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FTOPS: KiaJessie Captures Event #8


Author: LA Mike Tournament: FTOPS
Published on: 06:54:58 on Aug 15, 2007

KiaJessie overcame more than a 10 to 1 chip deficit to win the $200 Limit Omaha H/L event tonight over muckmehard.  KiaJessie took home $48,285 for the win while muckmehard's consolation prize was $31,117.  The final table payouts for the tournament were:

1.KiaJessie-- $48,285
2. muckmehard-- $31,117
3. AD-Stars22-- $23,069.50
4. Adar-- $17,704.50
5. SDLarry-- $13,412.50
6. Gunslinger3-- $9,657
7. Ditka89-- $6,438
8. cashnotax-- $4,828.50
9. bayne_s-- $3,433.60

Chris "Jesus" Ferguson took the honor for  the highest FTP "red" pro finisher with 20th place.  He earned $815.48 for his effort.  Toto Leonidas was the "bubble boy", he finished in 100th place.

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FTOPS: Event #8 $200 Limit Omaha H/L Off and Running


Author: LA Mike Tournament: FTOPS
Published on: 22:13:26 on Aug 14, 2007

Event #8, the $200 Limit Omaha H/L event with a 150k guaranteed prize pool started at 9pm EDT.  It is being hosted by Stuart Paterson, known as "The Donator" to the online world before becoming a FTP "red" pro.  This tournament began with 1,073 players for a pool of $214,600.  The final 99 players will all be guaranteed at least $364.82 while the winner will take home $48,285.

The FTP "red" pros in attendance were: Chris "Jesus" Ferguson, Chip Jett, Lynette Chan, Toto Leonidas, Max Pescatori, Jim McManus, Karina Jett, Berry Johnston, "Miami" John Cernuto, and the host Stuart Paterson.

LA Mike's top screen names in tonight's event are:

1. Exitonly
2. Tuna Tamer
3. The Polisher
4. lookin for work
5. DrOfDonkology
6. ProtekYoNuts
7. TheFamilyJules
8. Ilovepussycat
9. WTF_ever_nh
10. Trainedmonkey

Honorable Mention: LoveTunnel

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FTOPS #7: $1,000 No-Limit Holdem 6-Max


Author: Jeremiah Smith Tournament: FTOPS
Published on: 20:12:59 on Aug 13, 2007

Erica Schoenberg--one of the newest Full Tilt pros--will be hosting tonight's $1,000 6-max FTOPS event.  She also won an event at Mandalay Bay and made a final table at the World Series. 

Playing a 6-max tournament can, at times, be a completely different game than full-ring tournaments.  During the 2006 WSOP, I had the chance to talk to Joe Hachem about shorthanded tournament strategy (he was runner up to Dutch Boyd in a $2,500 event).  Even though he's not quite as attractive as Erica, he had some helpful strategy advice.

I've reposted the highlights of that conversation below:

1. Open Things Up Without Overdoing It

I play a lot faster in short-handed events. I’m seeing many more flops; I’m raising with many more hands even from the early stages. I’m calling raises with hands I would normally fold. There is a fine line though because people think they have to become super-aggressive. You don’t. You can still play a tight-solid game, but you have to be able to open it up a little bit.

2. Don’t Undervalue Your Starting Hands

Many people undervalue their hands like KQ; they’re afraid to play it because it could be dominated. Others think because it is short-handed they have to play super-fast. You have to find a balance. If I have A8 and there’s a raise in front of me, I might repop to take it down there. Because there’s so many less hand possibilities, there’s a chance I have the best hand. 

3. Play Small Pots Early

If I can just pick up a pot here or a pot there without risking my chip stack, that work’s the best for me. I’m not having huge confrontations early in a tournament. The 25-25 and 25-50 level you don’t want to be involved in big pots there without a big hand. Contrary to popular belief, a big hand is not top pair. To play a big pot in the first two levels, two pair is the minimum. 

4. Don’t Get Cute With Aces

If you are at an active table with a raiser and a few callers, don’t get cute. If the blinds are 25-50, there’s 500 in pot if someone raises and two people call.  If you have AA in the small blind, you want to take it down right there. Make it 1500. You just picked up 20% of your chip stack. Other people might want to gamble and try to double up early. There’s no reason too. 

If it’s a very active table and I’m under the gun, as long as my image is not too tight at the table, I’ll just limp in with them and wait for the raise. But if you’re gonna limp in with aces, you have to be prepared to drop them after the flop...but people just get married to them. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve folded aces after the flop.

5. Take time to figure your table out
Don’t go in saying, “I’m going to raise with this,” or, “I’m going to play this hand this way.”  This is especially true in short-handed.  You must feel your way through it.  Get a feeling of what your table image is.  Have they played with you before?  Some tables I can sit down and raise every hand and they are expecting me to do it, and they still let me.  If I sit down and think these guys are gonna be after me, then I just sit back and chill, picking my spots.

6. Sometimes your cards don’t really matter.
Everything depends on your table.  I will make a decision on the spot about a situation.  I will decide I’m raising Jeremiah’s big blind this hand. My cards are irrelevant, so why even look at them?  I try to play each player individually.  If I known you are not coming after me unless you have a hand, I’m stealing from you all day long.

7. Always be ready to pull the trigger

There’s a certain stage in the tournament where playing just small pot poker becomes hard because there’s so much out there.  You are always ready to maneuver.  In a shorthanded event, you are always ready to pull the trigger.  If you are involved in a pot and you feel you have to go for it, go for it.

8. Push hard with AK
In short-handed events I will push a lot harder with AK than in full ring.  The chances are even that much smaller of someone having a bigger hand.  Again, in the 25-50 level there’s no reason to go broke with top pair; but as the tournament progresses, push hard with it.

9. Play your tightest game after the dinner break.1

Play always tightens up when you are close to the bubble, of course.  Just before dinner time, play tightens up.  Just after dinner time, everyone blows themselves up.  They go and have dinner and they think about what they are going to do and they come back and just…blow themselves up.  The start of day two people just come in, they’ve thought about it all night, they haven’t slept, “I’m gonna do this, this, and that;” they come in and boom boom boom, you lose a big percentage of the field in the first level. I want to wait and wake up with a big hand so I can get some of the sugar.

1 I'm not exactly sure how this applies to an online event.  I've never really noticed if people play different after 5 minute breaks or not.

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FTOPS: 313OG Wins Event #6; JC Alavardo Takes 4th


Author: LA Mike Tournament: FTOPS
Published on: 05:06:51 on Aug 13, 2007

At 3:25am EDT, the final 9 players took their seats at the final table.  At least one player, the gentleman in the nine seat, was very recognizable.  He was PrtyPsux, otherwise known as JC Alvarado in the real world.  Alvarado has had plenty of "live" success as well.  He had a great run at the beginning of the year at the LA Poker Classic.  He was the runner-up in the 2.5k event and made a really deep run in the 10k main event.  He made the WPT TV table out in Reno, Nevada where he ended up as the runner-up for almost 367k.  JC finished the FTOPS event in 4th place, collecting $72,138 for his work.

Serefecheers hit the rail very quickly after Alvarado in third place.  He collected $91,812 for his effort today.  As heads-up play began, 313OG had a huge chip lead over akaginsf.  313OG ended the match in a timely fashion at 4:33am EDT to pickup the $231,615 first prize.  Akaginsf collected $140,210 for the runner-up finish. 

 

The final table payouts were:

  1. 313OG-- $231,615.44
  2. akaginsf-- $140,210.04
  3. serefecheers-- $91,812
  4. PrtyPsux-- $72,138
  5. dijana-- $54,169.08
  6. dacove71-- $40,134.96
  7. BigBukkinChickn-- $30,166.80
  8. PhilHPoker-- $23,608.80
  9. king goostar-- $17,575.44

Barny Boatman was the final FTP "red" pro left in the event.  He finished up in 345th for $590.22 and was the only "red" pro to cash.  Also bringing home a paycheck was PW's own, Pokerwire Amanda.

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FTOPS: Event #6 $300 No Limit Underway


Author: LA Mike Tournament: FTOPS
Published on: 20:26:40 on Aug 12, 2007

Event #6, a $300 NL Hold'em tourney with a guaranteed prize pool of at least $1M began at 6pm EDT.  4,372 players entered to produce an actual pool of over $1.3M.  The final 585 will all be guaranteed a minimum of $432.83.  The final player left will be the lucky winner of $231,615.  The event is being hosted by Clonie Gowen.

The other FTP "red" pros involved were: Roland De Wolfe, Ram Vaswani, Farzad Bonyadi, Greg "FBT" Mueller, Stuart Paterson, Karina Jett, Ross Boatman, David Benyamine, Steve Brecher, Thomas Wahlroos, Lynette Chan, Max Pescatori, Erica Schoenberg, Berry Johnston, Barny Boatman, Keith Sexton, Mike Gracz, JJ Liu, Allen Cunningham, Eddy Scharf, Paul Sexton and Kristy Gazes.

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FTOPS: GBecks Wins Event #5 $100 Rebuy


Author: LA Mike Tournament: FTOPS
Published on: 02:08:27 on Aug 12, 2007

After overcoming a large chip deficit heading into heads-up play, GBecks captured the $100 rebuy title over 20KJay.  The final table payouts were:

  1. GBecks-- $102,383
  2. 20KJAY-- $66,668
  3. flopdisasta-- $48,215.25
  4. darkbet-- $38,691.25
  5. GB2005-- $29,191.06
  6. LaJune-- $21,429
  7. ontherocksuga-- $13,809.80
  8. Doobie75-- $10,000.20
  9. Vanssi-- $7,081.10

Allen Cunningham finished in 74th position to be the last FTP "red" pro standing.  He earned $738.11 for the tournament.  The only other "red" pro to finish in the money was Andy Bloch.  He placed 135th for $595.25.

 

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FTOPS: Event #4 Captured by Bmqball


Author: LA Mike Tournament: FTOPS
Published on: 22:16:06 on Aug 11, 2007

After nearly 7 hours of play, Bmqball defeated serialkaller to win the $500 Pot Limit Omaha 6-Max event today.  The final table payouts were:

  1. Bmqball--  $66,865
  2. Serialkaller-- $43,851
  3. Tutnik-- $31,504.30
  4. Buckster316-- $23,947
  5. YoungSupremacy-- $17,105
  6. D2THEMFI-- $10,885

The top FTP "red" pro finisher in the event, happened to be the host, Robert Mizrachi.  He finished in 36th place to take home $1,244.  (He was the only one to cash in the event.)

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FTOPS: Events #4 and #5 In Progress


Author: LA Mike Tournament: FTOPS
Published on: 18:33:00 on Aug 11, 2007

Event #4, the $500 Pot Limit Omaha 6-Max started at 3:00pm EDT.  The tournament is being hosted by Robert Mizrachi and had a guaranteed prize pool of $150k.  622 players entered to produce a pool of $311k doubling the guarantee.  The final 84 players will all be guaranteed $808.60 with the eventual winner taking home $66,865.

Event #5, the $100 Rebuy with a guaranteed prize pool of $300k began at 4:30pm EDT.  That event is being hosted by Roland De Wolfe.  It drew 1,678 players for a pool of $476,200.  The final 153 players  will all earn at least $571.44 with the last man standing going home with $102,383.

Many of FTP's "red" pros came out for the action on this Saturday afternoon.  Some of those seen at the tables included: Roland De Wolfe, Andy Bloch, Rob Mizrachi, Erick Lindgren, Stuart Paterson, Steve Brecher, Allen Cunningham, Max Pescatori, Eddy Scharf, Toto Leonidas, Steve Zolotow, Berry Johnston, Ram Vaswani, Karina and Chip Jett, Lee Watkinson and Greg "FBT" Mueller.

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FTOPS #3: Results


Author: Jeremiah Smith Tournament: FTOPS
Published on: 09:01:27 on Aug 11, 2007

Here are the final table finishers from the $200 Pot-Limit Holdem event:

  1. JensV - $61,901
  2. Red Bikini - $38,144
  3. lyerly - $25,095
  4. ringjob3 - $20,076
  5. LegacyRik - $15,391
  6. stupidtim - $11,041
  7. TheFatFish - $8,030
  8. Corny54 - $6,257
  9. MrKrabbs - $4,818

Both Michael Craig and Thomas Fuller earned $435.  Thomas finished in 109th place, and Michael was able to make it to 101st.  I was impressed by Michael's finish--at the 3 1/2 hour mark he ran KK into AA for a 61k pot against a player who was also in the top five at the top.  Michael was able to nurse his remaining 5k into a healthy cash.  Stuart Paterson was the next top red pro, finishing in 245th.

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FTOPS #3: Michael Craig Takes Off


Author: Jeremiah Smith Tournament: FTOPS
Published on: 23:29:23 on Aug 10, 2007

After being down to 2k, Michael shot up the leaderboard during the second hour of the $200 PLH event.  Michael doubled up to about 8k with 10h9h and the next thing I knew he was in 5th place at 25k. Another PokerWire blogger, Thomas "GNightMoon" Fuller, has been playing well and sits on a stack of 19k. 

It was a rough hour for the Full Tilt pros as only Berry Johnston and Steve Brecher sat above the 5k mark.  Max Pecartori had 4.7k, and the only other pros I spotted who were still in were Clonie Gowen and Stuart Paterson, both under the 2k mark.

Unfortunately, when pros start going to the wayside, so does the entertaining chat.  I did get a laugh from Eugene Todd bro, however, when he flopped a wheel holding A3 on a 542 board.  His opponent, oldwolfhound, wasn't buying it and doubled genetodd up with 77.  He responded to a "Merry Christmas" quip with, "happy hannukah, bro."  If you haven't listened to the interview with Gene Todd on PokerWire Radio, do yourself a favor and download it now (right click on the link and select "save as").  Or, better yet, subscribe to the podcast.

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