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Friday, August 17, 2012

Arizona State Poker Trip Report



Got back yesterday after 5 days at the Arizona State Poker Championships at the Talking Stick Resort in Scottsdale. Traveled there with my friend Noah and stayed at the hotel there. All I have to say is wow. The hotel is super nice, the poker room is amazing, and this tournament is absolutely insane. The poker room is nicknamed “The Arena” and rightfully so. The poker room is surrounded by TV's everywhere and a giant jumbo-tron hangs in the middle with 4 more giant screens visible from everywhere in the room. Hotel rooms were nice, as well as cheap.
This tournament has to be one of the highest value tournaments of the year. $1070 3 starting days with re-entry. If i'm not mistaken that is the largest $1000 tournament outside of the WSOP? The play as one would expect was laughable. Felt like I was back in 2007 as most pots were 5-6 ways limped around. Structure was pretty good as well with 45 min levels and a very healthy starting stack. Shortly into day 2 levels went to 60 minutes. I needed all 3 days to qualify for day 2. On day 3 I built a monster stack and had 400k from 25k starting with 2 hours left in the day. Unfortunately I lost a few pots that I feel I played well, but didn’t go my way and I bagged 255k at days end, Good for 28th place out of the 210 returning to day 2.

Day two got off to a pretty rough start for me. During the 2nd orbit of play I got in a pretty tight spot where an older gentleman (no reads) opened to t15,000 at 2500/5000 with 115,000 total chips in middle position. David Pham flats the cutoff (he flats fairly wide here and never really has a big hand). I am on the button with 88. This is one of those weird spots where I feel that I am crushed by this older gentleman getting it in range (JJ+ AK+ in my opinion at the time). There is so much $$ in the pot though that he does not have to fold often for me to show an immediate profit here. With 42K of dead money in the pot I am risking $115K to win 42k. Lets assume for a second that I have 0 equity when I get all in with this guy than he has to fold (we will assume 40 -120 for easier math) 75% of the time. Which he might be doing as people in these tournaments just value their tournament life so much. Lets remember though that I do have a decent hand and vs what I think his all in range of JJ/AK+ I would guess that I have around 30% equity. Now the villain only needs to fold 50% of the time for me to break even and I would very safely assume your average random in this tournament is folding 50% of the time here. Unfortunately the villain had KK and I quickly lost half of my stack but still had 25 bb or so.

I was super card dead for a while before having a decent spot where it folded to me in the SB. I had 100k at 3000/6000 and had a pretty standard shove with K5o vs an unknown. He called with A8 off and I spiked a K on the turn for a big double up. I again folded for 2-3 more orbits with my new shit image until the bubble hit. This was the one mistake of the tournament that I felt I made. I had 150k at 4000/8000 and it folded to me in the Hi-Jack + 1 with 5 to act behind me. We were at this time 5 from the money. Everyone behind me was playing super tight and was calling it off with prob JJ+ AK+. For some reason unknown to me I just ripped all in since they were calling so tight. Shoving here is definitely +Cev but it is close with ICM factors if it is +$ev or not. A complete brain fart for me as raise fold here is a billion times better vs these players. Guy tanked for 2 minutes with JJ and finally called and I lost to bubble the tournament. I beat myself up for a little while after this one cause it was a pretty big mistake for how soft this tournament was. After a couple of hours though I realized that it was in the past though and I just need to learn from the mistake and not make it again.

As for cash games I did put in quite a few hours down there. The first day down there I played 3/5 which is nice cause it is a $1000 cap buyin instead of $500. Had some success and ended up making a $1000. The next night I found myself in the best 20/40 limit holdem game I have ever played in. Words could not describe how good this game was. People limping calling J4o and C/r any flop. It was insane. Unfortunately I probably ran about $3000 below EV and lost $2300 in the game. Still having problems figuring out how I lost $ in the game. The final day that I got to play cash I was super excited cause they got a 20/40 mix game. The game started as O8 / Triple Draw / Badugi for the first 4-5 hours and eventually Stud 8 and Badacey were added. I swear I would just love to play this game every single day. Playing mix is just so much more entertaining and relaxing. No bet sizing, tanking, hollywooding. Hoping they get these games legalized in Washington soon. Ran pretty bad in triple draw throughout the night and came out a $850 loser. Played for 12-14 hours in the game and did not get bored once. That is how much I love the mix games.

Overall I enjoyed this trip a ton. I wish I could of won some $$ on the trip, but sometimes that is not going to happen. Ill try to get another blog up on Sunday night with Stats for the first week of the grind.

Until then talk to everyone later.


Monday, August 6, 2012

The Grind

Welcome to the new installment of my blog “The Grind”. Follow me through what us poker players refer to the grind. The down and dirty, put in hours, make the cheddar part of the job. While many players are taking vacations following the WSOP right now, Im continuing the grind and continuing to work on my game.
I love getting in grind mode because of routine. Everything seems right when I am in a good routine. Wake up, hit the gym, eat healthy, and play some cards. Of course, I make sure to have fun while I am on the grind, but the main focuses are poker, working out and eating right. Hopefully you will see some golf updates, sporting updates, but I have a clear focus right now, Poker.

Goal setting is a very important part of being on the grind. It motivates you and keeps you going day after day through the struggles. My goals are going to focus on 2 things, health and poker. These are my 2 clear focuses throughout the rest of the year. I have always tried setting goals, but have struggled to stick to them, or keep good records to track my progress. Maybe more important then setting goals, is setting reasons on why you have the goals. For me this is simple this time. All my poker goals revolve around one thing, Making Money. I want to make money, more money. I have a lot of monthly expenses, way more than I should, and I have to work extremely hard too keep the life I have right now. Just like any other job I put in my hours, more hours, and grind it out day by day. The only difference is I love going to work, putting in hours won't be a problem for me. As for health. The reasons are motivational based. I haven't been under 200 pounds since early in high school probably. It is a huge milestone and I know when I see 199 on the scale that it will make all the hard work well worth while.

Poker
  • 45 hours / week minimum of grinding. (most of this @ 2/5nl and 15/30 Omaha 8)
  • 5 hours / week minimum of Studying game (books , videos , HH review, Equity calcs)
  • $8,000 / month profit (trying to stay away from these goals as they are somewhat out of my control but this should be fairly obtainable)
  • $1,000 / week for expenses (deposited weekly into bank)
  • Really develop and perfect my Limit Omaha 8/better game
  • Final Table a live tournament
The most important goals here for me are the two goals regarding minimum hours played. They will drive the success of the other goals. Also a key point here is the word Minimum. I am setting these goals up so that I can surpass them. The other two super important goals for me are the O8 goal and to FT a live tournament. We have recently gotten a 15/30 w 20/40 kill Omaha 8 game going at Tulalip a few days a week. I love the game, while I am still not suer experienced I want to work super hard on this game as it is super profitable. It is hard though to make a Quantifiable goal here. Also I want to regain my focus on working on my tournament game. I have a strong travel schedule set up for the rest of the year and plan on having a lot of success in those events. I need to prepare myself so I am ready deep in a tournament, whenever it maybe.

Health
  • Under 200 pounds
  • 5 workouts a week
Going to do some more research this week and probable revise these goals. Trying to find a new workout program to stick to. I want to do more crossfit based workouts instead of heavy lifting. Diet is going to be a huge part of these goals and I feel confident to go full speed on my normal diet like I have done in the past.

Not sure exactly where to put this, but one of the other big things I want to focus on is not wasting time. It is probably one of my weakest attributes and I will have to manage my time better in order to accomplish these goals. Basically my plan is before I go to bed make my schedule for the next day. What time I will wake up, what hours ill be in the gym, the casino, working on my game. Having a schedule is key for me to keep on track.

Travel Schedule
Get a lot of questions about what tournaments I am going to play next on twitter so here is my tenative schedule for the rest of the year.
August 10-14 Arizona State Poker Championships
September 12-21 Borgata Poker Open
October 6-7 DeepStacks Poker Tour Fall Pot of Gold
Oct 11-22 WSOPC Chicago
Oct 27-Nov 7 WSOPC Vancouver

As of right now that is what I am planning on traveling too. Some may be added, some may be taken off, but it is a good rough idea. The key for me is to remember that these are business trips and nothing should change in my routine while attending. Basically day off on each end for traveling, but other than that it is still workout in the morning followed by 10 hour days playing and working on my game. Traveling to events though is awesome casue it does keep the grind more exciting and different. Couple weeks at home and im ready to get on the road again. After a week on the road im ready to get home. This provides a nice change of pace. 

Look for weekly updates on this blog. As always you can follow me on twitter @McmattoPoker as I am always providing updates on their.