That’s my ending chipstack … how it looked after I
knocked out the #3 player on the way to heads-up. My JsJc held up against her
Ad7h. At that point, both the last remaining player (Gregg) and I had roughly
the same size stack (around 1.3 million), so we agreed to a 50/50 chop. I
actually had just a little bit more than he did, so I became listed as the
champion for that event. The tournament had 173 players; paid 18; and cost $200
to enter. Gregg and I walked away with a little over $6500 each. Hmm, $500+ per
hour for twelve hours’ work? Not bad I’d say.
I think I got the better end of that bargain. Gregg had
been running over every table he’d played at – including mine early on, before
I was mercifully moved away – and I wasn’t eager to play heads-up against him. Although
the two of us butted heads infrequently, the number of hands he won against me
and the number I won against him were about the same. I’m probably the only one
who could say that about him, and he’s probably the only one who could say the same thing
about me. So a 50/50 chop seemed like an appropriate way to wind up the game.
I don’t really have a narrative for this entry beyond
what I’ve said above, so I’ll just post some random, admittedly rather jumbled
comments.
·
It seemed like there were a lot of women players
at this event, and most of them were pretty good. Every table I was at,
including the final table, had three or four ladies at it.
·
I spent a LOT of time as the chip leader at
whichever table I was at. When I wasn’t leading, I was nearly always above
average stack. It wasn’t the result of very many big hands (although I certainly
did have many big hands). It was more the result of just slow, steady,
consistent grinding. I think I was only all-in twice, and both times early on
in the tournament.
·
One time I went all-in against another player
who had me just barely covered. I won the hand, and he was down to a single
chip!
·
I think I knocked out around ten players
overall, which is a lot. I knocked out three players in one hand, taking KK
against AQ, QQ, and 66.
·
Early in the tournament, I raised in middle
position with A9o. It folded to the small blind, who had a somewhat short
stack, and he shoved. After thinking it over for a while, I called (it wasn’t
that many more chips). He showed 4h2h. My Ace held up, and he was busted. The
guy sitting next to me, who was pretty much a jerk, said, “When did Ace/Nine
become a raising hand?” I said, “The same day Four/Deuce became a shoving hand.”
He had a lot more commentary on how badly I was playing overall. I just said, “Yes, you’re
right, I am a really bad player.” He busted out soon afterwards.
·
I did not deliver a single bad beat the entire
tournament. That is astonishing. Every time I won a hand at showdown, it was
because it started out being the better hand (at least post-flop). I certainly
suffered some soul-crushing bad beats myself though! Once my Aces were cracked
on the river for two pair (we were all-in on the turn). Another time, my Ace/King
was beat by Ace/Six when my opponent rivered a Ten-high straight. This was by
the same lady that went all the way to #3 (who I busted later). But I had so
many chips that I was able to survive both of these setbacks.
·
Another notable hand happened at the final
table. This player with a very swingy playing style (she was always involved in
massive pots with marginal hands, which she sometimes won) went all-in in early
position. I was in late position with Aces and called. (There's no better feeling than when someone shoves into your Aces.) She had AQo and busted.
What made this hand notable (to me) is that I think it was a mistake for her to
shove with Ace/Queen offsuit. First of all, she just had way too many chips. A
smaller raise would have made more sense, and been appropriate. But also, AQo
just isn’t a good shoving hand from early position at a full table, unless you
are desperately short-stacked. Again, she should have just raised.
·
When facing all-in bets, I folded 55 twice, 99,
and AQo. The AQ fold was against the same player who busted #3; I was probably
actually ahead of her range but didn’t want to get involved. The very next
hand, I shoved with AJo and won. The point here is that you need a much better
hand to call a shove than you do to
shove yourself.
After I won (it was around 1am), I was so excited that I
couldn’t sleep. This morning, I’m exhausted. I have another tournament that starts
in a couple of hours though, and I really want to play it, so hopefully I can
keep it together long enough to run well. It should only go about three or four
hours, so I should be okay.