High Stakes Snapshot: Hero Plays A Plenty
May 11, 2010 by admin
Filed under poker news
It all started when Tom “durrrr” Dwan made an incorrect hero call with nine-high vs Daniel Negreanu.
The hand was a rare unstraddled pot where Lex Veldhuis raised to $4,000 in late position with the A♥ 9♣.
Daniel Negreanu made the call in the small blind with the K♠ T♠ and durrrr called in the big blind with 9♥ 5♥.
The flop came 3♣ 7♠ 7♥. Negreanu checked and durrrr led for $10,700.
Veldhuis insta-folded and Negreanu made the call. When the turn came K♦ both players checked.
The river came Q♦ and Negreanu bet $28,200. durrrr tanked before wrongly calling with his nine high.
Unfortunately his nine was nowhere near good and rather than looking like a genius he looked just a little bit silly.
Phil Galfond was next on the hero bandwagon making a sick fold to save himself in a hand he never should have been in.
Galfond three-bet K♥ 5♦ vs an early position raise only to get cold fourbet out of the blinds by Eli Elezra’s K♦ K♣.
For some reason Galfond makes the call and the flop comes K♠ 9♣ 9♦. Galfond calls a bet on the flop and somehow checks the turn through in position when the 9♠ falls.
The river comes Q♠ and Elezra leads for $110,000 into $154,600. Galfond manages to find a fold with his nines full of kings.
Sick? Yes! But perhaps the sickest of the night was Lex Veldhuis’ river call on Doyle Brunson.
Doyle limped the big blind on Veldhuis’ straddle with Q♠ 7♠ and Veldhuis made it $11,000 with 9♠ 2♠.
Doyle called $9k more and to see a 6♠ 2♦ 3♥ flop.
Both players checked to a J♣ where Doyle led for $20,500.
Veldhuis made the call and the river dropped 4♣.
It didn’t end there, however. Elky joined the failed hero call camp after getting in far too deep with A♦ 6♦ by calling a three-bet in position only to stack off on a 4♣ 6♠ 8♠ Q♦ board vs durrrr’s A♠ A♣.
And last but not least Phil Galfond decided he’d fold another full house.
With Galfond in the straddle Negreanu raised in early position to $8,000 with the K♠ 5♠.
Veldhuis called on the button with the 9♦ 7♦ and Galfond defended his straddle with the 8♦ 7♠.
The flop came K♥ 8♣ 3♠ and Galfond checked and called. The turn brought the 8♥ and Galfond players checked.
The river brought the K♣ and Galfond checked and eventually folded to a full pot, $75,000, bet from Daniel Negreanu, successfully dodging another cooler.
And just like that the latest season of HSP comes to an end, a fitting conclusion to an eventful season.
It had everything we love about High Stakes Poker. The best players in the world doing their best to outplay each other, millions of dollars in cold hard cash trading hands and, of course, Gabe Kaplan.
We’ll be back with our strategy snapshots next season but for now you can relive all the Season 6 action using the links below.
More Strategy Snapshots from High Stakes Poker Season 6:
Episode 12: Galfond’s Gaffe
Episode 11: Negreanu Runs Bad, Plays Worse
Episode 10: The Old Triple Straddle
Episode 9: Big Mistakes Benifet Benyamine
Episode 8: Ivey Fivebets Light
Episode 7: Negreanu Bluffs Into The Nuts
Episode 6: Good2cRaSZi Bluffing
Episode 5: Welcome to Ivey World
Episode 4: Ivey Goes Vegetarian
Episode 3: Negreanu Bailed Out by River
Episode 2: Hoivold Sent Packing
Episode 1: Hellmuth Felted
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High Stakes Snapshot: Big Mistakes Benefit Benyamine
April 13, 2010 by admin
Filed under poker news
The Setup:
Stack sizes:
Daniel Negreanu $340,000~
Doyle Brunson $300,000
David Benyamine $200,000
Daniel Negreanu raises from middle position to $3,000 with the blinds at $400/$800.
Doyle Brunson makes the call in the cut-off and David Benyamine calls in the small blind.
Three-handed to a 9♣ 3♠ 8♠ flop. Benyamine checks and Negreanu fires $8,500 into $11,400. Doyle flats in position and Benyamine thinks and calls as well.
The turn comes Q♠ and the all three players check.
The river comes A♥ and after Benyamine checks, Negreanu fires $26,200. Doyle calls and Benyamine check-raises to $101,200 after a bit of thought.
Daniel Negreanu disgustedly folds, and Doyle Brunson disgustedly calls.
Benyamine shows 5♠ 7♠ for a flush and Brunson mucks his three queens with the Q♣ Q♥.
Benyamine’s $101,200 check-raise managed to fold out Daniel Negreanu’s better flush, 9♠ T♠, to get heads up with Doyle’s worse set of queens.
A questionable play, maybe, but it worked to the tune of a $265,500 pot.
The Breakdown:
When it’s folded to Negreanu in middle position he’s basically raising any two marginally connected cards when they’re suited, obviously T♠ 9♠ more than meets that criteria so he sticks in $3,000.
Doyle Brunson elects to flat call with his Q♥ Q♣ in the cut-off.
Doyle is almost 400bb deep with Negreanu and just calls both to keep the pot small and to keep his range wider in order to trap Negreanu on a later street.
It’s perfectly fine thinking but Negreanu has shown a propensity for calling three-bets both in and out of position. Since Doyle is in position he can control the size of the pot post-flop so a three-bet for value should be the more +ev play.
Benyamine is last to call with the 5♠ 7♠ in the small blind.
He’s $200k deep effective and is guaranteed a multi way pot but he’ll also be out of position for the remainder of the hand.
The flop comes 9♣ 3♠ 8♠ and Benyamine checks his gutshot plus flushdraw to the preflop raiser.
Daniel Negreanu also hit the flop and fires $8,500 into $11,400 with top pair plus a flush draw.
Doyle Brunson elects to just flat call with his over pair.
Looking to avoid a seriously difficult spot he calls and plays small ball hoping Negreanu will continue betting into him.
Benyamine chooses to just flat call with his robust draw.
For a moment he contemplates a raise but eventually thinks better of it. In a threeway pot he doesn’t want to checkraise only to end up getting all-in vs a better flush draw, leaving him with only a gutterball.
The turn comes the Q♠ which hits everyone, yet everyone chooses to check.
Of all the checks Negreanu’s is definitely the worst.
Negreanu has no reason not to bet his turned flush three-way. He’s the pre-flop raiser and there are a ton of worse hands his opponents can call with.
Furthermore if he checks through and a fourth spade falls he’s in pretty rough shape. But he checks and Doyle checks through praying for the board to pair.
The river comes the A♥.
Benyamine checks for a third time and Negreanu bets $26,200. Obviously once Negreanu doesn’t bet the turn with his flush he has to bet the river when it changes nothing.
Doyle calls thinking his three queens have to be good. But here’s where the hand gets interesting.
Benyamine check-raises to $101,200. He doesn’t call, which would be the “standard” play.
When the hand is over he explains to Kara Scott that he knew his raise would make Negreanu fold the best hand and allow Doyle Brunson to call with the worse hand.
Now, that is what happened but it’s tough to believe that was his intent.
It doesn’t make much sense, he expects Negreanu to fold a made flush with all of the calling station tendencies he’s shown in every season of High Stakes Poker?
Not likely.
Furthermore the point he made about Negreanu having to worry about Doyle’s river call is moot.
Chances are if Doyle could beat a ten high flush he would have either bet it in position on the turn or he would have raised with it on the river. He’s just not going to play a bigger flush that passively.
Negreanu doesn’t need to worry about Doyle’s call at all and should realize that if he calls the check-raise the action is finished, Doyle will very seldom overcall.
Which brings us back to Benyamine’s river check-raise, more likely than not Benyamine put Negreanu on a hand like A♠ K♥, A♠ Q♦ or even A♦ A♠, any hand that was a pair with a redraw on the turn and pot controlled three way. Of those, almost all of them improve on the river with the A♥.
Benyamine’s check-raise was more for value vs Negreanu’s two pair+ range than a bet to get a flush to fold.
Benyamine likely felt Doyle had a one pair bluff catcher and was a non issue in the hand. Of course what ended up happening was Negreanu folding his ten-high flush.
A fold that, looking purely at perceived ranges, isn’t very good.
When Negreanu checks the turn there probably aren’t a ton of flushes in his range, more likely Negreanu has a pair plus draw hand that he’s pot controlling.
So when he checks and then bets on the river he’s actually near the very top of his range given the situation.
The bulk of his range however are two pair or set type hands which Benyamine can checkraise for value with his small flush.
Negreanu probably just over-thought the hand, and believed he had to worry about Doyle acting behind him.
The end result was him folding the best hand.
Finally, Doyle calls Benyamines check-raise. The last mistake in a mistake-filled hand.
Honestly, there isn’t too much explanation for it other than he was angry how he played the hand up until this point and now was too angry to fold.
Add in to the fact that the whole hand was confusing as hell and he just stuck the money in and hoped for the best.
He wasn’t good of course, and Benyamine’s raise looks like one of the most unbelievably sick plays ever, successfully getting a player to fold a better hand, yet still getting action from a worse hand.
But that’s results oriented thinking, it was a a bad read that ended up working 100x better than he could have hoped.
On the bright side it did make for an interesting hand.
More Strategy Snapshots from High Stakes Poker Season 6:
Episode 8: Ivey Fivebets Light
Episode 7: Negreanu Bluffs Into The Nuts
Episode 6: Good2cRaSZi Bluffing
Episode 5: Welcome to Ivey World
Episode 4: Ivey Goes Vegetarian
Episode 3: Negreanu Bailed Out by River
Episode 2: Hoivold Sent Packing
Episode 1: Hellmuth Felted
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ADZ124: LA to Las Vegas Trip Report
March 11, 2010 by admin
Filed under poker news
Hello, hello. Just wanted to give you guys an update on the weekend’s activities.
I believe we last left off with me running super bad at the LAPC and losing the high-roller to a one-outer on the river, the main event kings to aces in the first level like a fish, losing to a free roll in PLO for $50k nuts vs nuts and losing a $45k pot with a wrap and a flush draw to middle set which we ran twice.
So basically, I needed to get out of LA.
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ADZ124: LA to Las Vegas Trip Report
March 11, 2010 by admin
Filed under poker news
Hello, hello. Just wanted to give you guys an update on the weekend’s activities.
I believe we last left off with me running super bad at the LAPC and losing the high-roller to a one-outer on the river, the main event kings to aces in the first level like a fish, losing to a free roll in PLO for $50k nuts vs nuts and losing a $45k pot with a wrap and a flush draw to middle set which we ran twice.
So basically, I needed to get out of LA.
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Mercier Update from the LAPC
February 18, 2010 by admin
Filed under poker news
Today I will be playing the $1k 8 game event at LAPC. This will be my 7th event played out here, having bricked the first six I played.
I bubbled the $1,500 NL last night after playing around 11 hours. I went out in 23rd and 18 got paid.
Sam Simon, the creator of the Simpsons, was the one who busted me. He’s a really nice guy and fun to have at the table, but oh, did he get me good!! Sigh!
Anyways, I had a rough online day on Sunday too, going deep in a few tourneys. I finished 8th in the 109 turbo, losing 2 pots for the chiplead at the final table, 6 outed on the river and 3 outed on the river… yuk.
Also got 20th in the 109 freeze, and bubbled the 200 rebuy AK<AA.
I will probably only be playing this 8 game tourney and the $1,500 Chinese poker tournament out in LA before heading to Vegas for the NAPT at the Venetian.
I will be playing the 5k main event there and also the 25k high rollers event. I’m really excited for these two events and looking forward to kicking off the NAPT season.
Later!
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