Category — Personal
Anatomy of a poker hand.
As many of you know, I love poker.
I can distinctly remember when my father taught me to play. This may date me, but who remembers when LifeSaver Holes were popular? They came in tubes the size of a roll of pennies. Anyway, those were our “stacksâ€, our chips. We would pull out the trusty TV trays and sit on the couch for hours playing 5 card draw. At the time, I had a problem with eating my own bets. Not so much anymore.
It wasn’t until much later that I began to appreciate the skills my dad had try to teach me at a young age.
During my sophomore year at Ole Miss, the World Series of Poker blew up, and I was introduced to Texas Hold ‘em. A quick run down of Texas Hold ‘em:
Each player is dealt two “hole cards†face down. A round of betting. The dealer turns over 3 community cards that each player can use to better his/her hand. A round of betting. The dealer then turns one card over. A round of betting. Finally, one last community card from the dealer is turned. Final round of betting. Read ‘em and weep.
I’ve played a lot since then. We would play at least once a week in college, and trips to Tunica, MS (local gambling city) weren’t as rare as they should have been.
I’ve won some, I’ve lost some, and most of all I love playing. I think there are a many things that draw me to the game: competition, exhilaration of the win, outsmarting your opponent, odds/probability, and the list goes on.
I wanted to document the play-by-play of a recent online hand (yes I play online poker).
I play poker online occasionally. I played for about 10 days straight when Virginia went out of town for 10 days. I started out around a month ago with a $150 deposit into my favorite site (rhymes with Rodog). I have systematically worked it up to quite a bit of money, and was “sitting at a table†last night where the blinds were $5/$10 – a table that I would never sit at live.
It was a six person table, and the average stack was about $1000. At the time of this hand, I had about $1200. I was on “the button†(was in the dealer position), which means that I’m last to bet in a given round when I was dealt 7d8d (7 of diamonds and 8 of diamonds), which I like. The action went as follows:
First to act folds. Player to his left raises the big blind to $35. Next player folds. I look down at 7d8d and smile, of course I’ll call this. I love calling raises online with mediocre hands like this. I may lose money on the flop when I don’t hit it sets me up perfectly for the situation I’m about to describe. Ok, so I call the $35. The small and big blinds both fold, leaving just the initial raiser, and myself following him.
What do you know? The flop brings 8s-8c-5h. So I’ve got a set of 8s and I’m thinking this guy has a decent hand (AJ-AK, 1010 and greater, etc.), but nothing that can catch up to me. Plus, how could he put me on calling with a single 8 in my hand?! So I’m sitting pretty. He’s first to act, and he takes a while before betting $75. There’s already $85 in the pot, so he’s trying to take it down immediately. I kind of laugh on the inside. I quickly call the $75 to try to play like I have something, (reverse psychology). The next card was probably the best card in the deck for me. It was the king of clubs. So on the board, we have 8s-8c-5h-Kc. It’s his turn to bet again. He waits maybe 5 seconds after the king fell before betting $185. So there is $235 in the pot when he bet $185. As I said before, this is a great card for a couple of reasons: (1.) If he has something like Ace-King, it allows him to hit his top-pair, (2.) if I raise, it looks like I have a king and he may call just to try to split the pot now that it’s so big. SO. I decide to raise to represent a king, thinking that surely he can at least tie a king. I raise to $695. This means that there is now $1115 in the pot. He waits for a long time (~30 seconds) before re-raising me all in for ~$200 more. At this point, I figure the only thing that can beat me is KK and, there is a slim chance (albeit very real with online poker) that he indeed has that. I mull over it for 0.5 seconds before calling the extra $200. That $200 call made the pot $2025! Low and behold, I played it just right – he flipped over AA. Pocket aces are a loser when I’m calling with 78 suited! The river was 10s; so he shipped all of his chips over for the $2025 victory.
The best part about this wasn’t the money. It was the fact that I outplayed and outsmarted that guy. I called when it didn’t cost me much, hit, and then played like I didn’t. I then raised precisely when I should have, (AA would love to see someone raise when a King hits), to take it to the bank.
That is why I love the game. It’s all in the head.
May 28, 2008 3 Comments
Palm Treo 750.
Well, as many of you know, I am ridiculous.
I stood in line for about 3 hours with Robbie in July(?) to the the iPhone, and I haven’t regretted it. But alas, I am on the prowl again. Unlike many other gadgets and things I’ve bought, the iPhone didn’t escort me to the hell that is buyer’s remorse. I’m happy to say that I still enjoy using the phone, and find that it actually does make aspects of my life much easier.
But, the time has come. The reason that I want to get the phone is so I can run Windows Mobile applications — which the iPhone is incapable of doing. The software I want to run is a Forex charting software that enables me to place real-time trades.
With the Treo, I’m hoping to better sync my Outlook (work) calendar with my Google Calendar and iCal from home. This should prevent me from missing meetings, keep current reminders about tasks, etc. I know that I can do all this with the iPhone, but I’ll be honest, I just like the Windows setup better. I’ve been saying it for months…I just want a new ThinkPad. My MacBook Pro is great and all, but I still prefer Windows to OSX, AND I’m a designer. I even prefer designing with Adobe CS on a PC. Just a preference.
If you know anyone who wants a great MacBook Pro at a fraction of the price, let me know. Here are some specs:
Model Name: MacBook Pro 15″
Model Identifier: MacBookPro1,1
Processor Name: Intel Core Duo
Processor Speed: 2 GHz
Number Of Processors: 1
Total Number Of Cores: 2
L2 Cache (per processor): 2 MB
Memory: 2 GB
Bus Speed: 667 MHz
Serial Number: XXXXXXXXXXX
Sudden Motion Sensor:
State: Enabled
Just email me if you are in the market. I can be reasonable.
Anyway, back to the Treo saga. Virginia has been wanting an iPhone, so I think we are just going to switch the iPhone to her number (which involves her getting a new SIM card AND re-activating through iTunes – gag) and add a new data package to support the unlimited data that I *need* after being spoiled with the iPhone.
Until next time.
April 13, 2008 3 Comments