You know we’re doing the new challenge stuff. I’m not that of a writer as the other two guys, but I can tell you I still have 0 points. Just as Mr. Blue.
But I can show you some hands from a tournament I played last week, the $4,40 one with 180 players. I made a deep run in that tourney, but didn’t make it to the final table. I was one of the shortstacks when I finally decided to stop folding some strong medium hands and made this move:
From that moment on, I had a little more breathing space and was able to play some more hands. I was moving up in chips and won some quality pots with some premium hands:
Getting Kings once is already nice, but another time during the same blinds level? Yes, but with a classic slowplay:
I think win the maximum in this hand playing it this way. Unfortunately my tournament ended shortly afterwards, but I’m warming up for those final tables. Till next time.
Submitted by Mr. Orange
I’m gonna teach you an important poker lesson today. We’ve been talking a lot about tournament poker here lately. One of the most important things you have to master when you want to be a profitable tournament player is how to play a final table. Listen poker ladies and gentlemen: the final table is another game of poker.
Everybody is under great stress in those situations. The message: don’t go with the flow, but make use of this situation. Don’t try to end up with a sweet price, try to win the thing. A hand from Cake Poker I played last week (their hand histories are even worse):
Hand#19725CE2A5001695 – Tournament Table 8 T6087333 — Table 8 — $100/$1.000/$2.000 NL Hold’em
Seat 1: chic***1 ($24.293 in chips)
Seat 2: dian***2 ($28.411 in chips)
Seat 5: White***5 ($25.481 in chips)
Seat 6: home***6 ($6.778 in chips)
Seat 7: UNDe***7 ($91.095 in chips) DEALER
Seat 10: theo***10 ($32.442 in chips)
chickgirl75 posts ante of 100
dianzor21 posts ante of 100
WhiteWidower666 posts ante of 100
homez20 posts ante of 100
UNDeSAZAR posts ante of 100
theodotca posts ante of 100
chic***1: posts small blind 1.000
dian***2: posts big blind 2.000
Dealt to WhiteWidower666 [8h,9h]
WhiteWidower666: calls 2.000
home***6: is all in 6.678
UNDe***7: folds
theo***10: folds
chic***1: folds
dian***2: folds
WhiteWidower666: calls 4.678
WhiteWidower666: shows [8h 9h]
home***6: shows [Jc Ts]
*** FLOP *** [7c,Td,Js]
*** TURN *** [4s]
*** RIVER *** [9s]
***SHOW DOWN***
WhiteWidower666: wins 16.956 with Straight, Jack high
So there’s clearly one big chip leader and one shortie. So I know it’s gonna be pretty tensed fight between us to play heads-up against the chipleader. So I call the BB with 8 9 suited and I already decided I’m gonna call the shortie’s all-in when necessary. You definitely must decide to play your live cards in this situations and try to cumulate chips. I flop a straight and it holds up: excellent result. I ended up third in the tournament. Till next time!
Submitted by Mr. White
After that miserable piece of poker knowledge that Mr. Blue dropped here last time, I will show you something today that you can really use to improve your own game. It’s all about certain moves you can make on the river.
I stumbled upon this subject because I was involved in a specific situation this week during a tournament on FTP:
I like my hand a little more because I’m on the button here. I could have raised, but try to see a flop cheaply here. Now the Ace flops with a pair of threes and the small blind leads out: always risky. However, I’m not folding of course and try to see what he’ll do on the turn. He bets the same amount on the turn which could be a sign of having a three: there’s a small chance that I’m going to outdraw that hand on this board. When he bets small on the river again I have enough information and I make a raise for two reasons.
First of all I was playing fairly loose-aggressive on this table and he could call me here with a medium pocket pair because of my image. And second, he might have a smaller Ace and pay my value raise. I think he had like 55 or something and he folds. Btw, if you would like to read more of my plays and the terrible beats I have to face now and then in specific, you can visit my own very interesting poker blog!
Submitted by Mr. White
Every poker player will have its own different tactics to play the big pocket pairs from let’s say Queens to Aces. Hand like Jacks and Tens are known as ‘problem-hands’, as people are often dragged into big pots with those hands. But how to play the small pocket pairs preflop?
The great part of all poker players agrees on how to play them in early and middle position: just limp when possible and try to flop your set. Of course, in late position you can be a little more creative and try to win the pot preflop or acquire pot control. I have a little expample from a tournament I played this week, where I had 33 in early position:
Now this is a relatively weak raise on the button: three times the big blind with already two callers in front you. Maybe I should have bet the flop with the paired board but in the end I’m still able to pick up the pot with a good bet.
Mr. Brown has also sent me an interesting hand from an heads-up game he played on Full Tilt:
Apparently he’s playing Pot Limit Omaha for the moment and apparently he made a royal flush
. Now I don’t know much about this game but the pot looks nice ^^.
Submitted by Mr. Blue
So Mr. Brown was watching some High Stakes Poker yesterday and I saw a really great pot during episode 11 of season 4. It’s one of the last episodes in this season where the players have decided to bring $500k to the table. This means there’s $5 million total on the table.
Now there’s of course the always tight playing Sammy Farha (you must love the man), French cash game player David Benyamine and his fellow countryman Guy Laliberté, the founder of Cirque du Soleil. I’ve got the hand right here for you, it starts after 7 minutes:
Now how sick is this?? Sammy of course calls Guy’s preflop raise with 32 suited and flops the flushdraw. But Guy realizes this is a dangerous board and bets his topset. Now it’s probably because there’s an extra player in this pot with Sammy that Guy bets his set directly and that saves him a LOT of money. Of course Sammy makes his flush and Guy is lucky to make a boat but the poor Benyamine would have made running quads…
Hi, it’s Mr. White here
. I decided to grind the $.10/.25 cashgames on FTP lately and I enjoy it after playing tournaments for such a long period
. I mean, sometimes it’s so easy to take a nice pot:
Hehe the minraise preflop obviously isn’t enough to get my KT out off of the way. The same bet on the flop is an insta call with my middle pair. Then he checks the turn, which is a sign of weakness of course. I can chase my straight for free and hit it. When he raises that big on the river I know he doesn’t have a flush, that would make no sense at all! Ship it fish!