Made Day 2 of WSOP PLO8

After a rocky start, yesterday was a lot of fun. During the first two levels, I felt kind of overwhelmed. Although I have a fair bit of PLO8 experience, including final tables in UBOC and PCA events, I haven’t played it in a while, and during those first two hours … Read full post

PLO8: Rested and Ready

I’m about a week behind on my WSOP trip reports, but I just want to interject with some exciting real-time news:

Today is the $1500 PLO8, the last WSOP event I’m going to play before the main. Although the series hasn’t been kind to me so far, I’m optimistic about … Read full post

Decompression

My sudden reversal of fortune in the $2500 6-handed was another visceral reminder of how much needs to go right even to make a run at a tournament. I mean by all accounts I ran extremely well in several important ways for the first hours of the tournament and two … Read full post

WSOP Event 11: $2500 Six-Handed

The $2500 six-handed event got off to a good start for me. It seemed like a pretty tough field overall, so I was pleased with my starting table at which there was only one truly tough player, seated across from me.

Even better, I took a big bite out of … Read full post

WSOP Event 9: $3000 No-Limit Shoot-Out

Someone flopped a set against my Aces in a four-bet pot. Stack-to-ratio was less than three when we saw the flop. If I put it to you like that, it sounds like a cooler plain and simple, like I was simply destined to go broke. And maybe I was. But … Read full post

WSOP Event 7: $1K NLHE

My starting table was a thing of beauty, nine opponents who lay somewhere on the spectrum of weak to competent but none who seemed likely to give me tough decisions, a great example of why I wanted to play a $1K WSOP event. The table was loose and limpy and … Read full post

WSOP Event 6: $1500 Millionaire Maker

The Millionaire Maker is like the PokerStars Sunday Million on crack, drawing a field of thousands with a relatively affordable buyin and the distant prospect of a life-changing score. It ended up drawing a field of 6343, making it roughly the size of the Main Event for about 1/7 the … Read full post

WSOP Event 4: $1500 6-Max

I went grocery shopping on the night I arrived in Las Vegas, but more chores remained for the next morning. I packed myself a lunch, a task that took me back to my grade school days as I tucked two halves of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich (I didn’t … Read full post

Road to the WSOP, Part 10: Vegas, Baby!

On Wednesday morning we drove down the mesa and set off into the Arizona desert bound for Flagstaff.  The way this road switchbacks through the canyons is really something and makes for some extraordinary views:

Though long, hot, and largely devoid of human settlement, the drive through the desert was … Read full post

What’s Your Play? Who Wants to Be a Millionaire

This hand comes from level 3 of the $1500 “Millionaire Maker” WSOP event, a two-day affair expected to draw a field of 5000+. With just 4500 starting chips, preflop shoves were commonplace. They’ll be commonplace in lots of the low buy-in tournaments in Las Vegas this summer, so if you … Read full post

Road to the WSOP, Part 9: Mesa Verde

My original plan for this point in the trip was to catch a flight to Vegas while Emily continued on alone, stopping at several national parks before reaching Austin. This would have put me in Las Vegas in time for the opening events.

I decided, however, to skip the first … Read full post

Road to the WSOP, Part 8: Amongst the Yuppies

With the luxury of a house and a driveway, we took some time Sunday morning to rearrange the car a bit make sure things were packed up right. We don’t exactly travel light on these road trips, and keeping the car organized is essential to minimizing the annoyance of more-or-less … Read full post

Road to the WSOP, Part 7: The High Desert

Sorry, despite my valiant efforts to keep up, this blog is a few days behind my actual progress. I arrived in Las Vegas last night and am playing my first WSOP event, the $1500 6-max, today at Noon. Now back to our story…

Lathrop State Park seemed to come out … Read full post

Is it Wednesday Already?

Followers of this blog probably couldn’t help noticing that I’ve been on a cross-country road trip for the past week and a half. We made a valiant effort, but I simply wasn’t able to find enough downtime to get this week’s episode recorded, so there’s not going to be a … Read full post

Road to the WSOP, Part 5: A Long Way From Home

With a lot to see on Wednesday, we got an early start. The Illinois statehouse was the first stop. Of all the statehouses we’ve visited, which is well over half of them, we found Illinois’ to be among the most beautiful both inside and out.

Our tour guide was a … Read full post

Road to the WSOP, Part 4: Land of Lincoln

Tuesday morning came on bright and sunny, with barely a cloud in sight. Even the ground wasn’t as wet as we expected – it was almost as though the storm had simply been a bad dream. Drying off the tent required a little extra time, but still we packed up … Read full post

Road to the WSOP, Part 3: Tornado Watch

We woke to a foggy, humid Monday. Columbus, Ohio was our first stop. Emily is into government and politics, and she used to work at the Massachusetts state house, so we try to visit state capitols when we travel. With a lot of ground to cover, there wasn’t time to … Read full post

WSOP Seminar

The World Series of Poker is unique among poker events. In no other tournaments will you encounter such a wide variety of opponents, from those who barely know the rules to the very best in the world. This seminar will discuss a number of strategic adaptations for dealing with various … Read full post

Weird Line, Big Fold

I thought about posting this one as a “What’s Your Play?”, but I think it’s too weird and the flop check would be too much of a distraction from the turn decision, so I’m just going to post it and write about it like I don’t do often enough anymore.  … Read full post

Winning, Losing, and Bluffing

I received this email as a mailbag question, but I think the author makes a good point well and I don’t really have anything to add to it, so I’m just going to post it here for everyone to read. Thanks for writing, Kev from Australia!

I’m curious of your

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What’s Your Play? Kings on an Ace River

What's Your Play?

Edit: Hey look, a mistake in a WYP post! Been a while since that happened… At least this was a minor one. My preflop raise was to 150, and I’ve adjusted pot size to reflect that. Sorry for any confusion.

It’s early in the $2500 Borgata Spring Poker Open Main … Read full post

Learning to Look Left

Card Player just published one of my articles about a challenge that I gave myself at the casino one night when it became clear that the game I wanted to play wasn’t going to go off:

Rather than leave immediately, though, I gave myself a challenge. I had to pay

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What’s Your Play? Rivered Top Pair

What's Your Play?This is the fourth hand of a six-max tournament on a .FR site. Hero (who is not me) and Villain are both readless on each other. Blinds are 50/100, both players have roughly 20K to start the hand.

Villain opens to 205 from the HJ, Hero calls with As Th … Read full post

April Bookclub

Nate and I will be discussing Tommy Angelo’s Elements of Poker for the Thinking Poker Bookclub during the month of April. I figured I’d make a separate post about here since not everyone reads the shownotes. If you’ve never read Elements of Poker, you’re in for a treat. It’s … Read full post

What’s Your Play? Overpair on Dry Flop

What's Your Play?Playing 10-handed $1/$3 no-limit hold ’em. Villain has roughly $300, Hero covers.

Villain is relatively new to the table, but he’s already complaining, good-naturedly but often, about how he’s getting nothing but bad cards. Before looking at his cards this hand, he said, “I just want to see one card … Read full post

The Calling Demon

You pay off too much. You have trouble letting go of big hands. Bad calls on early streets get you into trouble later. You call when you know you’re beat, saying things like, “I had to,” or “I was priced in.”

Does this sound like you? I’ve got good news.

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The Hardest Player to Bluff

Often, when I’m in a smaller stakes game waiting for a seat in the bigger game to open up, I use it as an opportunity to practice my discipline. Generally it’s easier to pick up physical tells, betting tendencies, etc. in smaller stakes games, and rather than acting like it’s … Read full post