MurryTheCat + Friends
HomeHome  ­CalendarCalendar  ­FAQFAQ  ­MemberlistMemberlist  ­UsergroupsUsergroups  ­RegisterRegister  ­Log inLog in  
Post new topic   Reply to topicShare | 
 

 WSOP Circuit @ Horseshoe Hammond Event # 13 -- Nov 2, 2008

View previous topic View next topic Go down 
AuthorMessage
lightning36



Posts: 39
Join date: 2008-10-02
Location: Illinois

PostSubject: WSOP Circuit @ Horseshoe Hammond Event # 13 -- Nov 2, 2008   Sun Nov 02, 2008 11:56 pm

The stars were aligned properly today, enabling me to play in my first WSOP event -- Event # 13 at the WSOP Circuit Event at the Horseshoe Hammond (IN). Would a circuit event be like the summer events in Las Vegas?

The day started off well. I got an extra hour of sleep due to the change of time, and the Mapquest directions were flawless. I got to the casino very early and got registered immediately. I then caught an early lunch and still had time for a little slot action to relax.

The tournament started on time with $6,000 starting chips and 25/50 blinds. Each level was supposed to be 40 minutes, but they announced that the levels would only be 30 minutes in order to complete the tournament during the allotted time. Huh?

The crowd was what you'd expect -- a lot of guys in their 20's, some "mature" gentlemen like myself, and only a smattering of women.

When the tourney started, my table was solid testosterone with an empty seat. Having watched the Tiffany Michelle show the past few weeks on ESPN's WSOP coverage, I almost joked, "Hey --where are the good looking babes?" Of course, you know what happened next. The empty seat was taken by a beautiful blonde -- thin tapered body, cute, huge chest, wearing a low-cut V-neck sweater. bounce Smile I was in seat six, and she was directly across from me in seat nine. I thought about offering to change seats with seat one - for a $1000 chip!

Early on I was dealt A-K and raised. One caller. The flop was A-A-rag. I raised and was called. Hmmm. The turn was a rag, and I raised again. Again a smooth call. The river was another rag, and I was concerned that my opponent might have called with a weak ace and hit a boat. I raised after the river and he called -- with 8-8! He stayed in all the way with my raising and two aces on the board? Nice pot for me.

Another good hand was when I was dealt K-9spades in late position. Everyone was calling for a big family pot, so I called. The flop: 9-9-K! There was a raise and a call, so I just called to set the trap. The turn was a blank with two checks and I didn't want to chase anyone out, so I checked. The river was a blank. There were two checks in front of me, so I placed a value bet. One guy folded (unsuccessful flush draw) and the other guy called with a King. If only the guy in early position had hit his flush, I would have cleaned up. Another nice pot for me anyway.

What followed was a card dead streak which lasted for about 90 minutes. I won one hand with pocket Tens, raising when an Ace came on the flop and scaring out my opponent, but that was about it. I speculated on a few hands, but nothing good hit. Guys started making huge raises, so I was forced to fold marginal hands. Antes kicked in and my stack was dwindling.

We were about to take the first break (after the fourth level), but our dealer dealt one more hand. I got a red King, then prayed that I would get ... yessssss, a second red King! The aggro guy in seat five raised to $1100 (blinds were $100/200), and I went all in for about $2750, figuring I'd get the blinds, antes, and his raise right before the break. Surprisingly, the guy in seat one called. We were heads up, K-K vs 8-8. I was surprised that he called off around 40% of his stack since all he was in for was the ante. I guess that he thought we were racing? Or did he see that after the break he would be down to 15-17 big blinds and he wanted to gamble?

You can guess what happened next. The flop contained a 4 and a 6, and I felt the screw job coming. The turn was a 7, and I swear that I knew the river would be a 5. Sure enough it was, and just like that, my tournament was over. I sat back in my chair, grabbed my head and yelled. Evil or Very Mad I guess my drama queen daughter didn't get it all from her mom.

How depressing. I wasn't playing too badly, made it past a few donks at my table who exited very early, then lost when I should probably never have been called when I was an 80% favorite. Sad

But ... what the heck. I did finally get some in-person poker, which I had been craving, and did play in a WSOP event, but still ... bahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. Mad

btw -- the Horseshoe Hammond poker room looked really nice. The tournament, however, was not played there due to the number of entrants. Everything the WSOP folks ran seemed to be professionally done. So yes ... I shall return! Cool
Back to top Go down
View user profile http://lightning36.blogspot.com/
MurryTheCat
Admin


Posts: 1155
Join date: 2008-08-22
Age: 49
Location: Long Island NY:

PostSubject: Re: WSOP Circuit @ Horseshoe Hammond Event # 13 -- Nov 2, 2008   Tue Nov 04, 2008 5:24 pm

Hey Light Very Happy Tough way to go down, so how far is Hammond from West Lafeyette? Hard to imagine getting involved there with 8-8 and a raise and all-in reraise in front of him. You have to go back and give it another go Cool
My first WSOP Circuit event at Harrahs ended when a player pushed in from cut-off or button to steal the pot with 3-10 I think it was, could be wrong but it was something awful, I looked down at a hand at wrong time and watched him flop a flush and knock me out of tournament at a similar stage in event.
What was funny in my game, when a player got knocked out early we had about 100 or so players waiting for a seat, didn't realize they did those kind of things, anyway the new player was a guy who cracked my KK (there is that cursed hand again) at final table at Taj-Mahal a few months earlier. He called from BB with Q-10 I think it was, this after I got called by K-Q, imagine my face when two queens hit the board Shocked
I think our next circuit is in December, one thing that is becoming more apparent to me when I play live is how aggressive everyone seems to play now, hard for someone like me to open up starting hand selection but I think you have to, more guess work in the game.
Good try though Light, our old buddy LakeOfFire told me once,"thats the way your suppose to lose if your playing well", cold comfort at moment it happens though Rolling Eyes

_________________
Back to top Go down
View user profile http://pokerpaul2.blogspot.com/
MischiefMarg
Admin


Posts: 477
Join date: 2008-08-23
Location: New Zealand

PostSubject: Dang it!!!!!!   Wed Nov 12, 2008 2:22 am

Nice going Lightning cheers

Im gonna have to read more in this section. What interesting reading. What a way to go out. ggrrrrrr!!!!! But seems more and more of that happens these days especially with the younger players who seem to think "they the man" when this happens. Not saying this player was, but the "gamble" some want, even if it means it will put them out.

Do they think of the big picture? Only if they loose. And even then I wonder LOL lol!

I played my 1st live tourny last night and had 1 guy thought he was awesome when collecting chip after chip with "rubbish hands" and winning ggrrrrrr!!!! It was a rebuy and after add on he started trying it on again until he was then getting raised LOL!! Well, he huffed and puffed and started going off at those for raising as they wouldnt show when he folded tehehe!!!!!!!!

Im glad you enjoyed your wsop event and next time Im sure you will kick ass. Would be awesome to have a go at. GL
flower

_________________
Back to top Go down
View user profile
 

WSOP Circuit @ Horseshoe Hammond Event # 13 -- Nov 2, 2008

View previous topic View next topic Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

Permissions of this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
MurryTheCat + Friends :: Splashing The Chips-
Post new topic   Reply to topic