mystpoker.com: January 2008

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Sunday, January 20, 2008

Aussie Millions

We arrived in Melbourne just after the start of Day 1a. The first thing I noticed was the +30 degree weather, which was a nice change from the record snowfall we received in Ottawa this winter. We checked into the hotel and then I headed down to the poker room to register for the main event. I saw a lot of familiar faces which was pretty cool, Phil Ivey, Mike Matusow, John Juanda, and a whole slew of other great players. Even though there were so many pros, the great thing about a tournament in an isolated place like Australia is that at least half of the field is made up of local Australians, who don't really play any tournaments outside of their country. They're mostly wealthy people who play for leisure.

I was slated to play on Day 1b, and for once I was actually early for a tournament! I was glad to see that I didn't recognize any of the players at my table. We started with $20,000 in chips and $50/$100 blinds. I got into the action on the first hand which played out like this:

It folds around to me on the button, and I make it $175 with A8. The SB quickly calls and the BB folds. The flop is 872 all clubs, and I have the Ace of clubs in my hand along with top pair. He checks, I bet $250, he min-raises me, and I call. Turn is a red Queen. He checks to me, and I check behind. River is a red 5. He leads out for $1000, I quickly call and he shows red 52 offsuit.

I can't say I was completely surprised, as nothing really surprises me anymore in these big tournaments. I now had some good information about this opponent and I just needed a good hand so I could get paid off.

The very next orbit, I get into another big pot. MP raises to $300, I call on the button with JT, blinds fold. Flop is AQ5. He checks, I check. Turn is a perfect K. I felt like he was slowplaying the flop, and he confirms this by leading out for $500. I raise to $2000 and he quickly calls. River is a 7. He again leads out for $2000. Now I go into the tank, thinking about how much I can make from him. I don't really want to shove because its such a massive overbet. Finally I bump it up to $10,000 since I have him on at least AK and I don't think he can get away from it very easily. He makes a quick call and just like that I am up to $31,000.

I stay quiet for a couple of orbits, then I decide to raise it up to $400 with the blinds at $75/$150 from the hijack with A9hh. The 52 guy calls from the cutoff, as does the BB. The flop comes K57 with two hearts, giving me the nut flush draw. BB checks to me, I bet $900, Mr. 52 min raises again, BB folds, I call. Turn is an offsuit 8, giving me a gutshot too. I check, he bets $3000, I call. He's made it obvious that he has a King and I'm not going to bluff him on the river because I know he will call anything. If I hit, I'm probably going to fire out something like $10,000. The river bricks out, I check, he bets $8000, I fold. That left me with around $25,000.

For the rest of the level I called 2 raises with pairs and missed the flop, and raised twice with AK and AQ and also missed the flop. On the AK I made a c-bet but had to shut down after getting called while out of position. Now I was back down $21,000. The blinds were now $100/$200 and I would play my final hand of the tournament:

MP raises to $700, 3 people call, and I call another $500 with 76 from the BB. I flop the nuts, 345 rainbow. I lead out for $2000, hoping somebody has an overpair and puts in a big raise. The original raiser calls, and the button calls. Turn is a 2, and now I'm hoping one of the players has an Ace or a 6. I lead out for $4000, MP folds, button calls. River is a 6, putting a straight on board, but still giving me a higher straight. My stack is now less than the pot, and I figure there's no way he can put me on a 7 with me leading out on all streets. He pretty much has to call any of my bets thinking it will be a chop. I shove all in, and insta calls and flips over... 78 for the nuts. I stand there for what seemed like an eternity just staring at the cards, until another player chimed in, "He has the nuts, you lost." I just picked up my jacket and walked away without saying a word.

I think I handled it as well as could be expected under the circumstances. If it was early in my career some chips would have most likely been airborne. But it has happened so many times now that it doesn't affect me like it used to, I just take it as it is and look forward to the next tournament. Before it would bother me for weeks after taking a beat like that.

I played one other tournament while I was in Australia, the $5000 Heads Up. The format was ok since it was best of 3, but we only started with 60 big blinds and 20 minute levels which wouldn't allow for much play. Even online sites give you 75 BB to start and more hands per level in HU matches. I guess they had to speed it up somehow, but I think I would rather have a best of 3 than slightly deeper stacks, so I can't really complain.

My match was against a young Swedish player, who turned out to be a really nice guy and a good player. In our first match, after each starting with $3000, I had him down around $4000 to $2000 when I flopped a straight flush draw and got it all in against his top pair. I turned the straight and also rivered a useless flush to win the first match.

In the second match, the blinds were at $75/$150 when he raised to $400 on the button and I called with JT. Flop was Jack high and I check raised him all in and he called me with QJ and he held up. Turns out we both started the hand with exactly $3000 so he won the second match.

The third match was the longest. We grinded away at each other for quite a while and we were at $100/$200 blinds so basically 15 BB each. He had me down $3400 to $2600 and he made it $500 on the button. I shoved all in with K6dd and he made the call with 77. I had a gutshot to go with my overcard but I couldn't suck out and he took won the round.

Hopefully my next tournament will go a little better. I'm planning a trip to Vegas in February, but I'm not exactly sure which tournament I'm going to be playing. I'll probably throw in another update before the trip.

In other news, things are looking good for Season 2 of the Myst Poker Tour which is hosted at the Lone Star restaurant in the east end. Season 1 was a blast and the champion ended up being my cousin Steve, who won a trip to Vancouver to play in the BC Poker Championship, a trip worth $4000. We are hoping to do something similar for this season, stay tuned to mystpoker.com for details!

Monday, January 07, 2008

2007 Recap, 2008 Poker Goals, and the Aussie Millions

First of all, I hope everyone had a good Christmas and I wish you all the best for the new year. 2007 has come to an end, which is kind of sad for me because it has been the best year of my life, for many reasons. One of those reasons is that it was the most profitable year of poker in my career. The funny thing is, in my 7 years of playing, I played the least amount of poker in 2007. I probably played less than 1/10th of the amount of hands I played in 2006. The biggest reason for that is I haven't played any online poker since around May, other than the random tournament here and there. Another reason is that our house hasn't finished being built yet, and I hate playing online poker from my laptop. I need a couple of high resolution monitors to really be comfortable if I'm multi-tabling. One of my New Year's resolutions is to play more online poker in 2008.

Considering how few tournaments I played compared to the big name pros, I'm very happy with my performance in 2007. I finished 3rd place in Canada and 47th in the world, ahead of the likes of Daniel Negreanu, Phil Hellmuth, Barry Greenstein, and Phil Ivey to name a few. While this means nothing unless I can do it in the long run, it's a pretty cool stat. =D Here are my results for 2007:

2007 EPT Prague Main Event - 20th place - $17,710.00
2007 WSOP Circuit - Harvey's Lake Tahoe H.O.R.S.E. Event 7 - 1st place - $11,916.00
2007 North American Poker Championship (WPT) Main Event - 25th place - $51,065.00
2007 WSOP Event 31 - World Championship Heads-Up NL - 33rd place - $9,212.00
2007 EPT Grand Final Championship Event - 2nd place - $1,413,291.00
2007 Aussie Millions Main Event Championship - 6th place $240,000.00

This translated into just under $2 million Canadian in live tournament proceeds. I still don't think it has sunk in yet. I always knew I would make a good living from playing poker, but not like this! I remember back in Monte Carlo in 2006 after my first ever final table when I was knocked out in 4th place. I was feeling so deflated after getting eliminated, and my cousin Steve, who was with me said, "Don't worry man, this is nothing, you can do this every time." I said, "No way man, this was my shot, what's the chance of me going through another large field and playing for 40-something hours and making a final table again?" Fast forward to a year and a half later, 3 more final tables, and a WSOP Circuit H.O.R.S.E. Championship. whowuddathunkit?

Here are my poker goals for 2008:

Play in at least 10 major tournaments
1 WPT/EPT final table
1 WSOP final table
Tournament proceeds of $400,000 or more for the 3rd year in a row
Net profit of $1,000,000 or more from poker for the 3rd year in a row
Increase the number of magazines/newspapers I publish articles to
Play on one of the high stakes TV shows

It's weird how all of the focus has turned to tournaments, when at heart I am really a cash game player. I miss the old days on the Tain network, when one of my friends would send me a text message when my big fish was online, and I would race home from whatever I was doing so I could play him. I also really miss playing the live games at the Bellagio in Vegas. I can't wait to go back.

Well, this has turned into one long brag post, but I earned it! As far as my next tournament goes, I was supposed to be in the Bahamas this week for the EPT event, but all of the hotels in the area were booked solid, so we skipped out on it. Instead I will be again heading to Australia for the Aussie Millions in Melbourne. I love Australia, but that 30 hour flight with 3 connections is torture.