Vegas Trip

I just spent a really fun weekend in Vegas with a bunch of friends. Unlike some of my past Vegas trips everyone who was down there was a poker player, which was great. We got to discuss a ton of poker, talk hands, and make fun of the locals (my favorite part). Although everyone plays poker, there are no NLers in the group, so its hard for me to bring up certain hands that I really want to discuss.

I only played 2 days of poker, about 12 hours total, but I managed to take about 5 buyins out of the room. That may seem like a lot, but everyone in that game probably suffered from some sort of mental disease. Hand reading is so easy that maximizing your winning hands is a piece of cake compared to online poker.

I just started playing online poker after about a weekend and a half off. Reason for this was my poker computer, which is about 2 years old, stopped working on some of the poker sites newer updates. I purchased a new computer that finally got here the other day, thank god too, I was going crazy not being able to play. I also picked up a 30″ monitor about a month ago that is a must have for poker. I can multi table on the screen with no problems what so ever. This may sound stupid, but using one 30″ monitor is so much easier than 3 20″ monitors.

My goal for December is to play 30,000 online hands, which may seem low, but I am going on three different trips this month. One which was Vegas, and then home for the Holidays as well as Skiin/Snowboarding with a group of friends.
Ok, this post sucked and was boring.

Vegas

I just got back from a poker filled weekend in Vegas. Every time I go to that city I am always amazed at how bad they are.

I started off playing 5/10 NLHE at the Bellagio. Everyone one in that game sucks at poker. The ‘winning’ players are just a bunch of set mining nits that are super easy to play against. The loser players are a bunch of drolling retards that refuse to fold. When I play online I am constantly in thinking situations which can (and often do) lead to tough spots. This seems to never happen in these small stakes live games. Of course, the only downside to live poker is playing 10 handed and getting 30 hands an hour.

The next day I played in a four handed 10/20 NLHE game. Over the past year I have really been focusing on my short handed no limit play, so this game was a perfect match for me.

Seat 1 was some asian gambler who didn’t play bad, but he also didn’t play good. Seat 2 was some guy who was just weak passive bad. Seat 3 was David Sklansky who was more interested in betting on horses than playing poker.

We played a few hands where I was just a total LAG. I won a bit without going to showdown so I had a pretty good image. Seat 2 got up to leave and I was left heads up with the asian guy. Effective stacks were about 3k and he was not reloading.

On one of the early HU hands I raised the BB, bet the flop, then check raised the turn with nothing. The guy folded.

I was then opening about 80% of buttons, which was super aggressive, but this guy didn’t really like to showdown so I thought this was fine.

I open K3o, he calls in the BB. Flop Kd 5h 3h, Perfect! He checks, I pot, he check raises, I 3bet. I was expecting him to play any king hard against me since I had been betting/raising so much. I was hoping he would put in his reminding 1.8k here, but he folded. Oh well.

At this point it finally clicked in my head that I am totally running over this guy. I starting bluffing raising a ton of flops/turns, betting whenever he showed any weakness, and just playing like a huge aggressive retarded… And it worked! He did not adjust well to it. He started open limping every hand on the button. I would raise the BB… he would call and then fold most flops. I would slowdown on some rivers when I wanted to induce a bluff from him… that worked once in a big pot.

After about 30 minutes of this he got moved to the main game so we were done. There is nothing better than playing a heads up session where you have total control over the table and the other guy cannot adjust to it.

I will post some fun stories later this week.

Live NL

I was in Vegas this week staying at the Bellagio and it was the first time since November that I was able to log a few serious sessions of live NL. Since Nov 2006 I have been playing nothing but online no limit and the difference between live and online is huge.

The first thing that I found so interesting was the over betting. In a 10/20 NL game the standard open was $80, which is fine, but once three players took a flop massive over betting would occur. The pot would be $240 and all of a sudden a guy who cold called a preflop raise would lead out for $320 from the SB on a 27T rainbow board. Wow?! This happened 5 or 6 times, sometimes the lead would even be as high as $500.

When I play online I make a lot of my money from 3 betting light in position. Always alway always 3 betting. It was hard for me to adapt to live at first because players would either never open raise or only open raise with the top 2 or 3 hands. After about an hour you could figure out who you could 3 bet light, but these situations do not come up nearly as often as they do online.

Your image at a live table is so easily craftable because of the amount of time between hands. One night when I first sat in the game there was a big fish directly on my right. He would limp probably 90% of his hands and then play so passively postflop. So of course every hand he limped I would immediately make it $100 in order to isolate him. We would see a flop, I cbet, I win. After doing this 5 times in 1 orbit a player at the table made a comment about how stupid aggressive I was. Anyway, the fish busted and left so I stopped doing this. I think I went 2 orbits (which was probably and hour in this game) without seeing a flop. All of a sudden that same player that called me stupid aggressive made some comment about how I was the tightest player on earth and he was going to start folding AA face up to me. It is so awesome when another player makes a comment like that out loud to the entire table. He thinks he is harassing you and trying to goat you, but he is just giving you the exact table image you need.

The last thing I noticed, and was really impressed by, is that the live NL pros do an amazing job of keeping the fish happy. They never berate them, always make small talk with them, and keep telling them that they played their hands fine whenever the fish takes a beat or plays a hand poorly. Tons of these fish struck me has huge degenerates with no life and money to burn. I am sure these fish view poker as a social thing and the pros really do a great job at providing a nice comfortable setting for them.

I don’t think I could play live all day, but it sure is a great break from playing online.