Online Poker Tournament Rankings

 
Sign in | Join
in
Bodog
$100K Guaranteed
Every Sunday! 
Sign Up Today!
Rakeback
Get cash back after
playing poker!
Sign up now!
CarbonPoker 
$15,000 Rake Chase
Plus 30% Rakeback!
Cake Poker 
33% Rakeback
$25k extra each month!

dtools22's Blog

 
84 Posts and 336 Comments
    • Google
    • Yahoo!
    • Bloglines
    • NewsGator
    • MSN
    • AOL
    • Technorati
    • RSS

October 2009 - Posts

  • $400NLHE Score Part 3

    By dtools22 - Oct 30 2009, 10:15 AM

     We came back from day 2 with 12 players remaining.  After I drilled the "sexy 2-outer" as Brandon was telling me the day before, I had 329K when we returned.  It became clear right from the start that Ryan, who was 2nd in chips at the time, was planning on avoiding people and that Brandon our chip leader was going to be the table bully.  One hand I might have wanted to play differently was in the SB with AhTc.  Brandon raised from the button to 25K (blinds still at 1K/5K/10K).  I reraised to 70K to try and get him to stop raising my SB every time, he shipped all in on me and I was forced to fold.  I understand that the fold there is not spectacular but at this stage Brandon has been the table bully, but he's also been showing down big hands when 3-bet pre, so it's not likely the AT is ahead here.

    A few times I pick up AQ and 77 in the SB and BB and when Brandon raised I just shipped it for around 225K.  He started getting a little aggrivated, telling all his buddies there was no way I was ever going to want to play a flop with him now (he's right, but it's because I have no chips and I'm OOP, not because he's been beating up on me).  When we make it to the official FT of 10 players, I was 6th in chips with 248K and the blings just about to increase to 1.5K/6K/12K.  The grind began from there.  My only pots were pretty much just shoving hands with another raiser in the pot to try and chip up.  I just found so few hands and so few spots to make any kind of moves that it was nearly impossible to get any big traction.  It wasn't until we were 4 handed that I got involved in any really big pots.

    During this stretch of waiting around for hands I noticed and older woman on the rail behind me.  She was there pretty much from the start of the FT.  I found out later that she had played in the event yesterday and was just trying to learn how to play by watching the FT.  She started asking me some basic questions, she knew terms like M and talked about floating so she had at least read some books on the subject.  By the time play had reached 5 handed, she was the only person in the audience that was actually rooting for me to TID.  I felt very much like Ivey with the Humphry's on the rail watching him play.  Yeah it's kinda lame, but I still think that was really nice of her to start cheering me on and stick around to watch.

    The guy that came in 4th, Paul, opened for about 50K with the blinds at 2K/10K/20K.  I looked down at Kc9c and make a somewhat suspect shove.  Paul calls with JJ and I flop top two to end his day in 4th place and give me about 700K in chips.  A few hands later came the turning point of the match.  I am in the SB with 8h8s and Brandon makes it 50K to go.  I raise to 130K and he decides to call.  The flop comes down:

    7s7c6c

    Pretty solid flop for me so I bet out 155K and Brandon ships it in on me (he had about 2mil to start the hand).  I go into the tank for a few minutes.  I figured he hasn't really tried to play too many pots like this with hands like 99+ so I don't think he has my pair beat by an overpair.  It came down in my head to do I think he has a 7.  I decided he didn't so I made the call and he showed Ac3c for a good old fashioned sweat.  The board bricked off and I raked in the 1.5mil chips.  That hand right there changed the entire MTT.

    I has the CL for most of the rest of the MTT.  I lost it for a bit when Ryan hit a 6-outer to really put a hurt on Brandon's chipstack and give himself a slight CL.  He didn't keep it long though as Brandon was calling down bluffs with K-high, I was hitting hands on him, and eventually he bled down to 300K or so.  Blinds at 3K/15K/30K I opened from the SB to 80K with Jc7s and Ryan shipped all in for 253K more.  My thought process was that he's shoving here any pair, most any ace, most Kx, SCs down to 65, and unsuited down to T9.  His range is just so wide here and to add to it if I call and win, I'll have a 1 million chip lead HU playing for $66K and I lock up and extra $15K in prize money.  If I lose I still have 1.6million in chips and am still the CL 3-handed so I opted to make the call.  Ryan showed A9o and was unhappy to see my call, particularly when the board came

    7h7c7d

    and ended matters with little sweat for me.  Ryan took the $20K for third and I started the HU battle.

    Brandon right away came up to me and said he thought he was the better player (I agreed on that one) and he wanted the trophy.  So he asked to chop the money evenly and he gets the win.  I said there was no way I was doing that when I have you covered by 1million.  We played HU for about 45 minutes or so and he cut the gap to 2.1 v 1.7 million when I opted to take his deal.  Yeah I gave away the CL and trophy for an extra $15K locked up but to be honest, I don't think there was really much of an edge for me once the stacks get even.  He was such a tough player that it wasn't work risking the extra cash on trying to go for the win.  I was pretty pissed at myself initially, and it still leaves a bad taste in my mouth, but it's hard to complain after winning $50K.

    Cmuparty1 asked in the last blog's comments where I go from here with the money.  To be honest I'm still not really sure.  My tennative plan for now is to leave my FTP BR alone at about $2.7K and just start mixing in the $26 buy in events, I put another $700 onto UB to bump my BR up to the $50NL level and start playing those games, and take $5K out of my winnings to use as my regular live poker BR.  The rest of the money will sit in some form of investments, either savings account or mutual funds, until I need it to pay off bills and whatnot.  I think the harder part of being a pro is locking up the money for those 6 months of bills, so that's where most of this money is going to go.  I don't really see much else changing, or even me buying anything really cool like a nice TV or something (no where to put it being the main reason).  Now that the luster has worn off somewhat, I can get back to playing my regular rotations and finish up at WPI.  My career is now ready to begin, and I look forward to grinding my way to the top.


    5 Comments on this post. Click here to post a comment.

  • $400NLHE Score Part 2

    By dtools22 - Oct 27 2009, 09:30 AM

     I'll just pick this one up right where the last post left off.  So after getting my new found chips the BB from the AA hand looked at me and said, "I thought you had a big hand.  I had MP on the flop, woulda rivered two pair."  Now in most of the cases where someone has said this to me in a live event, I've just brushed it off.  This guy however isn't trying to lord anything over me, he actually is just making conversation.  He and I had about the same chip stack with now around 45 players remaining in the event.  That's when the fun started.

    The dude in the BB was Brandon, a 40/80FLHE grinder at Foxwoods (all the dealers verified this for me during the breaks).  He was maybe 30 years old but if I was setting a line I would say the over under would be 27.  He's a funny dude to talk to and play with and from 45 players on down to the final 20 he and I started dueling back and forth.  He would KO someone, then shortly after I got it all in with TT vs 77 and held.  Then he busted a shorter stack, and a few hands later I called a nutball shortie with 33 and held vs his A3 after the KJJ flop.  Brandon looked at me afterward and chuckled, "Every single time I get some distance you just match me."  We actually started keeping score at the table of how many big pots we raked in.

    Play like this continued until we were left with 20 players and the floor had us redraw for seats.  I had around 290K when we got to this point, with the average stack around roughly 190K.  Play resumed until we had 13 players left at 2:10AM.  We were supposed to play until 2AM or until the final 10 were reached.  Brandon, the chip leader Ryan, and I all combined at this point for over 1/2 the chips in play (all sitting at the same table no less).  I had about 450K in chips at this point when all of the players agreed to play on for another 20 mins to try and reach the FT tonight.  That decision almost cost me my tournament.

    With 12 left Ryan raised UTG 6-handed to 31K with the blinds at 1K/5K/10K.  Brandon raised to 80K with about 275K at the start of the hand.  I looked down in the CO at 9c9s.  I thought about it for a bit, Ryan is only going to call a 4-bet shove here with AA or KK, for certain he folds QQ jut by the way he was playing.  I didn't feel like Brandon was all that strong so I decided to ship my stack for 450K.  Ryan tanked asking how much, which was the first time so far in the MTT where I was legit nervous.  After a few minutes he smirked and laid his hand down, Brandon then snapped off with KK and I lost a big chunk of my stack.  Looking back on it I feel like this was a big mistake.  This was Brandon's first three bet, but since it was 6-handed and he has proven to be a competent player I figured he could be making the move with 77 or something here just as easily.  Ryan later said he had TT, which I didn't figure him to be that strong either.  I then licked my wounds and went back to work with my 175K remaining.

    About 5 minutes left before the end of the day and still 12 players remaining I saw 44 UTG+1 (6-handed remember) and shipped it for my last 150K or so.  The guy to my left reshipped all in and flipped his AA proudly.  Flop came down KQ2 rainbow.  The turn was an 8, and then the river I binked the 4 to ship the pot.  I wasn't even really excited to be honest, I was just pissed at myself for getting involved in the 99 hand and then being coolered like that.  We ended the day with 12 players and I had about 329K left behind.  We would come back Thursday and play the 30mins left on the clock at the 1K/5K/10K level.  All I could think was that I needed to put the shitty hands out of my head, I made it to day 2 and the FT was in reach.  Anything can happen when I get to the FT, I just had to hold on from there.

    SPOILER ALERT AGAIN: I obv made the FT and even had a very Phil Ivey moment involving an apple, a nearly 1million chip pot, and an older woman on the rail who became my only fan.  Part 3 I'll wrap this up then it's back to the old grind stone.


    2 Comments on this post. Click here to post a comment.

  • $400NLHE Score Part 1

    By dtools22 - Oct 23 2009, 03:25 PM

     Well the title pretty much says it all.  This year's World Poker Finals at Foxwoods just started for me and already I have done what I set out to do and then some.  I had one simple goal in mind, get the terrible taste out of my mouth from my choke job last year in the $300 Shootout.  I decided to skip the Shootout this year and play in the $400NLHE event on 10/21/2009.  Boy did I get what I wanted out of it this year.

    I've got a tone of funny stories from this event so I'll do my best to get everything up in blog form.  The first couple of hours in the MTT were as expected slow and uneventful.  Starting stacks were 5K each, blinds at 25/50, increase every 50 minutes.  The structure was a little fast paced early but it provided for a fantastic structure late in the event.  I kept track of my chip stacks at the end of every level in a little notepad, not really sure why I did to be honest but I remember watching Raymer do it and for whatever reason it made sense to me to keep track.

    I chipped up very nicely and was able to keep my M hovering around 9-12 range for most of the first few levels.  I had very few hands to real speak of.  I was just playing hands late in position, stealing blinds, seeing cheap flops, and trying to take down as many small pots as possible.  I was cruising right along and even the dealers took note.  After I shipped another pot having raised on the button and taking the blinds, the dealer leaned into me and goes, "You're making this look easy."  All I could think was I hoped no one else heard that and took notice that I've probably had air every time.

    Things went great right up until my table broke.  I had to move from a table where maybe every 5th pot was raised preflop to every single pot being raised.  Just before the dinner break I had an M of 4 in the BB.  Folded to the SB who limped in and I shipped my stack with 88.  I got a speech from the SB telling me how big a mistake I was making shoving on the BB there.  He then mucked his hand and continued to "teach" me about my mistake.  We got one more hand in where it folded to me and I shoved from the SB again with 88 and again walked away unscathed.  With 125 players left at dinner break, 80 of them would be paid, I was simply happy to have played far better than I did the year before.  I felt proud of simply playing this MTT for real, and even if I bubbled in 81st I would have said oh well (obv easy to say now because I actually made a very deep run but I was calling people and saying this during dinner).

    I managed to get my crappy stack into the MTT when I finally found a hand.  I had AdAh UTG+1 and decided to limp in.  Both the blinds were my only takers.  I've made this play online many times before as a short stack against weaker players, the idea being I'd rather try to with a big pot and run the risk of getting stacked by a small PP or suited connectors than just ship it and take the blinds.  The flop came 4h5cQh and the SB shipped.  The BB tanked before making the lay down and I snapped off.  The SB had the nightmare hand 5h3h.  Thankfully the turn and river bricked off and I was able to bring myself back up to respectability.

    There were many many more sick details that I want to save for another blog post but I'll cliffnotes this one.  SPOILER ALERT: I ended up chopping the event HU for $50,272 and the official 2nd place finish.  Also, I did take an even chop as a chip leader.  I will explain my logic and how I got to the FT in the next blog, stay tuned.


    9 Comments on this post. Click here to post a comment.

  • $18K in 8 Months Week 3

    By dtools22 - Oct 19 2009, 09:53 PM

     Hopefully this past week was a sign of good things to come.  I managed to rebound from a lack luster week 2 and made a strong push in week three.  This week was however finals week for me (WPI runs quarters so I get a break the week of the 19th) so the hours were down overall.  I had to make the most of what I was given and I feel like I did that and then some.

    Cash Games - $25NL FR on UB

    Sunday -> 2.3 hours of play, -$5.81 on the session

    Cash game action unfortunately again took a back seat for most of this week.  My normal cash game grinding hours, some time in the afternoon hours here on the east coast, have been subject to longer hours in the school library and review sessions with TAs.  The only session I was able to log was on Sunday.  It had been so long since my last real cash game session I expected to need to knock off a little rust.  Couple that with a less than notable run of cards and I ended up pretty close to even on the session.  I did get my rakeback money added in so I still wind up with a couple more buy ins in my account at week's end.

    MTTs as has been the theme so far have dominated my schedule

    Monday -> $68.05 in buy ins, $1,332.35 on the session

    Tuesday -> $87.55 in buy ins, $6.40 on the session

    Friday -> $74 in buy ins, -$72 on the session

    Monday I found myself having just a monster day.  I played in a smaller schedule than normal, only 6 MTTs due to a late start.  I managed to go 5/6 on the night including a double cash in the daily doubles and two final tables.  I managed to get 3rd in the $3 rebuy good for just under $1K and got a little unlucky HU to finish 2nd in the $2.25 cubed good for $320.  Tuesday night I followed my strong showing up with only 2 cashes on my full 8 MTT rotation.  I just missed the top 100 in the Daily Double B for a small cash and then in gross fashion bubbled the FT of the $26 $5K Guaranteed PLO when my AAc7c3 fell against the nutball chip leader's AhKhTh4.  A win in that spot puts me 2nd in chips and gives me a great shot to make another big run at the FT.  Unfortunately I had to settle for breaking even on the night.

    Final totals at the end of the week:

    Cash Game BR: $761.13

    MTT BR: $2,784.38

    Total BR: $3,635.51

    With the WPF going on this week I'm not sure what I'm planning on doing with my MTT BR.  I have enough right now to rework a few more $26MTTs into my nightly schedule.  The other option would be to take another $500 or so out and play in another WPF event.  For now I'm planning on leaving my MTT schedule alone with the intention of reworking it if things go well for me this week at Foxwoods or on the virtual felt.  One thing for sure is that I plan on getting in far more cash game hours this week to make up for some lost time.  I'd like to try and log 10K+ hands this week and really make a push get get the BR up into the 4-figure area.

    Anyway you look at it, this is just the show that never ends.


    2 Comments on this post. Click here to post a comment.
More Posts Next page »


P5's Member Blogs
Free Poker Coaching (I Ne...
By Cre8ive - added Nov 18 2009, 02:38 AM
Relationships and Poker
By dtools22 - added Nov 16 2009, 12:15 PM
A Victory and Playing wit...
By sgildea25 - added Nov 16 2009, 12:49 PM
RECENT POSTS
Relationships and Poker
Nov 16 2009, 12:15 PM
Finding Motivation
Nov 12 2009, 08:40 PM
Taking Some Shots
Nov 09 2009, 05:28 PM
Closing Out 2009
Nov 06 2009, 10:06 AM
The New Grind Begins
Nov 03 2009, 11:22 AM
$400NLHE Score Part 3
Oct 30 2009, 10:15 AM
$400NLHE Score Part 2
Oct 27 2009, 09:30 AM
$400NLHE Score Part 1
Oct 23 2009, 03:25 PM
$18K in 8 Months Week 3
Oct 19 2009, 09:53 PM
A First Time for Everything
Oct 15 2009, 03:49 PM
Blog Roll
No blog rolls