Tuesday, June 30, 2009

June numbers and July goals

Here's a quick review of my Official Poker Rankings numbers from the month of June:

In The Money 24% (65/272)
Finish late 15%
ROI 4%
Profit $15

I had 1 first place finish, 4 seconds, 5 thirds and 45 fourth to tenth places.

Looking back at the goals I set for myself at the start of the month:
  • In the money goal 25% - actual 24% (almost)
  • Profit $150 - actual $15 (not even close)
  • Wins 6 - actual 1 (not even close, way too many 2nds)
According to the OPR site, my tournament stats now rank me just inside the top 4% of PokerStars tournament players for 2009.

Summary:
I knew I wouldn't be playing quite as much I did last month (played 100 less games, 25%) and my bankroll and profit plateaued. With my reading and posting on the Two Plus Two poker forums, I've adjusted my play a little and have been happy with the results since.
I'm also focussing on the $1 buy-in games (the 90 & 45 man turbos) until I get the bankroll up and my stats up to a level where I feel that I'm dominating.

Again, I don't think I'll be playing a huge amount of games this month as I have a few things going on at the moment (including selling my unit) but here are some goals for July:

In the money: 25%
Profit: $100
Wins: 4

Work on this will begin tonight ...

Eastgate vs Demidov: The Rematch

This morning I watched "Eastgate vs Demidov: The Rematch". In a Rocky-style build-up by PokerStars they created a rematch between the final two players in the 2008 WSOP Main Event, Peter Eastgate and Ivan Demidov.

The heads-up battle would of course be hosted on PokerStars and to replicate the situation from the WSOP final table, the players would start with the same starting stacks that they began heads-up with last year.

Click here to watch the coverage of the match on the PokerStars blog.

Three big hands (2 in a row at the end) went Demidov's way to give him the win. First was Eastgate with pocket 5's against Demidov's king queen off, the latter catching a king on the flop. Then it was Eastgate with ace two suited against Demidov's ace king off, neither hand improving to give Demidov the pot and the chip lead. Then the final hand was Eastgate with pocket 4's against Demidov with pocket tens. Demidov led all the way and caught a ten on the river for a full-house.

Congratulations to Ivan Demidov for winning the match and picking up $10,000 for his charity of choice.


Thursday, June 25, 2009

PokerStars update

Another relatively short night of online poker last night on PokerStars. I was supposed to be having breakfast with a friend this morning so I made sure I was in bed early.

Again, my theory at the moment is to just smash up the $1 90 man and 45 man turbo games and make sure I grow the bankroll and develop my game before bringing in the $2 games.

Last night went well, again happy with the way I was playing. Doing a lot more pushing from position, taking a few more races and attacking more blinds. I played 12 tournaments, final tabled 6 (45 man money starts at 7th) and cashed 4. I didn't get a win but had a 3rd, 4th, 5th and a 6th so it was a profitable night.

At one stage I final tabled 4 tournaments in a row! The first I bust in 9th of a 45 man so it wasn't a cash but the next 3 I was pleased to see were all 90 man tournaments. I was concentrating on the first one I final tabled so at the time I didn't even realise we were already in the money of another.

So I'm back with a positive ROI for the month of June and the bankroll is back up to US$326. Small steps.


Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Short night on PokerStars

I was disciplined last night, going to the gym straight after work before settling in on the couch for the night. I don't know why anyone goes to the gym after work, its way too packed. Thankfully I got there just in time to get a park and left just before it was too ridiculous.

Anyway, on to the poker. I felt like I played well last night, results just didn't go my way. I stuck with my theory of just playing the $1 tournaments until I'm completely smashing them and have developed my game a little more.

So my first 45 man turbo, I make it to the final table 3rd in chips and reasonably well placed. Blinds are quite high by this point and no one is calling the shoves all-in from the shorter stacks. I may be 3rd but relative to the blinds I'm not in a comfortable spot. Someone shoves from early position and I have pocket 8's in the small blind. I know he's pushing with pockets or a decent ace but I'm willing to take the race to knock someone, substantially chip up and play for the win. He turns over ace king and all is going well until he rivers a straight. I'm now in a bad spot but get ace queen on the button, everyone folds to me so I push it all-in. I get called by the small blind who turns over jack 8 off. I flop ace queen and then he hits runner runner straight and I'm out in 9th (top 7 cash in these tournaments).

Two games later in a 90 man turbo, I make final table, playing well and get to heads up. The other player took out the 3rd place finisher so has the chip lead. I check out their ranking on OPR to see what I'm up against and not surprisingly they're not a good player. A few hands in he raises from the small blind, I have ace jack in the big blind so re-raise before I get re-raised. They have the chip lead so I decide to shove and he calls me with king ten suited. My hand holds and I take down a huge pot and now take a dominant chip lead. A few hands later, he doubles the blinds from the small blind and I call with queen 4 suited. The board comes queen ten rag, I check and he shoves so I call. He turns over king jack off which is not what I wanted to see ... blank on the turn, ace on the river to give him the straight and the chip lead back. He works his way up to a 3 or 4 to 1 chip lead and I shove from the small blind with king ten off and he calls with 3, 4 off. Flop comes 2, king, 5 and I know exactly what's coming ... 6 on the turn and I'm gone. Another frustrating heads-up battle ends in a second place finish to a lesser player.

There was only one other small cash (2 total) from 11 games last night. Normally that would be a bad night but I'm not disappointed with the way I played (except for the final table of the other game, played WAY too passively). For example, in a 90 man tournament with 30 left and me being a short-stack, someone raises from middle position, I have pocket kings and flat call knowing that at this point I need to build a large pot and hope someone else comes along. The big blind shoves all-in over the top, the original raiser eventually calls and of course so do I. Big blind turns over pocket 8's, initial raiser had 7's so I'm well ahead with kings. 8 on the turn and I'm out. Normally I would discourage callers with pocket kings as I only want to be up against one other player, but at this stage of the tournament, I needed a big pot and if my hand had held I would've been up in the top 10 stacks.

Some other unlucky but well played moments throughout the night but I won't bore you with those. Despite only cashing twice, I turned a small profit. State of Origin 2 tonight so I won't be playing but will likely be back at the tables on Thursday night.

Go the Maroons!!


Monday, June 22, 2009

Australia New Zealand Poker Tour Queensland

Probably the most exciting poker thing that happened over the last two weeks is that I stumbled across this announcement (below). Its great Queensland and more specifically Brisbane and the Gold Coast are taking part in the new ANZPT.

Thanks to the current economic climate, I won't be rocking up on the day with the $2,500 buy-in but I have been playing in a few of the online freeroll qualifiers. There's usually about 3000 or so players in these events and most of the time I get to in to the top 200. Top 20 qualify for the next round where the seats are up for grabs so its a tough ask to get in to the event this way.

Even if I don't qualify, I'm keen to check out the action of the first few days at Conrad Treasury Brisbane. For more information about the event, click on the title below to go to the official website.

Australia New Zealand Poker Tour Queensland - ANZPT Sponsored by PokerStars.net

Conrad Jupiters and Conrad Treasury Casinos will be joining the inaugural season of the PokerStars Australia New Zealand Poker Tour as the new final event. The unique format will incorporate the event being held at two venues concurrently and the opportunity to firmly place Queensland as a new and exciting addition on the Australian poker tournament map.

What makes this event even better is that there is no admin fee for ANZPT Queensland. The entire $2,500 buy-in per player goes back into the prizepool!

ANZPT Queensland will be a five day event held from August 5-9, 2009 at both Treasury Casino in the State’s capital of Brisbane and Jupiters Casino on the Gold Coast. The event has a cap of 280 players plus 20 alternates. All players qualifying through to Day 3 will play at Jupiters Casino. Those players who commenced play at Brisbane and make the final table will receive a complimentary night’s accommodation at Jupiters Casino Hotel.

For more information on the format for this event go to http://www.anzpt.com/tournaments/queensland/faq/


PokerStars update

Since my last post updating you on my online progress its been a rough week or two of poker for me. I mentioned in it that I was going to stop playing over the weekend because I seem to struggle to do well on Saturdays and Sundays.

I of course played anyway and my bankroll got smashed as I played a lot more $2 buy-in events trying to get to the next level. I ran BAAAD! Over the next 4 days (after my Friday update) I played 61 tournaments and cashed in just 8 of them and on the last day went 0 from 9! That is unheard of for me and my confidence was questioned.

I have since righted the ship and had a solid day on Sunday cashing in 7 of 23 tournaments. I felt like I was playing pretty well and was unlucky not to cash in a few more. Of those 7 cashes, 3 were final tables with the best result being a 2nd in a $1 90 man turbo. I really should've won that game but lost a couple of costly flips heads-up. I went in to heads-up play behind in chips (as usual) but fought back to even and then got to a 2 to 1 chip lead. At this point the other player raised from the small blind and I pushed all-in with pocket 9's from the big blind. He called with ace ten suited and caught two pair on the flop and my hand didn't improve. Then when he had a dominant lead he pushed all-in from the small blind and I instantly called with pocket tens. He turned over ace 8 suited and turned the flush to knock me out in 2nd place.

It annoys me to lose in situations like this where I know I'm up against worse players. I usually check out my competition's results on Official Poker Rankings and that gives me an idea of who I'm up against and what sort of player they are. Most of the time, I get to these final tables against loose/weak players but can't finish them off. I've started posting hands and following the threads on the Two Plus Two Poker Forum so hopefully that helps to improve my game and develop my play a bit more.

Anyway, bankroll is just over US$300 after dipping under 290 a couple of times. I'm just going to focus on the $1 90 man games for a while until I feel like I'm really crushing them, improve my stats and hopefully get June back in to the black again (-2% ROI at the moment).


World Series of Poker update

Its been a week or so since I've updated this blog but seeing as tho only a few people read it at the moment, I don't feel quite so bad. Like my poker game, this blog is a work in progress so its early days.

As mentioned in a previous update, I've really taken an interest in the early events of this year's World Series of Poker. As I have only played no-limit and limit hold'em, I don't fully understand what's going on in games like omaha and razz but I'm getting an idea.

Since I've been playing more online poker recently and checking out blogs and forums, I'm tracking other players not just your big names (Negreanu, Ivey, Hellmuth, etc). Not that any of the bloggers I follow (Bond 18, Assassinato, etc) have had any great results as yet but there's still time and of course the main event yet to come.

Over the last week, the main stories have been about the double-bracelet wins by Brock Parker, Phil Ivey and then (Aussie) Jeff Lisandro. Here's the current Player of the Year Standings:

Player of the Year Standings View All-Time WSOP Player Stats

Name WSOP POY Points Bracelets Cashed 2009 WSOP Earnings
Jeffrey Lisandro 255 pts 2 5 $619,131
Ville Wahlbeck 255 pts 1 4 $849,785
Phil Ivey 225 pts 2 4 $340,255
John Brock Parker 220 pts 2 5 $802,514
James Van Alstyne 220 pts 1 3 $519,080
Roland De Wolfe 195 pts 1 5 $410,063
Angel Guillen 180 pts 1 3 $846,238
Pete Vilandos 175 pts 1 2 $1,080,538
Daniel Negreanu 165 pts 0 5 $316,190
Daniel Alaei 165 pts 1 3 $587,102

As we speak, I'm following the live updates on Poker News as Phil Ivey goes for his 3rd bracelet of the series in event 41, the $5000 no-limit hold'em shootout. I didn't know what a shootout event was before this series and for those who don't, you have to win your table to make it through to the next round where you have to do the same thing again. When it gets down to the final few in the tournament they play 6-handed.

Phil Ivey has just been knocked out in 8th place so he will have to wait a while longer for another bracelet. The points will certainly help in the Player of the Year race tho.


Friday, June 12, 2009

Friday night poker

I may have mentioned this before, Friday night is a great night for staying at home. Back to back games of NRL and two consecutive hours of poker on OneHD. That's some quality TV time if you ask me.

Another very quiet day at work yesterday and while I was productive for most of it, I finished the day with two quick sit'n go games. I loaded up a $3.40 18 man turbo and despite playing well ended up a very frustrated bubble-boy. I was fairly card dead on the final table and ended up pushing all-in as short-stack from the button with ace 7 off-suit. The big blind thought for a moment and then called turning over king 2 suited. First card out ace, GREAT ... but it was the ace of clubs, another club on the flop and then one more on the turn and I was done. Top 4 get paid, I finished 5th.

The next sit'n go didn't go anywhere near as well and I was sent packing fairly early on. I planned on going to the gym last night but it was way too cold so that idea got vetoed and I ended up playing more poker.

The night didn't get any better from home as I failed to cash in the next 5 games. I was playing a mix of $1 90 man turbos, $2 90 man non-turbos and $2 180 man turbos. I was hoping I could overcome my recent poor form in the $2 games but that wasn't the best start. Suck-outs all over the shop and I wasn't getting close to the money at all.

Thankfully my luck turned half-way through and I managed to scrape in to the money of a 180 man tournament finishing in 16th. $2 drought over!! And from there, the floodgates opened ... somewhat. I final tabled the next 180 man finishing a frustrating 7th and got in to the money again on the next 180 man finishing in 10th (bubbling the final table).

The night ended with a strong performance in a $2 90 man game. I chipped up early and maintained and built my stack throughout the tournament. I was never in trouble and stayed in the top 10 stacks down to the final two tables. I took a beat inside the top 16 but quickly got back in to the top stacks heading to final table.

I played a really good final table and felt in control. I made one mistake when I raised with ace jack in early position, got called by the big blind and when first to act he shoved all-in on a low board. I felt it was a move but still folded ... he showed ace ten off ... groan. I recovered from this miss-step and sat in the top 3 stacks as players were getting knocked out. In the big blind I had ace king suited when the short-stack shoves from early position. I played on this guy's table for the last hour so I knew I would be in good shape. He turned over ace 5 off but the first card out was a 5 and while I hit an ace it of course did me no good. That hurt and I found myself in trouble for the first time but I managed to take down a few pots and fought back up to a reasonable level. The player to my right who had just taken a bad beat shoved from the button and I called all-in from the small blind with ace queen suited. He had me covered but I knew I was ahead and wanted to take a shot at the win and couldn't wait for a better situation than this (as the blinds were already high). He turned over king ten off which was what I expected ... unfortunately the first card out was a king and my hand didn't improve. Gone in 4th spot which was disappointing as I knew I was the best player at the table, things just didn't go my way.

So after a horrible start to the night with the $3.40 sit'n go's and then failing to cash in my first 5 MTT's, i finished the night cashing in 4 of my final 5 tournaments, final-tabling 2 of them. I didn't managed to get a win or a top 3 finish but the bankroll still improved to US$380. The best news tho was that my $2 drought was over!

I've mentioned it before but I tend to find the weekend games particularly ugly on PokerStars and my bankroll grows midweek and falls on the weekend. So with this in mind I'm likely not going to play this weekend ... plus I have work to do. We'll see how I go tho ...


Thursday, June 11, 2009

Short night

I got home and watched the replay of game 3, Magic vs Lakers in the NBA Championship Series on One HD. I also had a DVD to watch before I have to take it back tomorrow, "Yes Man" with Jim Carrey ... meh, I've seen worse. I even laughed a couple of times, although mainly at Rhys Darby (Murray from "Flight of the Conchords"), I'm not a fan of Carrey. Anyway, by the time that was finished I had an hour or two to kill so loaded up PokerStars.

I only had time for 3 $1 90 man turbo games and although it got off to a slow start, some well-timed hands and I was continuing on the good form from last night. I got in the money in two out of the three, the first two games I final-tabled finishing 7th and 5th respectively.

The first final table I made with a solid chip stack but wasn't getting any decent cards in position. I probably should've taken a stand with pocket 6's at one point but folded to an early position raise. I ended up pushing from under the gun with ace jack but ran in to pocket queens in the small blind and couldn't outrun them.

The second table went a little better. Again I made the table with chips and waited for hands. I ended up taking a stand with ace jack (funnily enough) in the big blind against an early position raise. I pushed all-in and was called, he turned over king queen off and I flopped a jack to take down the pot. Shortly after I called the small stack push with pocket 7's in the small blind, he turned over ace 9 off and hit two pair. Next hand I had 7's again and thankfully they held up this time for me to double up. I ended up pushing with pocket 2's in the small blind but was called by the big blind who was chipped up. He called with king 8 off and rivered an 8 to knock me out. Looking back I probably should've just raised and then pushed the flop ... not sure he would've folded, but who knows.

Bankroll now just over $370.


Wednesday, June 10, 2009

PokerStars update

With so many pro poker players in Vegas at the moment for the early events of the World Series of Poker, most of the poker blogs are relatively quiet at the moment. There is essentially a new event starting every day so that doesn't give them much time to sit in front of the laptop and update the world about what's going on.

I haven't been playing as much as usual in the last week or so. I really need to get moving with a few business things so this will be my focus over the next few weeks. Saying that tho, I played cash games at PokerStars for a few hours on Saturday and decided to play some tournaments last night. The work will have to wait until this weekend.

Last night I felt I was playing really well. I didn't play too many games, just ten and I final tabled 3 of them. It could've actually been more but there were the usual suck-outs along the way.

Kings losing to king queen suited when they chased down the flush to the river. That was bad ... and there were others, but the worst was an unraised pot where I have king five suited in the big blind. Board comes 5, 6, 5 ... lovely! Small blind checks, I check, early position bets min and both blinds call. Next card out is a queen, small blind checks, I check, early position bets min, small blind calls. I decide its time to get some more out of this pot so I raise a couple of times the min blind, nothing excessive. Early position then shoves massively all-in, small blind umms and ahhs and calls and I reshove over the top and small blind still calls. What do they have you wonder? Early position turns over queen ten off, small blind turns over ace 6 off ... I'm in shock that either of them are still in the pot but know they're both drawing very thin (queen or a six). And the river ... a six of course ...

As mentioned tho, I made three final tables finishing 3rd, 4th and a 6th. So a profitable night and good for the stats but nothing too exciting.

My real concern at the moment is my horrible performances in anything other than the $1 90 man games. Every time I play the $2 90 man non-turbo tournament or even the $2 180 man turbo, I'm doing no good at all. Compared with my success rates at the $1 game, the next level up is a real struggle right now. I don't think its any tougher, I'm just running bad. Sure, I don't play as many of those tournaments as I do the $1 games but in the last 2 weeks I have essentially not cashed ANY of them and bubbling the money twice is as good as it gets. Over the next week or two I will be playing more of these tournaments and hopefully this trend will not continue!

Anyway, bankroll is now at $363 ... yes, I'm plateauing at the moment.


Adapting from online poker to playing live

I came across the following article on the PokerStars blog this morning. Its written by Greg Raymer and is a good read about converting from online play to live.

Click on the title below to read the full story.

How to adapt from online winner to live champion, by PokerStars' Greg Raymer - PokerStars Poker Blog

Many of our PokerStars players coming over to Las Vegas for the WSOP will be playing live tournaments for the first time. While the rules of the game are the same, playing online and live are two very different animals.

So who better to ask for some sound advice on how to adapt from online play to taking a shot at mega bucks at the Rio than Greg Raymer, who won the Main Event in 2004 and has got $6.8million in live winnings to his name....

by Team PokerStars Pro Greg Raymer

So, you've been playing on PokerStars.com, and doing well, and now you want to take a shot at the live games. What should you do? Well, the good news is you've already accomplished the hardest part, so the rest will probably come relatively easily. Here's some advice to make it even easier yet.

I've been playing poker seriously since 1992, so I started out as a live player, and only became an online player when it became available years later. Wherever you play poker, the hard part is learning how to play poker well. If you're winning online, then you've already done that. In 2004 when I won the Main Event, and prior to then, we used to make fun of the online players, and how bad they were. And for the most part, we were right. However, in today's poker world, it is the winning online players who have the most talent and knowledge, as compared to the live players. More importantly, the bad online players are nowhere near as bad as the bad live players.


Tuesday, June 9, 2009

World Series of Poker update

In previous years I really haven't taken much notice in the early events of the World Series of Poker. This year tho I've been following on Poker News and the official World Series of Poker website.

Today I also watched a bit of the live coverage from ESPN and Bluff TV. Coverage today was the final table of the $5000 no-limit hold-em event.

Of note from the first few events is how the cream of the poker world is already rising to the top:
  • Phil Ivey has already picked up his first bracelet (event # 8, $2500 no-limit deuce-to-seven lowball), cashed another time and is 3rd in the Player of the Year standings
  • Daniel Negreanu has a 2nd placed finish (event #14, $2500 6-handed limit hold-em), two other cashes and is 7th in the standings
  • "Aussie" Jeff Lisandro won event # 16: $1500 seven card stud
Phil Ivey wins WSOP bracelet #6

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

May numbers and June goals

Here's a quick review of my Official Poker Rankings numbers from the month of May:

In The Money 23% (88/378)
Finish late 14%
ROI 13%
Profit $70

I had 3 first place finishes, 3 seconds, 4 thirds and 52 fourth to tenth places.

My In The Money was down from 26% the month before and my ROI was down from 152%. I think this has more to do with the extremely good April I had more so than a poor May. I played a LOT more games than the previous month (378 up from 113) but didn't have a great result in the big field tournaments.

According to the OPR site, my tournament stats now rank me just outside the top 4% of PokerStars tournament players for 2009.

I'm not sure if I'm going to play quite the number of tournaments I did this month but my goals are:

In the money: 25%
Profit: $150
Wins: 6

I'd also like to get my ranking in to the top 2.5% of PokerStars players. Let's see how I go!

Monday, June 1, 2009

World Series of Poker


With the 2009 World Series of Poker getting underway last week, I came across the article below that covers the history of the event. Its a good recap of some of the highlights for those that haven't done their homework.

I've been following the updates for the last few days on Poker News's Live reporting pages. The highlight so far was former main event champion, Greg Raymer's (pictured right) 3rd place finish in event # 2, the $40,000 no-limit tournament. It would have been great to see him take the title but it was not to be.

Click on the title below to read the full story.

40 years of the WSOP: The new millenium

By Shari Geller

With the World Series of Poker approaching its 40th anniversary in just days, PokerListings has been looking back in a series of articles at how the event has evolved. This fifth and final part looks at the new millenium.

Back in 1991, Jack Binion was asked to look into the future and see where the WSOP might go.

Jack had no way of knowing how the WSOP would explode in popularity, bringing thousands to his casino in search of fame and fortune and said he expected a slow, steady 10 to 15 percent growth rate.