Saturday, September 12, 2009

Tourney #2

So I finished 15th in the $340 event. Next was the $2000 event. Again in this tournament I was not getting playable starting cards through the first five hours. In many ways, I find this to be not such a horrible thing. It forces me to throw away a lot of hands and since it was a deep stack tournament, I had plenty of time to be patient. It was a good time to develop the proper table image. In this case - tight. Most times, eventually, you start to get some hands and you start to hit a few flops.

My patience paid off in spades. I hit a set and Mr. Aggressive went all in ahead of me. Big win. Then I was getting paid off with some big pairs. Very few times I was called after the flop. Then as we floated down to thirty players, I hit card dead territory. Something we all hit at one point or another. Then I just got caught. My 400,000 in chips had drifted down to $260,000 and I knew I had to make something happen, if my cards didn't improve on their own. So I'm in the small blind, one of the tighter players who had a lot of chips, but uncharacteristically, was playing a lot of hands was on the button. Its folded around to him and he makes a standard 3X raise or $75,000. I've got 88 (remember that hand last tournament?). I really don't have a choice in my mind. There's a good chance the button is weak or not strong enough to call a big raise. I go all in. He instacalls and shows me AA. I lose. I'm out in 22 place but I win $5000.

Recapping my efforts in these two tournaments;I finished 15 and 22nd and I netted $7000. I very good week. But I was really pleased with was my play, especially in the Mega. I was able to tread water very nicely during a prolonged card dead phase. I picked the proper times to steal and developed a perfect table image. It wasn't about the cards at all. It was about creating a proper pacing; playing the player and keeping an eye on average chip stack and other indicators. But most importantly it was about picking the moments to raise in which it was virtually impossible for my opponents to call if they didn't have a very narrow number of hands. This is so critical in professional tournament play. My risk control was allowing me to build up a stack without (or rarely) risking my chips through to the river. Again, in my courses, I spell this out in great detail.

I love tournament poker the most because it is existing in time-space continuum. Its about seeing the world as it exists, evaluating each moment in relative terms and evaluating choices and making the proper one in this best manner. Its almost important as how you bet as how much and when to bet.

Now I'm sitting in my hotel room in Atlantic City. Another deep stack tom'w. I hope I continue my focus. Especially since my cash game has been killing me lately. But that too will pass.

1 comment:

  1. Neal, great comments. Again, congrads on your two cashes. Good luck in AC.
    John Q

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