutely can't find a way to win at either over a decent period of time I'll probably just have to give them up or just play every once in awhile for fun, but I'll cross that bridge when I come to it. I think many of the newer players (like me) are studying holdem much more than any other game and that probably contributes to the tighter tables, but maybe I'll find looser games at stud and omaha where people don't know quite so much about poker. And I'd say I've studied these other games enough to believe I know much more about them than the guy who's just playing them for fun. It'll just take time to get comfortable playing them for a profit.