OCTOBER 14th - EAT MY BLOG!
Well, another highly dissapointing day in Monkland!
Had a somewhat frustrating day at work, as I spent about an hour in the morning trying to get some analysis files off a computer onto another one only to find that every time I did it they seemed to be saved as "read only" and I couldn't even copy them across on the CD. By some ridiculous company screw up, a certain type of DNA analysis machine we have (the one I used) only runs on Windows NT, widely regarded as the biggest mistake in the corporate world since MGM decided to give Kevin Costner a few hundred million to make The Postman. This means it's not only extremely virus prone and goes down to some incredibly non-virulent trojan every 13 seconds, but that its not USB compatible and thus instead of easily transferring files by USB memory stick or something, we're reduced to copying onto hundreds of disparate CDs which end up lying round the office and leaving it looking like the aftermath of a tsunami-ravaged branch of Tower Records.
Anyway, in actual non-boring poker news, I fitted in a 3 hour session last night which was probably the most frustrating part of my day. I fired off to a great start, the E200 tables at Crypto were looking pretty loose so I had 3 of them running at once, plus some PLO8 and a couple of games at Empire (to clear the bonus mainly). Had a couple of nice wins at $200PLO8 at Crypto which put me up to about $350 in the first half hour, and then won a big pot in the E200 PLO game.
Dealt AAT3ss in the SB, it was min-raised by a slightly over-aggressive and fairly poor player in MP. I just called, as I couldn't make a sizeable re-raise and didn't think he was likely to bite and pop it again if I made a smaller one. Plus, it disguises my hand whilst I'm out of position.
Flop came a juicy AT5, with two clubs (I didn't have clubs).
The PFRer bet pot, after I checked, and picked up one call, who was pretty short stacked (only E80-odd after the call). Now, normally I'd check raise here, but on this occasion for some reason I didnt. At the time, my thinking was that at least one of these guys had a draw and they were both loose and would thus be certain to call. Now, if it hit the turn, I could see what the betting was like and maybe take one off if they gave me odds to chase my boat. If it didn't hit the turn, I was confident I could check the turn again and the aggressive PFRer would bet, allowing me to get all in with only one card to come, because my hand was still completely disguised. Normally, of course, I'd raise here, but I really felt I could get both of them in on the turn if they had any sort of hand and it fell blank, and I didn't think I could make them fold anything here. Plus, I had a feeling the PFRer had a made hand (like AT) rather than a draw (either that or nothing!) and that I could win the sidepot against him even if the shortstack caught something. Of course, low and high straights were possible and would throw a spanner in my plan (especially if I let someone catch a cheap gutshot or something) so there probably was merit to CRing too. I think my play is fine here though.
Anyhow, the turn brought a 4, which was only hurting me in the unlikely event either of them held 23. I checked, PFR bet as planned, I got all in as planned, the 4 paired on the river and I scooped a big pot, over E500 (pushing $650). PFR had AT BUT also had the flush draw, so in retrospect if I KNEW his hand I'd made the right play. Especially as the other guy had flopped a set of 5s and thus was drawing pretty dead to one out!
So at this point I'm something in the region of $450 up, in that zone of thinking "well, I'll have to go some to record a losing session here". Unfortunately, from that point on things went downhill with a combination of dry cards, a lot of annoying 2nd best hands, or hands that I could seemingly make a +EV move with but ran into the nuts, and one or two bits of harsh luck. I finished down about $300, which is a pretty big swing for me.
I'd lost a few smaller pots on the 200 tables when I got stacked with what (at the time) seemed a reasonable play, although now in retrospect it seems marginal at best.
Game #1050578183: Omaha PL (1/2) - 2005/10/13 - 22:18:57 (UK)
Table "Poppy" Seat 2 is the button.
Seat 2: Gregoshea (1601.89 in chips)
Seat 3: Jbj007 (423.50 in chips)
Seat 4: BigElmo sits out
Seat 5: JAMMYBSTD (352 in chips)
Seat 6: HongKKid (224.25 in chips)
Seat 7: Kalamees (45.75 in chips)
Seat 8: Thetaker (235.75 in chips)
Seat 9: CptKaos (235 in chips)
Seat 10: ME (194 in chips)
Jbj007: posts small blind 1
JAMMYBSTD: posts big blind 2
----- HOLE CARDS -----
dealt to ME [As Ah 5d 5c]
HongKKid: folds
Kalamees: folds
Thetaker: calls 2
CptKaos: folds
ME: raises to 9
Gregoshea: calls 9
Jbj007: folds
JAMMYBSTD: calls 7
Thetaker: calls 7
----- FLOP ----- [2s Kc 4c]
JAMMYBSTD: checks
Thetaker: checks
ME: bets 37
Gregoshea: folds
JAMMYBSTD: folds
Thetaker: calls 37
----- TURN ----- [2s Kc 4c][Ks]
Thetaker: checks
ME: bets 20
Thetaker: raises to 171
ME: is all-in 128
Returned uncalled bets 23 to Thetaker
----- RIVER ----- [2s Kc 4c Ks][Qc]
----- SHOW DOWN -----
Thetaker: shows [Kh 2h Ad 4s] (A Full House, Kings full of Fours)
ME: shows [As Ah 5d 5c] (Two Pairs, Aces and Kings, Queen high)
Thetaker collected 404 from Main pot
On the CO it seemed a good hand to raise preflop (especially if I could fold the button, who is a very good player). On the flop, two of the three callers checked on a flop that's mostly low-orientated, so I'm likely ahead unless someone has KK (I'll get check-raised, and then fold, end of story), and I bet, again to gain position, maybe steal the pot, and also because I don't mind building the pot if someone has a bare flush draw. I do have 4 practically nut outs (the non-flush ace and the non-flush 3s) as well.
Anyhow, I get one call so a flush draw seems the likeliest culprit. The turn hits the K again, he checks, I decide to bet weakly here because I'm still vulnerable to the flush draw but if he doesn't have a K he's less likely to call a draw on a paired board.
However, he check-raises all in. Normally I fold pretty quick here but a) I'd seen this guy make a BIG river bluff against the good button player about 15 minutes previously - the good guy made a fantastic call down with the A high flush on a paired board when Thetaker had only a busted draw or something but made a big river raise and b) it's hard to put him on a hand here, as he called a raise preflop - KK seems less likely now another K is out, and surely he won't risk me folding with such a huge hand. 44 and 22 are possible, but seem less likely again given the PFR, K4 and K2 likewise. I also think he'd be fairly likely to try to raise any of those hands on the flop, barring any other read, rather than give me a free card. However, I should be worried about AK which I guess he would play this way.
Anyway, I made the call because I thought my bet might've looked sufficiently weak that he took a stab at it. Plus, it's less than the pot to call (though in hindsight I thought i'd only been calling a E100 raise or so, so it was actually more than I thought). Still, big check-raises are usually pretty rare on bluffs so maybe it was a poor read. I just had a real feeling this time that I was ahead and my feelings often seem right so I usually trust them (especially where brave calls are concerned!). It backfired though and in retrospect I looked a little dumb.
Annoyingly, if he'd played the hand "correctly", my feeling is that he'd have folded that garbage preflop, either that or raised his likely winning (but very vulnerable) hand on the flop. Seriously, I don't understand his flop play at all. I could easily have a hand like AA with a flush draw which he's letting have free cards, or something like KQJT which could catch a big turn. Either way I'd have got out of the hand without losing much more than E50 on it. Bah.
I made two more plays I'd categorise as (at least) poor, something unusual for me in one session but I guess enough of these marginal hands (where it's possible to make a mistake and lose your stack) appeared where I held the worst of it that I just had a bit of an unfortunate run of cards.
Firstly, I held some hand involving J8. Flop came 228 and was checked around. Whatever. Turn J, gives me 2 pair but I'm still not betting as anyone with a QQ-AA beats me, and there might yet be a 2 or 88 lurking. River another 8, giving me a pretty strong boat. I decide to bet half pot to hope for a call if someone else had an 8. Some guy with a short(ish) stack raises the pot. He has about E60 left after the raise, I decide although I'm worried about JJ and 22 that I should put him all in (he is a decent, although slightly loose player; I've not seen him make a lot of aggressive bluffs or crazy plays but he can be a bit loose and poor). Probably a bad move, there's not much that I outright beat that he calls (another J8 is a big possibility, 2J perhaps though I reckon he'd have bet the flop, and, I guess, A8, but again he'd probably not raise, maybe). Although there's only precisely two possible sets of cards (the two remaining jacks and two remaining deuces) that beat me, there's not much else it seems he'd raise here. Right enough, he had quad twos and I lost perhaps E60 more than I should've on the hand. Annoying in a way that a) I managed to hit enough to pay off a flop hand that had the board crippled and b) he was a shortish stack - if he had enough to make a full re-raise on the river I wouldn't have raised, but I knew I could put him in and figured he might call a few things I could beat. Marginal, and not a terrible raise but I think I have to just call here, right?
Secondly, again I get sucked in to paying off the nuts because I have a bluffy sort of a read on my opponent. $100 PLO this time, a lot later, I get KKTx with the king suited in hearts, flop brings J94 with two hearts, loose guy bets out, I decide to call because my hand seems to have a decent amount going for it if he has a set or two pair even. Turn brings another heart, he bets pot again, there's still some depth to my stack so I try a small raise, to keep him in if he has a weaker flush and make him pay if he has a set, ready to fold a re-raise. He calls, river blanks, he bets out ($50 into a $70-ish pot). Normally I'd have given up on this somewhere, but I've played this guy before, and seen him do some dumb LAGGY things, including when I had middle set, he check-raised me on the flop (I often fold this to good players) and I put him all in only for him to show bottom two or some crap. Of course, here he wasn't bluffing and had the nut flush. Maybe not the worst play in the world, again, and pretty much "my style" against these sort of guys, but again I'm left feeling I didn't need to lose my stack there.
Had a few moments of annoyance at PLO8 as well - I'm clearly not quite up to playing 7 tables at once on my PC just yet (either that or I'm losing braincells due to inhalation of paint fumes at my house) because I managed to misread the board and waste about 25 bucks on a no-hoper hand. I raised AQT2ss preflop and got two callers with position, flop came something like J28 rainbow, I decide to bet out first to act because I think I've got two pairs, jacks and deuces (and because the 2 might've counterfeited someone's A2 and it's unlikely anyone has my hand beaten here), perhaps because I had AJ2x on another table. Of course, I got one caller, who was too short to try and bluff or bully and I had to check-fold the turn when I didn't catch a miracle straight or something.
I also (on a kind of positive note) ran into one of the worst players I've yet seen at 200PLO8 (this time at Crypto again), although proceeded to lose money to him in two hands he played badly beyond belief. He did have his "lucksack" hat on for a while though as I wasn't the only one he was bad-beating. Worst thing was he wasn't the textbook lucky LAG, who shoves on all sorts and catches, but a passive-loose type guy who was calling any bets with just about any cards. Absolute ATM at PLO8 but he picked up a few pots so he hung around for an hour or so before finally busting.
First hand I tussled with him, he's short (down to his last $90 or so I think). I get TTxx in the SB (can't remember the sidecards, probably some weak-ish low). Only two guys in the pot, so I come along. Flop comes KKT, out of position I decide to check-raise to try to remove the guy with a deep stack and see if I can get the dummy in against me. It works nicely, he calls a $20 check-raise. Turn is something, I bet out again, he calls. River is another K (ugh!); I'm guessing maybe he had a draw of some sort, although I did have him on a K when he called the CR, and I don't want to encourage a bluff, so I bet a small, milking/blocking amount ($10 I think). He thinks for an age, calls and flips up AQQx for a 3 outer, after calling a CR on a KKT flop. yep, he was that bad.
Shortly after, I have AA37 and raise it up. He calls, as does one other tall-ish stack. Both check to me on the QQ4 flop, I decide to bet out half pot or so, fairly cheap way to flush out a Q (I'd probably do the same with something like AQxx). Idiot calls me. Turn brings a lovely A, giving me the top boat and a scabby 37 for a low draw. I decide not to mess around here because he probably needs to be holding 4 cards here to consider calling. I bet pot, he calls, river brings a 6, I put him all in and he calls, flipping 3557 for the low. So he called a QQ4 flop with 3557, then called a full pot bet to chase half a pot on the turn when he didn't even have the first or 2nd nut low draw. Yep, as I told you, he was that bad. I doubt I'll see much more of this guy in these games as he will get his backside handed to him in the customary rapid way that dreadful PLO8 players do, but I hope to play with him again soon.
On another semi-positive, I stacked a short guy in my last PLO8 hand, I held A3TQ or something, A suited in diamonds, and called a small raise (the guy was steaming after being rivered by our friend, mr. fishy). Flop came all diamonds with two low cards, I CRed him all in, he had A2xx and I scooped.
Anyhow, a $300 loss was a bit of a shocker to be honest, but I'm confident I'm playing reasonably at the moment and although I haven't won or played much this month, hoping to get in plenty of hours either side of painting some of my house in the next week or so. I have a lot of bonuses left to collect, with Empire's $100 making slow progress (are those tables tight now or what?) and Stars hopefully going to get there for $150 before the end of the month (though I won't hold my breath!). I still have the majority of the Cryptos to clear, too, which usually net me about $500 or so in total after a lot of play. Additionally, I'm due a couple of months of Empire rakeback (after I played so little in August) so hopefully that'll be another 100, 150 or something, and I'm going to cash in my VIP points there which I think should net me another $80 before I transfer it to Party. On a related point, I've managed to lose/mislay/eat the letter which has my TotalBet account number on it, which I need to validate the account (which has the best part of $1k in it...) on my new computer, so that's a worry. I guess I better email them....
Might get in some hours tonight post-painting, I'm going to a friend's housewarming and clubbing tomorrow night so I might have to miss out on the Saturday night fish-fry this week. Oh well. Here's to better fortune!
I'm adding in the $80 I'll be making from Empire VIP points to make my early month figures look a little better
....
Winnings for October: $270
Hours played: 10
Hourly rate: $27/hr
More money, please, poker! I have hungry electricians to feed!