Hey guys,
Summary of recent results for those who don't want to read my incomprehensible ramblings:
+$6833.29 on the year: 34% of the way way to my goal for the year (slightly behind schedule....)
I'm running at 6ptbb/100 over ~25K hands at $1/$2, which is pretty good considering some of my crappy play in the preceding weeks.
Long time no post. The main reason for this is just that I haven't been playing much online poker for the last 1.5 months or so. In addition, the majority of the sessions that I played during that time were losing ones, which didn't really make me very motivated to blog about them. ("I lost $800 in four hours! Wheee!")
However, over the last few days, I have come roaring back and am up ~$1.5K in the last week. Last night, rather than being smart and going to sleep, I played until ~1:30AM and had a great session. I ran well, and despite losing a $800 pot with top set against a straight, I ended up more than $1k over the course of a few hours. I would describe the big pots of the session, but they were not super interesting. In the biggest pot that I won, I got into a coinflip with 7d4d against a guy's somewhat maniacally played KK:
To start the hand, I am 200BB+ deep, as is everybody else in the hand. Villain raises in EP to 3bb, guy flats in late position, I call from the BB with 7d4d. Flop comes perfect for my hand: Td5d4h, so I flop a pair and a flush draw. I check to the villain, who makes a normal cbet. The other player in the hand flats. I checkraise and the villain shoves for a bigger than pot sized raise. The other player gets out of the way and I end up calling getting significantly more than 1.5-1 on my money. This call is pretty standard. Worst case scenario I am up against a set and am 30% to win. I think I can discount the villain playing a set like this somewhat since I have a 4 in my hand which reduces the number of sets of 4's he has. Furthermore, in my experience, people tend not to overbet jam sets in spots like that. Against pretty much any other hand, I am a slight favorite or flipping. Thankfully, the Jd rolled off on the river and I scooped the pot.
I was playing with a Full Tilt Red pro called Steve Yea on a number of tables. I pretty much just owned him at every opportunity. I am not impressed with his play at all. According to tableratings.com, he barely breaks even before rakeback so he's pretty much just a low-mid stakes grinder who plays a boring, mechanical, ABC game and is profitable only because he gets 100% of his rake back due to being a Red Pro. I beat up on him pretty mercilessly and exploited him left and right.
One thing that I thought I did especially well over the course of the evening was pick up the small and medium sized pots without contest. I also made some good call downs and some nice thin value bets (i.e. value betting TT on AJ95x board and getting paid off by 88, calling a 3bet PF out of position with 44 and then calling a suspicious turn stab with 3 overs on the board.) I also managed to control potsize well in dangerous spots. I checked behind top pair and an open-ended straight draw on the turn and value bet top two (and got paid off) on the river when the villain had flopped top two pair on the flop and decided slowplaying was the way to go for some reason. (final board of x TJQK rainbow, I had KQ, he had JT).
To go along with call downs and value bets, I also was able to identify good bluffing spots. In one case, I raised a guy off his double barrel turn bet when I had a gutshot + overs. Furthermore, since so many of my opponents are playing robotically at 10 tables, I was able to pick up a lot of pots before the flop when I thought they were trying to pick on loose limpers. Never once did that backfire. Finally, I also chose good spots to 4-bet bluff when I thought others at the table were getting fed up with me and were trying to squeeze me out of pots.
I feel like a significant part of my recent downswing was not being in the right mindset to play (which is also part of the reason that I played so infrequently). However, with my recent results, I think that I am back on my game and playing sharp poker. Onward and upward!
And now what you have all been waiting for, the obligatory Sir Meow picture.
I lost $300 on blackjack and $400 on poker 2 weeks ago when I was at an Indian casino in Oklahoma. First hand at the $1/$2 poker table and I lost $200 on the first hand.
ReplyDeleteVillain on button raised $8, SB calls and I call in BB with 7d, 8d (pot $24). Flop comes K, 8, 7. SB checks, I bet $15, and Villian raises to $35 (pot $74). I reraise $70 more, SB folds and Villain calls (pot $179). Turn is a Queen and I bet $80 and Villain shoves ALL-IN. I am thinking what the hell! There's no straight or flush and I didn't think he had a set with Kings or Queens with a board of (K, 7, 8, Q) I called his All In and he showed K,Q. The dealer put out another Queen on the river so the guy made a full house. It was ugly - ugh! I rebought for another $200 and after 2 hrs lost to the villain again where my pocket Kings lost to his set of 9s after the flop.
That stinks. The other guy played it terribly and should clearly have just folded the flop. Instead he sucked out, which is always annoying. I guess that will happen when people can't fold to save their life.
ReplyDeleteI read a article under the same title some time ago, but this articles quality is much, much better. How you do this.. agen99
ReplyDelete