Deep, Deep Run at Aria, Part 1
As I hinted at in the post here and elsewhere, before I left Vegas early this month, I had a very nice run at the Aria 1PM $125 tournament. It was such a nice run it will take me two posts to get it all in (poker pun not intended). Let’s start with part 1, since starting with part 2 would be just weird.
My original plan was to be driving
back to LA on this day (the first Saturday of 2015). Initially, I figured that 30 nights in Vegas
would be plenty. But as my departure
date approached, I had started to run pretty good at the poker tables. I realized that my bankroll could easily
withstand a few more nights in town, and I had nothing I needed to get home to
until Tuesday of the next week anyway. Besides,
the city was still jammed with New Years visitors and the games figured to be
quite juicy.
So I arranged to stay a couple of more
days and go home on Monday.
That meant one more Saturday in Vegas.
I almost always play in a tournament when I’m in Vegas on a Saturday. And usually I play in the Binion’s 2PM,
downtown. However, I decided against that
this time. As I mentioned in a few other
posts, the weather in Vegas during the holidays had gotten unusually cold. Now I don’t want to hear any shit from those
of you who live in cold-weather cities that desire to make fun of me for
thinking that 30 degree temperatures are cold.
I didn’t tell you to live in cities where the temperature regularly
reaches single digits. I’ve lived most
of my life in Los Angeles, and if the thermometer reads 65 degrees we start
worrying about frostbite. I’m just not used
to anything 50 or below.
Thus, the week before, when I played
at Binion’s, it was really, really cold.
Low 40’s during the day, dipping to 35 at nite. Plus it was somewhat windy, make the
temperature seem lower.
The Binion’s tournament area is kind
of exposed to the elements. It’s not
part of the poker room, which is actually pretty nice. When I first started playing in it, the
weekend tournaments were held in this very nice, enclosed room that was very
comfortable, near the poker room (basically separated by the Binion’s
Deli). However, management at Binion’s
decided to lease that space out for an Elvis Presley Museum a year or two
ago. That didn’t go over too well and
Elvis has left the building, but for some reason, the powers that be didn’t let
the poker room take back the nice room for their tournaments, preferring to
leave that space basically empty. Go
figure.
So the big Saturday tournament is held
in this wide open area outside that nice enclosed room where it could be and
should be held. The area is very close
to not one, not two, but three doors to the outside world. Traffic is
constantly coming in and out of those doors.
When someone comes in or leaves, a blast of cold air comes into the
tournament area. Even when no one is
coming in or out, the building is quite old and the doors don’t shut
probably. So there’s always a little bit
of cold air from outside anyway.
On top of that, I think the
ventilation system doesn’t work too well in this part of the casino (I walked
through other parts, including the actual poker room, and it was fine). Or, it may just be that someone thought it
was a good idea to crank the A/C up on a very cold December day. I dunno.
Furthermore, I was assigned to one of
the tables closest to one of the doors to the street As the tournament started, I was incredibly,
uncomfortably cold. I thought I was
prepared for it. I had a t-shirt, a
long-sleeved shirt, a sweater and also a ski jacket, the warmest jacket I
have. I started the tournament without
the jacket on (because, seriously, who would wear a ski jacket indoors?) and
was freezing. I had to put the jacket
on. That kept my arms fairly
comfortable, but my legs, feet and hands were still ice cold. I honestly couldn’t stand it, it was extremely
uncomfortable.
Everyone at my table was unhappy and
complaining about it. But there didn’t
appear that anything could be done. And
as the day wore on and evening approached, it only figured to get worse, not
better.
After an hour or two, I was actually
dying to bust out. I started playing
super aggro and just looked for any excuse to get my chips in the middle. I actually considered just leaving with chips
behind and let them blind me off in absentia.
Instead, I called all-in on a flush draw I had picked up on the turn (a
move I wouldn’t ordinarily have made that early in the tournament—3rd
level I believe—and was very relieved when I missed and could get the hell out
of there, something I wasted no time in doing.
The point is, the warming trend the
weatherman promised was supposed to start just as I was heading out of
town. Even though it had warmed up a
bit, the experience from last week had left such a bad taste in my mouth, I
didn’t dare take a chance of experiencing it again. I decided against playing at Binion’s that
Saturday.
Which left me with Aria, another
excellent choice. I had already played
Aria tourneys three times this trip. The first time, you read about here.
The other two times were the week after that for the PokerAtlas Meet
& Greet, and then on Christmas Day (because this Jew doesn’t work on
Christmas). Neither of those two times were
worth a blog post, sadly. But I do like
the Aria tournament and it is an excellent place to play, even if it is a
little bit cramped (both the tables when you are 10-handed for the tournament
and the room itself).
I was assigned to seat 3 and in seat 2
at the table there was a guy who had an interesting story to tell as we were
getting under way. He said that the
night before, he was playing 4/8 limit Hold’em with Antonio Esfandiari, noted
poker pro. The last time I mentioned
“MagicAntonio” was in the post here. I’m going to call the fellow with the
MagicAntonio story in Seat 2 “Tim,”
because that’s his name. I only learned
that days later and you’ll have to wait until part 2 of this story to find out
how I found out. Anyway, Tim said that
Antonio’s father was with him, and that’s apparently why they were playing
4/8. Tim reported that Antonio was a
real nice guy and obviously it was a thrill for a recreational poker player to
find himself playing with such a great player.
The tournament began and the first two
cards dealt to me that day were both Kings.
Yes, yes, getting the tournament started with the dreaded hand. Gulp. Was this some kind of omen? Was I about to bust out on the first
hand? I promised myself I wouldn’t get
all my chips in preflop, at least. Too
early.
My neighbor to my right, Tim, raised
to $200 in front of me (blinds start at 25/50 with a $10K starting stack). I made it $500. It folded back to Tim, who just called. The flop was low and I bet $800; Tim
called. Another blank on the turn and we
both checked. Note, it being early in
the tournament, and since I just had an overpair (and that overpair being my
Kryptonite hand), I was being extra cautious.
I had showdown value, afterall.
Another blank on the river, and Tim led out for $1200. I called.
He had 8-7 of spades and nothing on the board. My lousy Kings held and I had dodged my first
bullet this tournament.
Still on level 1, I raised with A-K
& A-Q, missed, fired c-bets, got called, and let them go. Then on level 2, I didn’t do much of
anything. Started level 3 (100/200) with
$10,500. I had pocket Queens, raised to $550
and had three callers. The flop was
9-9-X and I bet $2K. One player
called. I bet $4K on a blank river. My opponent had a lot of chips, way more than
me. He tanked for a bit and then folded.
Started level 4 (25/100/200) with
$14,500. I raised to $800 with King-10
clubs. Three called. The flop was Ace-Queen-X, no clubs. I bet $2,500.
A guy shoved for about three times my bet. I folded.
I suppose a c-bet four handed was bad there, but my thinking was that
since I raised pre, they’d put me on a big Ace and let it go. Also, I did have the gutshot if I got
called. But I couldn’t call a raise.
Level 5 (25/200/400), $10,200. From this point on, I’ll try to make note of
what my “Tournament M” was. You will see
that I rarely had a lot of chips, and that, in fact, I was in desperation mode
or pretty damn close to it most of the tournament. So my “M” here is about 12-1/2. I called a raise to $1,050 with pocket 6’s. A guy raised behind me, the original raiser
shoved, and of course I got out. The
other player called. It was pocket 10’s vs.
Ace-King. I don’t remember who won the
race, but my 6’s were never good.
Level 6 (50/300/600) $8,300 (barely
above an “M” of 5—and when you reach 5 you’re essentially in fold-or-shove
mode). In the small blind, I completed
with 9-6 off after two limped and I thought there was a good chance the BB
would just check, which he did. The flop was 8-7-x. I called $1,100 and it was heads up. I suppose I should have shoved with my draw
there, but I decided to wait. I missed
and folded to a shove.
This put me in more dire straits
(though if I had shoved my draw there and been called, I would have been out). Meanwhile, an interesting guy had taken the
seat to my immediately left. I didn’t know his name, but I definitely
recognized him as someone I’d played with before. An older guy, very friendly, quite loquacious,
and rather witty. And he wore a fedora. Let’s
call him “Jerry” because he was a bit of a comedian, like Jerry Lewis. Or
because he told me his name was Jerry.
I wasn’t sure if he had come from
another table or had just registered late, but as soon as he got to the table
he noticed that chairs were not evenly distributed around the table and there
was not a lot of room for him. Part of
the problem was the guy in the 6 seat was taking up a lot of space. This guy (seat 6) was huge. He was a young guy who was morbidly obese. Then, at one point, I noticed him jump up
from the table to get something—it was Kleenex.
And he took that Kleenex and shoved it up his nose. He was nose was suddenly bleeding profusely. Yuck.
Seriously, he kept pulling bloody
tissues out of his nose and putting new, clean ones in. It was disgusting. He said he hadn’t had a nosebleed in “a long
time.” Now, I felt bad for the guy but
really, it was rather uncomfortable playing with him. I mean, I know in the NBA they don’t let a
player stay in the game if he’s bleeding, he has to come out until they can get
the bleeding to stop. They don’t want
his blood flying all around. This guy
was possibly getting his blood on the cards and the chips!
I seriously considered asking if he
should be allowed to continue in the tournament in his condition, but I
didn’t. Eventually, his nose stopped
bleeding before he busted out.
Back to Jerry. When he arrived at the table he immediately
asked for the table to be squared. As
soon as he had sat down, our knees knocked.
He said, “As much as I might like to get to know my new friend here
(meaning me), I think we might be just a little bit too close.”
He said, “I thought you were
a hot blonde. I better get my eyes
checked.” For the rest of the time he
sat next to me, Jerry entertained us with wisecracks and his life story. Honestly, he talked so much that it could
have easily been annoying, but he was such a good raconteur that he never got
overbearing. Unfortunately, I couldn’t
remember his one-liners the next day.
One thing he did tell us that shocked us all was how old he was. I won’t
say, but I will say he looked at least 15-20 years younger than he was. Funny, interesting, entertaining guy and I
hope I get to play at the same table with again sometime.
But I digress. On this same level, in
the small blind, I once again found myself looking at pocket Kings. It folded to the button who raised to $3K. Easy decision for me, I shoved. Jerry, who had me covered by a lot shoved
behind me from the big blind. Gulp. He couldn’t have Aces, could he? The original raiser folded.
I flipped over my Kings and Jerry showed
two Queens. The Kings held and I won a
really nice pot, just when I needed it.
The very next hand I had pocket Queens
myself. A guy in late position “accidentally”
raised to $2K. It looked like he had
grabbed the wrong color chip based on his reaction. I put in a big three-bet and he folded,
admitting that he meant to limp.
A hand or two later I raised to $2K
with Queen-Jack offsuit and no one called.
Now I was sitting behind a fairly nice stack and Jerry said to me, “Look
at you now. I knew you when you were
nothing. In fact, I made you the man you
are today.”
So at the start of level 7
(75/400/800), I had $17,700, which was
still slightly less than an M of 10. On
the button I had Ace-King off. Someone
raised to $2K, one player called, and I shoved. The first guy folded, but the
next guy called all in for about $4-$5K.
He flipped over pocket 6’s. The turn was a King giving me the pot.
Soon thereafter, I had pocket 10’s and
it was raised to $2K in front of me, I went ahead and made it $6K. Then Jerry shoved behind me. He had me covered. The original raiser folded
and I did as well. Jerry didn’t show,
but he told me he had the pocket Kings this time, and I believed him. I didn’t
feeling like risking my tournament life on pocket 10’s when I didn’t have to.
I raised to $2,500 with Queen-10 of
clubs. Yes, I raised with the “evil
hand,” Coach. But a short stack shoved over me for about
$6-$7K and I let it go.
First in, I raised to $2,500 with
King-Jack hearts and no one called.
Which brings us to the end of level 7,
and also to the end of part 1 of this tournament summary. The conclusion is now posted and can be found here.
Q10 has history in the WSOP, it's not evil COACH!
ReplyDeleteI guess I should let Coach reply but let me just say....10-2 also has history in the WSOP. But as they say...."don't try this at home."
DeleteQ 10 has history with me, and it is evil. Rob made a good point - try playing 10 2 habitually and let me know how it goes...
DeleteNow that you are learning how to play the Q-10, I might consider you for my advanced course on 7-6.
ReplyDelete7-6? Now, that's a great a hand, I already know how to play that!
DeleteRob gave away $2,500.00 when he had to fold to a re-raise, and you consider that learning how to play it Lightning? Limp there, and maybe you can call a smaller raise with two to the royal... Again, tread carefully... ;)
DeleteAt that point in the tournament, with my stack size, there was no way I'd limp in with a hand like Queen-10. I was in a close-to-desperation situation and had to be aggressive. I'm either raising or folding Q-10.
DeleteOkay, if you're close to desperation and aren't going to fold, I'd said that any hand that you're willing to raise with there, you have to be willing to go all the way with if you get re-popped...
DeleteWell, as I remember from my readings of Dan Harrington's books on tournament poker, there are definitely situations where you have to raise with less than premium hands to try to get chips, but then you have to be ready to let it go if you face resistance.
DeleteAn "M" of between 10 & 15, which is what I had there, is exactly that situation. I wasn't desperate enough to commit all my chips preflop (except with AA, KK, etc.
Cheers to Binions for driving you away to the Aria I guess - good luck in Part Two!!! :D
ReplyDeleteThanks, Coach.
DeleteTo be fair to Binion's, the poker people there would all love to supply more comfortable game conditions. I know they would love to move make in the area that Elvis vacated. Like most poker rooms, they get short shrift from upper casino management.
I have a lot of friends who work there or play in that tournament, and when the whether is more reasonable, I'll gladly return there..
You don't get to read too many good blog postings with the word "raconteur" in them. Nice post!
ReplyDeleteLOL! Yes, I thought that I was using a word I hadn't used in the blog before when I wrote that. It's a good word tho.
DeleteAnd let's see your stalkee PPP use that in a blog post some time!
Thanks, Doc.
Yeah, I liked that word also Rob (there's SO MUCH to remember after each of your posts... ;)
DeleteI like to may sure my readers get their moneysworth, Coach.
Delete