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By
StraightNutz
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Oct 31 2009, 12:26 AM
I just got done watching game two of the World Series and I am not happy with the outcome since I despise the Yankees. I am an avid Chicago Cubs fan with being born and raised around the Chicago area in northwest Indiana. I was a pitcher throughout my high school years at Lake Central High School in Saint John, IN, and always looked up to the Cubs dominant pitching rotation. I just have to say that the pitching duel between A.J. Burnett and “the most influential player to play in Yankee stadium”, Pedro Martinez, was a joy to watch to say the least. With Burnett’s knee buckling curve ball and Pedro’s devastating change up, I was astounded by their talent and wish I could be in their shoes. …but I was thrown a curveball in my life and ended up in the poker world my senior year at Indiana University in early 2008. I just got back from busting in the $555 WSOP circuit event in Elizabeth, IN at the magnificent Harrah’s Horseshoe Casino Southern Indiana. David “Whitey03” Whitehead and I decided to give our luck a try in the one day event. I did not have any luck in either of the Elizabeth or Hammond, IN events, but was very please with Hammond’s 1,412 entrants in the $345 first event which was a record setting field. Poker has come a long way since the Moneymaker effect. In both Hammond and Elizabeth I felt that I was the table captain and best player (which was not true last year), but things just did not pan out for me. I was never able to build a stack in both tournaments with short stacks crippling me four different times in Hammond and being non-stop coolered while losing with AA three times in Elizabeth (making the correct lay down with them showing their hands in all three instances). The pain of losing on the $555 was dampened by the $2-$5 cash game the night before where I cashed out $1241 at 2:00AM after a 5 hour cash session.
Although I did not have any luck at the live WSOP circuit events around Indiana, I had a lot of online success with my most profitable month yet as a professional online poker player. The month of October netted me just over 20K in profit, breaking the pocketfives top ten in the Indiana sortable rankings, and also became 84th place in bluffmagazine.com silver online player of the year rankings updated today. I ran well on Absolute poker this month with me taking down some big tournaments. I was able to take the down the largest tournament of my career with 1,068 entrants in the $20 15K Sniper. Also, I was fortunate to be victorious in the $30 rebuy 15K guaranteed. On Bodog poker, I was able to take down four tournaments: $150 5K, $69 3K, $12 rebuy 3K, $32 turbo 2K. I am very pleased with my October results and I see only bigger results in the near future.
Our poker crew, Midwest Connect Poker Crew, has a website midwestconnectpoker.com that has been up and running for about two months now. I am finally learning how to update it on a weekly basis. The website has everything you need to keep up to date on our poker crew, including jhebs and bigtone52. The main index page has summaries of the past week tournament victories along with the past week/monthly money winners and tournament challenges completed. It has history of the crew, member pages that include online stats and info on the players along with pictures and average online schedules. Also, we have a tournament challenge page that has 45 tournaments needed to be won in a span of one year. We took every weekly tournament that Bodog and Absolute Poker offered that had a buy in of $10 - $300 on the two poker websites including the Sunday majors. I am very proud to say that we have took down 20/45 tournaments in the challenge in just two and a half months. I alone have taken down a third of the challenges with 15 out of the 45 won. We also have a $300K profit challenge which we challenged ourselves to profit three hundred thousand dollars as a crew from our Bloomington, IN move in date from August 15th, 2009 to August 15th, 2010. We currently sit at $44,476 profit in two and a half months in the challenge. It is short of the pace needed, but I have no doubt that the crew will persevere in the challenge. We also have a blog page in which our crew members have wrote poker blogs about the daily grind of being a professional online poker player, including this one. The website is always being updated and would love to hear some ideas about what we can do to make it better for the viewers. Send your ideas; I would love to get some input!
What is in store for the Midwest Connect Poker Crew in the future? I am starting to figure out the grind of being a professional online poker player. Since moving to Bloomington, I have not been consistent with sticking to my 5 days a week 30 tournament day schedule. In October, I only played 82 tournaments on Bodog Poker which is well short of what it should be. My Bodog Poker online schedule should be playing ten tournaments a day on average. I should have been playing 200 minimum. On Absolute Poker I played around 225 tournaments, which is also short of my preferred schedule. I play between 15-18 tournaments a day on Absolute Poker, so I should have played around 300 to 380 in October. Although I was well below my preferred online tournament schedule, that was the most tournaments I have played in a month since I started playing online poker. I look up to players like daisyxoxo, 011pokerdr, and beland66. I aspire to be a more astute online player and plan on putting in the same volume as them within the next year. I looked forward to November with the Bodog Poker Open 4 Championship Series starting on November 1st. I plan on November being even bigger than October for the crew. I should be playing at least 500 tournaments because the WSOP circuit events are over and there is nothing besides Thanksgiving to distract me from my goals. I am very excited about the future of the Midwest Connect Poker Crew and I have very big expectations for jhebs and bigtone52. They have been running extremely bad for over a month now and I hope November brings some much needed luck to their side. I think that November is going to be the biggest month for the crew yet and hopefully we will put a huge dent in the 300K challenge along with keeping up the pace for the tournament challenges. I hope that a Sunday Major will be taken down and off the list for the crew in order to get the Midwest Connect Poker Crew on the map in the online poker community. As always, good luck at the tables and expect to see more of me on the virtual felt in November. Steve “MWCSTR8NUTZ” Skowronski
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By
StraightNutz
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Sep 04 2009, 03:58 PM
I heard from many online professionals that when you first start playing full time expect to lose a lot of money because the long hours are very strenuous and it takes time to adapt to the full time grind of a multi table tournament professional. They were right! The Midwest Connect Poker Crew has been in Bloomington, IN since August 13th. The crew started out ice cold and the 300k challenge in which hebs, bigtone52, and I challenged each other to profit three hundred thousand dollars in a one year from August 15th, 2009 to August 15th, 2010 seemed like it was unattainable. We were down close to six thousand dollars after the first week (I was down over two grand the first Sunday playing in the new house). I thought that I was prepared, but my actions and results beg to differ. After the first week I was down money, but more importantly, mentally I was way off course. I was screaming out loud after taking beat after beat, and I kept saying very negative connotations throughout the whole day. Some example are: "Obviously…Of Course!", "I can’t ever win these flips!", and "Why would I ever get there on that massive draw!" I never screamed out loud in my old house because no one was around me. I lived with my friends, but most of the time they were in the basement, when I was grinding in my room. They all had normal jobs and did not play online poker for a living. Now that bigtone52, hebs, and I all play in the same room, I feel obligated to scream out loud and show them what a bad beat I just took. With all three of us doing this, I get to see triple the amount of bad beats in one day. With the crew playing close to ninety tournaments in one day, that is a lot of bad beats seen. Also, with all three of us screaming in the room, it does not exactly make for a great environment for staying positive.
In the life of a professional online poker player, staying positive is very crucial, probably the most important attribute you can have. The techniques I have picked up while working my way up to becoming a professional in the last year are the biggest reason why I am making money and have such a positive attitude towards the game. First off, in the last two weeks, I have noticed that screaming out loud only intensifies the bad beat by at least four fold. Usually, I can get over a bad beat in a couple of minutes, but that first week in the new house it was taking me at least ten minutes to get back to the proper mental state for playing good/solid poker. Secondly, I stopped saying negative connotations completely. By saying these out loud or even just in your head you expect to lose the next crucial situation along with the one you just lost. I stopped saying anything negative out loud and it took me about a week to stop saying it in my head, but now I expect to win. Finally, visualization is a great technique I learned within the last six months. I do not use this technique when I am playing, but I try to use it after every session right before going to bed. It is more of a stress release technique, but it also helps with staying positive for the next day’s session and helps me fall asleep faster. I got this very helpful idea from the book The Secret by Rhonda Byrne and tweaked the technique towards poker. As poker players, it is natural to always remember the lost crucial late flips or big draws that just did not pan out instead of the big hand that held. Even after playing in over 3500 tournaments I would still lose sleep from thinking about them. Not any more! In bed, right before I try to fall asleep, I visualize me winning the huge flip and getting there with two over cards and the nut flush draw! Furthermore, I then visualize me heads up eventually taking down the tournament. This technique took me months to perfect, but it is huge for getting through and sometimes forgetting about the daily grind!
I am proud to say that after week two I am actually up two grand thanks to a win in the twenty five dollar 10k on Absolute Poker tonight! Mentally, I am a lot stronger and staying positive from the techniques I discussed above. The crew overall is up over seven thousand dollars and putting a nice dent into our tournament challenge, 7/44! I hope this blog helps online players with some of the mental aspects of the game or at least allows them to tweak my techniques in order to stay mentally strong. To see the details of our tournament challenge, read other blogs by the crew, and to keep tabs on the MWC Poker Crew, check out our website at midwestconnectpoker.com.
Best of Luck,
Steve "MWCSTR8NUTZ" Skowronski
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By
StraightNutz
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Jul 21 2009, 01:21 AM
By: Steve StraightNutz Skowronski
Lately, I have been complaining to
my poker crew that I would make so much more money if I could win a late
crucial flip, whether it is a 60/40 or a virtual coin flip. “I run so bad! I really could not win a late
flip if my life depended on it.” That
is what I just told my second trainee, Tony bigtone52 Calabrese, earlier tonight who decided to play a Saturday
session at my house on my laptop. After the
session was over and Tony left, I was extremely frustrated and just could not
sleep. I started to think of the past
hands I had earlier today. Mostly, I remembered the lost flips, but some good
plays and hands that held up also. The
hand I remember the most was actually not my hands of Renster12 getting there on the river with his 1010 versus my KK for
65x in chips late in the Bodog 10k or UFPokerStar
holding QQ versus my AK for a obscene amount of chips late in the 30r. The hand that sticks out the most was
actually Tony’s hand on Bodog late in the 10k.
It wasn’t how he lost but what he said after he just busted. “I am running terrible…whatever, life is
good!” He lost a 60x hand all in preflop AK< AQ with 25 left. Most of the time he yells loud as hell screaming
curse words, usually the f word about ten times loud and piercing enough to
make you cringe. It literally still
scares the shit out of me still to this day even when I somewhat expect it. I do not believe he knows I heard him say
those words because it was under his breath after he told me that AK was no
good against AQ in the 10k. While I was
moping around and complaining about how bad I run (FML wrote in numerous chat
box’s earlier today), I remembered what Tone said. I instantly started not feeling so bad for myself
because I just remembered that I play online poker, a hobby that turned into a
lucrative job for a living, and I wake up around nine
a.m. everyday at the earliest.
Life is good, life is great!
I started
out playing poker like a lot of you. I
went to Indiana University
to study biology planning on becoming a physical therapist. My brother Scott also went to Indiana
University who was two years older than
me and a senior at the time. Him and his
roommates would drink a bottle of Jim Bean and play one or two tournaments a
night. I looked up to my brother and he
was no doubt the biggest reason why I had such a huge interest in poker. It was not Moneymaker that did it for
me. If Scott was playing poker, than I
had to be playing poker also.
I started with micro sit and go’s
my sophomore year on PokerRoom.com with my roommate Landon Lengacher. He played a lot more sit and go’s than I did
and I was fascinated how much money he was winning on a weekly basis. I played very rarely and had about $200 in my
account. I also dabbled in tourneys and
profited about two thousand dollars throughout the remainder of my college
years from sit and go’s and tournaments.
In the end of my senior year, I tried to be a tournament grinder for the
winter living in my parent’s house. I
played for the first month and made about 600 dollars. It was not cutting it and I knew it. My parents knew it too, and my Dad told me to
get a job for the winter. Later that
day, I was playing probably the last tournaments of the winter or maybe of my
life, when I ran into a player by the screen name of The Maven on Bodog. If
you do not know who The Maven is
then you must be living under a rock. We
got into a chat about something off topic and it really seemed like he was a
nice guy and was dominating the Bodog tournaments on a weekly basis. After talking to him for a while he offered
to train me in tournament poker from his buddy’s house in Vegas. He said he
trained to the likes of daisyxoxo, fitzfitz, and quietwinner (who is just killing it right now, congrats Austin!). I told
my parents about The Maven and that
I could make a lot of money with this training.
I showed them his stats, I calculated profit, and told them what I could
make if I played all winter long. It
didn’t matter to them, especially my Dad.
He was set on me getting a job and kept saying, “Poker is garbage and it
will not get you anywhere.” After a few
days, thankfully, I was not able to find a job.
During my job hunt, my Mom saw my passion for the game of poker, because
I would not stop talking about it. I remember being on the verge of tears telling
my Mom that I do not want to regret this me entire life because you guys would
not let me go to Vegas. I am really big
on not regretting anything in my life, and she knew that. That must have persuaded her because she
convinced my Dad to let me go. They decided
to let me take the chance and loaned me some extra needed cash. I cashed off my entire bankroll besides five
hundred dollars on Bodog and two weeks later I was in Vegas training with the
one and only David Chicotsky. At the
time, he was living with Alan ari Engel
somewhere around Lake Mead. I had a week full of intensive training along
side Dannenmann. The experience was great and I learned a ton. I trained in Vegas late January 2008.
After playing for six months, I somewhat
made a name for myself in tournaments on Bodog. Joe hebs Hebda, an old friend through baseball got in touch with me
about tournament poker at a local bar. He
was very interested and wanted to know how I became such a good tournament player. He was not new to poker and also played
numerous sit and go’s online at college.
I told him that I had been trained by The Maven, and he should do the same. He wanted to do it, but he was new to his job
and could not take a week off work. At
the time, I was an alright player, but not even close to a good player
yet. The next week, he asked if I wanted
to go to the boats and play some cash games near my house in Hammond,
IN. I
have not played live since training and it sounded like a fun time. We started playing 1-2 NL around eleven a.m., when we found out that there was a
$50 freeze out tournament at noon. Joe, his friends, and I all decided to play
in the tournament. I ended up taking
down the tournament, my first live tournament after training, actually, my
first live tournament ever. After
winning the one hundred person field tournament, he said he could not wait for
Vegas and that I needed to train him as soon as possible. I insisted that he needed to train in Vegas
with The Maven, and that I am still
learning the game. I told him that it
was a great time and the wait would be worth training with one of the best in
the world. He persisted with me training
him and I finally gave in a couple weeks later.
We came up with a training schedule at my house a week later in early
August. Joe had enormous success after
training including winning the December monthly leader board on Bodog with a
part time job none the less. Not to
mention boasting a 96 percent ROI overall.
He also is destroying Absolute Poker with a ridiculous 112 percent ROI.
With word of mouth around the
region, I got in touch with my roommates friend from college a couple months
later. Tony bigtone52 Calabrese was extremely interested and seemed like a perfect
student. He had no job and my roommate said he would be completely dedicated to
poker. I trained him in the middle of October.
What a tournament beast he has become in
such a short period of time. He is
ranked 22nd in the world for 2009 silver player of the year on
bluffmagazine.com and not to mention 5th on the Bodog yearly leader
board. Oh yeah, he also was in a
horrific car accident where he was thrown out of the front wind shield of the
vehicle and suffered major brain injury a couple months before training. He had to wear sunglasses when training
because at the time he could not stare at a computer screen for more than an
hour without his brain throbbing in pain.
I am extremely happy with my student’s, now my great friend’s
success. While playing tournaments on
Bodog shortly after training Tony, andyvanslyke,
an online tournament regular coined
us three the crew name of The Midwest
Connect Poker Crew a.k.a. MWC poker crew.
MWC poker crew is growing at a fast pace, and now contains a total of
seven online players playing on all different sites.
If someone asked me right after
training in Vegas “Where do you expect to see yourself in online poker in a
year and a half?” I would hope my answer
would have been close to where I am right now in online tournament poker. Sure, I have not had as much success as some
of The Maven’s other students; but I
am very happy where I stand. In 2009, I
have won a 12K package to the Main Event on Bodog, took down the March TLB on
Bodog while profiting over 12k, and recently have had great success on Absolute
Poker profiting nearly 7k in my first 150 tournaments under the screen name MWCSTRAIGHTNUTZ. Total in 2009, I am pleased, not satisfied,
with profiting 45K playing what I would consider less than half time (fewer
than 1500 tournaments).
So what is next for StraightNutz
and the poker crew? Joe, Tony, and I are
moving to Bloomington, IN
on August 13th where we plan on playing online poker tournaments
full time. Full time meaning thirty tournaments a day, five days a week
minimum! Tony just told me that he would not be surprised if he only took off
two days a month the first three months after we move in. He said his brain
injury is now about ninety percent healed.
Like I said, tournament beast is an understatement. I am extremely excited and determined to
becoming a great, not good, tournament poker player. I believe by completely surrounding ourselves
with poker and not having any distractions in our way, the MWC will make a big
splash in the online tournament poker world in the near future. I believe that all three of us will be in the
top ten of the 2009 silver online player of the year rankings and creeping up
on the gold rankings by the end of the year.
To keep tabs on the Midwest Connect Poker Crew, we are creating a
website which will contain bios/pics, blogs, tournament updates, prop bet
videos, tournament challenges, and other great poker tournament related
topics. The website will be up within
the next month. Come check us out at midwestconnectpoker.com! I want to send a shout out to Flush634 for recently
helping/discussing tournament strategy with me, the Bodog regulars, and a big
shout out to the entire MWC poker crew.
I have big expectations for us.
My dream is finally starting to come true and I can not wait to see what
the future holds!
Gl at the tables,
SN
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