Shuffle up and deal! The WSOP at the Rio is off with event #1 (Casino Employees). Las Vegas itself is getting flooded with rich poker players, pro poker players real and imagined (in their own minds) and others who just want to scratch the big poker tournaments off their bucket lists. My first foray will be Saturday when I will be one of tens of thousands playing the Colossus tourney. The first half of the field kicks off Friday morning.
Along with the tournaments, the cash games around town get soooooo good. My normal games are 1/2 or 1/3NL with occasional forays into 2/5NL. Come WSOP time I stay in 2/5NL pretty consistently and sometimes foray into 5/10NL if the game looks good and my bankroll allows.
Poker Action - The Orleans
My wife wanted to see a movie at the Orleans, so while she watched her film I spent a couple of hours at the Orleans Poker Room, The Orleans I believe has the largest off strip poker room, and is quite busy, especially with Limit Hold'em and especially Omaha. I love playing Omaha, and I love the tournament structures, but I have had terrible luck at the Orleans.
This session didn't change anything. I caught few cards. I had few situations to make plays in position. Three times when I did wake up to hands I ran into AA each time. Yeah - bad mojo the whole way. I was happy just to get out of there having only lost $200.
The Summer Conservancy at the Bellagio
One of my favorite free spots in Vegas is the Conservancy at the Bellagio. This is a large area just off the main hotel lobby where the staff does major decorations depending on the time of the seasons and year. This week they broke out their Summer, and I loved it as it basically made it like you were inside an aquarium, complete with seahorses, jellyfish, bottom-of-the-briny-deep-treasure and a smirked sea tortoise. See the pictures:
Poker Action - Bellagio
Bobby's Room was closed but the rest of the room was rocking as serious and pro poker players were hitting town for the WSOP. I grabbed a seat at a 2/5NL game and fun began almost immediately. There were two larger stacks in seat 2 and 3 in the $2000 range. Everybody else ranged from about the max buy in of $500 to $200. In one of my first hands I raised to $25 from the button with Ad9d with Seat 1 ($500) and Seat 4 ($200) calling. The flop comes T high with two diamonds. Seat 1 bets about $40 and after Seat 3 mucks I re raise to $100 and Seat 1 calls. A blank on the Turn is followed by a check from Seat 1. I bet $180 and Seat 1 goes all in.
At this point I know I am beaten. However I do have the draw to the nut flush. Plus at this point I am in for $310, $190 remaining to call for a possible $1000+ pot so at 5-1 odds I am stuck. I call. The river pops a diamond. I show my nut flush. Seat 1 shows his TT for flopped set and goes freaking nuts.
I am an idiot, a donkey, how can I call that raise with just a draw. Don't go away because he is going to get my entire stack and every dollar I have in the ATM.
I nod and agree with him, which makes him dig even deeper into his wallet to rebuy.
Life is soooooooo good.
He eventually rebuys twice more, once leaving for about half an hour, a twenty dollar bill left at his seat to hold it, while he tracks down more money somewhere. He mocks me a couple of times when I reluctantly fold on the river when I knew I was beat.
"That King of Diamonds isn't so good now, is it?"
(I actually had a pair of Aces but it was clear from the action a single pair was dead).
Meanwhile he continues to spew chips. There are four others at the table who I generally stay out of the way unless I have a good hand. They are low-level pros or solid regulars. But there is a rotating cast of 3-4 weak players including my Seat 1 Spewer and I leave four hours later with four racks of red chips.
As I rack up to leave Seat 1 comes up and apologizes for his earlier action. He normally doesn't do that sort of thing.
"It didn't bother me guy," I say. "We're good."
And as I cash my chips I am very good. How I love the cash games around WSOP time!
Showing posts with label tournament. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tournament. Show all posts
Friday, May 29, 2015
Saturday, May 23, 2015
Countdown to the WSOP - The Colossus?
Less than a week until the WSOP 2015 kicks off at the Rio on May 27. I am incredibly tempted to break my cherry and actually dip my toe in the tourney this year.
In past years I have been too happy just taking advantage of the incredibly juicy side games. One year I had an incredibly profitable time playing the Single Table Qualifiers for the Venetian's Deep Stack Extravaganza. I'd play, win a seat, then sell the seat. Play, win, sell. Wash, rinse, repeat.
Most of the pros - real or self-delusioned - are playing the tournaments, meaning most of the games at places like the Bellagio and Wynn and Venetian are a couple steps easier than normal, and more profitable.
For me there is just too much variance in tournies when compared to the reliability of cash games. Fighting through several hours of play, pressured by ever increasing betting levels, subject to the crazy variables of desperate short stacks, doesn't normally fit well with my natural poker game.
And yet the WSOP is the World Series of Poker. Moneymaker, Brunson, Negreanu, Hellmuth and all the other icons of big time poker and its history. Yeah, I toil in the minor leagues of poker, but you always have dreams.
And for me there are a couple of interesting new tournies to consider. The first is Event #5 - The Colossus. With only a $565 buy-in the risk is low. The WSOP people are really thumping it up, hoping for a record turnout. Can they parley a lower buy-in event on the first weekend to make for a bigger tourney than the 2006 Main Event (8,773 entrants) which stands at the apex of poker popularity. WSOP is hoping for 10,000 or more. It could be fun.
Should I play? Right now I am leaning to at least give The Colossus a try, depending on how I am doing in the side games before it.
In past years I have been too happy just taking advantage of the incredibly juicy side games. One year I had an incredibly profitable time playing the Single Table Qualifiers for the Venetian's Deep Stack Extravaganza. I'd play, win a seat, then sell the seat. Play, win, sell. Wash, rinse, repeat.
Most of the pros - real or self-delusioned - are playing the tournaments, meaning most of the games at places like the Bellagio and Wynn and Venetian are a couple steps easier than normal, and more profitable.
For me there is just too much variance in tournies when compared to the reliability of cash games. Fighting through several hours of play, pressured by ever increasing betting levels, subject to the crazy variables of desperate short stacks, doesn't normally fit well with my natural poker game.
And yet the WSOP is the World Series of Poker. Moneymaker, Brunson, Negreanu, Hellmuth and all the other icons of big time poker and its history. Yeah, I toil in the minor leagues of poker, but you always have dreams.
And for me there are a couple of interesting new tournies to consider. The first is Event #5 - The Colossus. With only a $565 buy-in the risk is low. The WSOP people are really thumping it up, hoping for a record turnout. Can they parley a lower buy-in event on the first weekend to make for a bigger tourney than the 2006 Main Event (8,773 entrants) which stands at the apex of poker popularity. WSOP is hoping for 10,000 or more. It could be fun.
Should I play? Right now I am leaning to at least give The Colossus a try, depending on how I am doing in the side games before it.
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