Wednesday means the Above Malibu tournament with the best poker players the improv world has to offer. Well, most of them. Nixma was too tired to play this week, so he didn’t come to the game. And what a game it was.
The A.M. tournament is usually a three-table $10 freezeout. This week kicked off a month of $5 rebuy supersatellites to a $70 satellite (or super, if there is enough interest) with the winner taking the money to play in the October 31 $500+65 No Limit event at Foxwoods. I can’t actually play in the Halloween tournament, as I will be trying to save our country from a bunch of warmongering thieves, but I could sure use $565.
Shuffle up and deal.
I like the A.M. game. I like it because the mix of poker talent is mixed, but the willingness to teach the newbies is strong. Sure, the teaching often takes the form of “you shouldn’t have done that” while scooping a pot, but the winner always goes the extra mile and says why. I also like it because it is a smart group. I was surprised at first that they aren’t always cracking jokes and making each other laugh, but I realized that they just don’t feel like they have to be “on” all the time. I appreciate that becuase, well, it leaves more space for me. I have to be on all the time. It is a sickness, but not one I am particularly interetsted in having cured. All I can say is, when the laughter stops, I’ll probably never speak again.
Enough about the people. On to the poker.
It is actually a bit of a misnomer to call this a $5 rebuy tournament. The $5 buyin got you T1000 chips, but since one could rebuy immediately, everyone took the initial rebuy and started with T2000 in chips. The same held true for everyone that busted out. It was a bigger waste of $5 to buy in as a short stack than it would be to spend the extra $5 to get the full T2000.
The night started slowly for me and my T2000. I was folding like a cheap table for what seemed like an eternity. The table around me was playing fast and loose; “You can always rebuy” was the slogan of the night, and it led to a lot of fairly questionable calls. The good news is that the more that people rebuy, the more progress is made to seats to the Foxwoods qualifier. So keep rebuying, people!
I finally got involved in a hand at level 2 when it was folded to me in the BB with 95o. Of course, if you are going to play a hand like 95o, a flop of 9-9-7 is pretty much exactly what you want to see. I checked my 9 to see who would bet the pot. There are definitely some players at this table that I would lay this hand down to. Michael, a loose player and aggressive bluffer bet 500 and I check-raised him all-in. He thought about it for a while and then called with T9. The turn wasn’t a 5 and was too low to set up a chop and suddenly I was out of chips. Can I get a rebuy over here? Back to T2000, but now my $5 tournament has cost me $20.
I think I was shaken by busting out. I guess I checked specifically to check-raise if the right person put money in the pot, but I still can’t decide if I made the right play. I also don’t know that Michael made the right play. My check-push certainly smelled like a 9 (or Presto!), but he still called with a 10 as a kicker. I don’t know that either of us played the hand well, but he ended up with the chips. It made me play far too tight and I lost my focus.
I look down and see A7s in early position and throw it away - until I realize that I’m in the BB and have acted waaaaaaaaaaay out of turn. The players are kind enough to let me pull back my cards, but JCatz raised to 3x BB from UTG+1 (JCatz) and when I think about calling, get chastised for thinking about calling a raise with a hand that I wanted to fold without a raise. I feel too guilty to call (which is also a bad sign). More annoying, the flop was A-x-7. I’d have had top and bottom pair and I think it would have stood up. Grrrr.
My stack slowly bled down to T1100 just in time for the end of the rebuy period. To the surprise of JCatz and Pack, I opted not to push myself under 1000 just so I could rebuy and take the double add-on at the same time. Doing so would have given me T5000 to play with. It wasn’t worth it to me. While I obviously took the double add-on, doing another rebuy felt like a bad investment. First prize is a $70 seat at a satellite for a tournament that I can’t play in anyway. I was already committed to $25 and the extra $10 to play for $70 sounded like a bad deal to me. With T3100 I was the shortstack in the tournament (everyone took the add-on), but I only needed to double up once to be safe.
A few hands later, I got my double up. I checked 74 in the BB . And then check my middle pair on a flop of 8-7-2 rainbow. Eason, a loose player who had already built up, busted out and built up his rebuy with aggressive pot steals, bet T500 into a ~T700 pot. I put him on overcards and an aggressive personality, so when the table folded around to me, I pushed. Easton called with A2 and suddenly I’m comfortable with T6800.
Jay, who had joined the tournament at the rebuy period never got on track. He was one seat to my right for his brief appearance in the tournament. He was in the SB with a short stack and, even though the table folded to him, he completed instead of pushing. Much to the disappointment of the table, I checked. Sure, people were upset, but I’m not going to push the shortstack in with J3. Fortunately, the flop is jack high, and Jay calls when I push. T8500.
In the BB at 400/800/75, Pack goes all-in in front of me. Everyone folds, and with A9o I see a chance to bust Pack without risking too much of my stack. Unfortunately I miscounted his chips from across the table. I didn’t realize that he had T3200 left, which was about 1/2 of my stack. (I was still letting myself get bled dry by the antes and blinds.) I quick called and he turned over AJ. I was saved by a 9 on the flop and was up to 9400.
I busted Eason, though I don’t recall how. I read him for junk and I was right. Up to 12650 and on to the final table.
At the final table I was in fifth out of nine. The big stack (Mullansky) had 26500, two others (JCatz and BkynPlague) had over 20000. Waddell, Michael and I had over 10000. Buster, Sheffield and Moug were the three real shortstacks, none with more than 3000 - and the blinds were up to 600/800/100.
At final table Bkyn Plague learned a lesson about, well, playing the final table. BkynPlague has a private poker blog on the Improv message board and has allowed me to post his entry here, so I’ll let him tell you about the back-to-back hands in his own words. Take it away, BkynPlague…
I’m in the big blind, with 2♣6♦. The UTG goes all-in. I have the UTG stacked by a lot, since not only am I third at the table, but the UTG is one of the SHORT stacks.
Everyone folds to me. The antes add up to $6.75, and $12 in blinds. UTG didn’t push with more than $20.
So even though I’m getting almost 2-1 for my money, I fold. Allowing the shorter stack to stay in the tourney that much longer and collect the antes and blinds. Your pal the Conductor didn’t do the math that says, essentially, when getting 2-1 for your money pre-flop, in that situation, it’s almost an auto-call.
But the very next play is AWESOME!
I’m now on the small blind, and since my pride is stinging from not simply trying to eliminate the short stack, I’m a little testy… and see A♥9♥. Joe, the big stack at the table, makes a minimum raise to $16.
What does this mean, sports fans? What should your pal, the Third Blind, have deduced from this?
He should have taken a moment to see that the largest stack at the table, with another large stack (me) yet to act, is probably not going to even play a hand, much less raise a hand, at this stage of the tourney unless it is a premium hand. What would be the point? Why risk losing chips when you can fold your way to the prize?
But, instead, I just saw my suited Ace and thought that I’d want to see a flop with it. So I called.
The BB folds (a short stack) and now I’m heads up with the largest stack at the table.
Brilliant!
The flop comes 9 high, rainbow variety.
I check. Joe bets $15.
I have TPTK here, so I, of course, check raise him to $40. Bewildered, Joe folds.
Joe folds his OVERPAIR. TENS.
Am I proud?
NO.
Am I embarrassed?
YES.
Why?
Honor among thieves was not satisfied.
Once the big stack makes the raise preflop, I need to see that he’s baiting a small stack to push. I need to see that he’s not afraid of a push from a small stack… that he is, in fact, wanting a push from a short stack. When I call his raise, he is at least giving me credit for having a pocket pair.
And once the flop hits, instead of calling him down, I check raise him. He decides that his tens aren’t safe anymore.
I mean, why else would I check raise the LARGEST STACK AT THE TABLE with only TWO MORE PEOPLE to go before we ALL place in the money?
Proper tourney logic would dictate I have either something higher than his tens, or I hit my set.
So he folded his overpair.
If this were different circumstances, he might go over the top all-in. In which case I have to fold. But if he’s wrong about my hand, he’s severely hurt, so why risk it?
No, the thing that makes me upset with myself is the implicit collusion that I neglected to take part in. At that stage of the tourney, the only goal is to place in the money. So, in effect, all of the big stacks are on the same side. We are all working together to eliminate the small stacks, and not tangling with each other. By getting involved with a speculative hand, I risked my status in the tourney for no real upside.
Well said.
The only hand I played at the final table was my only chance to participate in the collusion against the short stacks. Buster was on my left with only 1100 behind his BB. It was, as most hands were, folded to the SB. 98o. This isn’t a great hand, but I saw two live cards against a short stack that I wanted out, so I pushed Buster all-in. He had no choice but to call even with 32o. I started ahead in the hand, but Buster paired up his deuce on the turn and survived.
That was enough action for me. I just posted and folded into a seat when Mullansky busted out Sheff. I was in 5th of 6 at the end but as far as I’m concerned I tied for first.
I thought about taking the subway home, but at 2AM - with work the next day - I decided I’d rather not wait for the train. And the weather was so nice anyway.
Addendum:
I talk to my cab drivers a lot. Mostly I talk about driving a cab because the people who do it seem to like talking about it. This driver was no different. Genial, informed about his industry and really very well informed about the best streets to drive throughout New York (yes, I should have been taking notes). All I remember is that Victory Boulevard in Staten Island moves very well. I can’t imagine when that will be helpful.
I also like these conversations because I get to find out the market for Taxi Medallions. The latest? The city announced the issuance of 900 new medallions. They auctioned off the first 300 recently, wisely choosing to do the auction in stages to minimize the price of medallions in the secondary market. Personal taxi medallions went for $285,000. A fleet medallion - $360,000, with a minimum of two. I like to hear that the cost of a medallion is going up (and if memory serves, this is higher than the last time I asked). Right or wrong, I consider it a window into the strength of the local economy, so I think the high value of medallions is a good thing.
Maybe some day I’ll have enough money to think about one. Right now I’d rather have my apartment.
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