WPR101 Blog

Played with the pros!

Haha, so I talk about table selection.  Last night I sit at the $330 turbo and draw Greg Raymer.  Dwindle him down to 600 chips early and he starts chipping away at me.  Gets back to even and he ends up winning AT>A4 at the 50/100 blind level for the win.


 

Then today I'm sitting and honestly usually fish register.  This is the very next match since last night and I draw Gavin Griffen.  Nothing exciting in the match, I end up losing KJ to A7o pre.  I hit a jack on the flop, he hits a jack on the turn.

 

Next one I play.  Fish.  I win.

 

Next one Gavin Griffen registers again!  I was much more impressed by Raymer's play than by Gavin's by the way.  Anyways same thing of some back and forth.  We get allin my AT versus his 55 on the 25/50 level.  Flop comes AJQ.  Turn five, river blank.  I lose.

 

I asked Gavin went he sat down if stars was sponsering them to play in them; he said no.  I mean I've never seen either pro register before and I get them back to back!  Heck it's rare even to get a decent player.  I fairly sure it was coincidence but still strange. 

 

Anyways, it was a little dis-spiriting to lose to both of them.  Raymer I felt I was even with.  I think I have an edge on Gavin over the long run in these though... however, I never want to find out what the long run is versus a pro.  I'll keep playing it for a few more days but if pros keep sitting with me I am done with that stake/sng for awhile. 

Some musings about heads up play formats

Lately I've been 10 tabling full ring and playing 1 heads up table at the same time for variety.  I usually play 2/4-5/10 cash or the $230/$335 turbo on Stars.  The sng and the cash games play a lot different and they both have their pros and cons.


With the SNG you are locked in for a buyin basically and the match will take no longer than 30 minutes.  It's critical to pratice table selection for these.  If you see a regular already sitting, do not sit!  It is not worth the trouble and the edge you might have will be minimal.  The nice thing is if you are against a good player it will be over soon and you are unlikely to be a dog.  The bad part is if you get a total fish you only have him for this short period... atleast he can't get up 20 big blinds and sit out though. 


On the first level (10/20, 1500 starting stacks) I make it 3xbb raise pre.  However, one the blinds get to 15/30 I prefer to minraise pre.  The minraise enables more postflop play because you are not committing as much preflop.  I like pick away at my opponents.  This means raising about half the hands and making small continuation bets.  Opponents often get frustrated by this approach and make moves at the wrong times. 


Another nice thing is opponents often don't understand fundamental sit and go principles when a player has less than 10 big blinds.  If you play this small ball approach the whole game and then start open pushing hands bad players will often give you way too much credit for a big hand.  No regular or decent player would fall for this. 


In general I think the heads up cash games are more profitable to play.  However, sometimes it's hard to attract bad players.  One thing I like to do is sit with an odd amount.  Say it is a 3/6 game.  I will sit with say $286.70 rather than $600.  It looks much less intimidating.  Often players who sit with that amount are really bad and are playing with a large portion of their bankroll... I want to appear to be one of those players.  After someone sits for 10 or so hands I will reload to the full $600. 


I try and practice leaving a cash table after 25 hands if a player appears to do nothing fishy.  You will notice right away usually.  Bad play is indicated by calling out of position preflop often, minraises, or open limping.  Good play is indicated by a few well timed 3-bets, folding out of position, and open raising 35%+ of the time. 


Cash game play is more frustrating to me.  In the past two days I have found some horrible opponents at 5/10 and 3/6 nl heads up.  Interesting enough they both had a similar tendency of being aggressive and not folding.  Maybe ever 4th hand I would raise I would get min 3-bet or face a very small 3-bet.  Normally this is great; I can call in position or 4-bet if my hand is strong enough.  The problem was I was calling but never hitting a flop!  It's tough when your opponent does this 10 times and you literally never hit a flop.  Then the couple times you decide to 4-bet bluff he shoves.  Adding to the frustration was when I got dealt premiums of JJ+/AK I was always getting folds.  Nothing was going right but in both cases I played until the villain sat out.  Despite being down a few buyins the game was still incredibly profitable over the long run.


You have to know when to quit at heads up cash.  Sometimes the momentum doesn't swing in your favor and you get totally steam rolled against a player who you should be crushing.  As long as your aren't tilting it's best to stay in the game assuming your bankroll can handle it.  However, you need to be honest with yourself because tilt comes in different forms.  For example against one of those opponents mentioned above I made a few tilty 4-bet bluffs just because I was getting extremely annoyed by the min 3-bets.  On balance I should have picked my spots more carefully.  The bluffs were necessarily bad, but if I was thinking more rationally I would not have made a few of them.


Personally I find the sngs to be more fun but the cash games are probably more profitable.  I get less frustrated with the sngs.  The sngs will inevitably come down to more luck because you are forced to show down.  But it's in those first 2 levels where you can really get a leg up on your opponents with superior postflop play.  For right now I'm switching back and forth between the two formats of heads up play depending on my mood.  Heads up play has helped me develop my reads better and it also makes me calmer when in full ring or 6 max situations.  Anyways, these are just some random thoughts I had lately about heads up play.  Feel free to comment. 

A down then up day

Had an interesting day that ended on a high note.  I started off the session immediately firing up a $330 hu sng, and a $315 9 man sng.  I was also looking to bring up some full ring or 6 max cash games tables.  However, there was nothing decent going.  In fact, one 2/4 full ring table had 13 people on the wait list!  That is how jammed they were with regulars. 


Due to the lack of good cash games going I played I sat a 3/6nl heads up table.  About 7 hands in I raise Qh6h from the button.  Villain calls and flop comes 9h5h3d.  I bet 30, he check raises to 90.  I thought there was a good chance he was making a move so I make it 260 he shoved and I called.  Turn and river are blanks and he shows A9o for the win.  I'm not too sure either of us played the hand great.  I'm not going to be stacking off worse top pair hands and at best he's a coinflip if we get in.  From my side I'm stacking off with a queen high flush draw; seems fairly marginal, but I though the fold equity would make up for it.


I end up losing both sngs on some unlucky allins.  Additionally, I've lost a few decent size pots at 3/6nl and 5/10nl cash games.  At this point I'm down about 2k and not too happy with how the session is going.  I wasn't tilting though.


Before I know it I won a 2k pot at 5/10nl with a set against a fish.  I registered for 2 more $330 sngs and won both of those.  They are offering 1.5x ffp/vpp on stars for those hu sngs this week so I figured I should play some.  I sneak a peek at my balance and realize I'm close to even again!


I win a few more heads up tournaments and pick up some decent size pots against fish for the rest of the session.  I didn't place in either 9 man $315 sng I played in though.  At the end I was up 2.4k and decided to stop because I was getting hungry.


Turned out to be a great session.  There's nothing like going down early and coming back for a sizable win. 

Welcome to my blog

What's up?  This is wpr101 and I'm starting a blog.  Never been a blogger before but I like to do some writing and this seems like a good avenue.  I will periodically updating my blog with stories about poker, my life, and anything else interesting going on. 

<< July 2008 >>
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
  1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31  

recent posts

archives

  rss feed