McQuitty.net
May 2007

Poker This Week

Ever get the feeling that little goes your way? Having terrible runs at poker only creates more mistakes on the felt. And so, it goes. I recently had the opportunity to visit Harrah’s in St. Louis. They run a decent, if not overly service oriented, poker room.

I stopped in on Monday. I sat down to a bunch of local that play each other often. It wasn’t hard to pick out the players. The easiest tell was a guy who threw his cards after being re-raised. It turns out, he hates to have his pocket 2s re-raised preflop. The guy was easy to tilt and left a short time after. But, before then he did get a nice little talking to from the poker room manager about his behavior. Go figure.

So, I sat there for a couple hours. It was a pretty crazy table at times. At other times, it was just completely tight. I had a guy next to me, Ryan, who was an action junkie. I saw him there with a big stack that he had built after catching a slew of cards.

We are playing 1-2 NL. I pick up KK. I am in late action, so after a lot of callers, I raise to $25. Ryan calls. The flop comes all low cards with two hearts. There’s roughly 70 in the pot, so I bet $70. He insta-calls after showing me his AQ hearts. I put all my chips in, about $40 left, before the turn card shows up. He calls. I double up.

He went on to a run of cards that decimated his stack. When you aren’t hitting cards and playing loose, that stack just has wild wings.

I joined the Monday night tournament. Out of 75 players, I placed 8th. During every tournament I have won, I have made a single hand that I shouldn’t have. In this tournament, I found myself outgunned a few times. Most notably was my QQ vs AA. The flop came low, I ended up getting her all in. I figured her for AK, AQ, JJ. Instead, the dreaded Aces were turned over. I never caught up.

I then had a moment, where I was nearly all in. I put the guy on overcards. I didn’t realize they were paired overcards. I had pocket 10s. I bet into him and he raised. I went all in. And he called. I then look over and see his pocket Queens. Damn. As the cards turned over, I looked onward. Then, out of habit, I call out the card I need on the river. And the 10 appeared, giving me a nice full house. I then proceeded to tear up the field and knocked out 10 players.

I did have a favorite hand in the tournament. I was the small blind and picked up KK. It was late in the tournament with 2 tables left. There were 7 players at my table. Everyone fold to me. I raise the minimum. The BB decides I am trying to bully him. He proceeds to move all in. I think about it for about a second. Then call. He flips over K6. He has one live card, three outs. The flop shows him no love. The turn comes up and he is drawing dead. I knock him out. Had I overplayed my hand, I might have had no action. Had I called, he might have just checked. By acting like I am playing position, he makes the wrong judgement.

I ended up placing 8th and making the money. On that final hand, I picked up A9d. I caught a flush draw on the flop and couldn’t get the guy to fold. I went all in and he finally called. He made a pair of queens on the flop. I had 12 outs (9 diamonds and 3 aces) and couldn’t catch up.

The next day, I decided to return. And while I played just about every hand well, I couldn’t get ahead. In the first half hour, I lost $100. I made two pair to have a guy call down his flush draw and catch runner, runner two pair. I pick up trips on the flop with pocket 2s, only to have the turn give my opponent trips.

It didn’t ever improve. I walked out after losing my table stakes. Perhaps next time.
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