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Thursday, September 30, 2004

Borgata with the bloggers, part III

Bonus update: To the incensed people demanding Empire's rescinded bonus -- hey, you got a free $50, no? Better than nothing and no raked hands to play? If anything happens to online poker legally and the U.S. Government begins wanting their share, I wouldn't be a bit surprised to see these sites shut down with our money. If you think Empire taking back a measly bonus is bad, wait'll you see sites shut down with your entire bankroll.

I have a manila folder in my filing cabinet labeled "Gambling" back when I used to be organized. In it contains fliers and outdated player's cards from my inaugural visits to Atlantic City with a just-turned-21 grubette. This was a long time ago (sorry, grubette).

grubette would drive to my place and we'd head to the Howard Johnson's or Red Roof Inn where we'd catch the daily weekend Martz bus and hope to be able to sit together and not with one of the smelly seniors protecting their plastic cups of quarters.

After multiple stops in dead areas of Virginia and Maryland and an edited-for-TV movie to pass the time (Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead on the way up, Uncle Buck on the way back), we'd begin seeing billboards and call out each one and their jackpot values.

Our excitement built with each passing sign, and when we finally arrived in the parking lot of the bus terminal, we couldn't wait to burst out and crush the casinos.

We hopped from Bally's to Caesar's, from the Sands to the Claridge. Accumulating player's cards, riding the escalators, pretending we were trust fund babies, marveling at the sheer opulence of it all. I did not know blackjack strategy (I wouldn't always double-down on 11 and wouldn't split 8s). My one brilliant strategy was to eat first so we wouldn't go hungry if we lost everything.

We would spend our allotted 6 hours enmeshed in blackjack and buffets, constantly get carded, load up on free drinks, lose what we brought, then return home vowing never to return, at least for another couple weeks.

That was a good Sunday.

I dug out the folder and spotted two cash advance receipts from credit cards I no longer have. One was for $50 and one was for $100. Those amounts seem so tame now, but back then it was quite a lot, even though I had more money then. We hadn't yet been to Vegas (nor had any desire) and my credit record was crystal clear, diligently paying off each card every month. I was living on my own for the first time, away from roommates, away from college, away from debt.

Taking out that first $100 cash advance at Merv Griffin's Resorts where they charged $14.95 in fees (on top of credit card fees and the increased APR %) was the beginning.

The beginning of what, I don't know, because it hasn't ended.

Atlantic City seems different now. The innocence for me is lost, for sure, and when I go, it's with a pointed purpose more than a sense of fun.

Hanging out with the bloggers in AC last weekend was for fun.


Saturday at the Borgata

After the blogger crew left, I put my name down on the long waiting list in the poker room and give in to blackjack temptation. I hadn't played any pit games at Borgata before and thought I'd sit down for a few (hands? hours? drinks?).

I take first base (my favorite seat) and settle in with a $200 buy-in. The pit-boss swipes my card and I ask if $25 is the minimum to be rated, and he says any amount will rate you.

The table is a fun one and a girl in a halter top high-fives everyone every time she or the table wins. Her friend sits behind her for luck. Fortunately she's more attractive than Pedro Martinez' lucky midget. Halter top rubs this friend's belly before each hand, which became a turn-on.

I couldn't leave the table in more ways than one.

Eric the dealer chats up the table in a sincere and non-tip-inducing way (they surprisingly don't share tips at the Borgata). He dispenses friendly advice and pleasantly chastises players for playing incorrect strategy.

"Sometimes I just have a feeling," the guy in the glasses says as he splits 44 against the dealer's 10... gets another 4, splits that, then gets yet another 4... and doesn't split. "Sure you don't want to split that?" Eric the dealer says. "Because you split the others, and I just want to be sure." Seven 4s were out in his hand.

I don't mind incorrect strategy too terribly much, because in the long run he'll help as much as hurt the table.

It's a $15 minimum table, and I'm betting a consistent $25 (my bj leak, when I should vary) with occasional bets for Eric the dealer. Others vary their bets from $15 to $100. The guy in third base has a wad of 100s that he keeps doling out and losing.

The tall girl to my left asks if anyone minds if she smokes. The belly girl pipes up; she's pregnant but don't let that stop. Rubbing her belly for luck now makes sense. In her 1950s rim specs and appearing very hot-for-teacherish, she certainly didn't look like any Buddha I know, but she had a rock on her finger about Buddha's size.

An ashtray is delivered and the tall girl refrains from smoking out of courtesy until she's down another $100, then she lights with abandon.

She jokes about her bad luck, but you can tell it matters to her. Perhaps not the money especially, but being beaten.

I feel guilty for having green chips in front of me and for winning and for not rebuying. But I've been in her place plenty of times and attempt to enjoy not betting just to get even.

Eventually the tall girl busts out and leaves, the dealer's down ends, and the belly-rubbing ceases enough for me to know it's time to go and cash out ahead $85.


Check-raising 6/12

Carter didn't nap after all and found his way into a 1/2 NL game. I'm amazingly still on the waiting list and opt for a Poker Snack from a constantly grinning blonde who doesn't entirely understand English and the smiling masks that fact. This time chicken noodle soup, a fruit tart, and a water, which my comp points take care of.

I don't know the rate, but I think I've been earning $1/hour for poker play. Far better than any casino in Vegas, where I think the best you can do is $.50/hour at The Orleans. A buffet comp at Bellagio if you're lucky.

From the poker lounge, I watch the final rounds of the Toney/Booker fight from the Pechanga Casino, soundless but front row center on the plasma. It goes the full 12 rounds and despite no KOs and no sound effects, is still compelling seeing Toney's energy and seeing how flabby Booker just stands there and continually pulls the hug maneuver to rest (it's obvious I know nothing about boxing). Toney's punches seem to have no effect on big lug Booker, but Booker just stands and takes it, either putting his gloves in front of his face or hugging like a bear. He reminds me of the crybaby AlCantHang sucked out on earlier that day.

I'm called for 6/12 and get seated at a tricky table. Like the 3/6 from the previous night, there are still many callers to a flop. But this time there are check-raises.

I win one hand total out of the two I was involved in past the flop.

Then I get AKs, raise preflop, one caller, undercards on the flop, and he check-raises. It could've been a move and I might have raised if another caller was in the hand, but I muck on the flop. No need to go further.

Then a loud, obnoxious kid sits to my right. He begins winning with bad cards and he's enjoying being loud.

My out to leave the table comes when Carter stops by and says I have to get to his table no matter what because there are "assholes giving away money."

I say I don't do well in no-limit; he looks at my stack and says I'm not doing well in 6/12.

He's right, and I table-change.


All I know I learned from the WSOP

I'm in the 10seat, which I like because it hides well from the other half of the table.

One of the assholes Carter was talking about is in the 5seat, two seats to Carter's right.

He was a genuine piece of work, with the TV posturing, the staring down, the sunglasses, the goatee, the PokerStars.com hat (which Carter mocked to his face, saying he's gotta be a good player because it's not a PartyPoker hat). There must be a WSOP for Dummies book out there and he read the Cliffs Notes.

Deb, an accountant from Philly wearing an Eagles jersey, takes up the 1seat with a commanding chip lead and goes up against WSOP guy.

WSOP guy raises all-in, then stares at Deb through his sunglasses. Deb plays with her chips, unsure whether to call. He then removes his shades. "I like you," he says. "You're wearing an Eagles Jersey. I like that. Just for you, I'll show you my cards."

Deb's not buying any of it. Good for her. She's a rock and only plays good cards. The flop was A-Q-x. She probably has KK or AJ.

She mucks, and WSOP guy nonchalantly tables his AQ face up over the flop and stacks the chips slowly and deliberately like this table is no match for his scary skills.

From then on, he would raise or go all-in. He was capable of folding, and when he did, it would be face up with him declaring, "I fold the winner to your King-Queen."

I was itching to get in a hand with him and I do with AQs.

I raise preflop, he's the only caller. His stack is hurting from his constant calling and drinking.

The flop is K-x-x.

Trying not to make it obvious, I glance at the size of his stack and bet half of it. My hand shakes a bit, more because of the freezing air conditioning blowing on my head than lack of confidence.

He makes the typical TV poses and then mucks K-7 face up. "I beat you," he says.

I consider showing, but I don't and stack my chips. Later, he asks, "Did you have a King?"

I say no. He nods, as if impressed that I made a play on him.

Then I think quickly and realize I don't want him thinking this, so I say, "I didn't have a King... I had better."

Which, of course, I did: I had a better bluff.

He nods again, rubs his goatee, and reapplies the smug look that he was correct in laying down the winner.

I had him back where I wanted him; unfortunately, I wasn't involved in another hand with him before he busted out.


The lucky flush

I hadn't been calling many hands, but we're now shorthanded and I'm now raising with a variety of groups.

I have A8o and raise on the Button. BB calls.

The flop is undercards, all s.

BB bets all-in, which completely surprises me. I know my A8o are black but I don't remember what my Ace is.

I say, "I'm going to have to look at my cards."

I say this while watching him out of the corner of my eye, gauging his reaction. I see nothing but confidence.

I have the A. His confidence does not include the nut flush, perhaps the reason why he pushed.

It's $60 to call.

I break down how much I'd be willing to chase. $30 on the flop, $30 on the turn? That was the equivalent.

No other callers. It isn't worth it.

I didn't have a read on him, but he seemed a decent player. I tried to think what I would do if I flopped a flush. Wouldn't I check-raise all-in or wouldn't I risk one more card showing before making a move? Especially heads-up?

A low made flush was a possibility, but then so was two pair or a set and he was protecting.

There's no business calling this hand whatsoever, except I wanted to see for future hands.

I call.

A card's burned, then the turn flips a and I win, and it's then that I see his cards -- J Q.

Ouch, I sucked out.

I don't know if this guy knows the WSOP guy, but they have words about my bad call. The flush guy keeps shaking his head, saying he can't believe I called. Yep, a stupid call, I know that, and I feel like Al must've a few hours prior.

I feel awkward and am relieved when he finally leaves.


Reading the rock

Deb is pretty and lights up our corner table with her smile. She's the sole woman at the table and she and Carter have been flirting, or what might constitute flirting over a game of bluffing and cards. From my vantage point, I can see some skin whenever she reaches for the pot and her Eagles jersey rides up. Not that I enjoy admitting I'm a horny ol' grub, but, well, I'm clearly headed that way so why try to hide it.

She raises $15, it's folded to me in the BB. I have A2s and desperately want to call. I want a chance to play Deb, but no one's giving me odds.

From what I'd seen, she only raised strong hands. She would limp with medium pocket pairs. Everything else she folded.

She rarely, rarely lost a pot when she was in a hand.

Yet I call, wanting to see if I could outplay her.

The flop is 2-3-x.

I bet $20 on my bottom pair, treading carefully and trying to watch her hands to see if she had a pocket pair.

She calls.

The turn is 4 and no flush.

Her hands are toward her cards and not her chips. I think she's getting ready to fold.

I bet $35. I'm betting while watching her, and I'm watching her watch the cards. I'm reasonably confident she doesn't have a pocket pair and put her on AK or AQ because she's been showing down nothing but good cards all night.

She calls again.

I don't know where I am, I'm lost in the hand. With the river I plan a pot-sized bet and hope for the best.

The river is 5.

Though there's a slight chance she has 66, I check. She checks and shows AQs for a split pot.

Carter says that was anticlimactic, that he'd expected something bigger from "the rock" and "the hard place."

I know which one I was, horny ol' grub.


Pulling an Annie on Carter

It was fun going up against Carter, and I did a few times. One time we both had AQ (his were suited), he raises, I call, and the flop is nothing. He checks, I check. The turn is a King and he says, "Now that's an interesting card," and bets on it. I fold and he shows AQ. Good bet!

And then my Annie Duke hand.

Carter raises and I call with 10-J. I noticed Carter was showing down less-than-premium cards, so my hand selection scaled down.

The flop is 10-3-3.

He bets, I call.

Turn is 10.

He checks, and I sigh in my moment of drama and WSOPishness. I say, "You showed weakness and now I have to... all-in."

This was a truly horrible move. I had Carter covered and there's no way he could call. I was playing him like a Party player. However, I put him on a big pair. JJ or QQ. Maybe AK. I was hoping he would think my posturing was bullying and he would call. Surely I wouldn't make a move like this and instead milk it further if I had the nuts...?

But Carter's a good player and he wouldn't call without the other 10.

He folds face-up: 99.

I nod and flip over one card. Earlier that day I had seen a rebroadcast of Annie Duke against Phil Hellmuth when he had K7 and she had K9 and the flop was K-9-x. Phil folded, Annie shows her 9 only, and Phil launches into his Hellmuth antics. Wish I could've heard the sound on that.

I'd been waiting all day for this opportunity, and I flip over one card (not knowing which is which) -- and the Jack flips up.

The table gets excited, thinking I made a play on Carter.

I couldn't resist telling him that I did indeed have the 10, but I'm not sure he believed me.

Oooh, I can't wait to try this move in Vegas. Too bad you can't reveal just one card online.


Folding rockets

I can lay down KK when I strongly suspect someone having AA preflop. I did that at The Orleans when I raised big and someone went all-in preflop. Probably the first and only time I'll ever lay down KK.

Two people sat down who looked in their 20s (one -- Joe from Poughkeepsie -- had just turned 21, I had found out). They were moderately club dressy but not WSOP bravura. I could see Carter rubbing his hands at the new fish, but they proved to be anything but.

Joe opens with a raise, I call with 55, and flop a set. An Ace also falls on the flop. Joe bets and I call. Turn is a King. Joe bets and I look at his chipstack and put him all-in.

He nods and calls. He tables AK and my set holds.

He rebuys.

Half an hour later, I have a good stack and am taking advantage of my rock image.

Joe raises $10, there's a call, and I call with Q-10 (unsuited). We were about 7-handed and I'm in late position. With one or two callers, I'll loosen and call. A bigger raise than that and I'd fold.

The flop is a miracle for me: 9-J-K (rainbow).

Joe bets $15, the other guy folds.

I look at his stack (about $50 left) in the same manner as before and raise the minimum (to $30). I considered putting him all-in, but feared he'd fold. I figured this was the best way to get more out of him, rather than raise the turn.

But I went back and forth on how to play this hand. A larger raise would have him thinking why I didn't just put him all-in. But a minimum raise would be suspect as well.

I thought he might move all-in with the rest if I made a minimum raise.

In retrospect, I should have smooth-called and hoped for him to push on the turn. That or so I could raise the turn. Against good players, however, I try to go opposite the standard turn-raise. Little did I know how good he really was. This was not PartyPoker by far.

He looks at the flop, looks at his hand, and mucks face up -- AA.

Other players including me are shocked. I go ahead and show my flopped straight, a bit angered he folded those.

Seeing that he was beat didn't surprise him.

I asked him how he could have folded that and he said, "I learned my lesson" from the 55 hand half an hour ago.

Incredible laydown, I tell him. I believe the sign of a good poker player is knowing when to fold.

He made the best play at the table, and even though I won, I felt I lost because I would never lay down AA to a flop raise. If I had his $50 remaining chipstack, I probably would've raised all-in.

That's why he's the better player.

Later he rebought and sat directly to my right, and we chatted for awhile. This was his first time in a casino, he just turned 21 on Sept. 23, and he's only played poker online for play money.

I wouldn't be at all surprised if we see Joe from Poughkeepsie ascending to a tournament champion very soon.


Two-hour nap

A couple times Carter said he'd sleep for a couple hours before heading to Al's. It's now 9 a.m. and checkout is 11 a.m.

My eyes are hurting and I cash out, planning to shower and return.

I'm up about $200, including what I lost from 6/12.

I go up, pack, and shower. I mop up the smaller shower flood, then crawl into the comfortable bed and relax a bit before checking out.

I should've kept my spot, because I'm now 5th on the waitlist for NL.

I'm completely beat at this point and can't think of anything but the Borgata bed. Plenty of time to sleep on the bus. I felt for Carter, who hadn't slept yet and still needed to drive to Philly.

Wandering around upstairs, it's pretty empty. I play some blackjack at an empty table. Two people sit in for one hand, lose, and leave.

I'm up about $65 and color up. The pit-boss comes over and I ask for reds, then I tip the dealer two reds with the pit-boss watching. No idea if this helps the rating, but couldn't hurt.

Back downstairs and I'm still on the waitlist.

I see some new slots and sit down. I'd hoped to last the entire trip without any slotplay, but my mind was mush.

I played two slot machines for an hour and am down $150. I nod off on the second machine while pressing the buttons.

I finally tear myself away and cashout, bid goodbye to Carter, and cab it to the bus terminal.


Can you hear me now?

The cabbie knows a shortcut, and makes it well within the $8 fare (fares in AC are capped at $8, which I'm sure makes them grumble at what would've been $8+ fares to Borgata).

Departure is 1 p.m. and I'm there and waiting at Bay 11 with a good 15 minutes to spare. Only in my sleep-deprivation I can't find my cell phone. I check my pocket, then my bag, then panic.

This happened the last time I was in Vegas... I was up all night playing slots at Luxor. When I park myself at a machine, I make myself comfortable. I don't straddle two machines like the blue-haired women, but I do put my feet up and relax over girly pina colada drinks. My cell had fallen out of my pocket and I didn't realize this until I had slot-hopped various machines. I retraced my steps, then asked the desk and they suggested Lost & Found. I sighed and trudged to L&F and inquired about a phone. Lo and behold they had it, I just had to prove it was mine by mentioning the Wendy's logo on the startup screen.

This time, I'm feeling hopeless. The phone is small enough that it had always slipped from my fingers since then. Maybe it wanted to be lost.

I try to retrace, recalling I had it in my hand while picking up my bag from the bell desk. Or did I? I had it in the cab, didn't I? Did I lose it at the slots?

I call the cab company. But was it a Yellow Cab or another? The dispatcher broadcasts a message asking for a fare from Borgata to the bus terminal and if anyone left a phone. He asks three times to no response.

Was there any hope of Lost & Found at Borgata? I connect to their Lost & Found department, but apparently they were closed. They gave an email address of lostandfound.com. Not too helpful.

Back and forth from the bay area to the terminal lobby, scanning each person to see if they resembled my cabbie. My memory of faces isn't too good, and in my stupor I couldn't even remember what color my cab was.

A woman lights up a cigarette and asks me for 50 cents. She says she needs bus fare. I say, "Only 50 cents for the bus?" Then she revises to $2. I give her all the change I have and she seemes appreciative.

Then I realize I don't have my calling card with me since getting the new phone. And I need that change for the payphone if I'm to call around trying to hunt it down. I couldn't even call back to the dispatcher to rebroadcast offering a reward.

And somewhere in the interim of going back and forth, I miss the 1 o'clock bus.

I curse myself for being so stupid -- the reason I'm missing Al's party and leaving AC at what I hoped was 1 o'clock was because I'd set up a third date (the first two were my fault that I'd missed and rescheduled).

I lose the phone, I miss the bus, I'll miss Al's party, I'll miss my date (and will be standing her up because her phone number was in the phone), I gave away my change, and here I am waiting for the next bus... which I don't realize until later won't arrive for another five hours.

My circle of Hell is the Atlantic City bus terminal.

I also realize I left the charger in the Borgata hotel room. That made the phone loss a bit easier; it was just as well then, though I could still hunt down another charger. I began thinking about a replacement for the two-month-old phone, maybe one with a speakerphone. The hassle of a new number and programming everyone's number into it. But I could get a clamshell! Dealing with AT&T about a lost phone. I could say it was stolen! I could get a phone with a better camera!

I went back and forth with pros and cons.

Suddenly a bearded man in a turban and gray beard is in front of me. "Hello," he says.

My jaw drops and I'm so ecstatic that I hug him. Then I reconsider -- was this my cabbie? Fortunately, it was.

He says he heard the announcement, found the phone, and came looking for me. I tip him heartily and marvel at my luck on the river.

Only it's still another 5 hours for the next bus.

I call and cancel my date (on her voice mail... as expected, haven't heard back since). Then I go walking. I need to lie down, I'm exhausted. Maybe I could then take a bus to Philly and still catch Al's party. Maybe Carter hasn't left yet.

I walk to the Boardwalk and then to the Irish Inn, where I'd originally planned on staying at the last minute without a reservation. Good thing I didn't -- boarded up until April.

I walk some more and ask for hotel rates -- all were over $150. I just needed it for a couple hours and I wasn't even with a hooker. If I couldn't make Al's, I could at least sleep some, play at the Taj, and catch the 4 a.m. bus.

Finally I opt to return to the terminal and catch the 6:30 (which doesn't arrive until 7), sleep most of the way, and return home late Saturday.

All in all, a great weekend except at the end when I should've folded and gone to Al's party.

Wednesday, September 29, 2004

Borgata with the bloggers, part II

Bonus update: Bad, bad PR move by Empire. Rather than honor an excellent bonus (and because you'd need to clear it in raked hands, they wouldn't be losing money unless your table was full of the bonus clearers), they decided to fix the mistake and take it back. That's fine, but they took advantage of the mistake and waited more than a day to correct it, knowing many people were signing new Empire accounts and many had already begun working on the raked hands. And that's what's bad and what made me cash out my Empire account... at least until the next bonus.


I'm $50 down from 3/6 the previous night and head to B-Bar to meet the bloggers. As loose as I played to adjust to the game, I felt I played the best I could under calling station conditions, so -$50 and all the free Capt&Cokes I could drink wasn't too bad.


B-bar bloggers

I enter the B-Bar and first notice the long hair... of AlCantHang. Then Mrs. CantHang, Pauly, and a bit later, Helixx who gets carded on his first drink. Later when we discover he's the same age as Al, Al says how young Helixx looks for [age] then points to himself and says, "This... this is a hard [age]."

They're already on their second drink, and I have what Pauly's having -- a Yuengling lager (these trendy New Yorkers). I'm still feeling the collective Capt&Cokes from a few hours prior but thankfully they stayed soaking in my stomach. I'm not grubette, after all, and can keep my liquor down (her story still forthcoming...).

We catch up, exchange poker stories, gossip, and just hang at an empty bar with gorgeous bartendresses who really need to learn how to play or deal poker.

Al is playing video poker and is doing well. He's then dealt a flush.

He says, "What should I do? I'm one away from a straight flush."

I say, "You gotta go for the straight flush."

Pauly concurs, "Always."

Al holds all the cards except the inside straight flush card, hits deal, and we chant for the one card he needs. It doesn't come, nor does another flush appear.

"Sucker!" I say. "Loser!" Pauly says.

We hit N.O.W. (Noodles of the World) for lunch (General Tso's for me and Pauly, and Pauly left the broccoli), fuel up on soft drinks and water, then invade the poker room for some no-limit.

I've only played live no-limit ring twice before, at Luxor (three blinds to increase action) and Binion's (no max buy-in!) in August. Online most of my NL experience is the SnGs and multis, but ring games I figured I was going to be bluffed and intimidated out of many pots and my goal was to lose the least that I could.

Helixx gets seated immediately in a 2/4 ring and I wouldn't see him until dinner. I'd had enough of the 3/6 gambling so decide to join the others in NL. We each buy in for the $300 max and start a new table. I intended to just go $100, but succumbed to the blog pressure. I make sure to sit directly to Al's left (a careful calculation made to look random). Two seats to my left is Mrs. CantHang, and Pauly is two seats left of her.

Many folds and everyone plays tight to get a feel for the table. Mrs. is doing very well and crushing the guys on either side of her. She's getting good cards and she's also getting lucky on the turn and river, yet others are letting her draw out for cheap.

The folds keep up and a bring-in of $15 would take the blinds and limpers.

Some shift in strategy, and a couple times I raise with nothing and limp with big cards.

Then I limp with AKo.

Guy to my left also limps in. Flop is K-Q-x. I bet, the guy raises the minimum, it's to me and I consider raising but I call. Tough to put limpers on a hand. I figured he would also be hard-pressed to figure out what I had as well. But I put him on the same hand that I have.

Turn is an Ace. I bet out, he calls. I considered a check-raise, but that might have had an effect on him holding a grudge against me in later rounds. I knew him to be a good player and didn't need his wrath.

River is blank. I bet again, he calls and shows KQ. He nods at my AK as if he knew it all along. From this hand on, the guy never plays a hand against me. His slowplaying KQ also gave me information that I shouldn't go up against him unless I have a big hand.

More tight play, Mrs. builds up a nice stack, and then finally...


A hand with Pauly

Pauly was playing very few hands. When he did, he came in for a lot and took the blinds. In early position, maybe even UTG, he raises $30 and it's folded to Al, who calls. I have JJ and decide to call. If Al hadn't called, I might have folded knowing how tight Pauly was playing.

The flop is J-x-x (undercards). Two s.

Pauly bets $50. Al folds. I say, "Sorry, Pauly, I have to do this," and I reraise all-in. The first all-in of the table, and we're just an hour into playing.

Pauly's clearly puzzled. I know he has a high pocket pair, the Hilton Sisters on up. I have to get him out of the hand in case he catches a higher set. There's also the chance he has A K, and I don't want him to see another or catch a runner.

I also hope he folds so that he doesn't lose the rest of his stack. If the flop were rainbow, I would have smooth-called or min. raised to extract more. I don't think he'll call, I'm hoping it's an easy laydown with AKs or a medium pair.

I'm ready for him to fold and I'm ready to show my Jacks. Al takes out his notebook and jots down some notes with glee.

Pauly thinks for awhile, then calls! He shows KK and my set holds.

I bust him for about $250 and I feel bad. I don't enjoy taking a friend's money, but I would also never slowplay someone I know or play differently than any other opponent.

Pauly stands and leaves for a second, then returns with more chips and removes his jacket. Down to business. No more Dr. Nice Pauly!


A hand with Al

Al was clearly tilting the table. The more Southern Comfort (straight albeit with a bottled water to track the number) he drinks, the looser and more aggressive he plays.

A players like Al at the table is a gift. When I see a player like this, I need to scrutinize to see if it's an act or if he's really playing badly. In most cases it's the latter. With Al, particularly because he told me his plan beforehand, he was doing it intentionally with the hope to loosen the table and then switch gears. I think the one leak in this maneuver is he feels too much sympathy for putting a bad beat on someone.

I was involved in a number of hands with him and seemed to read him correctly -- he more or less played the opposite. If he bet strong, he had nothing and a reraise would get him to fold (even if I reraised with nothing). If he bet weak or checked, he had something and it was wise to check behind. Of course, him sitting directly to my right was a great benefit.

He announces his short-stack intentions and proceeds to push in position and raise big with a variety of hands that he doesn't show. "Raise or fold, no limping" became his motto. This would later bring a guy close to tears (see below) and brought a threat from the KQ guy to my left who leaned behind me and warned Al: "Every time you raise, I'm going to raise you. Every time. Just so you know."

Yee-ikes. We're all pissing in our shorts, KQ slowplaying dude. What happened to a friendly fun game of poker?

The guy did seem to take a liking to me, though, and chatted me up about other hands and tables from the previous night.

I could not pick up a read from him, but he seemed to stay out of my way whenever I raised. This led me to less limping with loose hands, fearing a raise from him. He seemed a solid enough player who got his ass whooped a few times from Mrs. CantHang, until the tables turned (see below).

Pauly says he hasn't heard from me in awhile, so I say I'll raise the next hand in the dark.

Next hand comes, some limpers, and I raise $20 without looking at my cards. Al made this raise-in-the-dark and bet-in-the-dark move in a previous hand, and I thought I'd give it a go.

It's folded to Al, who's about to fold. I remind him that I told Pauly I would raise dark. So Al changes his mind and goes all-in.

I then have to look at my cards: KTo. I have to take it the whole way, especially knowing Al was about to fold and probably has undercards. It's about $60 to call. I consider that I likely have a coinflip hand, I'm already up a good amount, and I wanted to see (and wanted the table to see, for future plays) what hand he's capable of pushing with. This hand could loosen the table way up.

So I call. He has 69s and catches a 9. I double him up.

Yep, we bloggers definitely like to gamble!


Don't cry for me, Al-gentina

This was the hand of the night.

MonkeyBoyJr. attaches to Al's left leg for luck. Cocktail waitresses ask if he knows there's a monkey on his leg. Al refrains from asking if they know there're boulders in their chests.

Drinks are also coming fast. New Capt&Cokes that Al orders for me arrive before I've finished my old.

Al raises and he gets one caller: this young kid in the 1seat with a pretty yet bored girlfriend that was MonkeyBoyJr.-worthy.

The Kid arranged his chips in neat stacks of $50 and $100 and was careful to keep them organized in a row. It looked like it mattered to him.

Details are a bit sketchy because I wasn't involved in the hand, but as I can remember in my Capt&Coke stupor:

The flop is K-x-x.

Al bets, the Kid calls.

The turn is blank but before it's even shown, Al announces he's betting in the dark.

Al pushes two large stacks of chips to bet (about $100), then he goes back for more. But he's unable to because it was two separate moves and he didn't announce the amount of his bet.

If I didn't know him, I would think this was an angle and I'd be prone to calling.

The Kid mumbles that he (the Kid) is dumb for calling and that he should never have called in the first place.

He's right.

But he does.

Before the river is burned and shown, Al goes all-in.

The Kid shakes his head, says he's committed, and calls.

Al says, "Ace!" as he shows A-10.

The Kid crinkles his face as he sees the cards, expecting to see the Ace with a King. Then he looks at the river card: Ace.

As the Kid's KJo falls flaccid out of his hand, the Kid slams the table and stands erect. He pounds the table again.

Al apologizes profusely, says that was a bad beat, that he was trying to push him off, that he's used to getting beats like that on PartyPoker. All the while stacking his chips.

The Kid sits and stands, sits and stands. Like he's been punched and can't decide whether to go for the 10-count or stand up and get beaten some more. He takes off his baseball cap, turns it around, turns it around again.

Al's still counting chips.

Finally the Kid sits back down and doesn't look at anyone, going into the worst sulk since grubby's preschool days when he didn't get the Matchbox car he really wanted.

Would he have reacted this way if the girlfriend were there?

Al excuses himself, says he's going to take a break. Probably to let the guy cool off.

If it were me, I'd probably play bad hands against the guy to further tilt him. Perhaps he'd even have to throw his girlfriend into the pot after he lost everything. Or if I were Al, I'd cash out to not reward that behavior and not let him win back any of his money.

Upstairs, Al runs into the girlfriend who asks how her beau's doing. Al says, "I just put the worst beat on your boyfriend, I wouldn't go down there."

I tell Al he should've said, "Wanna go spend some of your boyfriend's money?"

Then later I say, "There goes the MonkeyBoyJr. photo op," pointing to the girlfriend. And we both shake our heads solemnly at a missed opportunity for another notch on MonkeyBoyJr.'s banana.

The Kid completely shuts down. Other people at the table try to console him, saying it happens and that he read him right and the long-haired hippie in the Eagles jersey happened to get lucky.

Me, I'm thinking the Kid made a horrible call. Four times. He called a raise with KJo preflop. When the flop gave a King, he called with a medium kicker (he should've raised if he thought he read Al correctly or raised to see what Al would do). Then he called the turn close-to-all-in, then called the river. The least mistake he made was calling the river, since it was only a few more dollars at that point.

The Kid could've folded at any time but elected to stay the whole way. And if that's his plan, he should've risked his money upfront. If I'm going down with the ship, I'm sure as hell taking the anchor with me and taking control of the hand. I'm not rearranging deckchairs.

The Kid deserved to lose a $400 pot.

And throughout all his sulking and refusing eye contact for 30 minutes and throwing out angry bets and calls like the pissy prepubescent teen he reverted to, I don't think he once blamed himself for how badly he played that hand.

Poor baby, no one felt sorry for you.

Before the hand, his girlfriend watched him watch the candy and cigarette girl (and by "girl" I mean she was last called that 50 years ago). As his eyes roamed, he glanced at the girlfriend and said, "What?" The girlfriend said, "Just watching you."

So we know who wears the pants in that relationship. And it ain't the guy who cries.

By the time Al returns, the Kid is back up to a decent amount. Al apologizes again and shakes hands, and all was well until karma rears its head and Al gets the brunt of a suckout (a flopped straight for Al, two pair for crybaby, and baby's boat on the turn).

I hear the Kid say to his girlfriend that up to that point he had almost won what he lost the previous night. Er, think she was getting any of it? Not from her bored look.

By the time we left, however, the Kid had at least $1200 in front of him, wore a wide smile on his face, and his hands caressed his little stacks of $50 and $100 each.

If you're playing this far over your head to have beats affect you to the point you act like a whining baby in public, it's time to call a 1-800 number.


Dr. Pauly and Senor Al No Puede Colgar

Al is in very nice shape and leads the table with about $500.

Pauly raises a hand and Al calls to a flop of J-J-x.

Al bets out and Pauly calls.

The turn is blank and now Al bets big.

This was a similar pattern to how Al played the crying guy. Based on my run-ins with Al in previous hands, I knew he didn't have a Jack or he would've checked. Maybe a medium pocket pair though. I didn't know what Pauly had, except that if he raised pre, he had a big hand. I put him on AK which would've been an easy fold... yet his brain was smoking the same way when I was in his hand, so perhaps he had KK again.

Pauly finally mucks.

Al shows A 7 for a brilliant bluff with Ace high.

I get to see Pauly lose his temper and pound the table and leave for a bit (I later found out he laid down the Hilton Sisters). He didn't cry, though.

This was the first hand I saw crybaby peer at the A7s and look up at Al with a devilish smile. The context was clear -- he was gunning for Al and knew he could take him.

About this time Carter sat down. My cell reception was dead in the poker room, but he had found us (rather, found Al) and was lying in wait at another table before ours opened up.

The seat he took was a guy who called every hand. I raised UTG, the guy called from SB, and Al called BB. Flop was K-K-7. The guy checks, Al bets big, I raise him double, and now the guy goes all-in. Easy folds for Al and me, and the guy shows K7o. Yep, figured he'd bust out soon.


Mrs. King and the Queen

I was never involved in a hand with Mrs. CantHang, but seemingly everyone else was... including Al.

This hand involved KQ guy to my left. Mrs. raises between $15 and $30, and the guy calls.

Flop is 2-3-x (undercard).

Mrs. bets, the guy calls. For him to call means to me he's sitting on something big and is waiting to raise the turn. But that something big could still be a big pocket pair.

Turn is 2.

Mrs. bets the same as her flop bet, and this time the guy goes all-in.

Mrs. thinks long and hard. I'm thinking the guy was waiting 3 hours to finally get a hand against her and he's not going to be making a play without something strong. The only person at the table making big bully bets was Al. Mrs. not betting a large amount made it difficult to read the guy -- if he had gone over the top on her large bet, I'd have an easier time of laying down. Knowing how the guy was foaming at the mouth to be involved in a hand with her (or someone of the CantHang family to make good on his threat), I'd be looking for reasons to fold.

She finally calls and shows KK. The guy has 33 for a flopped set.

Mrs. handles it well and gently slides her chips into the guy's stack, bypassing the pot completely. She congratulates the guy, then excuses herself and heads upstairs.

A class act. No tears were shed, unlike the guy in the 1seat.

A few hands later, Mrs. CantHang returns and makes a beeline to the KQ guy like she's on a mission. Anyone else, I would've thought she held a knife. Instead of a walk-by stabbing, she grabs the shoulders of the guy and thanks him for putting the beat on her. The guy apologizes. Mrs. shrugs off the apology, as she explains that she cooled off by going upstairs, took her $10 freeplay in slots, doubled her money by the second pull, then did a third pull and hit for $1200, as she fans her Franklins.

Wow.

We cash out shortly afterwards, stomachs aching from too much alcohol. I think Al is sweating SoCo at this point and lucky for him he married his designated driver.

I'm up $220, mostly thanks to that first hand with Pauly.

It's a pretty good crowd for a Friday (not), and we head for burgers and fries at the gelato bar across from Gypsy.

We chat about poker, writing, girls, MonkeyBoyJr., and I find out Al and I have both eaten Wendy's salt packets accidentally.

Mrs. CantHang graciously picks up the tab and we exchange goodbyes.

Helixx is the first, as he prepares for the drive to Ocean City. Carter's next to head upstairs to get a nap in before hunkering down to Saturday night poker at the Borgata.

Before departing, the rest of us hunt down a quick dancing hippie hippo slot machine in honor of Al.

My $10 freeplay goes nowhere, but Mrs. gets lucky with a free round of bonus spins. I resist putting any of my own money into the machine.

As Mr. & Mrs. C. and Pauly walk away, I'm unsettled knowing that left to my own devices with rows of tempting slots and blackjack tables and an extra $220 in my pocket, I'm liable to lose it all.


(next... can you hear me now?)

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

Borgata with the bloggers, part I


Bonus update: Empire has a phenomenal reload bonus of 100 percent up to $500 using the bonus code MATCHBONUSEP. You'll have 30 days to work off 2500 raked hands (only 5x). I suspect this is a mistake, so I don't anticipate it working very much longer. Take it while you can! Once it's sitting in your account, they'll honor it.

9/29/04 -- This code spread too far and Empire revoked and replaced it with a HOTSEP (10 percent up to $100 retroactively). To make up for their mistake, they've released this bonus automatically with no raked hand requirement. A little consolation.

Last year was the last time I was in Atlantic City right before a good friend moved to San Francisco. We both began playing seriously early last year (i.e., became Sklansky disciples). Now he's off winning first place multis for $8000+ paydays on the west coast, and I'm... not.

I had planned to stay where we usually did at the Irish Inn, this quaint rustic (read: cheap with shared bathrooms and no air conditioning) hotel off the boardwalk and a 10-minute walk from the Taj. Downstairs is the restaurant bar with cheap eats (a po' man's special for $1.95) and brunette Irish servers in shorts. It's the type of 24-hour bar where just like in the movies, everyone spontaneously bursts into a Neil Diamond song... only they're different Neil Diamond songs... at the same time.

But if not to just check out their rooms, I figured I'd splurge at the Borgata, which I'd visited several times but never stayed.

I booked Thursday and Friday, after first being told they were sold out Friday. I called back a few minutes later on the toll line and got booked with no problem. That's a tip with these infuriating casinos. No casino is every truly sold out; why would they ask for your player's number first? If they say so, hang up and try again or try the info line to get a different department. Then lay on the saccharine, preferably with a Southern accent ("my wife loooves your spa and it's our anniversary and she'd just KILL me if we shacked up at that dirty' ol bankrupt Taj"). Not saying I do this, but I'm not above it. All's fair in love and casino rooms.

No poker room rate for Friday and Saturday (and comp dollars now expire after 4+ months of nonuse), but an excellent Sunday-Thursday bargain of $59 with a minimum 4 hours of poker play. Easy!

Thursday at the last minute, my ride cancels. I'd planned to go up with a friend but he ran into work and car problems and couldn't go. I scramble to find another way.

Driving myself was the last resort. I worry about the condition of my 11-year-old car with a slow leak in the right front tire and a nail stuck in the rear left tire, and I can't drive longer than two hours without falling asleep, which will make a cross-country trip quite the experience (it would take me at least two weeks).

I had the Greyhound schedule memorized (basically 5:45 p.m. and 5:50 p.m. -- if I missed one, I was in for a 2-hour wait and a 6-hour trip with many stops) as a backup and took a cab up to the terminal behind Union Station. The cab turned out to be a Mercedes with an Albanian driver (the flag on his keychain) complaining about his fares' low tipping and the luxury of his $80,000 vehicle, as he strokes the leather and GPS map like a James Bond villain pets his cat.

He gets me there at a flat rate but also at a slow 40 mph because he's twisting his head looking at me the entire time and spouting off about his $350,000 insurance policy and his cheap customers who don't know how good they got it. I take the hint and tip him well, then feel like an immediate target stepping out of a Mercedes at the bus terminal that's valued less than one of his car payments.

No line, and the cost of the roundtrip bus: $34. Less than the cab.

Several stops, some napping, and I'm dropped at the Taj a bit over 4 hours later. I walk through the cacophony of slot machines, feeling ill at the smoke and sounds and without the least desire to sit down at one. I cash in my $17 voucher from a grumpy cashier (making the roundtrip $17... why don't I do this more often?), grab a hotdog pretzel, and cab it to the Borgata.

I check in at 11 p.m. to no lines at all.

No traffic, no lines, poker room rate... Thursday night arrivals are the nuts.

The Borgata's version of hotel security is a guy standing outside the Living Room (a place for guests to hang out and ogle the eye candy from the privacy of their own glass window or, reverse that, a zoo and we're the animals! Take that, Shyamalan!) glancing at yellow keycards. A flash of yellow anything would get you in. And that includes a hooker on your arm wearing a plastic yellow miniskirt (not me, my miniskirt is nylon black). She walked in just fine escorted by a guy with a yellow card.

Room 2121 is nice and serviceable, with a view of the roof and the Trump Marina. Worth the $59 poker rate but certainly not the $399 Fri/Sat rate, particularly considering I played all night Friday. An empty fridge in the cabinet, along with a coffeemaker. Overboard with the phones -- a cordless by the bed, another on a table, and another by the toilet. I love the big solid wooden doors that are also in their restrooms. Gives you a real sense of privacy while poopin'.


I'll have the 3/6 to start

No waiting list (Thursday!), and after a Poker Snack (as it read on the room bill) of chicken fingers, fries, a fruit tart, and bottled water ($13), I buy into a 3/6 game.

Loose as it ever was, most flops were seen by at least six people.

None of my big pockets, AK, or AQ hold up. One hand I have AA in the big blind with seven callers. I raise, and all seven call.

The flop is K-2-J. I check, UTG bets, four people call, and I raise. Even a check-raise doesn't shake anyone out.

In the end, I lose to 2-4 when a 4 hits the river. At least he didn't raise me.

I play looser, I refresh my Capt&Coke drink of choice, and I rebuy $100.

I have $1500 with me and intentionally skipped the higher limits because I didn't want to be broke before meeting the bloggers.

Already $100 into the 3/6 game, but I was having fun.

A guy begins tilting majorly and a friend of his pops by, saying, "Dude, I can't believe it. I got rivered. I had King-Two and the guy caught his kicker on the river." Which would mean his 2 kicker was dead anyway regardless of the river.

I stick around, seeing that his friend nodded in sympathy and seeing the types of hands he's tilting with.

A few hands later I have 56o. Not even suited but in position with half of New Jersey limping.

I join the party and limp along to a Q-6-3 flop. Tilty bets, I figure the pot is now big enough to make the call with medium pair, another caller.

Turn is a 6. Tilty bets, I smooth call to get the other guy to call, and he does.

River is blank. I raise here, and get Tilty to pull a Hellmuth and storm away. But not without calling. I'm so evil.

He doesn't show, but I put him on Q2.

Our table breaks and I move to another table with a fellow Capt&Coke brother to my right. Only his drinking seems to be affecting his play -- he's calling every hand and betting every flop even if it was raised pre. The new dealer nicknames him Gage, after the guy in the Mortal Combat movie, which I nod in recognition as if I know what the young'uns are talking about.

A Fight Club (a movie I do know about) drunk guy in the 3seat is raising every hand and taking his cards off the table to look at them before waiting 60 seconds on his action. He's been warned twice by the floor and is given a third-time-you're-out warning.

He raises a hand and I decide to call with QJs in the BB.

Flop is Q-J-x.

Gage is in the SB and, as expected, bets out. I raise. Player to my left calls, along with Fight Club.

Turn is blank. Gage bets out, I raise. A call and Fight Club takes his cards off the table to look at them once again, shows everyone carelessly, and mucks.

The floor was standing watching the whole hand and says, "And that's three. You're on a one-hour break. Dealer, deal him out next hand."

Fight Club doesn't hear any of this or pretends not to. Number one rule: you do not talk about Fight Club.

The river is blank. Gage checks, I bet. The other guy folds. Gage calls with K-J and I take down a healthy pot. Gage says, "Just want to see what people are made of."

Yet even though he now knew it wasn't frogs and snails and puppy dog tails, he continued to bet out every flop.

The next hand the dealer skips Fight Club, who immediately stands and explodes. The dealer looks like an Army brat and can handle himself (on your action, the dealer pounds his fist in front of you, which I kinda liked and took to pounding my fist when checking). Army dealer says to call the floor. Fight Club does and he and the floor get into each other's faces within spittin' distance. Security circles FC and I think he's a bit outnumbered, but I may be seeing double. FC makes a wise decision and elects to leave.

It's always sad seeing the ATM close for the night.

One huge pot had me limp with Q8s (yep, my kicker standards went down) with everyone checking a flop of 7-9-J (two of my suit). The turn is 10. I check, the guy to my left bets, a few callers, and I check-raise. I fear KQ just a bit and wanted to see if anyone had it.

The guy to my left 3bets, it's called around. And I go ahead and cap. More callers.

KQ possible, but I'm convinced the guy to my left would've raised preflop.

The river is an 8, putting a board of 7-8-9-10-J out there.

Guy to my left has 89. And the one guy who called the whole way, through all those raises... he had Q6o, my hand is counterfeited, and we split the pot.

I'm well past 4 hours of play at this point, but wanted to lock in the poker rate and double my hours to be safe before clocking out.

I get one more Capt&Coke to go, thinking it's ironic that I had a Capt&Coke for dinner and here I am having it for breakfast.

I clock out and request the poker room discount (not guaranteed and still at the discretion of management). They write down my player's number and room number in a little notebook. She has cute handwriting and I'm smitten. Who needs computers?


Bedtime for grubby

The Borgata bed is the most comfortable I've ever been in. I could drown in dreams in the 300-thread-count white sheets. At home, I sleep on a hard mattress or the couch if I'm too lazy to get up. Wherever I move next, I resolve to live like a normal grub and get a real bed with real box springs and a real mattress that I can stuff counterfeit money into. With 300-thread-count white sheets.

I hit the pillow at 8 a.m. The alarm goes off at 11:30. Immediately after the phone rings -- it's Al, they just rolled in. I say I'll be down soon and hop in the shower.

Which takes longer than anticipated, because I'm mopping the mini-flood I made. Borgata has nice large glass showers (for two) but engineering was a little lax in sealing the hinge area completely, so when the showerhead points to it, water sprays through and has a habit of building a nice puddle.

The oversized towels sop up the water nicely, as I create a little white mountain resembling Richard Dreyfuss' mashed potatoes, and I leave a couple dollars to tip my mistake (which would occur again the next day).

And I head downstairs to meet the infamous bloggers.


next... B-bar bloggers...

Monday, September 27, 2004

Grubby's Hand of the Week #19

Bonus update: through Sept. 28, PokerStars has a reload bonus of 20 percent up to $120 (no bonus code required).

Bonus update II: Party has a rare reload bonus of 15 percent up to $100 using the bonus code SEPREL04. Rare because it's good for all players! Hurry on this one, not sure when the expiration date is. Could be the end of September, could be sooner if they discover it wasn't intended for all.

Bonus update III: through Oct. 4, UltimateBet has a reload bonus of 50 percent up to $100 (no bonus code required).

Thank goodness for reload bonuses! I took advantage of all three. Signup bonuses are well and good, but does no good if you already have accounts at the sites. Nice when they share the love with their current customers. Reload bonuses can significantly increase your hourly rate and soften those bad beats. I know they do for me.


Had a blast at the Borgata.

My birthday was Friday and I couldn't have asked for a better time, hanging out and playing cards with AlCantHang (and meeting MonkeyBoyJr.!), Mrs. AlCantHang, Pauly, Carter, and Helixx.

Something I never anticipated when originally brainstorming Poker Grub with grubette was befriending fellow degenerates who love poker (and Wendy's) as much as I do. From reading their poker blogs I feel I know them and when meeting in person it was like long-lost family reunited... only we had something more in common than blood (have you ever met that long-lost great-aunt from an old world country who doesn't speak English and is 90 years old but whom you're obligated to hug for pictures for the sake of the family tree because you share genes, a mole, and a middle initial?).

There are close parallels between poker and writing. I believe poker is as creative an endeavor as anything (Al bluffing Pauly with Ace high) and both, at least online, are solitary.

The close-knit common bond between the type of person who would write introspective poker blogs for themselves and never expect anyone else to read them... well, that's my kind of family.

Everyone was just as I'd imagined them, with the exception of Mrs. AlCantHang who is even more lovely and charming in person than she comes across in Al's stories.

I only wish I could've met iggy the dwarf and Boy "don't call me BG" Genius, but I know it's in the cards sooner or later.

Was it a good move missing Al's big shindig in favor of a pre-arranged date with a girl, whom I'd already cancelled on not once but twice (the first a couple weeks ago, the second a last-minute Thursday when I left to AC). I can't miss the third time, can I? Where are my priorities? Where is the key to this ball and chain?

But more on that and the Borgata later when I can get my thoughts together.

For now, the Hand of the Week!

Congrats to AgentLace who correctly guessed that last week MP1 played the incredibly bad hand of QJo and still stuck around to donate the rest of his money. A.L. wins $35 and is the next Ken Jennings as he takes the lead of HoW champion (he's won two so far).

Here's #19...


Grubby's Hand of the Week #19
for Monday, September 27, 2004

Prize: $20


The first person to correctly guess my opponent's hand before next Monday wins. Suits may or may not matter. One guess per person, please. Winner will be declared here that Monday. If there's no winner, $5 will be added to the prize pool.

This week's HoW is sponsored by the above three sites with the reload bonuses. If you haven't signed up yet and would like to support more of these quizzes, consider using one of those links. If you're the winner and you're signed up through me, the prize is doubled for you.

Leave your guess in the comments section below. You can be Anonymous without registering through Blogger, but do include your name so I know whose guess is whose.

If you don't include contact info and you're the winner, email me after the quiz is over.

Good luck and good skills,




Party Poker 1/2 Hold'em (6 max, 6 handed) converter

Preflop: grubby is MP with 7 8
1 fold, grubby calls, CO raises, Button 3-bets, 2 folds, grubby calls, CO caps, Button calls, grubby calls.

Flop: (13.50 SB) 8 5 8 (3 players)
grubby bets, CO raises, Button folds, grubby calls.

Turn: (8.75 BB) T (2 players)
grubby checks, CO bets, grubby raises, CO 3-bets, grubby caps, CO calls.

River: (16.75 BB) 7 (2 players)
grubby bets, CO raises, grubby 3-bets, CO caps, grubby calls.

Final Pot: 24.75 BB
Main Pot: 24.75 BB, between CO and grubby.


I played some 1/2 limit to get back into the swing of loose ring play, so I could be prepared for the Borgata.

This hand was untypical Party, since it mostly seems loose-weak than this much aggression. Yet it was also typical of Party in that you had some fish who called 3bets from early position (i.e., me).

Probably a bad move to lead the flop betting, but while I wanted a raise, I didn't want to lose the Button. A check-raise here might have also slowed them down on the turn.

I opted for betting out and just calling the flop reraise for deception. Probably bad at this point, being heads-up. My plan was to pop it on the turn if the 3flush didn't come.

With his continued aggression on the turn, I began to think he had 10-10... and if so, I'm committed to giving him all my money.

Did I luck out on the river? Hmmm...

For $20 and a chance to tie AgentLace's record, what did CO have?

Wednesday, September 22, 2004

Respecting the roll, recordkeeping, and reorganization (for real)

I have two bankrolls that in my mind are separate but are in fact more married than they should be.

My gambling bankroll is NETeller, for online poker and online casinos.

My living bankroll is everything else, comprising my checking and PayPal accounts, plus ancillary emergency funds that combined would last maybe, oh, three-months' rent: ING Direct (forgot the password since depositing the minimum), languishing penny stocks and mutual funds near and past bankruptcy, and a credit union account at the minimum just to maintain it. It's not worth the effort to cash these things out, but they're there if I need them. My main monthly expenses are rent, car, garage, utilities, insurance, credit card, plays & movies, Wendy's, and casino trips.

When I play live and when I make trips to Vegas, it all comes out of my regular account and I don't touch the NETeller roll. Not without intent; when I withdraw from checking I simply neglect to pull out the same amount from NETeller to refund myself the difference.

I keep a constant stream of depositing and withdrawing between NETeller and poker/casino sites. I try to keep NETeller at least partially funded, for possible reload bonuses that may crop up. If I find NETeller empty, I'll deposit from my checking account via IGM-Pay (if Party & skins) or InstaCash where the site picks up the outrageous 8.9 percent fee. IGM-Pay is usually good enough if NETeller's empty, because I can get around the lag time by craftily going from bank -> Party -> NETeller -> the place I want to deposit.

These deposits I also inevitably forget to restock from the NETeller roll.

My recent records have been piss-poor -- nothing but chicken scratch on a pad of "While You Were Out" paper so cheap the adhesive is crumbling and the pages are strewn about, out of order. I'd intended to plug the data into PokerCharts, where I'd been keeping track of my play for over a year, but more and more it seemed a futile, depressing, inaccurate effort (it's still a terrific site, but for my purposes it wasn't what I was looking for). I've tricked myself into thinking my bottom line is what's in NETeller and the various poker sites (I never keep a balance in the casino sites). Yet in reality, I've been making deposits all along.

This makes for a terribly confused grubby when trying to figure how I'm running and where I stand.

Add to this -- whenever NETeller bloats a certain amount, I interpret this to give me permission to play blackjack and slots. NETeller then goes down (because you can't win at blackjack or slots), I work in poker to drive it back up, and the whole process is repeated.

To show how volatile this slot habit of mine is, for the month of August at Lucky Nugget (I won't even give the link, because you shouldn't follow in this behavior), I played through over $360,000 at $4.50 per spin. Now that's a hell of a lot of gambling and if you work through standard deviation, either I've won a ton or I've made a ton of deposits.

Did I mention you can't win in slots?

It doesn't take a rocket scientologist to crunch numbers or a peek into my NETeller's emptiness to realize that overall, I've lost. That much playthrough with whatever house edge percentage cannot merely break-even.

As retribution for my slot sins, here's the cold, hard data from my past six months of play at Lucky Nugget:

March: $1300 deposits - $0 withdrawals = ($1300)
April: $1675 deposits - $467 withdrawals = ($1208)
May: $4475 deposits - $1874 withdrawals = ($2601)
June: $3050 deposits - $1794 withdrawals = ($1256)
July: $4800 deposits - $4062 withdrawals = ($738)
August: $14,350 deposits - $12,963.86 withdrawals = ($1386.14)

The past six months have me losing $8489.14 at this one casino. This was all money I had won in poker that I chose to throw away in slots. If I didn't touch Nugget, I would have over $8K in my account. This August was particularly insane (June and July's playthroughs were $120K each) and concentrated because I used Nugget as my sole casino. August was also over only three weeks, since I spent a week in Vegas.

I have never won from here. Why do I keep playing?

Slots -- or rather, the big score -- are incredibly enticing to me. Belle Rock announced new slots at the end of August, which I was first in line to play that weekday, workday morning and thought nothing of depositing $500 to play on each. The thinking is that new slots mean looser slots, because they want people to hit big so that they can post jackpot winners and attract more players. This was faulty thinking, because nothing hit. Tally Ho, King Cashalot: bah to you.

I came to poker from blackjack and slots, and my poker game is consequently more loose-aggressive than it should be. This is why shorthanded and heads-up games appeal so much more to me than paint-drying full ring.

Up to now, poker has largely been a form of therapy and escape for me. When I'm jostled from that consciousness, I revert back to the bad crowd of the -EV bell and whistle games. I am not at the point where I am unaffected and can let bad beats wash over me.

Because I'll soon be relying on poker for more than just entertainment, I'm introducing some changes that have already begun this month:
  • Better records. My recordkeeping is now much more exact and meticulous, thanks to Excel. I have constantly updating statistics on how I'm doing along with my hourly and daily rate.
  • Back it up with PokerTracker. All of my ring and SnG data is being filtered through PT for further scrutiny.
  • Play mostly SnGs. My profitability is less, but the variance is also less. I may even drop down a level for next month to shrink variance still more.
  • Sign up to a rakeback program, which after this month of 400 50+5 SnGs, would've resulted in $500.
  • Drastically cut down my blackjack and slot play (I know myself too well to stray away completely from the slot monster). To replace that need for something mindless and tiltproof, I'll get a video game where I can shoot a lot of zombies and drive cars into walls.
  • Ignore bonuses at new places.
  • And finally, and this is the biggee -- make regular withdrawals from NETeller to my bank account. The first one was today and will continue every other Wednesday, coinciding in time and amount with my regular biweekly paycheck... eventually replacing it. And further, unless inevitable, I won't make any more bank deposits to NETeller and will keep the two bankrolls separate.
A month of firsts with more changes in store, but baby steps for now.

I'm off to Atlantic City (funded by the appropriate bankroll) tomorrow to join the blogger (re)union.

In the meantime, look forward to a drunken grubette post!



lunch:
turkey & swiss & cream cheese on sundried tomato bagel
Peanut M&Ms
Kit Kat
Nestle's Crunch
Snickers
M&Mazing

3 Diet Cokes
1 Diet Coke with lime

dinner:
McDonald's premium chicken strips
fries

Monday, September 20, 2004

Grubby's Hand of the Week #18

That sure was a tough one for last week's Hand of the Week #17. ToddCommish actually came close with his Hammer guess, but I'm waiting for the one week no one guesses 27o before sneaking it in.

Nope, the oddball Button had a truly oddball hand. Compared with a lot of showdowns at Party, even this one was surprising. And just when you think you've seen it all.

Button had...

Are you ready?

He had...

Are you sitting down?

Still in level 1, the Button raised preflop and called a 3bet (including one all-in) with...

2 5.

Yep, you read that right.

Go back and check Hand of the Week #17 and see how truly insane this call was. He raised from the Button trying to steal. When BB reraised and UTG reraised all-in, I suppose he was looking at a big gamblin' pot where any two cards could win.

And he did.

With a pair of 2s.

And it's a 50+5 SnG.

Jeesh, to think I folded the winner. Maybe I should start making calls like that. Goodness knows my big pockets were continually pummelled by small pockets that hit their sets all last week. Would he have called if his 2-5 was unsuited? It boggles the mind.

I dug up the stats on him in PokerTracker and he busted out three hands later. No big surprise. He was raised T175, and he went over the top with... A4o. The raiser called him with 22 and won. How's that for just desserts?

Okay, that week's behind us. Let's move on to better play... ah c'mon, this is Party, who'm I foolin'?

Extra $5 in the HoW kitty, and compared with the above hand, this is a piece o' fishcake. It won't be the first thing you think of, so discard that one. The second and third obvious guesses will also be wrong, but in the general ballpark. If you pick what you would've chosen as fifth or sixth -- probably seventh down the list -- I'd say that's a better guess and I would go with that. Make sense? (And no, that isn't some veiled code for Sklansky rankings... or is it?)

I'm so sure that someone will win this week that I'm guaranteeing a winner because if there's no correct answer, I'll pick randomly out of all the guesses. But don't let me down and post some random hand! Where's the fun in that?


Grubby's Hand of the Week #18
for Monday, September 20, 2004

Prize: $35


The first person to correctly guess my opponent's hand before next Monday wins. Suits may or may not matter. One guess per person, please. Winner will be declared here that Monday. If there's no winner, I'll pick one randomly out of all the guesses and award him/her $35. Next week will reset to $20.

This week's HoW is sponsored by Party, that maker of fine aquariums where you don't have to be a good player, just a bit better than the worst. A-yuh, this is a moot ad since if you play online poker, you already play Party. But on the offchance you haven't signed up yet and would like to support more of these quizzes, consider signing up using this link. You'll join my elite group of signups (currently at 1), plus if you're the winner, the prize is doubled for you.

Leave your guess in the comments section below. You can be Anonymous without registering through Blogger, but do include your name so I know whose guess is whose.

If you don't include contact info and you're the winner, email me after the quiz is over.

Good luck and good skills,




Party Poker No-Limit Hold'em Tourney, Big Blind is t15 (10 handed) converter

grubby (t1000)
SB (t1000)
BB (t1000)
UTG (t1000)
UTG+1 (t1000)
UTG+2 (t1000)
MP1 (t1000)
MP2 (t1000)
MP3 (t1000)
CO (t1000)

Preflop: grubby is Button with A T
3 folds, MP1 raises to t30, 3 folds, grubby calls t30, 1 fold, BB calls t15.

Flop: (t100) J 9 7 (3 players)
BB checks, MP1 bets t80, grubby raises to t160, BB folds, MP1 calls t80.

Turn: (t420) 3 (2 players)
MP1 bets t150, grubby raises to t300, MP1 raises to t450, grubby raises to t600, MP1 raises to t750, grubby raises to t810 (All-In), MP1 calls t60 (All-In).

River: (t2040) Q (2 players, 2 all-in)

Final Pot: t2040
Main Pot: t2040 (t2040), between grubby and MP1.


My 50+5 SnG September madness continues. I'm in the home stretch at exactly 100 more to go in 10 days. I've been ahead of pace (at least in quantity), so I expect to complete all 400 by next HoW. My ROI is all over the place, beginning at the highest I've ever seen (and too much to hope for, sadly) and is currently at the lowest (double sadly). A hunnert more SnGs and this stat had better not dip lower, or Poker Grub will become Slots Grub and I'll be all the more happier living the rivered-free life of slots. But I'll save that discussion for month's end.

I'll try to play better, but after the hand above, you see what people call and get lucky with. This is why I pump preflop to make it too expensive for them to even try to flop the chance to draw. Mostly I hope I'm not involved in that hand when it comes down (because there's always one hand like this in every SnG).

Yeah yeah, odds will eventually work in your favor when you're a 65 percent better-than-a-coinflip favorite going in. But imagine several at the table gunning for their draws and you're left holding top pair/top kicker. Sometimes AKs just isn't worth it.

Must.
Learn.
To.

Fold.

This hand is from another $50+5 SnG. Nice to flop the nut flush on the very first hand and get bet into every step of the way. (Alas, I came in 6th in this tourney... I did not do his chips justice.)

I easily call a 2x raise here at the Button. 2x BB is for wimps. It means nothing and you might as well call. It's the rare Party player who does the minimum raise hoping for a reraise. And if he's raising this little with a big pocket pair, I'm just itching to crack 'em. With this hand and this early where the BB isn't too high, I'd probably call as high as 5x (too loose territory, that's me). Having A T on the Button is a much different story than from early position.

I admit I had to check under the bed for monsters, but no made straight flush was in sight, thanks to my bad 10 kicker.

What could MP1 have had?

Remember the hint I said earlier, but here's another one: his hand contained neither a 2 nor a 5.

Friday, September 17, 2004

Al lucky can you get

(Bonus update: through Sept. 21, Pokerroom has a NETeller reload bonus of 15 percent up to $150 using the code TEAM. You can sign up with the regular 20 percent to $100 bonus and then take advantage of the reload. I really like Pokerroom and not just because you can work off the bonus playing multi-hand blackjack. The top 50 daily point-earners (both poker and casino) share a prize pool of cash, and back in my BJ fiend days I placed in the top 50 every day for a week while working off my whole $250 bonus.)

(Bonus update II: through Sept. 19, Absolute Poker has a NETeller reload bonus of 15 percent up to $100. No bonus code necessary, it'll show up when you deposit. You can do this three times within 24 hours, so a max bonus of $300. They also still have their 35 percent first-time deposit bonus going on.)

My aunt Cynthia brings terrible luck. Bad luck in grub manor is nothing new, but Aunty Cynthia carries a dark shroud with her that follows heavier than Punxsutawney Phil on a cloudy day. Right from a horror movie, you sense her impending approach from the increasingly loud rasping that is her heavy breathing ("the calls are coming from inside the house!"), then you turn and WHOAH! Oh, it's just the housecat. But then you look back to the table and WHOAH! It's Aunty Cynthia, staring at your cards and cooling off not just your own meager luck but the entire table's. Like an adult to a rambunctious child, you have to tell her to move on several times before she gets the hint, takes a sip of her Pepsi, pauses to consider, takes another sip, then wanders off to William H. Macy the rest of the casino.

With every action there's a reaction, and in one little hour I felt a burst of positive, good luck playing 50+5 SnGs. Not of my doing, but in the form of America's wingman AlCantHang.

The best thing that can happen to your game is for Al to pop in and unwittingly sweat you. Both times he appeared in two of my SnGs without my knowing until he revealed himself at the end, bringing me much-needed luck for me to win.

One time, okay, chalk it up to coincidence. Maybe even self-delusion that I was playing well and making good reads.

Two times, and that's enough stone-cold proof for me that it's in Al's hands.

In SnGs, I get very aggressive when down to four people. You have to. I'm here for 1st place, not 3rd. I play and prey on other's fear of the bubble. This accounts for many of my fourth-place finishes, probably as many as my third-places. But the upshot is that I get more 1sts than 2nds.

When it's down to three players, I ramp up the aggression. I back off a tiny bit heads-up, until I get a feel for their play, then move in for the kill. This often irritates people. One person told me to slow down. Another asked if I had ever heard of slowplaying. Another said that's not poker, that's gambling. Another paused a long time before telling me that the next time he would call with a Jack (I raised all-in next time, and he mucked... I guess he didn't have a Jack).

I don't listen to any of this. Just because the three of us are now in the money doesn't mean we can all relax. I want to win.

I adjust quickly to people's styles, which I find stay consistent. I try to temper my own style so that it isn't always appearing the same. This goes against how some people play (always raising 3x BB whether AA or a bluff, for example), but once it gets down to the final three I figure they're good players and they're observant. I may raise all-in a couple times in a row and then raise 3x BB. That is sometimes enough for them to think I was bluffing the first two times and now I have a hand. The smart ones notice what I'm doing and go over the top.

Cards really don't matter because I'm not expecting to see a flop. Raise or fold are the only two options.

As you know from my stints in 5/10 6max and 10/20 6max, I dearly love short-handed play. Heads-up is even better. Being short-stacked and gradually chipping away at the leader until you're equal, then ahead, then win. I live for these moments. When in the heat of it, it feels like I'm conducting an orchestra and I'm entirely in control of even that stray oboe stage left who's a bit too sharp because her reed is new.

Okay, got too excited there.

Back to Al. At both tables (spaced an hour apart), it was down to three. My aggression kicked in based on reads of the other player who decided to call. Both cases I thought I had the better hand going in and on the flop, and both cases I was wrong and sucked out to win.

Here's the first:


Party Poker No-Limit Hold'em Tourney, Big Blind is t500 (3 handed) converter

Button (t450)
SB (t3480)
grubby (t6070)

Preflop: grubby is BB with J T
1 fold, SB completes, grubby checks.

Three-handed, when SB just completes, it raises red flags for me. Normally I would raise all-in here no matter what to apply pressure on SB. With the shortstack about to be taken in by the next T500 blind, SB would not want to call and risk going out in 3rd.

But SB completing made me suspect he had a monster and that he would call an all-in. I figured we'd take a flop and see. If I didn't hit, I could fold... or I could try to outplay him.

Flop: (t1000) Q J 3 (2 players)
SB bets t1000, grubby raises to t5570 (All-In), SB calls t1980 (All-In).

Yep, I raised all-in on medium pair/medium kicker. True, I was probably dominated (and knew it as soon as he called) -- SB either had a Queen or a Jack with a better kicker. I ruled out QJ and a set because he would've check-raised me if he had anything stronger than a pair. KK or AA were remotely possible, but he would've raised something preflop. Drawing to the flush was possible, too. Putting him to an all-in decision here goes back to my thoughts preflop: would he sacrifice a possible lock for 2nd place on this hand? No way.

But he did!

When he called, SB's cards flipped over: Q T

I was toast and was the one looking at 2nd place now.

Turn: (t9550) T (2 players, 2 all-in)

Tens are dead, no help. I'm still drawing to two outs.

River: (t9550) J (2 players, 2 all-in)

And I get it.

Final Pot: t9550
Main Pot: t6960 (t6960), between SB and grubby.
Pot won by grubby (t6960).
Pot 2: t2590 (t2590), returned to grubby.

SB has Q T (two pair, queens and jacks).
grubby has J T (full house, jacks full of tens).
Outcome: grubby wins t9550.


SB said "unreal."

I concur. But it felt mighty good to be on the other end of a beat for a change that I refrained from responding.

It was here that I first saw Al in chat, when he said: "good lord."

Up to that point, I had lost the past six SnGs in a row and things were looking decidedly grim.

Just one more hand to put out the other guy, and I moved on to two more SnGs.

Lost.

Then an hour later, I'm 3-handed with this hand:


Party Poker No-Limit Hold'em Tourney, Big Blind is t500 (3 handed) converter

BB (t2440)
Button (t3920)
grubby (t3640)

Preflop: grubby is SB with A 6
1 fold, grubby raises to t3640 (All-In), BB calls t1940 (All-In).

Another example of grubby aggression. I don't want a high ITM, I want a high ROI.

At this point, I'm pushing with any Ace if I'm opening.

BB flips over K A and my heart sinks.

Three outs. I get ready to pack up and go home. Wait, I'm already home. You know what I mean.

Flop: (t6080) A 9 7 (2 players, 2 all-in)

I'm dead. Still three outs, unless a miracle runner-runner.

Turn: (t6080) 8 (2 players, 2 all-in)

River: (t6080) T (2 players, 2 all-in)

And the miracle comes.

Final Pot: t6080
Main Pot: t4880 (t4880), between BB and grubby.
Pot won by grubby (t4880).
Pot 2: t1200 (t1200), returned to grubby.

BB has K A (one pair, aces).
grubby has A 6 (straight, ten high).
Outcome: grubby wins t6080.


Amazing, eh? Or: unreal. I simply cannot buy this kind of luck on my own. People refuse to stand next to me in a lightning storm.

Then I see that Al was watching the whole time, when he says in chat: "again?"

And that explains it.

Because, see, I've also secretly provided some sweat to fellow bloggers at their SnGs but I don't say anything because I see them lose. I've stopped doing this because I don't need to be givin' my bad mojo to people I like. (A caveat before you run in fear from my heavy breathing at your table: the last three 2+2ers given some grubby sweat in big multis ended up winning to the tune of five figures... so to sum up: SnGs, bad... multis, good.)

It took another four hands to win, again probably due to Al.

I don't know at what point he stopped by to watch either of the games. He said he was looking for a friend and stumbled on my two tables. I'm glad he did, because it changed the color of my evening from red to black.

He said he was turning in for the night, and I did too. Can't wear out the Al luck.

So thanks, Al (and happy belated birthday, Mrs. CantHang)! Drinks on me next time I see you, even if you're back on the wagon and it's a Shirley Temple or a Heavy Petting on the Beach (I made that one up, but if it ever becomes a virgin drink, send residuals to BonusCodeIggy.com).



lunch:
Twinkie
Dunkin' Donut chocolate donut, jelly donut
1/2 turkey sandwich
Wendy's mandarin chicken salad
Peanut M&Ms

3 Diet Cokes

dinner:
...

Wednesday, September 15, 2004

No sir, I don't mean Borgata

I was all set to head to Atlantic City this weekend to play in the Borgata Poker Open super satellite. Buy-in is $200+20 (2000 chips) with unlimited $200 rebuys (2000 chips) in the first hour, then a $200 add-on (4000 chips). A nice structure that would guarantee a few hours of play. The winner(s) of the super go to the $10,000+300 main WPT event.

A lightbulb went off while I was in the shower this morning (how it got in the shower I'll never know), and I realized except for the experience of playing in a big tourney, I would just be throwing away money. If I won, I wouldn't be able to take time off on short notice. With WPT beginning Sunday (I'd of course have high expectations to continue to the second day), I'd be calling in and feigning illness, something I've never done with a job.

This was typical behavior in previous months, when I'd drop a few hundred on a big multi or on slots or blackjack. I'm trying to be good this month by focusing on +EV ventures, knowing there're still two long weeks to go. That's probably why I take such long showers -- it cuts down my gamblin' time.

So now I'll have to live vicariously through Double As, The Poker Chronicles, and Richard Brodie for all the juicy Borgata Open stories.

That money will come in handy for the online poker tournament I'm running the following weekend for my nonprofit (and nonpoker) theater group. Because of the way private tournaments are set, I can't run a freeroll so I decided to refund everyone's buy-in. There's the option of them refusing the refund, and that will go directly to a charity for needy kids in the area. They'll also be able to donate their winnings to the charity. I called in favors from my favorite theater companies, and happily they all accepted and not only are they donating tickets and season subscriptions, but some will be playing the tournament with bounties on their heads! I really will miss the closeness of the DC theater community.

I've placed ads and have loaded it up with extra prizes to lure as many people as possible. My goal is small -- if I can get just 10 people, I'd be happy. If that happens, all 10 would be guaranteed a prize of some sort even if they don't place in the top 3. The group itself has about 2000 members and while they're heavily social and have expressed interest in a poker tournament, not many are trusting of playing online. With online depositing more difficult (and 23 percent of the group in Maryland, ruling out NETeller), it will take some handholding.

'Course, the more people that show, the more it will cost me. But I doubt buy-ins and the extra prizes will surpass $620, what I would've spent in the super satellite.

This tourney is also a beta test of sorts for the next Grublog Poker Classic. I really do not want another Choice Poker fiasco, nor do I want a place that might "forget" to schedule the tournament. This place is trustworthy but I haven't seen how their private tourney runs yet. If all goes well, expect to see Grublog return at the end of October or early November.

§

Last weekend, I played another of those 50+5 pro tourneys at Absolute. They seem to be having them every week now, though less action than the previous weekend as there were only 78 people. Soon this tournament will have more pros than regular players.

This one was with TJ Cloutier, David Plastik, Mark Seif, Peter Costa, and Shirley Rosario. My first table found TJ to my left, and he gradually bled chips till he was out. Next table had Shirley "siren" Rosario directly across from me. The hand I played against her had me raising with KK. Everyone dropped but her. Flop was Q-10-x (two s). I bet big, she called. She was now down to T500. Turn paired the 10. I bet T500 to put her all-in and she folded.

I showed my cowboys and she said she was too scared to stay with a draw. I doubt a pro would just be calling a draw, and I suspect she really had a Q with a medium kicker. Nevertheless, I was smelling the $50 bounty and the honor of knocking out Shirley Rosario.

This put me at a good chipstack, but I started feeling gaseous from the earlier McDonald's premium chicken strips (which they shoved into a regular nugget box and forgot to include the sauce). Next break was 15 minutes away, but I had to leave immediately or there'd be an accident.

Came back to see I was still in decent shape (chips, not bowels), but Absolute began to freeze on me. Long periods of time when I'd be waiting for someone to make a move, when I realized I must be disconnected and had to relaunch. Party was running fine, so I knew it wasn't my connection.

A few more of these had me frustrated and not worth the time to continue playing in that environment. Well, that and bad cards the rest of the tourney.

Absolute's tournaments do seem fairly soft, judging what players were calling with.

Played several other multis with no success. Won an entry into the $250K guaranteed at Party, but ran into cold cards and didn't last much past the second break. The biggest disappointment was bubbling the Paradise $35K guaranteed ($45K after rebuys and add-ons). Twice I called the same all-in shortstacked guy and lost. I was correct in my read (dominated his hand both times) but unlucky on the board. I'm at 16th largest stack at this point with T23,000. Would you call T4000 with AKs? In an SnG perhaps not, but in a multi? Of course you do because if you're playing the tourney to fold AKs, you shouldn't be playing. He had A2, by the way, and caught a 2.

This week I've been getting home too late and too tired to play any multis, which is just as well. My SnG month is still going strong, however, and I'm right on target in terms of 200 completed without going broke (jinx, you owe me a lammer). If I can keep up this pace (I'm actually playing less hours than usual), I'll have a happy report come October 1st.

Just goes to show that laying off the slots and blackjack does wonders.



lunch:
focaccia roast beef & provolone sandwich
Skittles
Peanut M&Ms
Nestle's Crunch
Tostito's Gold
popcorn

2 Diet Cokes
2 Diet Cokes with lemon

dinner:
...

Monday, September 13, 2004

Grubby's Hand of the Week #17

No winner for Hand of the Week #16.

You already know that SB had K J. Because calling an all-in with KJ suited is bound to win one of these times, never mind the fact that it's lost the past dozen times he's played 'em. Happily, this time it did win him the pot, so he'll be calling big raises and all-ins with KJ in the future.

BB, however, could have still escaped unscathed. But nope, the pot was apparently big enough for him to want to call with his powerhouse K 7 (incidentally, the same hand but different suit as Hand of the Week #15... my attempt at a HoW in-joke).

I debated whether my fold was correct and posted this hand on 2+2 and received just a couple responses, but enough to confirm I made the right move. I was playing Party, but even Party players can't be that bad, right? Wrong.

But still... oooh, that big pot would've put me in a great position in that multi.


Grubby's Hand of the Week #17
for Monday, September 13, 2004

Prize: $30


The first person to correctly guess my opponent's hand before next Monday wins. Suits may or may not matter. One guess per person, please. Winner will be declared here that Monday. If there's no winner, the prize will increase $5.

If you sign up to Nostalgia through that link, the prize is doubled for you. Yeah, it's a casino. But it's one with no wage requirements and a 50 percent match bonus (up to $300) which they give you to play with upfront. They will remove this bonus upon your first withdrawal, so be careful. The trick to playing this is to bet big (if you can afford it, bet your entire deposit + bonus) on one hand of baccarat, craps, or roulette and then cashout (your withdrawal will hit NETeller within minutes). Blackjack will also work, but I'd recommend betting half your deposit + bonus to take advantage of splitting or doubling-down. The longer I play, the more I lose. I do, however, have success using this hit-and-run method at Nostalgia whenever they offer reload bonuses (which seem to be biweekly). So if you feel like gambling anywhere from $50 to $600 in one fell swoop, Nostalgia will pad that bankroll with 50 percent more.

Leave your guess in the comments section below. You can be Anonymous without registering through Blogger, but do include your name so I know whose guess is whose.

If you don't include contact info and you're the winner, email me after the quiz is over.

Good luck and good skills,




Party Poker No-Limit Hold'em Tourney, Big Blind is t30 (9 handed) converter

MP3 (t2415)
CO (t976)
Button (t616)
SB (t775)
BB (t1943)
UTG (t515)
UTG+1 (t1115)
grubby (t855)
MP2 (t790)

Preflop: grubby is MP1 with T 9
UTG calls t30, 4 folds, CO calls t30, Button raises to t125, 1 fold, BB raises to t300, UTG raises to t515 (All-In), CO folds, Button raises to t616 (All-In), BB calls t316.

Flop: (t1792) T 3 8 (3 players, 2 all-in)

Turn: (t1792) 4 (3 players, 2 all-in)

River: (t1792) 2 (3 players, 2 all-in)

Final Pot: t1792
Main Pot: t1590 (t1590), between Button, BB and UTG.
Pot 2: t202 (t202), between Button and BB.


Playing all SnGs this month doesn't make for particularly compelling hands to pull. Most of the time you're heads-up, you win with the best hand, or you have the best starter but lose to a bad beat. Occasionally there's the oddball play that keeps you on your toes and makes you realize you can make money in SnGs.

This is a $50+5 SnG and is still early. One person already gone. Seems more like a $10+1, but let's check the handy HoleCardCam™ to see what a couple of my opponents had.

BB had A K. No oddball play there except that after this much aggression to you, it might run through your head that you're behind and will be drawing. If it were me, I wouldn't have reraised (this is my weakness), but I would call the all-in because I still have one of the top starters, I'm still in the game if I lose, I can knock two people out, and it's a chance to move into the lead.

UTG had A J. He 3bet all-in with AJo. Definite oddball here. But perhaps he was trying for the pot.

For the win and Oprah's Pontiac G6 (in spirit, that is... Poker Grub does not yet have Pontiac as a sponsor to make us look like we're fulfilling wishes when in actuality we've sold our Steadman soul and are providing a one-hour infomercial), what did the aggressive possible oddball Button have?

Friday, September 10, 2004

In need of a diaper
by grubette

A couple of weeks ago I went to my cousin’s baby shower. I’m awful at going to these events because they’re filled with goo goos and awwws and that bothers the crap out of me. In addition, I have to spend time in the baby aisle of Target sniffing baby powder-scented plush toys and sifting through miniature socks to find the right gift (what the heck is a “onesie”?). Coupled with the fact that my cousin is having multiple births, this time I decide to make something by my own hand because I’m cheap to make it extra special.

You’d think this would be no big deal, but childless me has somewhat of an aversion to diapers. I find them hideous. My best friend continually teases me with the theme song to the diaper commercial for toddlers, “Pull-Ups,” that goes something like, “Mommy, wow! I’m a big kid now.” I can’t tell you how revolting I find that. Having to actually purchase diapers is like squashing a big hairy spider. We won’t even go into what I think of adult diapers. So I furtively duck into the diaper aisle because I plan on making a diaper cake and buy 110 of them.

I told my friend I was making a diaper cake and he said, “Are you including real poo and everything?”

Three hours later, here was the result:



It figures that my cousin decided to use cloth diapers. Ah well.

Segue to Hawaiian Gardens last night, I was actually going to play til I won 40 small dollars. We’re re-doing our living room and are saving up for a sofa, so all my winnings are being “contributed” to furniture. My first hand of the night, a straight flush.. ooh I’ve already won $40! Ten minutes later, I’m up $100. Then I’m in a hand with a pair of eights when the dealer puts a inside, five card straight on the board with the river card. A guy bets, so I have to call, thinking he’s trying to buy the pot but he had a pair of eights too, with a kicker that made a higher straight than the board. So this guy, let’s call him “Dick,” wordlessly takes the pot and stacks his chips. A few hands later he’s still winning and I’m ready to go but some guy just bought me a beer despite my protests so I have to stay and drink it to be polite. About 90 minutes later, Dick still has not said anything and gets up presumably to smoke or go to the bathroom. When he returns, he absolutely reeks of foul excrement combined with un-Sure® body odor. I’m sitting TWO seats away and can still smell him. The guy next to me starts looking around for the cause of the odor and changes seats. Another guy sits down next to me and sniffs the air, grimacing. This smell is so sickening people are leaving the table! I ask the woman next to me, who keeps complaining she’s hungry, if she’s interested in ordering a nice hunk of fish and eating it at the table. Anything to get rid of this smell! I had my shirt over my nose and could still smell him. I didn’t even wait for my blind, I got up and left, $60 for the furniture kitty.

Later in the evening, I kept thinking about how Dick was probably wearing adult diapers and it made me gag a couple of times. No more close contact with diapers for me.

Wednesday, September 08, 2004

September sit-n-go a-go-go

I used to keep records of my poker play but drifted off somewhat when I began playing the online casinos again. I even stopped requesting hand histories for a few months, despite continuing to play daily.

Last year I'd mentioned that PokerCharts showed me as a break-even player in limit ring because of costly multis eating profits. I lost my PokerTracker database shortly after (coincidence?) and started from scratch.

Now that I'll be needing to pull money out of bankroll for living expenses, it's time to get serious and whip the roll into shape.

My goal for this month is to parse an hourly rate based on approximately 100 Party SnGs per week at an average 18 minutes each (factoring in multi-tabling and early noncash exits). It will be primarily 50+5 with sprinklings of 30+3 and 100+9 depending if I'm doing well or poorly. If well, a shot at 100+9. If poorly, some 30+3 to get back on my feet. These are for variety and to confuse the poker gods by mixing up streaks of a possible 10+ in a row noncashes (or the more preferable 10+ in a row cashes); the final data will focus on my rate for 50+5.

Four hundred SnGs is still statistically too small to extrapolate performance in future months (I'd feel more comfortable with at least a thousand), but it's enough trials to give me a general gauge of what I might expect. If I find at the end of this case study month that I'm at a loss, I'll do another month at just 30+3 to reaffirm or hang up the poker hat and take up needlepoint. Based on my 30+3 ROI of 16 percent (yep, that's low though still profitable), I'm shooting for my 50+5 ROI to be right at that level despite the fact that in actuality it should be less because the higher you go, the better the players and the higher the variance. But I have high expectations. Or equal expectations.

At 16 percent, that would be (50+5)*16% = $8.80 * 400 tourneys = $3520 for the month at 120 hours, or 30 hours per week, or $29/hour. This would be satisfactory to me. Anything significantly less, and I'll reconsider limit ring.

Try as I might, I will also restrain to cold turkey all casino play this month in an effort not to be tempted into more tilt-induced forays. SnGs do not tilt me as much as other games, because I can hop right into the next one and quickly forget the guy who sucked out because I won't see him again.

SnGs are still relatively new to the poker scene, and I believe they're the hidden cash cow of online poker. Whenever my bankroll has taken a hit, I've gone back to the security blanket of SnGs to rebuild. I would be showing a profit if not for (30+3)*16% = $5.28 * 400 tourneys = $2112 - 1500 slots - 500 blackjack = $112 every month.

But we'll see.

Some seven months ago I had begun something similar with stars in my eyes at $60/hour (way, way too high for 30+3, which at 16 percent and 18 minutes each SnG comes to $17.60/hour). I dropped the quest soon after some beats that ran me into the red. This time, I'm a bit better bankrolled to handle the streaks (20+ buy-ins at 50+5 vs. 6 buy-ins at 30+3) and even if I take some early hits I'll plow on... let's just hope against 20 losses in a row, or out comes the needle and thread and cross-stitch patterns.

I think I'm more profitable in SnGs than any other type of game, but I need to stare at the data to convince myself, because it's still difficult for me to reconcile a buy-in that I'll never see again unless hitting 3rd place or better. Playing 400 SnGs will up my confidence interval with the stats to stand behind it.

According to PokerTracker, my 5/10 6max rate over 3-4 tables is 2.9BB/100 hands. Assuming 60 hands per hour * 3 tables, my actual hourly for 5/10 short is 5.22BB, or $52.20/hour. (The last ring I played was 10/20 6max over 2 tables at 1.64BB/100, or $39.36/hour.)

So if 5/10 6max is so much more profitable, why am I not playing that solely? I don't believe this rate is sustainable with a limited bankroll. But the main reason: freakin' variance. Which is what brought me down to my small roll to begin with (okay, slots and blackjack did me in, but we're discounting them for the moment).

Plus ring games simply aren't as much fun and seem more the grind. Even while playing ring I always had an SnG or two in the background.

I'm regrouping in the SnGs hoping to rebuild to take more shots at 10/20; however, after this month is over, with any luck I may find myself with a good argument to never return to limit and instead pursue the 100+9 and 200+15 SnGs.

One piece of data is for certain: after 400 SnGs at the 50+5 level, I'll have paid $2000 just in fees to Party. That's $24K per year. Mind-boggling, ain't it? Once I embark on this for good, I will seek out a 20-25% rakeback, which at $400-$500 per month would look very good indeed and add $3 to $4 per hour to my rate.

I'm welcoming a relatively calm SnG-only month. There will still be beats, but they won't cost as much. I'll update at the end of the month and give the cold hard stats that don't lie no matter how much I try to make them.



lunch:
Krispy Kreme donut holes (the boxed version, not fresh)
mint chocolates
Cup o' Noodles (beef flavor)
Texas cornbread with grape jelly (really needed the jelly)
Nestle's Crunch
Peanut M&Ms
Skittles
Krackle
watermelon

3 Diet Cokes
1 Diet Coke with Lime
Orange Tornado

dinner:
fried calamari
chicken panang
2 steamed mussels

Monday, September 06, 2004

How to lose $1200 (and still be happy)

In this month of SnGs and all SnGs, I'm still allowing myself the occasional multi as long as they're $100 and below. The PPM semis this weekend didn't count, as I'd already registered prior to this month. (And was at best a few hours away from making the top 20ish for the boat.)

Eyeballing three 9 p.m. tourneys at Party, Absolute, and Paradise, I decided to push my laptop to its limit by entering all three. Party I knew would be no problem. I can have four tables open and four lobbies plus Empire's four tables and lobbies and never run out of memory.

My old machine could never handle Paradise. And I know Absolute is also a big memory hog. But hey, I paid for 1 gig of memory and the 256K video card upgrade and the fancy schmancy fastest clock speed available when I got it in March, let's take it on the road, lady!

For the most part, it passed with flying colors. But I could tell as Absolute and Paradise wore on, the animation ran slower. During a break I had to close out of Paradise and re-open.

I loathe playing tourneys anywhere but Party. Since they've eliminated disconnect protects and fixed their server problems where every multi was guaranteed not of cashing but of crashing, they now run smoothly, buttons are fast and responsive, and chat isn't inadvertently typed anywhere but the chat box. The only annoying thing now is hand-for-hand play beginning 10 places away from the bubble. With no antes, this takes an eternity to play.

It's good to get out and experience what else is out there because each site is different with its own different style of players. You wouldn't play at just one cardroom in Vegas (unless you're a smoker -- most of the cardrooms are now smoke-free), likewise I try to be well-rounded online.

Busted first out of the Party 20+2 with 1804 players. Came in 401st and played my final hand so horribly I had to get up and shake myself out of self-flagellation. I was chip leader at the table and a close third on the leader board. Top 130 cash. I could easily fold to the money and, in fact, when I checked back at 130th, I went out with the same amount of chips that the chip average was.

I have 88 on the Button. A guy limps, a few more limps, and I'm seeing a good five players calling to me, "grubby, take our limps... please." I raise all-in, planning to buy it down. The only player who called was the first limper. I knew I was dead as soon as he called; I didn't have to see what he had. Of course, it was AA. And of course, he was second to my big stack and I covered him by just a little.

An Ace flops to taunt me further, leaving me no room to scream for another 8 unless I screamed for two of them.

A better play would've been to call and fold to the Ace that flopped.

Trying not to be results-oriented, though, I don't think what I did was that bad of a play. Pocket AA guy and I were the big stacks by a wide margin, and practically anyone was folding to a fear of an all-in. It just happened that my play backfired to the guy's slowplay (which I'm sure will backfire on him more times than not... especially on Party). Anyone else who'd call my all-in, and I'd still be in the game with half my stack -- which was still more than most of the people at the table.

As it was, I went from chip leader to bust-out within the span of two hands.

So much for those two hours.

While playing Party, I'm still in the Absolute and Paradise tourneys. Paradise isn't going well, I'm very low-stacked and just folding to survive, patiently waiting for a good hand.

Absolute is going okay. I'm in this tourney because it sounded intriguing to play pros Mark Seif, Kathy Liebert, David Plastik, and a few others. Each one had a $50 bounty if you knocked him/her out, so people would be targeting them unnecessarily. It didn't attract many others, as only 105 entered.

My table had Liebert to my right and Plastik to my left. There was one hand between the two of them that looked as if they'd have to split their own bounties. Plastik raised 5x BB and Liebert called. He had more chips and tried to make a move, but Liebert called with AK. Plastik had KJ. And I can't believe a pro would have played KJ under the gun the way he played it.

Another hand I was involved in with Liebert and one other. I was on the Button with AKs and it's limped to me, and I raise 5x. Two callers including Liebert.

Flop has an Ace and rags. The first bettor goes all-in, Liebert contemplates then calls, and I toss in the last of my chips.

I think I'm good here, and I'm right and triple up.

The guy who pushed had 44 for, well, a pair of 4s. He obviously wanted Liebert's $50 bounty more than he wanted to win the tourney.

And Liebert? She had AQ. She limped with it preflop, she cold-called a 5x BB raise with it, and she called a guy's all-in.

That's three mistakes in a single hand. This is fish-type play, not pro-play.

Later, I'm seated at Mark Seif's table. He's the big stack and plays most hands by raising all-in, or else he's folding. I considered calling him with 55, but tossed it. Then I saw him make the same rote move over and over again, that I wish I'd tried with 55 just to see what he had.

Finally someone grew tired and called him with AJ. Seif had A5 and his 5 kicker didn't hold up, and just like that he was gone and Absolute was $50 lighter.

Is this how a pro plays? Just bully all-in every hand? No variation? Eventually someone will call. I dunno, maybe he had to go somewhere like the new 25/50 tables that Absolute started this weekend.

Heading into the final table, our final 9 comprised nary a pro. Just amateurs who outlasted all the bad play of the pros. I was disappointed and unimpressed by how these so-called pros played, and I didn't feel warm and fuzzy getting to the final table. If they had played better like they should have, then yes. But otherwise, it meant nothing to me.

Down to the last few, I'm short stacked and it's basically shooting darts. I make it to 7th and cash for a paltry $183.75. Just $130 or so profit for 3 hours of work. Not bad ordinarily, pretty poor compared with my regular 50+5 SnGs.

Even worse about Absolute? The lobby ceased updating. Then it would update slowly, lagging 10 minutes behind. The only way to tell your standing was to open each table yourself and count players.

There was some grumbling in chat that the previous day they cancelled their multi when it was down to 40 people and it crashed. They simply refunded everyone, rather than award based on current chipstack.

For a cardroom that's been around awhile, this is inexcusable.

They're throwing bonus after bonus at players (which admittedly acts as a nice rakeback). They're hiring tourney pros to work with them and be a presence, even though they're not social in chat and play badly. But have they fixed the memory problem the longer you play or the more tables you have open? Have they added NL ring games? Have they changed tables so they're not just nine-handed?

A big no to all of the above.

Absolute is not exactly my number one site to go to.

(Time for a bonus intermission, courtesy of GrannyMae -- if you go to this link and type in GRANNY as your first-time deposit code when signing up to Paradise Poker, you'll get 50 percent up to $100. The normal bonus for everyone else is 25 percent up to $50.)

So now I'm out of Absolute and turn my attention to the last multi at Paradise.

I had almost neglected it, concentrating more on the others.

Paradise was my first online cardroom a few years back, solely 7-card-stud and then 5-card-stud. I had no idea what I was doing in either game (still don't) and lost everything. Then I switched to hold'em, again had no idea what I was doing, and lost still more. I would hope my fishy days have ended.

Since they've introduced tournaments, you'll often find me playing the Paradise 9 p.m. $35,000 guaranteed rebuy tourney for a $30 buy-in. Like PokerStars, these rebuy tourneys are crazy. Once Party implements rebuys and add-ons on their site, they will have solidified their domination in online poker.

I can often double- or triple-up before the first break simply playing tight and aggressive when I get a hand. There's much bluffing in this first hour because of the safety net of the rebuy. Many people rebuy more than once. For this tourney, I didn't take the rebuy or add-on. Though I needed it, believe me.

I was too low a stack for an add-on to be worthwhile, so I resigned myself to busting out early to concentrate on Party.

But here I was, still alive, outlasting Party and Absolute, and taking some good-sized pots when big stacks at the table tried to bluff. One in particular raised, I reraised with QQ, and the big stack to my left 3bets. The original raiser folds and I go all-in. The big stack calls with 5 7. Perhaps he was taking lessons from Mark Seif, because this guy went on to 5th place.

One entertaining hand had a shortstack go all-in with A3s and the chip leader calling with 33. No Ace for the shortstack, and he went out complaining up a storm over the next few hands, asking how the heck he could've called with a pair of 3s (I would've made this same play). Chip leader simply said that he had more chips. A3s guy said, "But you didn't know what I had, that's neither here nor there."

I couldn't resist and typed the only thing not containing "ty" all night: "well, that's why he's here and you're there."

And of course, A3s guy turned Exorcist on me and called me names unsuitable for print in a family blog.

I was seeing flops at a low 12 percent and suddenly I found myself chip leader for the whole tourney. I maintained first or within a few positions of first, never even having to worry about the bubble, which came at 60th place and blazed by because of the increasing antes and speed of Paradise's blinds. I make it to the final table comfortably in 5th position.

Two final tables in one night! And to think, I had all but given up on Paradise.

At the final table, I'm raring to go since I can now treat it like an SnG. Only it became more of an all-in fest.

I can remember a pivotal hand as clear as crystal. I have AQo and UTG low chipstack bets half his stack. It's folded to me and I raise just enough to put him all-in. I still wanted callers to gang up on him and take him down if my AQ didn't hold up. And it didn't. He calls with 37o, catches a 7, and I double him up. Because of this hand, he later went on to place 2nd. What I don't understand is why he didn't push in the first place. I mean, did he want a caller with 37o? I would've called regardless, but if he was prepared to call an all-in, why bet half?

When blinds were T25,000/T50,000 and antes were T2,500, I found myself in the BB and there were two other players after me with the same sized stacks. If I folded no matter what I had, I could coast one more round, and it was a certainty that unless the two shortstacks caught some incredible cards, both of them would be taken out within the round, and I would move up two places worth $1,200.

I hope to have trash cards in this position so I'm not put to a test, but I see A6s. Seven players left, it's folded to chip leader who's SB and who raises me all-in.

I suspect a steal, as he had been doing all along to grab up all the chips. This was the same guy who called my re-raised all-in a few tables ago with 5 7, so I had a good read.

Folding is still a consideration to latch onto those two places. I almost hear the chanting of the shortstacks to call over the ISDN lines.

I enter the timebank and think some more.

Ace high was certainly good enough, I was sure. There was still the possibility of catching an Ace. Add to that the extra 4 percent value of the suited cards.

I could fold, sneak up two positions, or call and definitely move up two positions as well as have extra chips to throw around.

I call. Chip leader has 10-10, no help for me, and I'm out in 7th place for $1,600.

Not bad for a $30 buy-in, and I could have indeed taken the safe route by folding and advancing at least one more.

But we always play for the win, no?



lunch:
roast beef sub

5 Diet Cokes

dinner:
McDonald's premium select chicken strips (honey mustard)
fries
fruit 'n' yogurt parfait
Lay's potato chips
Skittles
Peanut M&Ms
Breyer's cookies 'n' cream ice cream

Friday, September 03, 2004

The Elephant Man's earlobe

(Bonus alert: Absolute is again offering a $100 bonus (as they do every week), but this one is for today only. New players can still sign up to receive 35 percent on their first deposit, up to $210.)

§

Gads, my legs are covered in insect (flea?) bites.

I've been housesitting for some friends the past couple weeks and caring for Spike the cat (who just prior was shaved except for head and tail, poor thing). They have a load of plants outside, and I spend 20 minutes watering.

Each time I visit I bring back half a dozen bites somewhere on my body that blow up to elephantine size and itch like crazy.

My last visit I made the mistake of wearing shorts and now it looks like my legs are giving birth to tumors and there's an Alien baby struggling to get out.

To say nothing of my left earlobe, somehow bitten and appearing as if I've had an allergic reaction to an earring that mamagrub would disprove of if I ever had my ears or anything pierced.

§

I finally cashed in a Party multi after running so long without. Still, I was disappointed because I went out with a better hand (raised all-in preflop with AK... AJ called... board gave him a broadway). We both were a bit under average chip size, which was still more than others. I placed 13th out of 470 for $446.50 ($100+9 buy-in). Payouts began at 50th.

Aside from getting cards that play themselves, you really do need to get lucky to last in these things. My luck involved people not calling when I raised all-in with AK, AQ, and big pockets. Three times in a row in early/middle position, I raised all-in and took the blinds uncontested (QQ, 88, AQ).

Then the fourth time I received AKo UTG. We're all safely in the money at this point, and because of my table image, I folded. Sacrilege, I know, but consider: three times in a row, this maniac goes all-in. Now a fourth time. I believe someone with a pocket pair will be antsy and want to take a stab at the coinflip, particularly with all of us past the bubble and nothing to lose and much to gain. That was my thinking, anyway. Could've been a mistake, but I don't think so. Anywhere but UTG, I would not have folded.

After the third break, there was very little actual skill involved and mostly playing the cards. Rarely did anyone limp or raise the minimum.

I hopped in that multi as soon as I busted out of the PPM semi at 236 out of 1395 (top 23 get the cruise package). All the PPM tourneys are limit (the cruise tourney is also limit) and the extra 2000 starting chips made a big difference. After the third break it becomes similar to no-limit.

When I busted out of the 100+9, the PPM was still going at almost 8 hours!

Both tourneys I put my chips in there when I had the best of it, stole blinds at good opportunities, and felt I played the best I could have.

The best multi to play is still the 100K guaranteed at The Gaming Club and you'll find me there every Saturday afternoon even if I have to scrape pennies together from other sites. I'm flabbergasted they're attracting even fewer players now, since they upped their buy-in to $100+10 (vs. $50+5). Rebuys and the add-on are still $50 (no juice). With fewer than 400 players every Saturday, the tourney also ends fairly quickly.

I plan to play one more PPM semi (I'm holding off on the others until the next set in November, when I can earn enough extra starting chips for each). Too tired tonight, I may go for Saturday afternoon and play both the PPM and TGC at the same time.

And of course, SnGs galore. Atlantic City doesn't look likely because of work and no vacation time and many projects with looming deadlines, but I'm still trying to negotiate.

Wednesday, September 01, 2004

How to play grubette


Rabbit, rabbit!


It's Sept. 1st, the beginning of a winning month (I just know it), the beginning of autumn, and grubs' own birthday month (don't remind him)! When celebrating mamagrub's big day in February, the day was getting long and the grub clan was getting tired and she was asked, "How much longer are we celebrating your birthday?" She replied, "The whole month!"

I'll talk more about my shameful -EV blackjack and slots addiction that's fed, bred, and bled by poker profits. With the bankroll taking a severe hit last month because of these games (damn Belle Rock and their new Tally Ho and King Cashalot slots), this month will be spent regrouping and rebuilding through SnG poker without any play on these dreaded temptations. I'll also abstain from the big 150 and 200 Party multis, which I've dropped over $1000 playing the past couple weeks with no final tables (or anywhere near 'em) to speak of.

But first I thought I'd take a moment to give you three rules of thumb when playing grubette:

1) Keep track of what hands have been winning at the table.
2) If she says what she has, believe it.
3) If it's 3 a.m. and she's drunk... just fold your pocket rockets.

She emailed this recap from her loose 3/6 game (then again, what live 3/6 game isn't loose?):

A guy made four 5's out of a 95o and he wasn't even in the blind.
Two full houses lost.

A couple of pairs of 9's, one with 5 kickers.

So when I got the 95, I said what I had and that I was happy to play it. Big
action pre-flop, which I called the cap. The flop was AJ8, big round of action
again, 9 on the turn to which I said, "Ah, there's a 9! Watch a 5 will come up
on the river."
Big action again, then the river, a 5, to which i said,
"There's my 5!" One guy has pocket Ks, another has a pair of Js, and I flip
over my 95, two pair winner. The pocket K guy was so mad and said I had no reason
to be in that hand.. but he had missed all the 95 action earlier in the game.

I didn't feel bad. I don't tell people how to play.


(I sent an email aghast that she stayed with nothing and runnered two pair and asked if I could post her moment of fishiness.)


I never did see the last guy's hand, so he might've had an Ace.

I was just playing for fun anyway, and even said what I had the whole hand,
which was even funnier. At least mine were suited. But yeah, on the flop I had
absolutely nothing and no hope for a draw. What the heck was i doing? Burning
chips.. it was late, like 3am. The pot was about $100.. not huge, but it was
amusing. You're welcome to use it to show how poorly grubette plays at wee
hours of the night!




lunch:
small wonton soup
egg roll
hunan chicken
fried rice
fortune cookie (two fortunes included: An empty stomach is not a good political advisor and At 20 years of age the will reigns; at 30 the wit; at 40 the judgment -- what the hell?)
Nestle's Crunch
Snickers

3 Diet Cokes
1 Diet Pepsi
1 Slice
1 Mountain Dew Pitch Black (limited edition! much better than the tepid Sprite Remix)

dinner:
...