Huge Fish, Little Pond
by huge on Aug.15, 2011, under Poker
It’s always hard coming back from the WSOP and attempting to re-integrate into whatever semblance of a normal life I have in Seattle (yes, I know my life is far from “normal”, but bear with me) - switching gears from being completely focused and immersed in poker, having to choose between the many different tournaments I could play on any given day, and the inexorable buildup to (and nearly inevitable letdown from) the ever-looming main event … back to humdrum pajama-clad layabout home-(and now dog-)owner married-guy life. In the past it has always been difficult to adjust back to playing poker online, but this year I don’t even have that struggle, since online poker is effectively dead, at least for the time being. I usually have a week or two of limbo/malaise and then get back into playing online and the rest of life, and last year I had a juicy acting gig to look forward to. But this year things are pretty empty & bleak on the poker front – online poker is gone, and for live poker I can drive 20 minutes to play in pathetic little cash games and tournaments or 40 minutes to play in decent-sized cash games and slightly less pathetic tournaments. Add to that my mom’s illness and my month back from Vegas has been unusually depressed & aimless (mom is actually doing surprisingly well given that she was given about a year … about a year ago – she shows some slow signs of deteriorating health but no dramatic downturns or obvious cancer symptoms, and her spirits are, all things considered, not too bad).
In spite of its deficiencies, I’ve been playing some live poker when I can – mostly playing $2-5 no-limit hold’em (cash game) at the Snoqualmie tribal casino (40 minutes East of Seattle). I’ve done well there, I think winning something like 7 out of 8 sessions including a few before the WSOP. That win-rate is probably not sustainable, but I feel good about my ability to churn a profit there. This past Friday I decided to mix it up and try playing at Muckleshoot (another tribal casino, 40 minutes South), thinking that the $3-5 game there might be weak because they run a $5-10 game on Friday nights, so the better players would hopefully be in that game. The game wasn’t really any softer than at Snoqualmie, and I suffered my worst cash game loss in a while, dropping almost $1,000 in a few hours. There was no way I was going to avoid losing money that night given how the cards were falling for me:
- I flopped an overpair with TT on 987 flop, turned the straight, but opponent rivered a full house
- I flopped a flush but (again) opponent rivered a full house
- I flopped the nut straight but lost to a turned flush
- I had AA cracked by 86s
…So I was pretty much doomed to lose money, but in each of those hands I think I could have possibly made a disciplined fold on the river and saved myself some pain – even if I could have found a fold in two of those spots I could have cut the loss in half. Disappointing.
I went back to Muckleshoot yesterday (Saturday) to play in a qualifier tournament for their big Summer Poker Series next month (a $375 buyin satellite that awarded entry into all three of their series events – a $300 buyin, $500 buyin, and $1000 buyin on consecutive days – that’s pretty big dollars for this part of the world), and the first hand dealt to me I had pocket Kings beat by pocket Queens (on a T98J board), and even though this time around I did manage to fold my hand on the turn and lose the minimum, it still hurt, and it was downhill from there for another $375 down the drain.
Refusing to heed the warning signs indicating a Muckleshoot curse, I returned today for their monthly 2nd-Sunday $215 buyin tournament. It’s hard to pass it up given that the only other 3-digit buyin tournaments around here are a weekly $130 and a weekly $100, and the $215 is only once a month. So I made the drive three days in a row and hoped to avoid an antimatter hat-trick.
The tournament started well, and after an hour or so I had run my 10K starting stack well over 20K. I hit a major road bump with AJ on a JT3 flop when a conservative woman donk-bet into me and called my raise, called me again when a 9 hit on the turn (leading me to think she had QJ or KJ) and then bet small into me when a second Ten hit on the river. All the sudden I had to add QT or KT to her range, but she could just as easily be making a blocking bet with my original hand estimate, so I had to call, and sure enough she showed me the KT. Blecchhh.
More ups and downs followed, and I was often well below average chip stack, but I stuck around and found some good spots and made it to the final table with a decent stack. There were 60 players to start, and they were paying the final 6, with $360 for 6th and $4200 for 1st. I played well at the final table, and actually never got my money in bad – I won one coin flip and then lost one … took a mild bad beat when I got all-in with a short stack with AJ vs his A6 and the board ran out KQ7 (OK) … Ten (YES!) … Jack (Booooo!) for a split pot. I accumulated chips on the bubble and was in 3rd when we made the money with six players. Short stacks busted, I did not. With three players left I was the shorter stack, but I ground away at them (the other two were at least decent – I would say they were the two best players I faced in the whole tournament, and one of them actually had some annoying tricks in his arsenal), and when I busted the tricky guy I was still behind but had some room to maneuver. The heads-up match was pretty good – my opponent was very consistently aggressive, maybe a little too consistent. He always raised 3x the big blind, which was a bit on the heavy side, and he seemed to give my smaller raises no respect. I mostly folded to his raises but would gain back the lost chips with an occasional big 3-bet, which he always folded to. I took over the chip lead with a 4-bet shove when he put in 100K chips with A9 and then folded to my shove for maybe 180K more (?). I had AJ so wouldn’t have minded him calling, but I still think it’s a pretty weak play on his part. He continued to play a pretty non-creative style and never really did anything to adapt to the fact that he was playing someone with some skill. He clearly knew that I knew what I was doing, but didn’t seem able to try to do anything different to throw me off balance (I would have had a harder time mopping up the tricky guy). I continued to grind him down and eventually he was short enough that he was forced to call my 3-bet shove holding KQ, and my A4 held up for the win.
1st place out of 60, $4200 prize. That’s my second victory at Muckleshoot – long-time readers will remember the event from August 2007 in which I ended up heads-up with Team Huge member Deb, and came from behind to eke out the victory. I’m pretty sure I haven’t played anywhere near ten events at the Muck, so two outright wins is not too shabby. Looking back at that blog post I am reminded that that win was on the heels of another small live tournament victory, which just happened to fall on this exact same date 4 years ago - funky coincidence. I titled the blog post “nothin’ like winning one live” – so true. Ahhh 2007 … those were the good old days.
-huge
August 15th, 2011 on 5:17 am
Was up at Phils ranch last week and got a copy (pre release) of his Little Gold Book.
He hired Galafond and Annette15 to teach him how to beat the Internet kids.
I’m in Vegas putting it into practice. At Ven noon my flopped str8 was rivers b a flush so I walked over to Ceasers for their 2pm $225
With four left we chopped with me taking $3445. Some of my success was some techniques from Phils book, and most from my hands holding when they were ahead and two doubles when I was short and got it in as a 30-70 dog.
August 16th, 2011 on 12:34 pm
1st place is always good. Congrats!
August 16th, 2011 on 7:58 pm
It’s true, folding to that 4 bet when it meant losing such a large portion of my stack, and when, objectively, I had odds to call, may seem like a weak play, but then again, like I told you, I knew my A9s was no good and I would have hated to end my tournament as a 3 to 1 dog.
Sigh, I clearly need to work on my heads up skills. It kills me to be referred to as “decent”. Although considering that’s the first time I ever even played poker in a casino, I feel like maybe that was a “decent” first outing. Let’s face it, I was crushing everyone… well, almost everyone.
August 17th, 2011 on 12:39 am
well, let’s see … where to begin … sorry for the criticism in my blog post, and how the hell did you find it? … I’ll repeat that you, me, and the guy who finished third were the three best players I saw in the whole tournament … if that was your first outing at casino poker you played *PHENOMENALLY* well. On the A9 hand, maybe the fold on the end is OK if you were confident you were dominated, but the bigger-picture tactic of 3-bet-folding I think is the problem - I think flatting, 3-bet-shoving, or even just folding would have been preferable. This is all coming from someone who, in the wider poker pond, is merely “decent” at heads-up… Congrats on a spectacular first outing.
August 17th, 2011 on 7:47 am
Hahah thanks Laurence. It just occurred to me that you might be a pro, that there probably aren’t a lot of pros in Seattle named Laurence and that it might be cool to see how good the guy was who beat me. Five minutes of searching and the magic of Google and there you were. Sorry, I didn’t mean to freak you out, but after reading how “decent” I was, I just had to say something.
You are right, 3 betting out of position with anything other than a real hand against a guy who has very clearly just told me he has a hand was a bad tactic. I get so aggressive and so confident in my abilities to play any hand that sometimes I forget the basics of poker and, against a far better than decent opponent, that type of play can, and probably did, cost me the game.
And by the way, thanks for the compliments. That was a fun game. I know you do this for a living so you probably wouldn’t be interested in playing at one of my little $10 buy-in home games with me and my friends, but if, instead, you just happen to randomly like playing frisbee golf let me know, you would be more than welcome to join me and my buddies frolf-ing some weekend. It’s not quite as exciting as poker, but it’s easily just as fun. Either way, it was nice meeting you and best of luck to you out there.