December 12, 2007

Tilt King

Blog by : T0ughBeats
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Psychologically I've improved leaps and bounds. A good example of this is the heads up match I played today: 100NL on Stars.
I haven't played heads up for sometime, but after watching some recent Cardrunners videos, it got me motivated again. Anyway, less than 30 minutes in and I'm down 4-buy-ins. Nevertheless, I felt I was playing great poker and had lots of reads on my opponent.
He was quite bad and one of his biggest leaks was that he'd over bet the pot on the turn - by 2 or 3 times - with top pair and a weak kicker! I lost one buy-in with 4-6 on a 2-4-6 board to his 77 - he rivered a set. Then I lost another with AQ on an ace-rag-rag board; only this time he hit the rag on the turn. Anyway, you get the idea: Bad player, high variance. On top of all this, he's talking trash saying how bad my calls are to his massive over bets, to which I politely reply, "yeah, keep playing like that and you'll win lots more money." He replied: "Well I got all night if you have the bankroll before I bust you."
I know it's not a bad idea to quit a game like this - especially when your opponent has the momentum - but this player was just too bad and psychologically I was in complete control...not an ounce of tilt.
Anyway, 1 hour later and I'm sitting with $600 and him with $15. No reload this time and he quits. I was only up $100, but it was incredibly satisfying.
Add that to the fact I made $1,700 at 1-2 and 2-4 and it was a pretty good day!
I haven't really played much this last week actually. I've just been really busy with other things outside of poker... oh and playing A LOT of live poker at the weekends.
4-betting essay coming soon...

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December 04, 2007

A look back at November

Blog by : T0ughBeats
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I was meant to post this Friday... better late than never though!
My basic goal was to play 80 hours online and 40 hours live; I managed 69 hours online and about 45 hours live.
My online play took a bit of a kicking 10 days into the month, causing me to take a very long weekend. Also since changing to crypto I can only average ~350 hands/hr compared to ~500/hr on Stars.
I changed over the database on poker tracker to PostgreSQL so I can no longer make those nice pokergrpaher graphs. Instead, here's the one from PokerEV:
Yeah, the first 9K hands were sweet, and then it just went to shit for the rest of the month! Most of it is bad 'all-in' luck...down about 10 buy-ins from that! Then maybe a little bit of tilt and playing at bad times (tired, not focused, etc). Also I lost about 2,000 hands so the graph is not a true representation really - add another $500 spike during that break even stretch.
I did get some bonuses too, and I'm using some my Stars points to buy all my Christmas presents from Amazon!
Live was pretty much 'meh' too. I think I've ran pretty bad in the tournaments lately...keep getting deep or making the final table and then missing out on the good money! It's been a while since I've had a good live tournament result, but then again I've only played about twenty these last four months.
I've been reviewing my game and working hard to plug leaks. Sometimes when you don't run that well, one of the hardest things is to stay positive and patient. Personally what works well for me a simple little reminder: "Keep making the correct decisions and you bankroll will take care of itself."

I've already played over 1,000 hands today so I might go play the £50 rebuy tonight. I don't normally play live on Tuesdays, but I really feel like I'm playing well in live tournaments lately (despite the results). After all, I know the results are coming sooner or later!

www.T0ughBeats.blogspot.com

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November 30, 2007

I did it!

Blog by : T0ughBeats
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The last few days have been a right pain in the ass...
I started playing on a crypto skin a few weeks ago mostly because of another project I have going on, but also so that I could see what the standard of play is like. Anyway, the deal is that you have to amass 1000 player points in a month to earn 30% rakeback -normally not a problem, but I've been playing Stars too and didn't really keep an eye on it. This all meant that two days ago I still had to get 350 points to get the rakeback!
I must admit, I almost give up yesterday after 3 hours. But I did hang in there and got 6 hours in (almost impossible for me in cash games). I was actually surprised how quickly I got the rest of the way there today. But it's done now - I did it! Phew.
I've been writing a piece on 4-betting this week. It's almost done so will post it up soon.
Right, I'm taking the weekend off now...except the tournament on Sunday of course.

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November 28, 2007

A quick update

Blog by : T0ughBeats
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As you can see from my previous post I ran quite badly the week before last. This prompted a break last weekend, which was good but kind of slowed me down. Other than one live tournament last Sunday I didn't play at all from Saturday through Monday. I did play the rest of the week - running quite good again - but probably only half as many hands as usual.
I've been playing on a few different sites too. The change is really good again but I do miss 100+ hands per table/hr. This week I've only averaged 80 hands per table/hr and on that particular site (crypto skin) I can only 4-table. I don't really mind 4-tabling as oppose 6 or so on Stars; the good thing is that at those hand rates - and only 4-tabling - I feel like I have all the time in the world to think about my decisions! Overall that will make me a much better player.
Today was pretty much a relaxation too; I've been to the gym and then spent all afternoon watching the darts on TV. I have a few things to do now, and then I think it's the local for a few drinks with a bud.
Sundays are fun...I see some of the family for Sunday lunch and then it's off to the Casino for the tournament. It's the only live tournament I play these days, but the structure is great. Typically there's around 8K in the pot and about £2,500 for first.

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November 28, 2007

I want to be lucky!

Blog by : T0ughBeats
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So far November is going well, but the last few days have been a little swingy. I haven't been feeling so good either whenever I get my money in. I have to change that feeling though - I want to expect to WIN my all-ins and no expect to LOSE them. I guess that just happens when you feel that you're running bad.
Anyway, just to confirm my instinct I had to run my hands this month through Poker EV to see how well I've run in these all-in situations.
So yeah, my all-in luck sucks so far this month!
A lot can still happen yet, so I'm just riding it out.
Later, TB

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November 12, 2007

Got Unstuck

Blog by : T0ughBeats
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So I've not played much online this weekend. That was the plan anyway - grind, grind, grind Monday to Friday and relax some at the weekend.
So what did I do to relax? Well, I played some live poker of course!
Saturday night started out well - up a few buy-ins in the first half hour! Then the following hand came up (1-2PL):
I have AQ of clubs in middle position and raise the pot to £13 (three limpers in front of me). Drunken guy on my left re-raises to £26 - he has about £250 behind and I have him covered. Now there's no reason to put this guy on a really big hand since he's been talking some trash and I know he's coming after me. So I just call and see the flop:
Q - 5 - 2 two diamonds.
Perfect.
I check to let him bet. Sure enough he 'pots' it - £61. Now I'm pretty comfortable with my hand in this spot against such an opponent, but just be sure I tank it up for a minute to see if I can get a read. The guy is staring me down so badly! I mean I look at him and he looks back even harder. Under the table his legs are shaking. The guy is drunk too, so all of this could mean nothing. I think about just calling for a second and checking the turn, but my call will look strong and I hate giving free cards. Then again, if he has any sort of hand at all, he's not laying it down. The SPR (stack-to-pot ratio) is just over 3 - plenty enough for top pair/top kicker against this opponent. So I raise all-in for his other 190 pounds and he snap calls! I turn over AQ and he turns over JJ. Wow! Early Christmas! Well it was until the dealer flipped the turn card...another jack and he takes down the £560 pot!
That was just the start. A few coolers later and I'm down a few buy-ins or so. Normally I wouldn't mind so much, but the game was REALLY good and I was desperate to take advantage of that; especially since I was down from my last live session too. I even changed seat to have position on the drunken fish that two-outed me. And remember: he's sitting with almost £600 now! He wasn't the only one either; there were a whole group of them and they'd each turned their initial £50 buy-in into a few hundred!
After one of them cracked my pocket kings with 67 off-suit he actually got up and left! Good for him really - it was his first time in a casino and probably his first time playing poker. The knock on effect, however, was all the 'hit and run' banter. This caused Mr. Jack-Jack to start playing scared money - he really didn't want to lose his winnings, and especially not to me as now I was back to about £500 pounds again and sitting directly to his left. I was in almost all of his pots and stole about £200 back from him due to his new weak-tight nature.
Finally they all left; most of them still up a few quid. I was about to go home too - about 100 pounds down - until I noticed the 5-5 game was only 4-handed. As an added bonus there were two live ones, one weak-tight regular, and only one decent player. Needless to say - I was in.
We only got to play for about 45 minutes until the game broke, but I did manage to run them over for a few hundred quid. I ended up finishing +£115 for the night. Phew.
After that, I'll not even bother explaining what happened today. But I did play the tournament. And I did bust out to runner-runner flush...again.

It's Monday tomorrow - back to the grind.

www.T0ughBeats.blogspot.com

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November 09, 2007

Finding leaks and changing style

Blog by : T0ughBeats
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So after moving to Stars last month I really started looking at certain aspects of my game.
Gradually, throughout October, I realised that certain things had to change - finding leaks in your own game can be a very difficult task indeed. I enlisted the help of a coach too; although so far I've only taken one lesson.
See Poker Stars has quite a different style of player compared to the Ongame network. Generally, I've found the typical Poker Stars player a lot more tight-aggressive then the looser/ laggier players at Ongame. Of course, Ongame is only 5-max...compared to 6-max at Stars. I think the other factor, however, is that a lot more players multi-table at Stars, and at a lot more tables too.
So I guess that's why Ongame is generally viewed as having some the softest games available, whereas Poker Stars have some of the toughest - I don't think so.
The games are very different. Yes. But it's how you approach the games and plan to beat them that make the difference: At Ongame I became tighter and tighter - going from a 26/22 player to 19/16 or so. At Stars exactly the opposite is happening!
I think that's why I enjoy Stars a lot more: I much prefer a LAG style to a TAG.
Anyway, since making various changes to my game and identifying some leaks, I've so far dramatically improved my win rate. It could just be a heater, but I know how hard I've worked and how much I've changed!

Let's just wait until the end of the month...

www.T0ughBeats.blogspot.com

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November 07, 2007

Essay on 3-Betting

Blog by : T0ughBeats
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This is actually from my other blog, but thought i'd post it here too:

So your typical LAGTAG (Tight-aggressive player with loose-aggressive tendencies in position) raises from the button. You reraise with 97s from the small blind. LAGTAG calls. Flop K84. You bet 2/3 pot and LAGTAG folds. Easy $$$$$! Or is it?

3-betting and in particular, 3-betting light, is something I've been thinking a lot about lately. It's a concept I've been aware of for quite some time, but in all honesty I've often used it at the wrong times, against the wrong type of opponents.

See, you can play a solid safe game and just call preflop with certain hands that may be +EV. However, when you're in the blinds facing a raise from the button, or even from the cut off - what do you really accomplish cold calling with good hands like AQ, AJs, and KQ? A lot of these hands carry reverse implied odds. You're going to miss the flop most of the time and be forced to fold to a continuation bet. Often you'll be folding the best hand! Even when you hit... where are you when facing a lot of pressure? Even with small pairs and suited connectors, your implied odds are very bad. Why? Because a late position raiser tends to have a very wide range. When you do hit (which won't be very often), it's hard to get paid off. In both cases we lack initiative. What are we going to achieve cold calling OOP with these hands? Maybe a small +EV?

So what about reraising? By 3-betting you take the initiative, you gain momentum and you force your opponent into making a hand. If you don't win the pot right there, you'll often take it down with a continuation bet a high percentage of the time. Against some opponents this is +EV right there - even with any two cards! As your more observant opponents realize that you're capable of reraising light, you'll increase the action on your big hands too.

So now we've established that 3-betting is definitely a good thing; what sort of hands to we want to 3-bet with and against which opponents? Well to give you an exhaustive list, here are the hands I would consider 3-betting with:

Any Pair, Any SC 67+, one gap SC's 79+, AJ+, KQ.

Occasionally I'll 3-bet other hands too, like KTs, Q9s, J8s, QJ, JT, T9 and more. However, the situation and opponent must be exactly right.

That's what it's all about... I can't emphasize enough how important player reads are!

Does the button raiser almost never call a reraise? Will they only call with TT/AQ+? Do they call with any drawing hand/pair because they know you sometimes 3-bet light? Do they 4-bet with a wide range? Or you do they mix it up - sometimes calling/4-betting with both ends of the spectrum? Also how do they play after the flop? Are they almost always folding if they miss? Are they capable of raising the flop with air? Along with game dynamics and your own image, these questions largely decide whether it's best to fold, call or reraise against this opponent in this particular situation with whatever hand you hold.

So as you can see, against some opponents (players with tight calling ranges), AJ might as well be 72o, as basically your 3-bet is a bluff. Their calling range crush you, but you still expect +EV as they fold too way too much preflop. They may also fold QQ, KK etc. on ace high flops, hence why AJ is in fact slight better than 72o.

Against other opponents however (players who call 3-bets with a wide range), AJ may be one of the better hands to 3-bet with, as it has showdown value. Think about opponents who are going to call you with any pair or suited connector. I'm much more likely to 3-bet these guys with AJ than I am with T8s.

In any case, always remember to mix it up. I love it when I find a really weak tight opponent who ALWAYS folds to my C-bet! I'll hit on these guys all day long, but sooner or later though they're going to fight back. After 3-betting these guys a few times with air, I'm much more likely to start 3-betting with only the nuts (AA, KK etc), and good drawing hands (suited connectors & small pairs, etc). This way I'll have a good chance of stacking them when they do play back. And most will play back... eventually.

So 3-betting is definitely a must have weapon to have in your arsenal. Especially moving through the levels you're going to need it more and more. Just remember that player reads and table image are probably more important than the cards themselves! Pick your moments and feel the game. It's all about feel! Used correctly 3-betting can drastically increase you BB/100, but used incorrectly and you've found a quick way to burn your bankroll!

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October 31, 2007

October Graph and November Goals

Blog by : T0ughBeats
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Okay, October is done. I'm quite happy with the way things went. I may not have made mega bucks but dropping down and moving to Stars was definitely a +EV decision!

Here's the graph:

Yeah still only 24K hands but I've made a lot of changes to my game and playing procedures which in the long run will definitely be worth it. All together I logged 60 hours online with a multi-table ratio of 4.27. My ptbb/100 was 3.8bb/100, but I was down an extra 350BB from 'all-in luck.' Most of these coolers were near the end of the month where I had to endure a 7-8 buy-in downswing!

I have a new screen too so that I can extend my laptop. The result is that I can comfortably 6-table now.
So here is what I predict for November:
1) Will play 20 hours a week online: So 40K hands for the month.
2) Going to play mixed limits 100NL to 400NL: 6-tabling probably 3 tables of two different limits. i.e. 3 tables of 100NL and 3 tables of 200NL. Maybe some 400NL later.
3) Will play 10 hours a week of live cash games.
I'm not even really setting these as goals. I basically just do whatever I feel like anyway. However, I'm very confident that November will be my highest playing volume month yet.
Tonight is live cash game night so no more online play today. I guess this is still October so it won't count towards my 10 hours a week!

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October 27, 2007

About me

Blog by : T0ughBeats
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So for those of you who don't know me, let me tell you a bit about myself. As mentioned in my profile, I'm British and originally started out life as a cadet in the Merchant Navy. After 10 years of that I achieved an Unlimited Masters certificate and worked my way to a First Officer on cruise ships. The job is great (albeit hard work sometimes...no most of the time), but the nice thing about it, was that with my regular schedule of working 3 months on and then 2/3 months off I basically had 5-6 months a year to concentrate full time on my passion: POKER!
Ever since I was a kid I was fascinated with cards, coins, magic, and casinos. I remember the first book I ever read about poker was Amarillo Slim's 'Play Poker to Win.' This guy talked about guys like Puggy Pearson and Doyle 'Texas Dolly' Brunson! It wasn't until quite a few years later in the Bellagio that I would see these guys with my own eyes! And to think...when I first read that old book, I figured all these guys must be dead already. Well, how wrong could I have been!

I had my first taste of gambling when I was about 10 years old. My dad give me 20p to bet on a horse (well, he did the betting - I just picked it). All I could think of was how to win the most $$$ so I picked the outsider at like 20 to 1. Sure enough...it won! I was hooked. Every Saturday I'd have the Racing Post at 7am and study until noon. I would triple my pocket money or go home with none! It was like that for years. To be honest, I probably lost, but it was only pennies, so who cares. By the time I was 16 I was going to the bookies myself, but that was about the same time I went away to sea for the first time. As soon as I was 18 I went to my first casino. I'd already learnt blackjack at home (including card counting) and was ready to 'bring down the house!' Well, as you can imagine that never happened! The rules suck in the UK and they play with 6-8 frigg'n decks (now they all use card shufflers).

It was during my occasional visits however, that I noticed poker being played in the corner. I would stand and watch for hours, wondering where the hell these guys get all that money from! The game was self dealt and a mixture of chips and cash. Dealer's choice - Hold'em, Omaha, Irish, you name it...they played it. I could smell the money, but I knew it would take a lot of time and effort before I'd be sitting in that game.

I put it off for a few years, but finally online poker kicked off and I bought a few good books. I turned my first $100 deposit into a few thousand and then back down again. I guess it's just progressed from there. I play brick and mortar a lot now too. Incidentally, with the same guys I used to watch when I was 18. Only it's me sitting their now with the pile of cash and these old timers wondering how these 'young guns' get so good, so quickly. I've probably played more hands online then some of these guys have played in their whole lives! I owe my progression to online poker, forums and training sites like Cardrunners.com. They know it too, but they're just too damn stubborn to change. Well, their loss, my gain!

So that brings me to the present and the year ahead. I've talking about taking year off for a while now, but I guess it's just a matter of biting the bullet. See, problem is I've always felt that with my job I takes two steps forward (when I am home and playing all the time), and then one step back (when I'm away and playing a very limited amount). Well, I figure if I'm going to become the best poker player I can possible be then I have to do it full time...for at least a year. So here we go, it all starts now. Wish me luck!

www.t0ughbeats.blogspot.com

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