This past Saturday I played in
Ventura and actually had a nice session, short but profitable. I was playing
1/2—which has a $50 min/ $100 max buy-in.
And at least for a week I can't complain about being card-dead.
I was still playing my first orbit
when I was dealt the dreaded pocket Kings. So I figured that
naturally I'd be down a buy-in before I'd warmed up the chair. There was a $4 straddle (UTG) so I made it
$12 and got a couple of callers. The flop came 10-9-5, rainbow. I bet $20 and one of the two tanked, but
neither called. Winning!
In the cut-off with King-7 of
spades, I limped in behind a bunch of limpers.
Not a hand I normally play, but I decided to play a few more speculative
hands this time. Five of us saw a flop
of 9-6-5, two spades. Someone led out
for $7, a lady shoved her last $10, I called and another player called, the
first guy added $3 to make the call as well.
The turn was a red 8, giving me a straight while still having the second
nut flush draw. So I led out for about
$25 but no one called, I was heads up against the all-in. The river was a blank—no flush—and the lady
didn't show when I flipped over my 7.
I opened to $8 with Ace-Jack of
hearts. The big blind three-bet me to
$25. The guy was new to the table and I
somehow got the vibe that he was trying to steal it. So I called.
The flop was Ace-Queen-10, giving me not only top pair but a gut-shot to
Broadway. He checked so I bet $30. He open folded pocket Kings! Well, my read was certainly wrong there. But
I was happy to take the pot.
The very next hand I got a
couple of Aces, I opened to $8 and had two callers. The flop was Ace-10-4, two clubs. I did have the Ace of clubs. Never sure what to do there. A lot of people would slow play it, even with
the two clubs. But I think you want to
start building the pot, no? It's pretty likely
no one has anything to call with though.
I decided to make a smallish bet of $12 and to my surprise, they both
called. I guess at least one of them had
a flush draw. The turn was the 7 of hearts and this time I put out $20 (which,
now that I think of it, was way too small).
The first guy called instantly but the other guy went into the tank. I had seen him bust out earlier but he rebought
for $100 and then had won a big hand.
Our stacks were similar. He
thought and thought and finally folded, saying, "This is a sick fold."
The river was a red Jack and I put
out $40. The guy didn't have much more
than that and I assumed he would either fold his busted flush draw or shove
since he wouldn't have much left if he just called. But no, he did in fact just call. I showed my Aces and he mucked, but the
happiest guy at the table was the guy who folded on the turn. He said he had Ace-Jack and if he had made
the call he would have given me all of his chips when the Jack hit the
river. Damn. I guess I should have bet smaller, not bigger
(that's results-oriented thinking and I don't mean it).
Then the deck turned cold for me
and I was mostly just watching. I was
ready to leave, but made a last minute decision to play one more orbit. A guy opened to $5 (a common opening raise in
this game) and I called in late position with Ace-Queen off. Six of us saw a
flop of Ace-Ace-6, rainbow. The preflop
raiser checked, but a lady bet $10 in front of me. Hmmm….This lady had been at the table for a
few orbits and I couldn't recall her playing a hand. She was, well, a "mature" woman and
certainly fit the stereotype of a nit. I
proceeded with caution. I thought she wouldn't bet that flop without a big
hand. Maybe she had a weaker Ace than
mine, but I also thought it was very possible she had Ace-King. I wouldn't expect this woman to three-bet
with it preflop. A pair of 6's and thus
a flopped boat was not out of the question either. I just called, and it was heads up. The turn was a blank and this time she bet
$20, I called. There was another blank
on the river and this time she hesitated and only bet $10. That confused me. Why bet so little there? I was still thinking she was the nit of all
nits and that just maybe she was trying to get me to raise her when she had a
monster. I took the coward's way out and
just called. She turned over pocket
Queens! Wow, I never would have put her
on that, betting into two Aces on the board. But I wasn't surprised that she
hadn't three-bet with them preflop.
Anyway it was another nice pot, my last one of the session.
After another orbit I racked up
and cashed out $315. So a $215 profit.
Pretty good for that game.
Note, the pic below has nothing
to do with this post. But the NFL season
did start the same weekend this session took place so it is not quite a total
non sequitur. I think most of you will like it even if you're not a Packers
fan.
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