Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Home Game Friday Night

Some observations and recap of some noteworthy hands I was involved in our last home game. The Friday night game was full table with 9-10 players, so I decided to pick my spots carefully. I only entered pot with Pockets, Ace Big, and Broadway, and occasionally suited connectors. 

I had one hand where I tangled with Serg. He's in early position and goes All-in. I'm dealt wired 8's in middle position. Up to this point, Serg is stuck $7 and down to about $2 and change. He's more likely to ship it with anything to try to recoup his losses and couple that with his loose play, and I knew I was ahead. I decide to reraise all-in to isolate and protect my hand. I drove everyone out and its just me and Serg to see the flop. Flop contains an Ace and an Eight giving me a set. Turn is another Ace completing my Full House. Serg flips over his cards and reveals trip Aces. I still haven't turn over my cards yet tho so Serg must have thought his three Aces were good. It might have seemed to Serg like I was slowrolling, but it was because he had a redraw to a higher boat and that whys I didn't show my winning hand till the end. 

I had another hand where I was dealt Pocket Jacks in the BB. John who is UTG raises to 40 cents. There are two callers and action comes back around to me. I decide to just call the additional 30 cent and see the flop. Flop comes K 8 5. Not the flop I was hoping for obviously. At showdown, John shows K4 to win the pot. Perhaps I played the hand wrong or perhaps I saved myself money with the way I played it. In retrospect, I could have reraised John's preflop 40 cent raise. It most certainly would have thinned out the field by making the two limper fold. Hard to say whether John would have laid down his hand if I had reraised. He was one of the bigger stacks, can afford to gamble, and is most certainly prone to making loose calls. 

The biggest pot of the night for me came when I was dealt the mother of all hands: Pocket Aces! Jose opens the action with a raise to 80 cents. Peter and Rich are the only two to call. I look down at Aces and decide to bump it up to $2.75(which I realize was too little after I bet it). Jose doesn't go away and neither does Peter. After Rich thinks forever, he finally releases his hand. I put Jose on either Pockets 7's, 8's, or 9's. I have no idea where Peter is at. Flop comes 8s 6s 8d. Now the pot is ~$9 and I decide to lead out for $4. Jose folds, but Peter declares All-in. Peter was running lucky all night and he had me covered by a substantial margin. But I refuse to believe he hit that eight. I had no choice but to call the $4 I have behind since I already contributed  $6.75 to the pot. I show my Aces, and he shows the spade nut flush draw. Thankfully, neither the turn or river brought a spade, and I picked up that monster pot. Afterwards, Rich reveals that he folded the Pocket 8's. He woulda had Quads. LOL!!!

All in all, not a bad night for me. Net gain of $23. 

Some final thoughts on the incident involving Peter, Mia, and Jimmy. I'm still not privy to the situation or have all the facts, but I'm sure situations like those could have been avoided. I know most of us adhere to the rules, but those new to the game don't always know the finer intricacies of the game. I'm sure if we live by these rules and introduce them to all new players, we'll avoid these future dicey situations. Here they are:

1. No coffeehousing. If you're not in the hand, don't speak about the hand. For those in the hand still, talk to your hearts content. 

2. Don't share hole cards. One player to a hand please.

3. Don't ask or offer advice. If you're in a hand, don't ask for advice. Likewise, if you're not in the hand, don't offer advice. 

4. Don't deliberately act out of turn. I think this should include both putting chips into the pot, and declaring your intentions before its your turn to act. 

1 comment:

  1. haha...man, I wish I didn't miss such a good game! I totally agree with you on the rules and most of us have followed them to a tee.

    But when we do have new players, these rules do tend to go out the window because we want them to have fun and get into the game.

    That whole situation could have been avoided by not sharing hole cards or not letting the person help in the hand when someone is aware of two ppls' hole cards.

    I hope i'm there for the next game.

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