
I did not sleep well the night before Day 3, was awake far too early in the morning and could not get back to sleep. I had a sense of foreboding about the day, but tried to tell myself to just enjoy it. The money was already invested in the tournament and even if nothing came of it I was already set-up with my new job in Montreal in August.
My initial table draw looked like this:
Herberholz, Mark USA 50,200 1 MTG player
Taylor, Stuart UK 129,500 2
Wach, Dan USA 33,100 3 EPT Final Mini-Cash 09
Myung, John USA 115,700 4 $1.9M inc some big cashes
Utt, Garrett USA 146,100 5 2 cashes, inc 44th in 1k special
Crivello, Craig USA 130,900 6 $420k many small cashes
Raymond, Derek USA 131,400 7 2009 2.5k O8 bracelet winner
Patrick, Joseph USA 68,700 8 Unknown
Ginzburg, Roman USA 72,600 9 1 small 09 WSOP cash
I was only worried about Seat 4 and sure enough, early in the first level, he began to play aggressively and 3-bet me OTB when I opened light from HJ. Not much happened in the level, I played an average number of pots for my game, including one with AA, but didn’t win or lose anything big and finished the level with 118k.
I did notice that Seat 9 was playing a lot of pots and sometimes doing unusual things like limping the button (which he then c-bet and I check-raised him with air and took down the pot). Seats 3 and 8 soon busted. A 51-year old guy with a big stack and a massive unlit cigar in his mouth moved into Seat 3, but he seemed to play quite a straightforward amateur game, including over-valuing his single pairs, but he was hitting a lot of flops and generally winning pots.
The more significant development was Justin “ZeeJustin” Bonomo moving into Seat 8. He also had a lot of chips and soon got involved in several pots. I opened QQ UTG and he called me OTB. I c-bet the nasty looking AK6 flop, but he quickly mucked and must have been playing a small-medium pair or suited connector type hand and believed that I had the Ace.
Still things weren’t going too badly when I got involved in my first big pot:
My Stack ~120k, Seat 9 ~80k, Blinds 800/1600/200, I hold AJo in SB.
Seat 9 opened from the CO for 4400, which was a fairly standard sized raise for him at this level. He had been opening a lot of pots. I felt that 3-betting him with AJo was the best play here because I am out of position with a hand that doesn’t generally flop well, so I am expecting to take it down preflop, but if he calls I can represent a lot of strength after the flop, or if he 4-bets I can easily fold. So I make it 12.8k. In hindsight I made my betsize a little too large and made my hand look a lot like AK. I should generally be making 2.5X type bets to ~11k here, but it’s not a huge mistake. After some thought he called:
Pot ~29k
Flop QT8r
I feel that he must be calling with a range of hands that generally missed that flop and I’m only really worried about him having got lucky with AQ/KQ/TT or him being stubborn preflop with marginal hands like KJ (he was quite a stubborn player). Given the strength of my preflop 3-bet, I believe I can represent strength by c-betting at this flop. With 29k in there, I need to make it a good sized bet, and 20k seemed about right, but it did expose me to exactly what transpired: an all-in move by Seat 9 with good fold equity. I sighed and let it go, but that knocked me down to ~85k and kinda put me on a little bit of tilt.
I went over it in my head afterwards and wondered if I could have played it differently. I still felt the 3-bet/c-bet line was correct, just that my bet-sizing could have been 11k/15k, which would have saved me 6.8k in chips, but likely ended in the same result.
After feeling a little tilted for a while, I told myself to let it go and just enjoy this experience. I was now short-stacked in relation to the average and my table, but still have over 50BBs and could grind it out. I did that for a while, but things just didn’t go my way as my opening bets kept getting called and I missed every flop. This bled me down as we approached the end of the level, when my final hand of the WSOP came up and brought into play a lot of factors that I’ve been writing about, analysing and discussing through the series:
My Stack ~74k, Seat 9 ~75k, Seat 8 >200k, Blinds 800/1600/200, I hold AJcc in MP.
Seat 9 limped UTG. He had already limped a few hands from various positions and, as such, this limp did not arouse any suspicions. I thought about raising with my AJs to isolate Seat 9, but decided to keep it small by over-limping. This attracted another limp and both of the blinds into the pot:
Pot 9.8k
Flop Q45cc
I’m obviously liking that flop and when it checks to me, I decide to lead out for 5.5k with my strong draw to give myself some fold equity, either right away or to set-up that image for a strong bet on the turn. The other limper and SB fold, but ZeeJustin makes the call in the SB. Seat 9 tanks for a while before moving all-in. I wasn’t expecting that!
Here I think we are presented with a situation where it is important to get the maths right and I spent a considerable amount of time making sure I counted the pot, calculated the pot odds, gave my opponents a range of hands and estimated my equity. All key concepts in poker that are the fundamental basis of the game: are we being offered an attractive wager to make the call here?
With the 16.5k from the three 5.5k bets added to the 9.8k preflop pot, we have 26.3k in the middle plus the remaining 67k in my stack, meaning we can win 93.3k for a call of 67k. We have ~1.4-1 and need ~42% equity for an attractive call (I was able to calculate the 1.4-1 and 42% in my head at the table).
I then considered his potential hands. Most likely he has something like AA/KK/AQ/KQ. He could also have stronger hands like QQ/44/55, but I felt these were unlikely due to the size of his shove. He may well have some weaker hands including weaker flush draws such as KcTc. So overall, I felt that mostly I have 12 outs, rarely do I have only 9 outs, but some percentage of the time I am actually ahead of his lower value draws. I gave myself ~45% equity at the table. Running it now on Pokerstove, I get this if I assume that semi-bluff lower flush draws represent ~10% of his range:
Board: Qc 4c 5h
44.822% { AcJc }
55.178% { KK+, AQs, KQs, KcTc, Kc9c, JcTc, Jc9c, AQo, KQo }
I then considered my tournament and table situation. With the blinds about to increase to 1000/2000/300, I would be left with 33BBs and an M of ~12, whereas the tournament average was over 130k and most of my table has well over 100K. Also, we are still several hours of play away from the money with ~1400 players remaining. Although I am very capable of grinding out my stack, the Main Event structure means that short-stacks will be increasingly facing pressure from bigger stacks, when holding playable 20-30BB stacks, before getting to the much easier to play 10-20BB stack level. Even then, with such a small stack, unlike most other online or live tourny situations, you are so far below the average stack size that your chance of survival with a small stack is much lower than normal, because there is less fold equity due to much bigger stacks being able to afford to make marginal calls against shoves or re-shoves.
I also had a number of skilful players at my table. As such, I did not feel that I would be able to generate much of an edge with a 67k stack. Given that I was being offered a fairly significant edge in this particular pot, therefore, it was a worthy wager and I decided to make the call. Moreover, if I won this pot I would have a healthy 160k stack and able to put some pressure on the other players at the table and generate more of edge in future hands.
ZeeJustin quickly folded what he later said was 23. Seat 9 showed me KK and although I can’t remember for sure, I don’t think he had Kc:
Board: Qc 4c 5h
46.566% { AcJc }
53.434% { KdKh, KdKs, KhKs }
Essentially, therefore, I had a coin-flip for my tourny life and likely for my first WSOP Main Event cash. I’m normally pretty calm in these situations, but I guess this time there was a little more pressure so I stood up, as did my opponent (he was essentially all-in with a coin-flip too):
Turn 6o (ZJ woulda got there)
River 8o
And my WSOP was over. I wished everyone good luck and shook hands before making my exit. I didn’t get angry or upset because this ending to my summer was always on the cards. It is the end of my poker dream; the end of my career as a poker player (although I will continue to pursue it as a hobby); and the beginning of my normal life back in the ordinary world.