As I mentioned before, I played just
one tournament in Vegas during my July visit.
That was the Wynn on Sunday. On Friday and Sunday (but, alas, not
Saturday), they have $200 tournament at noon, 15K starting stack, 30-minute
levels and it even has a $10K guarantee. Big blind ante, of course. I had never played a tournament at Wynn
before, but from my observations, it appeared that this Friday and Sunday
tourney there was now getting a bigger crowd than Aria's similar tournament had. Plus Wynn had the $10K guarantee and Aria had
no guarantee. So I figured I'd give it a
shot.
It's a good tournament, good structure
for the price. I'll be more than happy
to play it again if I get the chance.
That said, (spoiler warning) I didn't come close to cashing. I'm not going to do a complete recap of my
experience. Basically I just want to
discuss one thing that came up during my run, based on a play I made and a
comment I received for that play.
My table was kind of crazy. Not the play, just the cards. In the first few levels there were an awful
lot of bad beats and bust-outs. I mean
ten-minutes into the tournament two players got it all in on the turn. The flop had been Queen-Jack-x, and the turn
had been another Queen. One guy had
pocket Jacks and the other guy had Queen-Jack!
Boat over boat in the first level.
The guy who won that hand later lost most of his chips in another boat
over boat situation, this time he was on the wrong end of it. Another time a guy with 7-4 in the big blind
took out a guy who had a boat with three 4's on the board.
The craziest hand was perhaps when a
short stack shoved from the big blind.
There had been a limper, and the small blind completed. The big blind explained after the hand that he
figured he had enough chips to get the two limpers to fold. But it turned out the first limper had pocket
10's and the small blind inexplicably completed with pocket Queens. So they both called the shove. The big blind was embarrassed to turn over
Queen-3 off. But he wasn't too
embarrassed to take the triple up when he used that 3 to complete a wheel on
the river. He couldn't believe his good
fortune and also couldn't believe the guy with Queens just limped in from the
small blind. He said, "I was just
trying to steal it. If he had raised, as
he should have, I'd have folded of course."
Well, the hand I want to discuss was
on level 5. The blinds were
400/200/400. I had approx 16K. With Queen-10 of spades, I opened to $500. There was a call then a guy shoved his last
$1,800. I called and the other guy
called. He had me covered, in fact this
was the guy who had gotten a double up in the boat over boat situation from
level 1. He was a fairly aggressive
player which is why I didn't re-raise.
Of course I was worried about a re-raise from him, but I thought if he
only called my initial raise that was unlikely.
The flop was Queen high, one spade. I bet 2K and the guy said,
"Why?" Huh? "Why are you giving him
protection?" He folded, saying,
"I hope you have a monster."
OK, so I guess what he was saying was that in a tournament situation, it
was in both of our interests for the guy to bust out and we'd both have one
less player to compete against. That is
basic tournament strategy, and certainly in the latter stages of a tournament
in a multi-way pot, you often see the players in the side pot check it down so
that either one of them can bust out the short stack.
I never said a word, but for a second
I was wondering if I had made a major gaffe.
Had it been so long since I played a tournament that I forgot basic
tournament strategy? It bothered me.
Anyway, the short stack had King-8
off. Not sure why he felt compelled to
shove with that, he was not one of the blinds.
The turn card was a second spade, so when the King of spades hit the
river, his pair of Kings was no good against my flush.
Of course I kept thinking about the
guy's comment. The more I thought about
it, the more I thought he was wrong.
What he was referring to was a late-in-the-tournament strategy, when you
are near the money (or in the money) and you really want to see those player
bust. Here we were still early,
registration was still open so I'm not sure what one guy busting during
registration gets us. I mean he could
have re-entered himself (I don't believe he did). My thought was that at this point in the
tournament, I'm really trying to accumulate chips more than I'm trying to bust
people and the best way for me to do that was to bet top pair and either get
him to call me with a weaker hand or get him to fold whatever equity he had.
Am I right or was he right?
Anyway, I made it to level 7
(600/300/600) with $21,600. With Ace-9
of spades, I opened to $1,600. A guy
shoved his last $3,100 and it folded back to me. Couldn't fold for that price so I
called. He had pocket 3's. The flop had a 9 on it but was all hearts and
he had the 3 of hearts. I faded the
hearts but he rivered a 3 and that one hurt.
I tried to steal it when it folded to
me on the button with King-deuce by raising to $1,800 but the small blind
shoved. Had to fold.
I opened to $1,800 with pocket 9's and
got a call. The flop was King high and I
tried to get away with a c-bet ($2500).
But the other guy raised big and I had to fold.
That got me to level 7 (800/400/800)
with $9,600. So I open/shoved with
pocket 3's. I got called by the small
blind who had me covered with King-9. He said he "had to call" me but
I'm not sure why. Well, he hit his 9 and
I was done.
They ended up with 110 players and an
$18K prize pool. Not bad at all. First place was $6K and the min-cash was $490
(acceptable!), 11 players were paid.
Would have been nice to have lasted into the money but I didn't run well
enough…or didn't play well enough. Maybe both.