Bad Beat Diary

My diary of the bad beats I deal out. I want to track the madness to prove, to me epecially, that there is a method in dealing bad beats to someone. The names of the opponents will be changed to protect the innocent.

Sunday, May 28, 2006

5/27/06

And now, it was time to unleash the BBS on a lot of unsuspecting people at the ACF5k tournament. 88 players entered the tournament and most of those people I would be playing, it would have been the first time they would see me play, so I was reveling in that prospect.

After registering, I found myself at table 1, which was the last table to be collapsed, so if I played my cards right (ok, pun intended) I wouldn't budge from that seat, which was Table 1 Seat 4. When the order from the TD to "shuffle up and deal" I was in the zone, I had my N91 playing Coldplay's A Rush of Blood to the Head, which seems to be a good soundtrack to my poker playing (always profitable, it seems), my chi was centered (whatever that means). In a span of ten minutes, I won 5 hands by raising pre-flop three successive times and then outplaying the players post-flop. All of those wins, my hole cards were never shown. How awesome is that. Early chip lead and then the roller coaster ride which was my tournament day started. I had a lot of fun, mind you, but trying to get a BBS to write about was still paramount in my mind.

Nothing going until, I look down at 52s and I raised it 3xBB which was 1,200 at that time. I get a raise to 4,200 and I know I was in big trouble, I'm thinking big pair, but I called. The flop comes T-7-6 with two clubs giving me a flush draw, and if you have been reading this blog for a while, you know I haven't gotten anything in the region of a straight (well, the night before the tournament) let alone a flush. I was giddy about the prospects. I bet out 800 and I get a raise from Seat 7 to 2,300. I was like, yup, feed him some rope, feed him some rope. So I call. Another T comes on the turn, and he checks. I didn't want to force the issue so I check as well and the river gave another 7. I sigh, cause I didn't get my flush but when seat 7 turns over pocket Aces, I was livid. That would have been one for the blog, certified hall of fame BBS but as it turned out,
BBS denied

Analysis -
With the hole cards revealed now, I was a 81/19 underdog pre-flop. Nothing new for me, after the flop I was 61/39. Imagine that, I was 39% chance to win from that point, that is a big swing, more than doubling my 19% pre-flop. With the T coming on the turn, I was back to my 81/19 hole before the flop. Man, what could have been . . .

I was still happy about my potential pocket rocket killer, but I had to nurse my stack again. In a few minutes, I was near the chip lead again and this situation came up. UTG raised it to 3,000 when the blinds were 500/1000 and I had my friend Lil Joey in seat 3 calling it. I look down at pocket tens on the BB and decide that I wanted to win the pot right then. I re-raise to 6,000 and I didn't know that seat 5 would have been all-in with that re-raise so he called all-in. My friend Joey agonizes for awhile and me as well, because I didn't want anyone else in the pot with me and seat 5, but the darndest thing happened. He called, saying "Ok, let's gamble." My gut was doing back flips when I heard that, I knew he was up to something.

We had a side pot already and when the flop came Q-Q-4 with two spades, I was pissed. Someone might have a Queen and would have out-flopped my pocket tens. But even one Queen would have done the job anyways, right? Both of us checked, which I didn't know how Joey would react to a short stack going all-in and us checking it down, which is the right tournament move for us, but I wouldn't even think about telling him that at that time, so I was just hoping he knew that. The third spade hit the board and appropriately, it was the 3. So I was dancing on thin ice, I had to dodge a Q or two spades to win this hand. With the river coming out a case 7, I knew I was beat. When I showed Joey my pocket Tens, I was kinda assured . . . optimistic maybe? But he turned over 87 of spades, and I was like WTF? You dealt a BBS to ME . . . Bastard. . . Had to just make light of the moment so that I wouldn't do a Hellmuth tirade.

Anyways, the other guy flipped over AQ which gave him trips on the flop but it was moot because he was out of the tournament.
BBS Served TO ME

Analysis -
I was ahead pre-flop 43% chance to win with the AQ at a close second at 36% and the 87 of spades at 21%, decent percentages pre-flop for everyone. But I was ahead. . . Post flop though, I got moved to the dog house, YUCK. I only had 8% chance to win at that point (the two other Tens in the deck), Joey had 22% chance to win with his flush draw (F-ing Bastard), and the AQ was way ahead, 70% at that point. When the Turn hit I only had 5% chance to win, still wasn't drawing dead, but Joey was ahead 72% and AQ still had outs at 23%.

Joey had the big stack now at the table, and I am perturbed to say the least. A few hands later, a Caucasian guy comes into the table to replace the person that just got busted out. I look down at 74o and I raise my usual 3xBB. The white guy folds and Joey decides to call. The flop comes K-Q-8 and I decide to check and Joey does the same. Another K comes off the Turn and we check it again. A 2 comes on the river and I did not hit anything at all and I check, but Joey checked to and he says, GET THIS, "Six high." I was like, "Really? I got Seven high." We laugh and I'm stacking my chips and the white guy slams the table, it seems that he had a King and I raised him out of the pot.
Story Continued

Analysis
- I really don't want to analyze this but I have to just to see the math side of this. Pre-flop I was 61/39 ahead and was 62/38 ahead post flop. After the turn I was only 59/41 ahead, yikes, but closed the deal on that case 2. How funny was that hand, but it did set me up for something later.

I had the white guy on the verge of tilting but he was moved before I could do anything. Oh well, but it seems like a foreshadowing moment, right? Fast forward to the dinner break, where I was one of the chip leaders after clawing my way back from short stack just ten minutes prior to the break, at about 76k, and fast forward again to the final two tables where I begin to distribute my chips again to the rest of the players in my pursuit of the BBS.

With the blinds at 5,000/10,000, I was at the cutoff and I decide to take a stand with my last 27k on 42s. YES, I did. SB called me and he turns over A9, I turn over my 42 and the small crowd that was building around us, started to laugh. When the flop came T-5-4, they started to cheer me on. The board finished J-7 and I just doubled up with 42!!
BBS Served

Analysis –
I was 61/39 underdog pre-flop, but when was I not? But when that 4 hit the flop I was 76/24 ahead, and 84/16 after the turn. Oh yeah!!

That is the highlight of my tournament so far, I didn’t have to go all-in at that time because I was at the cutoff but I liked the cards and I went all-in. Two players busts out and wouldn't you know it, the white guy came to the table again, this time holding a beer and a big stack. I get on his case already before he sits down about him having a beer and none of the players at this table having any, because he was white . . . Blah blah.

I look down at JTo and I raise it 3xBB and everyone folds except the white guy. The flop comes J-J-9 and I check, the white guy puts me all-in and I beat him into the pot turning my trips as he turns over KQ. He's shouting for a Ten and I shout for a Ten as well cause that would have given me the Nuts, and he sees it and decides to abandon the shouting for the Ten bit. Two blanks come off and I doubled up again and his chip stack is severly crippled.
BBS Effect Served

Analysis - How funny is that, I set up a guy and I get my man at the end. Pre flop I was behind 65/35 but I didn't know that. After the flop I was 99/1 and he was in a world of hurt, at the turn he was drawing dead already.

The next hand he was busted out and he walked away, I think until now, in disbelief. I make it to the final table and the roller coaster had another rise for me as I was at about 150k in chips and was battling the chip leader. I wanted to stop but I couldn't because it wasn't keeping with my BBS style. Inevitably, a really bad dealer did me in. I guess there was a shift change, but man, that dealer stank. I think he didn't even know how to deal poker, I think he knew how to run the Paigow table so he figured that was ok already.

I placed 7th and I had a lot of fun. It was the deepest I have gotten in any tournament and I did it the BBS way. Yeha . . .

Game Summary - 22,000
Running Total - 39,560

5/26/06

I hosted a poker party for a friend and after the initial tournament, I decided to play as well. Nothing going at all, just that one hand, which I think was more of an abberation than the norm. It went down like this, I pick up 63o and I raise it 3xBB when the levels were still 100/200, a guy goes all-in and, like the adventurer that I was, I called with my 3,200. He turns over pocket 8's and I am in a world of hurt. I have never gotten past an overpair yet. I was kinda upbeat when the flop wasQ-4-2, but an inside straight draw would be harder for this type of situation. But wouldn't you know it, a 5 hit the turn AND the river.

I was like, SHIT. You see, I had a big tournament the next day, and I just spent my best scenario EVER with BBS hands in a game that didn't really count. ARGH . .
BBS served

Analysis - I was really dominated pre-flop 85/15, that is tough to come back from any way you cut it. After the flop I was still in that dark deep hole 81/19, albeit a little less deep than I was pre-flop. But with the turn, I was out of that well and was doing my dance of Joy.

Well I ended out of the money in both tournaments that I played with those guys, who were ALL calling stations, no way to out-play those types of players but hey, you live you learn.

Game summary - (1000)
Running Total - 17,560

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

5/22/06

It was my friend's birthday so we trekked to this underground poker place which we never usually go to. We came early so we were playing pool because there was only one table doing 10/20. They were going to have a sit and go for 500 so I signed up. Well, I lost that and moved to the 10/20 ring game, seat 10. The lady that just stood up from that seat was still fuming about the bad beats she got from that seat. I was like "perfect, now its my turn to deal some."

Mind you, the game was 10/20. As usual I raise to 60 UTG with 85o and everyone calls, except for the person in seat 7, who bets 1200 pre-flop. Actually seat 7 got another player to play for him, a friend of mine who usually plays at the biggest tables in town, one of the big table players (BTP). So I'm like, "What's up with that dude? 1,200 pre-flop in a 10/20 game?" Of course I call, kinda seething about that type of BS. I just bought in for 1k and only had 830 in chips left at this point, so I called with my 830. He flips over AKo and I flip over my 85. Wouldn't you know it, the flop came T-9-5 and with the board finishing up Q-4, I just dealt a BBS to one of the BTP.
BBS Served

Analysis - My only true concern was that he had an overpair, because experience has shown that overpairs are hard to come back from but as it was I was just a 65/35 underdog, easy for me. Post flop, I was way ahead 75% chance to win from that point and with the Q on the turn, giving him an inside straight draw, kept him afloat at 23% chance to win. A blank on the turn would have pushed him lower, to only about 13% chance to win at that point.

So I was kinda marked as a wild player by those who never saw me play before. Looking down at 76o I raise it again to 60 and now everyone calls. The flop comes 9-8-7 with two clubs so I decide to try to take down the pot that that point, betting 300 (in a 10/20 game) and wouldnt you know it, I had one called in seat 1 (more on him later) and seat 7 goes bezerk again, going all-in. Now I know its not his money, and the person whose money it is, we really don't care too much about, so maybe he's throwing that guy's money away just to spite him. I call and so does seat 1. Wouldn't you know it, they had A6h and A4h, taking away seat 7's straight draw, we could tie but he couldn't win outright with a T or a 5. The board ended up K-K and I won my next big hand in a span of ten minutes and the once-healthy stack of the guy was reduced to a molehill.
BBS Served.

Analysis - Preflop I was behind the A6h but on equal footing with the A4o. Post flop, I was very ahead at 70% chance to win at that point with A6h only 19% chance to win and A4 at 11%. When the K hit the board I increased my advantage to 85% and they needed a miracle to win.

As the night progressed, seat 7 gave back the seat (and the stack) to the owner and I was involved with some discussion with seat 1. After calling a bet on the river, I didn't make my straight, he showed his hand and I mucked it. He insisted on asking for my cards. I told him that I mucked it already but he persisted. So I taught the dealer how to show a called hand. Put the called hand aside, push the pot to the winner, collect the board and the other cards, tap the called hand to the muck and show the hand. At that point, there is no pot to contest and no board to compare it to. I just was very pissed.

Looking down on pocket threes, I managed my best not to go hog wild and only raise 3xBB, which everyone called anyways. But with the flop coming 8-3-2, I was in very good shape. I bet 300 and only seat one calls. With the 2 coming off the turn, my thoughts were on him having pocket 2's. Chances of him having pocket 8's and not going hog wild was very slim and I knew he didn't have it. I bet 800 and he calls. The turn gave a 7 and I go all-in which he calls, and my sinking feeling went out the window when I tured over my pocket 3's and he turned over A4. WTF? What a chump, but as one of my favorite pros said, never tap the aquarium. Another BTP comes in and we're really going to town with these fishes. It was kinda late and I had to leave to go home. I told the BTP, we're never going to get invited here again. I mean look at this, and I wave my hand around the room, I've never seen so much fish and we just took a huge chunk of their money.

Game Result - 3500
Running Total - 18,560

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

5/16/06

I go to my usual ring game place because they were having SNG's. I miss the first one and decide to play the 20/40 ring. I lose my first buy-in, which was half of the max, and when my second buy-in comes, the next SNG is announced. I decide the ring wasn't for me at that time and played the SNG. I got to say, the saying "The more things change, the more things stay the same," got it spot on. Man, was I having a bad night. Couple that with the winner of the first SNG, cleaning up in the second, I kinda lost interest and pushed all-in with my 82s, which didn't felt like a winner but I pushed in anyways. Well, I lost and moved back to the ring game.

I get a marker for a buy-in for half the max for the table and lose that with bonehead plays. None of my BBS were coming out, neither were my straights nor flushes and I was getting sucked out on, which was really a bad combination. I decide to buckle down and get a marker buying-in for half the max again, and if you are keeping score at home that is about 1.5x max buy-in already. The strangest things happened, I actually won hands, a lot of hands, and I had customers in most of them.

Looking down on pocket sixes I raise 3xBB and I get everyone to call. I check when the flop came T-6-4 but seat 4 bets 200, which the player to my right calls and I call as well. With the turn coming J, I had to bet to protect myself from the straight, getting both players to call my 300 bet. The turn came 5 and I bet 500 and both players called. Seat 4 turns over JTo giving her two pair and the player to my right showing pocket Q's, I show my set and take down a big pot.

I get pocket Aces, which has been a rare thing for me these days, and I decide not to go wild and just raise 3xBB. Everyone calls, I've been doing 3xBB all night, why wouldn't they. The flop comes low cards and I bet 300, making eveyone fold except seat 3 who calls. A possible flush draw comes out on the turn and I am beside myself for slow-playing my Aces. My opponent check as well as I. The turn pairs the board and my opponent goes all-in. I covered him, but that would not really be a smart move for me if I get the bet wrong. So I study the player and wouldn't you know it, he gave me a tell that he was weak. I call and show him my pocket Aces. He mucks his cards, stands up and says goodbye and leaves.

Analysis - WOW, how scary was that. I didn't really knew what he was holding until I saw that tell. Thank you Mike Caro.

I build my stack enough to pay back the markers I took out and still had a healthy stack. A couple of hands later, I look down at pocket Aces, again, and my stomach turns, I know these are going to get cracked now but I still raise only 3xBB. I get one caller in seat 6 and again with the flop coming T-4-3 rainbow, I bet 500, trying to take down the pot then, but seat 6 called. The turn gave the 6h which made a straight possibility and a flush draw, seat 6 decides to go all-in for about 4,700, I was really getting sick. I needed information and I tried to extract it from him. I count the 4,700 in front of him trying to get information but he wasn't giving any information, and then he did. He gave me the tell that he was weak, so I called. He turned over J9 of hearts giving him a flush draw and I turn over my Aces, which was still shakey to say the least, but I managed to hold out and win the pot.

Analysis - I can't remember the last time I got pocket aces, let alone two pocket rockets in the same session, but what a way to win with them. If not for Mike Caro, I probably would have folded those rockets. Playing BBS and trying to catch up really has given me a new appreciation for premium cards, but I'd still play the BBS, cause its more fun. Hehe

I win a couple of more hands and bully the players into folding hands when flops looked very weak. I set my departure time at 3am and decide to coast along, not repeating what had happened the last time I had a monster stack in this ring game. When I cashed out for the night, I was really feeling good about myself.

Game result - 12,000
Running total - 15,260

5/12/06

I had to go around my usual places to spread the word of my tournament. I sat at a SNG in the usual place I played and here was an interesting hand I played around midway through the second level.

So with the blinds at 50-100, I look at 45o and I raise it to 3xBB. I get two callers and with the flop 3hQhTc, both players in front of me check so I did as well. The turn gave the 4h and I decide to represent a flush if not a flush draw, with both players calling I smelled something was up. The river came 5h and I was definitely sure someone made their flush and in that place, everyone check-raised so when the both players checked to me, I showed my two pair. Wouldn't you know it, neither player had a heart but both players did have pocket pairs. One had sixes the other had twos.
BBS Served

Analysis - The sixes were way ahead preflop 74% to win with me only having a 12% chance to win, and the pocket twos having 14%. After the flop, I am only 4% to win with the pocket 6's way up 88%. I eat up some of their advantage on the turn tripling my percentage to win to 12% which is still not high, especially with the 6's still hovering at 83%. It was just a funny hand to be involved.

Midway through the tournament, I actually got a bad beat served to me. I was on the button and decided to limp in my AKo. With the flop coming 6-T-3 I bet 200 and I get one caller but when the turn comes off 4, that caller went all-in. By that time I had a healthy stack and I really didn't think he had anything, maybe pair tens? I got him covered and I decide to call. He turns over 25o making the nut straight and me holding my nuts, drawing dead.
BBS Served to ME

Analysis - Limping in really doesn't protect your premium hand, while I was a 66/33 favorite, I didn't protect it. I just couldn't belive it but since I limped in, I should have known.

With my stack spiralling downward, I decide to take a stand with my AKo going all-in with about 1,500 in chips. I get called with KJ and wouldn't you know it, a J comes off the flop which read J-6-9 and when the turn and river not providing any help with their 8-3, I get busted out.

Analysis - I really hate AK. I dominate the guy pre-flop 75/25 but fall on my face the rest of the way, busting out.

Game result - (400)
Running Total - 3260


So I move to the other place I play but this time it's the usual 20/40 Ring game. I don't have much going , I wasn't really hitting my BBS but was winning hands with premium hands or semi-premium hands, until this hand. I look down at 47o and I raise it to 120, I get one caller. The flop comes A-5-6 and he bets out 300 which I call. The turn gives me my straight with a 3 but it also shows a flush draw so I'm kinda antsy to do anything. He bets 500 and I call. The river gives out a Q and he checks, as well as I, turning over my 45 for the straight. He shows AKo.
BBS Served

Analysis - I was behind preflop with only 35% chance to win, but what else is new. The percentages stay the same after the flop with his top pair but me with my OESD. After the turn, it was really just a matter of finding out if he had a flush or if my straight was good.

My stack dwindles to break even and I call it a night, at around 3am.

Game result - 0
Running total - 3260

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

5/9/06

I went to the other underground game last night to play. I missed the SNG so I settled on playing a 20-40 ring game. Sitting down on the table, there were five of us that started to play, I didn't know anyone. That's good, I guess. I proceed to grow my stack, I could not do anything wrong and I wasn't showing anyone my cards, I was not being called. When I did get called, I would show respectible cards, no BBS, so it was good. As the night went on, my chips leveled to about 7-8x buy-in. I still couldn't believe it how good the cards were coming, but I still haven't gotten a BBS to write about, and then this hand happened.

I look down on 56o and I raise it 3xBB which made most of the players fold except for the the player in seat 2 who raised it to 300. I called and we were the only ones in this pot. The flop comes K-8-7, giving me an open ended straight draw. I checked blind because I was out of position (still haven't learned my lesson) and seat 2 bet 300 which I called. The turn gave a Q and seat 2 bet 1,000. I knew seat 2 was a loose-aggressive player that could have anything, but I still had that open ended draw, if it was a gut shot, I would have folded, but in this instance I called. The river gave me a 9 and the straight that I needed. I checked, again to try to trap, which doesn't work and I turn over my straight and he turns over AKo.
BBS Served

Analysis - Obviously, I was an underdog all the way in that hand. Preflop I was behind 38/62 but gained a little bit after the flop 34/66. The turn pushed me further behind 18/82 but I got saved by the river.

After that hand, I was playing careless, I mean just raising on everything and chasing everything. So much so that my stack dwindled to about 3-4x buy-in. Looking down at T9o I raised 3xBB and get one caller. With the flop coming T-T-3, I was in great shape and checked to my opponent who checked as well. The turn came off a 7 and I bet 300, which he calls, but I check on the river with another 7 coming off. He bets about 1,200 and that made me think, barring that he had pocket 7's, the worst I could do is split the pot if he had the other T. So I raise all-in with my remaining 1500+ and he calls. I turn over my cards and he shows his 74o.

That should have been it for me, but I continue to play, very VERY loose and getting cards which would hit the flop not as hard as I wanted or I would chase down and lose a bit, and when the night wound down for me, around 2am, I look down and cash out 3k. Not bad for the night, could have been better. Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda. . .

Game Result - 3,000
Running Total - 3,660

Sunday, May 07, 2006

5/3/06 - Part 2

(note - I was rushing my last post because I had a lot of family stuff to do over the weekend so I have to finish my story today.)

I played a SNG after busting out in the multi-table tournament and after winning some hands with premium hands (seems players don't really believe I play premium hands) I came across this situation. I'm sitting in seat 11 and the player at seat 2 goes all-in preflop with the player at seat four calling. I had both of them covered and when I looked down at 82o, I kinda liked my chances. Seat 2 flipped over AKo and seat five turned over KT (I've been starting to call that Tom Cruise, cause its a hand only he can like, get it, KT - Katie Holmes, anyway) I turn my 82o with a smile on my face. I know I am way behind but with both of them playing premium hands, I was in good shape. The flop came 7-4-2 and I am liking it, I am ahead, albeit still an underdog I presume. The Turn gives a 3 and I can sense a bad beat coming, cause a river 5 would give the AK a wheel beating my pair and like those accidents you see in the movies where everything is in slow motion, the dealer turns over the river, and wouldn't you know it, it was a 5.
BBS Denied

Analysis - Preflop, I was actually ahead of the Tom Cruise 28/23, imagine that, with the AK being the favorite at 49%. After the flop I am WAY ahead with 67% chance to win from that point while the AK and KT only had 21% and 11% to win respectively. With the turn being a 3, I stretch my lead to 71% chance to win, the AK holding steady at 21% and the KT droping only to 7% chance to win. That is a suck out. Now I'm pissed I got bad beat by an AK. Haha.

Still reeling from that bad beat I got, I look down at A3o and raise it 3xBB. I get a caller and since I didn't have position on him, I checked blind to him. The flop came 6-6-3 and I was in good shape. I didn't put him on a 6 and when he checked, that confirmed it. The turn came K and now I check and he bets, I call. The river comes K and I check again and he bets and I call. I turn over my cards and he turns over his K9o, giving him Kings full.
BBS Denied

Analysis - Another instance where my blind check caused my downfall. If I led out betting after the flop, chances are he wouldn't call and never would have seen the runner-runner full house. Pre-flop I was ahead 60/40 with my ace and after the flop was more ahead 77/23. With the turn coming out free, and the K showing up, the advantage moved to my opponent 84/14, which is a big swing. I really should have pressured him with a bet or moving in after the flop.

With my stack dwindling, I get my money in with KT and get beat.

Game Total - (500)
Running Total - 660

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

5/3/06 - Part 1

Went back to my ususal underground SNG place and everyone is happy that I don't have my BBS notebook, which I forgot at home. I just say that, I just need a piece of paper to write my BBS and they sigh . . . I laugh, on the inside of course. I stumbled upon the rare, mutli-table tournament here and I buy-in because there were seats left and were just being blinded out.

As I am sitting down, action is to me and I look down at A5o and I raise 3xBB on my first hand. Everyone groans and says, oh here we go again. The player to my left calls as the rest of the players fold. The flop comes 7-3-5 and I bet 200, he calls. The turn comes with an A and I check, and he bets out 500 which I call. When another 5 comes on the river, I bet out 500 and the player mucks his hand. Nothing too spectacular, but always a good thing when you win your first hand.
BBS-effect served

Analysis - When I sat down people knew already what game I was bringing to the table. I guess thats good and bad at the same time. With a flop like that, my A5 wasn't really hidden and I think that's why it scared my opponent.

Later on that game, a guy goes all-in and I'm BB and look down at 53o, and I call about 2/3 of my stack. He flips up JTo and I flip up my cards. I like my chances, as always. The flop comes T-5-6 so both of us hitting the flop but with a 4 coming on the turn, my opponent starts to sweat now. But when I see that open-ended straight draw, I knew I was going to lose that hand, which I did when a K came.
BBS denied

Analysis - Pre-flop I was behind, as usual, 67/33 and after the flop I was already 78/22 behind, I really didn't like that T coming out. The 4 on the turn game me some breathing space and was only down 70/30 but got denied. Another case of a straight draw not materializing. I'm beginning to think that BBS really are not for straights or flushes.

I nurse my stack and had only about about 2xBB left so I decide to go all-in with my 65o when someone goes all-in to my left and a player calls to my right. I and mildly shock to see that the original all-in raiser opens up K6 but the other guy had KJo which was stranger still. The board came 6-J-4-4-A and both of us bust out.
BBS denied

Analysis - Pre-flop I wasn't the total underdog that I thought I was, with 26% chance to win. K6o only had 16% chance to win while KJ was the favorite, of course, 57%. After the flop K6 was almost drawing dead with only 9% chance to win, I actually was around there as well with only 15% chance to win. I wouldn't be such an underdog if the K6 guy wasn't in the pot but what can you do, I wasn't supposed to be in the pot either.

Game total - (500)
Running Total - 1160

5/2/06

Went to a different venue to play a cash game, low stakes 20-40 so I wanted to test my theory there. I sat and I looked around and only saw two guys I knew. One was a player who've I've played with since this whole Hold'em thing stated and another was a guy I haven't seen since the turn of the century in LA. I didn't even know he played poker, so it was good to catch up.

I bought in for half of the max buy-in, something I like to do, not really the right thing but what can you do. I sit in seat 2 with a loose player in the seat one and a loose player with is friend in seats 7 and 8. I'm playing my BBS and not hitting the flops at all or not hard enough. In one hand, someone goes all in with about 800 and I look down at 76o, and I'm thinking looks good. I call and he turns over pocket eights and I am thinking DOMINATION. The flop comes 2-J-7 and I am kinda alright, it did feel that one of my cards would come out and with the board finishing up 5-4, I lose most of my stack and rebuy again for half the max.
BBS Denied

Analysis - Overcards vs BBS is ok for me but overpairs are very hard to comeback from. I don't think any of my BBS have come back from an overpair, it would be nice but it hasn't happen yet. Pre-flop I was behind already 85/15 and was 83/17 dog after, that 7 stopped the bleeding a little bit.

After buying, I was thinking of tightening up but what fun would that be? I look down at ATo and I raise to 3xBB. I get the guy at seat 7 to call along with four others, they've been calling all my raises after that 76o hand. With the flop coming Q-J-T, I put in a feeler of 300 and everyone folds except for seat 7 who calls, chased some people out but no information gained from seat 7. An A comes out on the turn, giving me two pair and without a flush draw on board, I'm just worried about Broadway. I bet 300 again and he calls. A T comes on the river making me Tens full, and I try to trap by checking but seat 7 checks so I turn over my Boat and he checks his cards and mucks his hand.
BBS-effect served

Analysis - At that point, most people on the table, I think, labeled me Loose-Aggressive, which I am and not really. I really think the beauty of playing BBS is that players can't put you on a hand, not even a range of hands. If you play the same holding a BBS and a premium hand, players will really have a hard time figuring you out.

By the end of the night, and the table winding down, I am up around 1k for the night and still wanting to play. But when a player asks to play a "One hand Satellite," I just call the floor to ask him to cash me out. WTF?

Game Result - 1000
Running Total - 1660