Special Bug Pages

Showing posts with label wsop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wsop. Show all posts

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Bug's Back... some random thoughts and miscellaneous ramblings



Three weeks in Europe is a tough thing to recover from. I went from hiking 12+ miles a day on average there to about 1 mile a day here. Went from eating like a schwein to, well... that hasn't changed. Went from cool weather (literally got caught in a blizzard in Berchtesgaden) to HOT here in Tucson. Went from slow, restful days with the wife, to holy-crap-there's-a-lot-of-stuff-to-catchup-on mode. Went from not a care in the world, to work, kids, house, vehicles, yada yada yada.

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Came home... and my new 27-inch Retina iMac was waiting for me to unbox and get running. Gorgeous display. Two days later I'm wrapping up all the software installs and updates, reorganizing the home office, yada yada yada. I'm now 100% an Apple guy (iMac, MacBook Pro, iPad, and iPhone 6). God help me.

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I'm REALLY jealous of all the WSOP players who made the trek to Vegas this year. Overall, the vacation in Germany was better-- but maybe just marginally!

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Looking forward to the Main Event coverage. I'm seriously rooting for a girl to make the final table this year. Annette and Vanessa, heads-up in November, would be perfect.

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One thing a vacation always does for me is refocus and reenergize. As a result, I've got a few online projects that are going to see some re-invigoration. For this blog, the plan is to get more regular with posts. Tied to this of course is with getting more focused on the ABC Poker Training lessons with Le Monsieur and getting the alpha version up and running. I've been offline and carefree for essentially a full month, and now it's time for this re-energized Bug to get busy.

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Jet lag sucks.

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All-in for now....
-Bug

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Time Flies

Been crazy busy with work, travel, and about a dozen non-poker project lately, so the posts here have be, ahem, sporadic at best. The next two months are going to be similarly crammed with non-poker time sinks, but I'm going to endeavor to at least post some poker olio on a more regular basis, starting today...

  • Read a neat post by Memphis Mojo today that helped re-inspire the posting. Check it out
  • Will almost certainly miss the WSOP again this year due to work commitments. Will be in Europe and/or Hawaii for most of May and June. I hate business travel and how it basically results in me putting my life on hold..
  • Le Monsieur and I are continuing to make slow but steady progress on the training app. In fact, we've got only a few lessons left in our first level-1 training set to produce, which means we'll next be looking for help coding up the app itself. We're also going to be asking for some feedback from poker enthusiasts, which means I'll be posting here on this blog for volunteers. More details will be forthcoming, but if you're at all interested drop me a line.
  • I'm only playing about 1-2 times a week, max, and then only 30 minutes or so per session. Very little NLHE; my focus has been on PLO, which has turned from a break-even proposition to a consistently (though moderately) profitable gig. Whilst NLHE has really gotten tougher over the past few years (due to Black Friday, etc.) the low-stakes PLO games are chock-full of, well, really bad players. There's some gold in them thar PLO hills, kids.
  • Lost a quads over quads hand the other day. Seriously.
  • I've canceled my subscription to Bart Hanson's podcast. The reason has nothing to do with his technical content, which remains REALLY good, imho. The reason instead is due to the fact that I rarely if ever have time to listen to him, and I've got about five months of back logged podcasts of his to listen to. Sigh.
  • Am doing a few coaching sessions with newbie students here and there, but my travel schedule is putting a crimp on that aspect of my game, too; it's hard to commit to a student when my week-to-week travel schedule is so fluid. For instance, I just got back from Hawaii, and am leaving for Colorado early this week. The following week will find me in Illinois, then back to Colorado. Did I mention I hate biz travel?

All-in for now...
-Bug






Wednesday, November 12, 2014

A New Main Event Champion Is Crowned!

[Spoiler Alert]

Had another ball watching the final three guys play last night. It was really hard to root against any single one of them, as they all were a) such super talented players; and b) seemed to be just genuinely nice, humble guys. That said, Martin Jacobson was clearly the best player over the last couple of days, moving steadily and surely up from the second shortest chip stack at the start of the final nine table, to eventual winner of the whole shootin' match. He was like the irresistible force actually getting the immovable object(s) to budge with his slow, relentless pressure.

In contrast, I, like a lot of viewers I suspect, started to see the cracks in Van Hoof's armor an hour or so into play last night. First came out the sunglasses, which I don't recall seeing him wear before. It was almost like he sensed he needed some kind of crutch against the two Scandinavians. Then he took a big hit with a bad call and his whole body language seemed to change for the worse. Then the sunglasses were ditched again, like he was scrambling for a solution to the incoming tide. I'm not sure of the stats, but it's surprisingly rare to have the final nine starting chip leader win it all, and last night was no exception. (This is a weird phenomena, but I have a theory as to why it's true, which I'll touch on in a future post...) Anyway, it was a tough way to go out for the Dutchman, but $3.8M is a nice consolation prize for third. :-)

The heads-up battle was also a lot of fun to watch, but it almost felt anti-climactic in contrast to the earlier two-day's play. Yes, Stephenson had chips and put up a good, valiant fight heads-up, but Jacobson was just so incredibly solid and patient and strong. If he plays next year the way he did this year, he's my favorite to final table again.

The last couple of things I wanted to note is about the commentary. Long time readers of this blog should know my feelings about Norm, and the last few days of babbling did nothing to dissuade me; his jokes were dumb and at times cringe worthy, he stumbled more than a few times (probably due to it being live, not a pre-canned taping), he actually seemed at a loss for words occasionally (amazing in itself), and he came off at times almost hostile to Antonio. The only time Norm added anything of value was when he was serious and talking actual strategy; the man actually knows poker quite well, and if ESPN is going to keep him, I wish the producers would encourage a lot more of the latter, and a lot less of all the former nonsense....

...which brings me back to Antonio. This guy is really, really good in this role of technical analyst. Seriously. I really hope he comes back in future years in the same capacity. His reads, both hand ranges and what the players lines were going to be, were straight up amazing and spot on. I greatly enjoyed listening to him think aloud through hands and predict the action. I'm a pretty solid hand reader myself, but I was truly blown away by his level of thought and his dead-accurate prognostications. He would be really scary to play against. Excellent job, ESPN, for giving this guy a voice again this year. Now do it again next year!

All-in for now...
-Bug

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Late Sunday Sundries


World Series of Poker November Nine final table starts tomorrow night. Woot! I've taped and watched all but the last installment before tomorrow's big day, so I'll need to find time to watch it before the action kicks off. Like the past few years, I will probably stay up as late as my eyelids allow, and then hit the record button to catch any late night action. Watching the shows thus far this year, I have to say the play has been very impressive. Yes, I know they edit for TV and air only the big and exciting hands, but some of the preflop action and reads have been fantastic. I'm also learning a few things about live tells that that I've been looking for on the telly. Good fun. The only (kinda) disappointing thing is the guy I previously thought I wanted to root for to win it all: Mark Newhouse. While I credit his amazing feat making back-to-back final tables, and he's clearly very skilled, the guy kind of comes off as a too-cool tool in the off-table interviews. Too bad, too, as there are only four Yanks in total to root for at the final table, and this guy is one of them. Billy Pappas and Dan Sindelar tie for my vote as to whom I want to win. But if I were a betting man--and you know that I am!--my money is on Felix Stephensen from Norway. He's second in chips and just comes off as a really solid player. Can't wait for the action to kick off manana.

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Been back in town for a few days and I'm finally settling back into "normalcy." Am even planning on playing Wednesday night in a local live tourney. Last time I played there was over five weeks ago, so I'm itching to get back on the felt and splash some pots.

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Got knocked out of the WRGPT "Glaciers" tournament in the practice round this week. Had a busted straight draw on the river and bluff shoved into two players who were calling my bets on all streets. One of these guys was Flyboy, which made my shove a high-percentage play, as he is way too solid to call off without the near nuts or better there, which I knew he didn't have given the earlier street action. Alas, the other player in the hand called with a lone pair and I was sent packing. Good thing it was all for practice. The real tourney should be heating up soon...

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Despite all the travel I've been on, Le Monsieur and I continue to make slow but steady progress on the lessons. We're transitioning to situations where you're facing preflop action from one or more villains....

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...which reminds me of a terrible, terrible, terrible call I saw on tonight's penultimate WSOP broadcast. One of the two remaining first-time amateurs at the table called off his entire stack with KQo against a preflop 4bet. He ended up facing AKs and got knocked from the tourney when there was no reason to do so. Now, don't take the wrong message from this; shoving with KQo there would have been fine and dandy, but calling off your stack when you're not short? No way. Remember, it's far, far, far better to fire the gun then dodge a bullet in poker. Fold to live another day in that situation. Even this bug knows that!

***

Went pretty deep in an online 600 player tourney the other night in my hotel room on Bovada. Busted in 22nd place when my KK ran into AA preflop. Then yesterday I lost a huge stack in cash when my KK ran into another AA preflop. Then today I lost another monster stack preflop when I held the AA and my opponent setted up with his KK on a K-5-2. That's poker, but coolers suck, too.

All-in for now...
-Bug

Sunday, October 12, 2014

Sunday Sundries

The annual WRGPT (a.k.a. "Glaciers") online tournament by email is warming back up, with registration underway and the practice round just a week or two away. I registered a couple days ago for this free, very fun, very educational event. If you're at all serious about poker, I strongly suggest you do the same. This will be my fifth year playing in the event, and every time I get even more excited about the tourney than the previous time. Sign up here: http://www.wrgpt.org/registration. You won't regret it!

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As part of the process of developing Le Monsieur and my ABC training app, I've been noodling around a lot with starting hands, equities, hot-and-cold numbers, etc... The goal is to not only give a newbie safe and reasonable recommendations for starting hands, but to explain the why, too... which actually turns out to be fairly difficult. It sounds simple, but doing all the math properly to determine when a hand should or shouldn't be opened from different positions is tough, and if anything, I'm now a bit more confused than when I started... Lots of books and online guides give starting hand chart recommendations (and many of these contradict each other), but the confusing part is there is basically zero analysis of "why" a hand like KTs should be opened in MP. I'm doing all manner of analysis, and probably spent five hours on it yesterday alone.

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And speaking of starting hands, I watched an Ed Miller video on $2/$5 live poker earlier this week, and his recommendation was to treat the first five seats at a nine-handed table exactly the same, and to play no more than 15% of your hands in any one of those seats. Specifically: 66+, AXs, K9s+, 76s+, J9s+, AJ+, KQ. Then in cut-off seat, open raise: K7s+, 43s+, 53s+, J8s+, A9o+, KT0+, QJo. And really open up your game on the button... Seems a little extreme, but EM is the man, so he's got me thinking...

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Been on a bit of a downswing in cash games the past few weeks. I think I'm playing fairly well, so it's just variance at work. I'm getting sucked out on left and right by incredibly bad players. The bad (good?) news is I recently cashed out a large chunk of my bankroll, so my (now) small online 'roll is, well, even smaller. Looks like I will have to drop down a few levels to build it all back up again...

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Went deep in a big-field online tourney on Bovada yesterday. Starting field was 1078 runners, and I finished in 35th place after five hours of play. Was seventh in chips when I got it all in with a fifteen out straight flush draw and over cards holding KhQh on a Jh-Th-3s board. Villain snap called holding 9s8s for the idiot end of the straight draw. I had him covered by 30% or so. Of course he turned an eight and the river bricked, leaving me one of the shorties at the table. The rest of my money went in a few hands later with AKs and I was sent packing. Sigh.

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Am enjoying the Sunday night WSOP broadcasts, even with the ever annoying Norm on the microphone. Episodes #3 and #4 were particularly fun to watch, with an obnoxious amateur getting under the skin of a professional at the table with his incessant table talk. Lesson to be learned: don't wrestle with a pig. You both will get covered in mud, but the pig will enjoy the experience.

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Non poker news: I have a marathon set of biz trips coming up, starting this week. Will be gone 18 of the next 25 days. Ugh. Posts may be even more sporadic than they have been recently.

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Other non poker news: Watched this little guy in my backyard this morning for about 30 minutes. Cats will be cats, regardless of type:



All-in for now...
-Bug


Sunday, June 29, 2014

Sunday Sundries

Clouseau: Does yer dewg bite?
Inn Keeper: No
Clouseau: Nice Doggy
[bends down to pet a small mutt on the lobby floor- it snarls and bites him]
Clouseau: I thought you said yer dewg did not bite!
Inn Keeper: Zat eez not my dog.

A few weeks back I started working informally with a blog reader whom henceforth I shall refer to as Le Monsieur. He and I have exchanged a dozen or so emails in the past year or so on various poker subjects, but the focus always seemed to come back to the topic of learning and teaching methods. Long-time readers of this blog know I'm a little obsessed with this particular topic, especially re: ways in which a newbie to the game can/should learn from the ground up using a linear framework like levels of thought, my poker pyramid, and the three primary edge categories. I've been coaching a few online students over the past year or so, refining and tweaking these methods, and have indeed had some very good success with the likes of e-Pal (who, by the way, continues to crush the mid-stakes cash games down under). Anyway, to make a long story short, Le Monsieur approached me a while back with an idea for a training app that would be based around my teaching framework. I won't go into a lot of details here, but he has some killer ideas on short/repetitive/fast quizzing methods with immediate feedback to the student. He also has created some intriguing mock-ups for the user interface, plus has contacts in the NorCal tech arena that can possibly help steer us forward. Bottom line is I think Le Monsieur's content delivery ideas and teaching methods, coupled with my poker framework and base curriculum, could potentially turn into a killer training tool. The trick now (as usual) is to budget enough time in my already full life to work on my end of this bargain.

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And speaking of my end of the bargain... as part of this week's homework assignment on Le Monsieur's app project, I've been noodling around with starting hands. One of the things that I've stumbled upon  is the concept of "bunching". It's a small esoteric thing that poker nerds like me love to discover. Let me explain: For practical purposes, playing at a six-handed (6max) NL table can be treated the same as playing at a nine-handed (full ring) table in which the first three early position seats have folded. Said another way, starting hands at a 6max table should be identical to the last four seats + blinds at a full ring table. This is traditional wisdom and actually a pretty good way to transition from full ring to 6max... except it isn't quite accurate. By virtue of the fact that the first three seats have folded, we can deduce that the quality of their mucked hands were below what they needed to play in those positions. And because people tend to play big cards more than small ones, we therefore know a few things about the remaining cards in the deck. Said another way, we know that on average there are slightly more aces, kings, queens and jacks than usual in the last six seats at a nine-handed table in which the first three seats have folded, than there are at a 6max table. No, it's not a huge difference (in fact it's very small), but it is an actual difference. In a six max game, this means we can therefore raise a teeny-tiny-itty-bitty bit lighter than we can in a nine max game where the first three players have folded to us. Cool beans.

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I watched snippets of Phil Ivey winning his 10th bracelet this week at the WSOP. This particular event netted him something like $170K for first place, but the rumors  around Vegas are that he made about ten times that amount on a series of prop bets associated with him (and Negreanu) going deep and winning a bracelet this year.

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I'm really intrigued with the WSOP's new $1500 "Monster Stack" NL event. If I had time in my schedule this year I would have definitely played in this new event. Nearly 8000 runners entered this inaugural year, which makes it the second largest ever non-rebuy WSOP event in history. For $1.5K you get a massive T15,000 in tournament chips. Even better, the blind structure is very slow and gradual, more akin to a $10K event than a $1.5K. I'm already budgeting to play in it next year. Woot.

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In a training video I watched on an airplane a few weeks ago, tournament poker coach and trainer John "Kasino Krime" Beauprez of PLO QuickPro fame stated that there are four skills a tournament player needs to be successful in today's games:
  1. Ability to play different effective stack sizes correctly, from 10bb up to 100bb.
  2. Ability to be very aggressive preflop, including 4-betting light.
  3. Ability to stay very observant of the other players, their stacks, their tendencies, and (especially) their states of mind throughout all stages of the tournament-- and exploit that information.
  4. Have the wherewithal to join an off-table network of like-minded skilled players willing to share and work together to get better. And then participate and work on your game actively.

---Non Poker Content Below---

I had a death in the immediate family last week-- my mom. It was the punctuation point on a long and protracted illness she battled for the past two years. We all knew this day would come, but it still was a painful shock when it did. Heartbreaking, draining, surreal... I'm feeling all manner of emotions this week. I was also in a foreign country on a business trip when I got the news, which meant the added complications and frustrations of trying to get home early on an international flight on an uncooperative airline on very short notice. When I finally did manage to arrive home, I was greeted with not only sadness and grief in the family, but a ton of challenging things to help take care of. Various affairs of state, taxes, money issues, probate, death certificates, funeral service arrangements, siblings with differing ideas on how things should be handled, my devastated father, etc.. This has definitely been a very hard week for everyone. It was also a sobering reminder that life is far too short. My biggest takeaway thus far in this process is: make the most of your limited years on this spinning globe, and make the time now for those things you keep putting off for "someday" in the future. My mom did this right; she lead a full and fulfilling life; she literally told me a few weeks before she passed that she had no regrets in how she lived her life and would have done it all over the same way if given the opportunity. Can you say the same about your own life?

All-in for now...
-Bug

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Run, Memphis, Run!

WOOOOOT!


Memphis Mojo continues his deep run in the $1K Seniors event. He's made Day 3! They're down to 32 players and he's still got a very playable stack. Read all about it here.

Having played in this very same event last year with Dave, I honestly can't fully describe how happy I am for him. Yes, I'm more than a little envious I didn't get to play this year... but I am so incredibly thrilled he's down to the final few tables.

This year's Seniors Event broke last years entrance record, with 4,425 players entered this time around. The moderately short stack nature and fast blind structure of the $1K events means the action is fast and furious-- you have to be both lucky at times and willing to gamble, but also (ironically) very patient. You also obviously have to be very talented to survive even the first day. The prize pool is nearly $4 million, with more than $627,000 guaranteed for the winner.

I will absolutely be watching the live stream tonight if the Mojo continues to work and Dave makes the final table.

Go, Memphis, Go!

WOOOOOOOOOOOT!

All-in for now...
-Bug

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

ASAP WSOP WWW's PDQ

Vanessa Selbst leads event #2, the $25K mixed-max event after the first day of play.

A couple of websites for those following the WSOP this year:

Scorecard: http://www.wsop.com/scoreboard/

Live Streaming Schedule: http://www.wsop.com/news/2014/May/4754/2014-WSOP-LIVESTREAMING-SCHEDULE.html

Off on another trip this morning. Sigh.

All-in for now...
-Bug

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Rough Patches


Got a slew of biz trips coming up, including a week-long nasty one starting this afternoon. Blog posts are going to be a little spare... or not. As usual, the cadence of said post are strongly a function of jet lag. Have I mentioned I currently hate my job?

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The Bankroll Builder exercise has hit a bit of a rough patch. Yes, we've been running bad, but the truth also is that we're simply pushing too hard. I stated in the last update that we planned to start ramping up things once we hit the $200 mark, but this has just resulted in us starting to rollercoaster up and down from $200 to $240 and back. Time to tighten things back up.

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One of the annual traditions at my house for the past few years is taping the Kentucky Derby during the afternoon, and then watching the whole thing late that same night. Now, I'm not a horse guy, and my wife really doesn't like any kind of televised sports (save for the Olympics, that is), but for some reason we now make it a point of watching this crazy spectacle-- all 3.5 hours of it. Last night was no exception. Takeout Chinese Food (at my house) + Crazy Hats (on TV) + Exciting Race = Fun Evening. Heck, I even picked two of the top three finishers. Now if I had only visited an OTB establishment ahead of the race...

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Still no Full Tilt Remission. Grrrrrr....

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Even though I 'm not personally playing in it this year, I'm nonetheless starting to get excited for the WSOP to kick off. Ya just gotta love the drama and intrigue that is Vegas in early summer every year.

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Is there anything more annoying than music and/or other sound effects that auto-play on blogs and websites when you visit them? There are a couple of blogs I read regularly that do just this, and there is no apparent way of turning off what I consider to be a) obnoxious music; and b) stupid sound effects, respectively on the two sites. Tip to blog owners: you may think that gangsta rap is cool, but taste is subjective, and probably more people dislike the tune you love than like it. Hell, I've actually stopped visiting one site in the past due to the loud and overpowering sound of random fireworks exploding that can't be stopped on this otherwise good blogger's site.

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And speaking of music, an acquaintance of mine defines rap as Retards Attempting Poetry, which is sophomoric, but still makes me giggle every time I hear it.

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Full disclosure: I actually own a couple of Eminem songs. Seriously. Perfect workout music, even if it is (c)rap.

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Have I mentioned that I hate my job?

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All-in for now...
-Bug


Monday, June 24, 2013

WSOP: Some Lessons Learned


Damn, I miss Vegas! I've now been back from Sin City for a little over a week, and I have to confess that I missed being there almost immediately upon touching down in my hometown. I had a great time, and even counting my airfare, hotel, taxis, meals, swag, tourney buy-ins, etc., I still came out ahead and part way toward another buy-in at next year's WSOP. Gotta love a vacation where you come back with a fatter wallet than you left with. :)

Anyway, here are a few lessons learned on this foray for me to the WSOP for the first time:
  • Lodging. I'm still a little torn on what exactly the lesson is on this one. On the one hand, staying at the same place I played definitely made logistics dead easy; in simple terms, I never had to leave the Rio during my entire stay. But the Rio was on the pricey side, and frankly I wasn't very impressed with the hospitality they offered up. Also, the logistical advantage presented a corresponding disadvantage of sorts-- namely, I never got to leave the Rio. I heard that some of the other casinos had excellent deep stack events going on at the same time as the WSOP, but I literally never stepped foot outside the grounds of the Rio during my 4.5 day stay. The WSOP is the epicenter of poker during this period of the year, but there's more poker going on in Vegas than just at the Rio. 
  • Da Crew. I'm not a particularly social animal, and I am almost always comfortably happy alone, especially on biz trips… but I have to say that I missed having the camaraderie of a crew of fellow players with me on this trip. Now, don't get me wrong; I still had a fantastic time, and I have no real regrets, but I think the whole experience would have been enhanced even more if I'd spent the time in Vegas with 2-5 other hardcore poker playing friends. Sweating and railing each other, meeting at breaks, eating dinner together, commiserating and cheering each other one would have made for an even better experience, me thinks. I might see if I can get a few folks like Mr. Multi, Tash-man, and/or Chopper Bob to tag along next time.
  • Deepstack Events. These were definitely fun and worthwhile events to play in, and I need to make time for more of these in the future. The competition is decent, but not crazy good, and the event structures are pretty sweet, especially early on with 300 big blind starting stacks. For a $235 buy-in, a good, cautious/patient poker player has a pretty good chance at making the money in these events. I also would have liked to play in some of the other non-Rio casinos deep stack games, as I heard some of these were pretty good, too. 
  • Cash Games. I have to say that the cash games I played in (three long sessions of $1/2 and one moderately long session of $2/4 NLHE) were pretty good, with relatively soft competition seated at the felt with me. Okay, maybe I ran a little better than average, but I also saw plenty of questionable poker being played by the opp. Some of this I think was due to the fact that many of the players were tourney dropouts trying to "get even" after busting out of various events. The key for me in these sessions was simply be patient, bluff hardly at all, value-town the heck out of the calling stations, and print the money. 
  • $1K vs. $1.5K Events. I am leaning toward playing in a $1500 WSOP bracelet event next time I go in lieu of a $1K event. While the $1K tourney was great fun, and definitely had some dead money at the tables, the structure is just a tad too fast for the money outlay. You start with T3K/T25 = 120 bigs, which is fine, but in the very next level you're down to 60, and then 30, and then 15 by the fourth hour if you don't chip up. Yes, the levels are one hour long, but this is still a relatively fast drop-off in big blinds if you're not getting cards or finding good situations to play. In contrast, the $1500 events typically start you at 180 bigs, then 90, then 45, and then 22.5 in the same first four hours of play. The payouts are also proportionally better (but the field sizes tend to be smaller, however.) Ergo, I might give one of these a try next time I go.
  • Fly vs. Drive. I live just 5 hours or so by car from Vegas, so I probably will drive next time. This could save a little on travel expenses, I could bring more of my own food and gear, plus I'd have a set of wheels that I could use to hit the other casinos in town as the mood strikes. 
  • Stars in my Eyes. I admit it: I was a little star struck at the WSOP with all the poker royalty and celebrity abounding. But what first-timer wouldn't have been? Between chatting with Negreanu, railing Hellmuth, listening in on Mike the Mouth drop F-bombs, eavesdropping in on Duhamel in French while he stood in a snack line in front of me, corralling Brokos at a break and chatting his ear off, and gawking at Tiffany Michelle (after sitting beside her for twenty minutes at an 08 event before realizing who she was), my head was spinning the whole time I was at the WSOP. While this was absolutely a fun part of the adventure, it also took away from a) my concentration; and b) my actual seat time. This latter item probably cost me a grand or more in extra cash game profits simply because I was spending hours and hours watching famous players play, than play myself. Next year I need to get over the spectacle of the celebs and stars and such, and just plain play more poker. 
  • Tactics. If there was one thing I feel I could have done better in the tourneys, it is this: play stronger offense, and don't get sucked into a defensive posture. When Leather Face sat down next to me (and subsequently started running over the table) at my bracelet event, I think I should have picked up on this sooner, and then started pushing back on him faster and harder. In fact, once he showed up, I almost reverted back to a pseudo level-1 (or maybe 1.5) style of poker, waiting for opportunities rather than proactively generating them. When you're 30+ bigs deep, you can afford to wait; when you're under 30, you need to start actively making plays instead of waiting. This is definitely an area I can improve on next time. Said another way: stop making hard decisions, and instead put those hard decisions on to my opponents.
  • Note Taking. I kept hand and play notes in a small pad I had in my shirt pocket, but it was clumsy and distracting to keep pulling it out and jot things down. And because I was writing down items like my own hands and my reads on other players, I kept having to keep the open pages hidden from view of my neighbors while I scribbled. Not sure what I'll do next year, but there has to be a better way of keeping a running record of the game for later review. Or not; maybe I should just forgo the whole note taking thing and just concentrate 100% on the immediate game situation and flow? Dunno. 
In any case, I learned a lot in Vegas this year, had truly great fun playing and gawking, and my poker is definitely better for the whole experience.

But damn, I want to go back. :-)

All-in for now…
-Bug

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

No Excuses...


Was running through my pre-game checklist today, reminding myself of a number of things I want to keep in mind while playing in the tournament on Friday. For early stage play, for example, these include such wide-ranging things as:
  • Be very patient. Let game come to me. Don't force the action.
  • Tight/semi-passive play in first few blind levels (play almost a weak-tight game). Start adding aggression as the blinds climb. Be in full blown (re)attack mode by the time the antes kick in.
  • Do not gamble early. Main goal is to not lose a lot of chips early. Don't dig a hole.
  • First: Survive and observe. Second: Chip-up if I can. This reverses deep into antes.
  • Don't LP steal with hands I'm not willing to call a re-reraise with (or 4bet with). Stealing isn't worth it at the early stages.
  • Dump the small pairs and trouble hands in EP.
  • And so on...
Anyway, I've recently added three high level items to the master list:
  1. Have Fun. This is perhaps the most important thing to keep in mind. Why am I going to Vegas in the first place? Because it's on my bucket list, that's why. I'm doing this because I want to experience, well, the experience of the WSOP. The stress of playing in a big event like this can easily overwhelm the whole big picture if I let it. I have to actually remind myself that the point of this fandango is to enjoy the WSOP. Experience it. Have fun. Enjoy. Take it all in. Play poker. Smile.
  2. Play With Heart. Trust my instincts and have the courage to pull the trigger when the time comes. And have the courage to fold, too. The buy-in money is already gone, so don't stress the money part. It's like posting your blinds; that money no longer belongs to me. These be sunk costs, boy. Play irrespective of the buy-in or the payout structure. Which brings us to...
  3. Make Good Decisions. It may sound simpleminded, but this is perhaps the biggest, most important and fundamental secret to winning poker. The results don't freaking matter: it's all about the decisions, mate. The absolute last thing I want to do is come back from Vegas wishing I'd played a key hand differently than I did, especially in tough spots. I can take coolers. I can live with bad beats. What I can't stand, however, is bad decisions. Especially hasty, bad decisions. My internal dialog on each tough hand is going to include something along the lines of: If this hand busts me out, how am I going to justify my play tomorrow on the blog? If I can't justify the play, I should not make it. It's really that simple. Think, reason it out, make a decision, then act.
Three days and counting...


All-in for now...
-Bug


Sunday, March 10, 2013

WSOP-2013: Week #28


It's Sunday, so time for a recap of this past week's progress for the 2013 WSOP:

Executive Summary: Another slow week on the WSOP prep front. Part of this was work commitments, but frankly another part was just lethargy/apathy on my part. I played a little poker this week, but actually am in a bit of a lull enthusiasm-wise when it come to studying for the WSOP. In fact, my playing desire is in a bit of a downturn, too.
  • Strategy Books Read:
    • Poked around with Snyders PTF2 book a bit, and read a couple of hands in the Winning Poker Tournament V1 book, but that was about it.
  • Videos Watched:
    • Didn't watch a single video this week.
  • Fitness:
    • Diet: Meh. Did OK on this front, but I also sinned a few times. Giving myself a B- grade.
    • Exercise: Meh, too. Walked a couple of times, did some body weight exercises, and.. well, that was about it. Call it a C-.
  • Tournament/SnG Results:
    • Online: Played a 9-handed $11 STSnG, but busted in third place due to a cooler (set over set).
    • Live: Played in a monthly live tournament and had the dubious distinction of being the first player eliminated (out of 21 runners). I think I played OK, but busted mostly due to a bad case of "second best" hands dealt to me. E.g., top two pair on a board that straightened and flushed by the river. My AJs against AQo in a blind-vs.-blind battle with an Ace on the flop. Etcetera. Whatyougonnado?
  • Other: Like I said, I've been a bit apathetic this week. This is fine, as I don't want to force the issue... but time is a-tickin' as they say, so I need to find that spark again and get busy. I'm 99% certain I'll enter the $1K Seniors event the weekend of 14 June. Now I need to figure out hotel reservations, travel, etc.
All-in for now...
-Bug

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

The Old Guy Always Has It.... Right?

I listened to the inaugural Thinking Poker podcast on my flight the other day, and the show wasn't too bad. The two guys hosting the podcast are clearly doing this for the first time, and they need a little polish, but all-in-all it was informative and entertaining. I'll definitely download the next one.

One of the hands they discussed  on the podcast (actually, it was the only hand they discussed, and it took fully the first 30 minutes of the hour-long podcast) was the following pot played by one of the podcasters in this year's WSOP (note that I may have some of the details wrong, such as exact bet sizes, but I think I've got the important stuff right):

The tourney is the WSOP main event, and it's about midway through day one. Effective stacks are still around T20K. Blinds are T100/200.

Hero open-raises to T600 in EP with 3-3, gets two field callers. The blinds fold. Pot is T2100.

Flop is 8-3-2 rainbow, giving Hero middle set. Suh-weet.

Hero leads for T1100, gets one fold and one caller, who is an older guy on the button. Pot is now T4300.

Turn is a Q. Hero leads again for about T2000..and gets raised about to T6000. Hero calls. Pot is now T16.3K.

River is a rainbow 2, giving Hero a boat (threes full of deuces). Hero checks, and villain bets out T8K, which if called by Hero would leave him about T4K behind.

What do you do if you're the Hero?

Answer:

Even though they took 30 minutes to discuss the hand, both podcasters essentially said this was a trivial fold. Do you agree? At first I was a little shocked that one would even consider folding a full house here, but the more I think about the hand, the more I'm convinced this is the correct play. The reason can be found in a combination of REDi and what I discussed in the last blog post (here) on Edge in big MTTs.

The villain is essentially saying that he's got a big hand. He's not afraid of the paired board, and he's forcing you to commit a huge fraction of your stack. He's also committing a huge fraction of his own stack early in a multi-day tourney.

I won't go through the entire REDi analysis here, but I'll leave you with this thought: What hand range is villain calling with pre-flop? Then what's he calling with on the flop? Then what's he raising with on the turn? Then what is he committing nearly the rest of his entire tournament stack/life with on the river?  Said another way: what hands is he doing this with that you can beat?

Answer: not many.

All-in for now...
-Bug

Sunday, September 2, 2012

WSOP-2013: Week #1

It's Sunday, so it must be time for a recap of the past week's prep for WSOP-2013.
  • Preparation:
    • Pregame. Once again, I did a lot of just jumping into games without doing pre-game checklists or warm-ups. This is true even in the one live tourney I played in, in which I just sort of showed up to play, with no overall strategy in mind.
    • Postgame. I fine-tuned my results tracking spreadsheet so I can see how I'm dong in a) online tourneys; b) live tourneys; c) cash games; d) miscellaneous prep; and e) my fitness results. Manually entering results and charting my daily ups and downs is oddly motivating; there's no cheating allowed, and I definitely wake up each day wanting to improve on the previous day's results. This method is highly recommended if you want to get better at poker.
    • Off-Table.
      • Forums. Very little time spent either reading or posting. I did, however, add a quick comment/analysis to a couple of Quiz of the Day posts.
      • Books.  Am continuing to read Snyder's The Poker Tournament Formula. I liked the Patience Factor chapter, and it spurred some conversation with Mr. Multi on the subject (he also dug up a time estimate formula for tourneys that I've yet to look closely at, but which might be useful to adjust one's strategy in a tourney.) I'm now reading Snyder's chapter on "rock-paper-scissors", which is his way of looking at the three main weapons at your disposal in fast tourneys (rocks=chips, paper=cards, scissors=position). One quote jumped out at me in this chapter: "...95% of the time when you bust out, it will be with good cards. Cards are the weakest weapon you have. Don't overvalue them. Don't overplay them. Don't wait for them. Good cards are rare, and you must increase your chip stack so much and so fast, that you must look at cards as icing on the cake."
      • Videos.  Over the course of the week, exercising on my elliptical cardio/card-io machine in the mornings, I watched the first installment of Last Man Standing, which is an eight-part DeucesCracked video series on SNGs (both single table (ST) and multitable tourneys (MTT)). This first installment was focused on early game considerations, and the instructor's main points, if I can summarize, are: Play very tight early on (big pairs and big aces only), because a) chips lost are more valuable than chips won; and b) this builds your image as a rock. Don't get fancy; play your strong hands strong, and fold the rest.
      • Health.  Did pretty good on this front for the majority of week, though I did relapse on Friday when I ate some junk food at work, and then went out for a big fattening meal that evening. Overall, however, I've been exercising and watching what I eat. I'm trying to follow (more or less) the tenets of the "Paleo" or "Primal Blueprint" diet/exercise/lifestyle program by Mark Sisson. It's a very effective way to get in shape, and in just this first week I've dropped a little more than five pounds. Still a long way to go, but this is a good start.
      • Other.  Purchased a copy of the Master Poker training program and installed it on my computer. I've heard good things about this program for playing/simulating long tournaments, which I can do on some of my longer airplane trips (like the one I've got coming up at the end of this coming week). Overall, the program is fine, but frankly it's not really any better than the free DD poker training software that Mr. Multi discovered a few months ago (see this blog entry).
  • Technique:
    • Preflop.  I poked a little at the next installment of my starting hand chart, which admittedly is still focused on L1 cash play, but will also be eventually turned into the basis of pseudo-L2 tournament play guidelines. This exercise, while basic, is actually helping me think through some specific hand spots and, I believe, going to strengthen my game.
    • Postflop.
      • Evals (RED).  In general, I'm a pretty good cash hand reader, but an area that definitely needs improvement in tourneys is factoring in how desperate my opponents are (or aren't) in a tournament, given the current blind level and their stack size. I made a couple of mistakes playing this week when I didn't notice that a villain was getting super short and would have to get it in almost regardless of what I did.
      • Line Implementations (i).  I made some mistakes in this area, too, trying to get too FPS-ish when I had big hands and wanted to get paid off. Flopped a set of sevens at my live tournament, for instance, and should have played it harder than I did.
  • Emotional Control:
    • Tilt Control.  Overall, not anything significant to report here. I'm pretty good at accepting losses, but I do have to say that I started to get frustrated after going zero for eight in STSnGs and MTTSnGs this week. In addition to raw data on entry costs, field size, my finish place, profit, etc. in my results tracking spreadsheet, I also write down my immediate impressions of how I played and what was going through my head after busting. Early in the week, my comments were things like, "Bubbled in eighth place when I called a shove and re-shove with QQ. Should I have waited?" By the end of the week, however, my comments degenerated into such gems as, "Got stupid impatient on the end at the bubble." and "I cannot win a fucking flip to save my fucking life!" and "Got DAMN unlucky again. Played super patient, waited for good spots, took a beat, and then had to struggle to stay alive. ARGHGH."  Sounds like escalating tilt to me....
    • BRM.  No problems here. I lost a lot overall in SnGs, but more than made up for it in cash games. Playing well within my limits.
    • Discipline.  Patience is my continuing downfall in tournaments. I need to re-discover the Zen of Folding, especially early in tourneys. I also need to really understand how desperate (or not) I and my opponents are nearing the bubble of MTTs.
$ Results:
  • Tournaments (Online). Played two 45-man tourneys and seven single-tables. Entries ranged from $5.50 to $11.50. Only monied in one of the $11.50 single tables, taking second place. Net overall loss was $28.
  • Tournaments (Live). Played in just the one live local casino, and didn't money, taking 12th place out of 40 entrants. Net overall loss was $35.
  • Cash Games. Played here and there in online $25NL games. A couple of sessions were definitely played with me not at my best or focused (and I lost a lot during those two sessions). That said, I was up overall $87 for the week due to mostly solid play.
Summary: In general, I didn't do as a much as I would have liked in the studying arena, but I did get in enough ST and MTT SnG play to start the mental shift from cash to tournament play. Bottom line takeaway message I think is: There is a huge difference between cash and tourneys, and I have a long way to go to be even half as good at tournament play as I am at cash ring games.


All-in for now...
-Bug

Saturday, August 18, 2012

WSOP 2013: Putting a Plan Together


Okay, so how does a player go about getting ready for a major live tournament that's nearly a year away? Especially if said player has never attended a major tourney like this before? Here's my to-do list:
  1. Pick an event and register;
  2. Get ready to play; and
  3. Go to Vegas and sit down.
Ha. Ha. While I'm obviously being more than a little facetious with this three-step plan, the reality is that this is the basis of what I intend to do. Let me explain by expanding on the first two:

Pick an Event. This step is more involved than it sounds. Obviously, I'm going to stick with one of the NL Hold'em events, as this is where I'm in my comfort zone. Also, while I'd love to play in the Main Event, I frankly don't have ten large lying around that I can justify spending on a mid-life crisis. It's also pretty hard to justify even $2500, but one of the $1500 or $1K events is do-able for my limited budget. Fully 15 of the 61 events at this year's WSOP (i.e., 25% of the tourneys spread) were $1K or $1.5K games, so finding something that fits my budget and schedule next year should be reasonably easy. There are also things like hotel, food, transportation, and a side cash game or two that currently aren't in my budget. Oh, and I want to spend some time between now and then in some local live tournaments, which means buy-in fees. In other words, I've got some saving to do between now and then.

Get Ready. This is where I put my money where my mouth is; i.e., I frequently tout my "ABC Edges" approach to mastering poker on this blog (hell, I devote four of the nine drop down tabs at the top of this blog's home page to the subject of Edge). This system was/is-being developed primarily for learning cash games, but I really don't see a reason it's not applicable to tourneys, too, so this is where I intend to start:
  1. Preparation. As you no doubt know, I believe there are three subparts to this Edge: pregame, postgame, and offtable. In the context of this big tournament endeavour, this far out from the WSOP, the "pregame" prep is going to focus primarily on selecting the tournament that has the most dead money and offers me the biggest edge. The "postgame" part is going to be me reviewing tournaments that I play between now and then, including posting a lot of questions about hands played to the forums. This will involve a lot of online tournaments (to get in volume), some local live tournaments (to practice handling chips, etc), and perhaps a pre-visit to Vegas to get my feet wet in one of the smaller regular tournaments like a Venetian deep stack event*. The "off-table" prep is where the bulk of my work on this edge is going to take place. Get in shape/increase staminia (read: lose 30+ pounds and improve cardio), read tournament poker books (at least three between now and then), watch a bunch of MTT training videos (review the ones I already own, plus maybe invest in some more), steering away from the cash game sections of the forums and focusing on the MTT sections, and perhaps investing in some type of software tournament training program. 
  2. Technique. I also believe there are three subparts to this Edge: preflop, postflop evaluations, and line implementations. I've got a pretty good handle on preflop hand selection, but not necessarily for tournament play (which is strongly a function of payout structure, blind size, stack sizes, and stage of the tournament); I have a lot to bone up on here, including ICM and the concept of cEV. (I intend to finish my cash game starting hand chart, but once I do I'll revisit it with tournament play in mind). Similarly, I'm OK at postflop evaluations in cash games (i.e., the "R" and "E" parts of REDi), but I need to really start turning my focus to tournaments. Hand reading is going to be vitally important, and factoring in all the ICM stuff is going to be an interesting challenge to master. Finally, line implementations are pretty standard (the "D" and "i" parts of REDi), but I need to wrap my head around things like the concept of making thin +EV plays when my tournament life is on the line.
  3. Emotions. The three subparts to this are Tilt Control, BRM, and Discipline. I think I'm fine with the Tilt part (and getting in cardio shape has been shown to actually improve this part of a person's emotional control, so this should improve). BRM is also an area that's OK here; I've got a monthly budget set aside for tournaments and training, and as long as I don't exceed this I'll be fine. The last one, Discipline, is where I think I have the most work to do. Frankly speaking, right now I simply don't have the patience one needs to play a three day tournament. Hell, in online tournaments I have a bad habit of lasting 2-3 hours and then busting out for no good reason other than I got bored and wanted the thing over with. Sigh. I also tend to surf, read, work, etc when playing online. Not good. I watched a video the other day in which a guy was talking about a big, slow live tourney he played in; his comment was that the slowness of the game really allowed him to focus on reading and observing other players. I need to learn this mental approach to the game.
Obviously, this midlife crisis is a big undertaking, but as they say: you eat an elephant one bite at a time. Over the next week or two I'll get this list and plan a little better formulated and formalized. Then it's just a matter of implementing it (and fitting it in and around the rest of my life). The goal is work on the big-picture leaks and weaknesses in my game first, and then fine tune the closer I get to the event, hopefully peaking physically and mentally around early Summer of 2013.


All-in for now...
-Bug
*I'm actually torn about playing at the Venetian. A true enemy of the legalization of on-line poker is Sheldon Adelson, who owns the Venetian. I will look hard at alternate venues to  play in, but these games are known to be player friendly, with good structures and soft fields. Arghgh.



Thursday, August 16, 2012

Fat Boys and Bucket Lists

"Life is a journey, not a destination."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson

I had a bit of a big life wake-up call hit me repeatedly over the head during the past few months. It started when a close family member was diagnosed with a particularly aggressive and deadly form of cancer. This news coincided almost exactly with my own milestone birthday of turning the big five-oh. Couple these hard facts with a) the arrival of the dreaded "Congratulations, you're eligible to join AARP" letter in the mailbox; b) the less-than-stellar results of a routine medical check-up; and...

...well, enough whining. To be honest, I really can't complain. All-in-all, I lead a relatively contented life. I've got a great wife, a well paid and interesting job, two adult kids (mostly) out on their own, a roof over my head, food in the pantry, and plenty of fulfilling interests and hobbies, including poker of course...

...ah, but there's something missing, something that's been nagging at me for the past few years, something that ESPN is now reminding me of every Tuesday night as they begin broadcasting the run-up to this year's main event final table.

So what's missing? Answer: the realization that I have never played in the WSOP, despite claiming on the very masthead of this blog when I started it up that this was the ultimate goal of me learning poker in the first place. The years just keep passing by, the excuses and reasons keep piling up, and I've yet to make the trip to Vegas to play in the WSOP. Hell, I've never even gone to Sin City during the WSOP as a spectator to what is arguably poker's biggest gathering, despite living just a handful of hours away by car.

So enough, already. It's time to put up or shut up.

Soooo: I'm hereby publicly proclaiming herein this blog that I will attend and play in next year's WSOP, come hell or high water. Dunno what event I'll play in, but I will play.

Okay, so with that in mind, a few immediate problems arise. First and foremost is the fact that I'm primarily a cash  game player. An online cash game player. Obviously, I've got a lot of MTT studying to do, plus I've got to get in significantly more live play experience if I want to stand a chance of making a deep run in a crowded WSOP event.

Second, I'm out of shape. How out of shape? Think 30+ pounds, poor cardio, and a BMI that is better suited to that of a sumo wrestler than the champion freestyle wrestler and karate kid that I once was in high school and college, respectively. Said another way: my current stamina simply ain't up to the task of a long, multi-day tournament. I will need to get seriously busy now getting this tub of goo I call my body into shape for a multi-day endurance event next June; it's only ten months away, which is actually not a lot of time to go from a couch potato to a lean, mean, poker machine.

Third, my day job is best described as frenetic and reactionary, and it promises to get worse this coming year with the start of a huge construction project in another state that I'm responsible for. I'll need to plan far in advance to schedule my workload to accommodate this, ahem, major mid-life crisis.

And fourth.... uh, well, there really isn't any fourth thing holding me back. Money isn't a big impediment; sure, I'd like to win my way in, but if necessary, I can afford to simply pay the entry fee into one of the lower buy-in events. Also, I've got the support of my wife (especially if I enter the senior's event, which she has begun reminding me daily that I'm now qualified to play in. sigh). I've also got a fairly decent set of fundamental poker skills and a fairly intense desire to get better. In other words, there isn't really any real show stoppers in the way holding me back from finally taking the plunge. Like I said, it's time to put up or shut up.

Life is short, people. Don't sit around, waiting for these bucket list things to happen on their own; you have to make them materialize or they almost never do. Playing in the WSOP has been on my own list for over ten years. It's about damn time I did something about it. Ralph E. himself would probably counsel me that it's time to get this particular journey going, or the destination will never happen.



All-in for now...
-Bug