You may have noticed I haven't
been posting as much lately as I used to.
There's a few reasons for that but the main one is that my enthusiasm
for writing blog posts has waned a bit lately.
I mean once I start writing I enjoy it, but getting myself off the couch
to actually start is the issue. And
there is a lot going on that seems to have diminished the time I have to
write. I dunno where the time goes. It seems like I used to have the entire
evenings to write, but lately I don't seem to get to the PC until about 10 pm.
Even though I haven't been to Vegas since
June, I still have plenty of material from that trip for you—in fact, I'm not
even half way through my stories. I'm
not dragging it out on purpose, it's just happening naturally.
Anyway, before getting back to a
story from that trip, I figured I would tell you about the session I had yesterday
in Ventura. Again it was 1/2 with a $100
max buy-in. I got stuck early with a
hand that went wrong with the dreaded pocket Aces. No!
Don't worry, I'm not going to start calling pocket Aces
"dreaded." At least not
yet. But I got them twice and…well,
you'll see.
Early on, I got them and I think
it might have been the first hand I played other than the blinds. There was a single limper and I made it
$8. At this game, that seemed appropriate. Sometimes you can bet bigger but from what I
was seeing that was the right size. The
limper was the only caller. He had just
swept in a huge pot when I was sitting down and he had me covered. The flop was Queen-9-8, two spades. I didn't have the Ace of spades. He donked out $20 which perplexed me. Was he betting more than the pot with just a
Queen? I suspected not, but obviously
couldn't be sure. I had never seen this
guy before.
Now from my years of playing
poker, I've come to realize that if you see a board where a straight is
possible with Jack-10, it's more likely they have that than almost any other
combination that makes a straight.
That's my observation anyway.
People just love to play that Jack-10.
So I tend think it's at least 10% more likely that a player has the
straight if Jack-10 is needed than any other hole cards.
I decided just to call. I think in retrospect the play might have been
to just shove there since I only had about $85-$86 left. The turn was a blank and he bet again, but
only $20. Hmm, the first bet was an over
bet but now this was an under bet. It
was a small enough bet for me to call again.
The river was a very interesting card.
It was the Ace of spades. So now
a flush was possible and I had a set of Aces.
This time he checked. Well, well.
My gut told me he would have bet the flush if he had been betting the
draw up until then. He couldn't count on
me to bet for him. Yeah, maybe he had
the straight and the flush scared him.
But I also thought he could have two pair and the Ace (and the flush) scared
him. Now my normal play there is to just
check behind and play it safe. But I
swear I'm trying to force myself to start value betting more on the river. So I forced myself to bet my set. But my nitty nature prevented me from
shoving, I just put out $20 matching his last two bets.
He shrugged and said,
"Call." And flipped over
Jack-10. Ugh.
Well, I did play the hand badly
but in reality nothing I could have done would have made a difference. Not that I'm taking any credit for my playing
saving me a few bucks. Actually, I think
bad play on the flop and the turn saved me some money, and a bad value bet on
the river cost me money there.
I topped off my stack to get
back to $100. Much later, I limped in
with pocket 8's. There was a raise to $5
(very common in this game) and I called, there were a bunch of us in the
hand. The flop was 8-4-2, two spades. I checked and the raiser bet $10. Another guy called. I made it $40 with the check-raise. The first guy folded and the other guy went
all in for $42. I threw in the two bucks
and we didn't show. A spade on the turn
was scary, but the river paired the turn card making the flush worthless. However, he didn't have the flush. He flipped over pocket 4's for a set. Set over set is so nice when you're on the
winning end of it.
I won a small pot when I raised
with Ace-Queen, hit a Queen and didn't get a call on my flop bet.
Then I limped in with 10-9 of
hearts, not sure if limping was the right move there. I think there might have been a subsequent
small raise that I called. The flop was
Ace-8-6, rainbow. The 8 was the 8 of
hearts, so in addition to the gut shot I had a back-door straight flush draw.
There was a $10 bet and a call. I
thought it was worth seeing one more card.
Good decision. It was a black 7,
filling in my straight but putting a second club or spade out there. After I checked, the same guy bet $12 and
then the other guy called. Both of them
had me covered. I made it $35. Not sure if I could have bet any less. But the first guy folded instantly and the
second guy tanked for a bit—but then folded, saying, "nice 10-9."
I got Aces again,
under-the-gun. I opened to $8. No one called. Well, that's better than the last time I got
them.
It was time to cash out and I
had $180—which was exactly what I had bought in for after the rebuy. I dunno, it felt liked better than a break
even session after the bad start with the dreaded pocket Aces.
The power of the J-10 is when a flop has broadway potential and your opponent has ace-something where they end up with two pair or top top while you have made broadway. But making that play with J-10 can leave you with a gutshot draw for the beloved broadway in many cases. Oh do the sparks fly when I call too small of a flop bet when I am gutshot and hit broadway and then smooth call the turn and reraise the river!
ReplyDeleteThanks Lester. I remember one of the first poker tidbits I ever read in a poker book was that if you have Jack-10 and make a straight, it is always the nut straight.
DeleteI had a hot streak of five winning sessions. My biggest loss was with pocket aces. I three bet and had one caller. The flop was Q-J-10 of clubs. The villain went all in and I folded. I don't care what he had. I didn't want to call. I figured he had A-K off with a club in his hand.
ReplyDeleteInteresting, Darryl, thanks for sharing.
DeleteAces can be tough. It's only the best hand before the flop!