Posts Tagged ‘nlhe’

EMHD Event B-2 Results

February 14th, 2010

The second event in the B series went down TONIGHT ! (well, this afternoon into the evening). The fields are getting larger, deeper, and stronger. At the start of the tournament I overheard several conversations about which table people would have rather drawn, and don’t think I heard a consensus amongst anyone.

This single buy-in tournament began with 29 able bodied rounders, and the top 5 would take home points, the top 4 took home their buy-in and some walkin’ around money. Without any further adieu (adieu is a funny word to type) here’s how it finished:

Congratulations to the winners !

1. EMG – 1363

2. Hulk – 783

3. Canadian Shawn – 522

4. Faith L. – 232

5. Jocko – 116

No joke, 4 of the top 5 were members of the EMHD‘s Useless Ass Staff (ask mh62) and the 5th member of the group was not Alan G. ! Faith L. played her way into some points and spending cash. Canadian Shawn made another cash and exploded from an extreme short stack to near the chip lead before his Ace/Jack ran into EMG’s Ace/King. Heads up play between myself (Hulk) and EMG lasted exactly one hand, and although we began discussions of a deal, I wasn’t about to fold pocket 7s heads up, and EMG sure as hell wasn’t running away with Ace/Queen. As you can see from the finish order EMG won that race and the tournament.

To hear EMG tell the story, he was fed cards all night. Perhaps he was, but to get through the field that started today he also needed to know what to do with them … it’s very tough to make the right decisions for an extended period of time, to know when your top pair is strong enough to win, and when it’s been cracked by the cheeky bastard in seat 8 that saw a flop with baby suited cards and hit 2 pair.  Congratulations EMG, it’s been a long time coming.

*The scores listed above include only event points, and do not reflect attendance or kill points. For a quick look at the standings, check the column to the right, and for a more in depth break down, take a look at the Full EMHD Leaderboard.

EMHD Event B-1 Results

January 20th, 2010

The B series started Monday January 18th, and it got big in a hurry. The federal holiday allowed for several new faces to join us and swelled the field to 27 28 (good eye Lee !) players who bought, re-bought, and added on 63 times. Those 63 buy-ins mark the 2nd most buy-ins that and EMHD event has ever seen, so the points and prizes were plenty. Congratulations to the winners !

1. Alan G.- 1399

1. Lesley R. – 1399

3. Justin F. – 680

4. John V. – 302

5. Wisconsin Geoff – 151

It’s not a typo, or a lazy re-post, Alan G. did it again, this time splitting the top prize with Lesley R. Justin F. made the money again, another seemingly regular occurrence. John V. played in his first EMHD event and walked away on the leader board, and Wisconsin Geoff bubbled for money, but got his foot in the door with some event points.

*The scores listed above include only event points, and do not reflect attendance or kill points. For a quick look at the standings, check the column to the right, and for a more in depth break down, take a look at the Full EMHD Leaderboard.

EMHD Series A Results: Alan G., Klinker Bell, and Canadian Shawn fight for the top prize.

December 14th, 2009

You are The Winner is ... ALAN G ! all very welcome to read this poorly crafted narrative, or check the scoreboard HERE for the quick answer … or look in the sidebar, or click on the scoreboard image near the bottom of this post.

Saturday, December 12th marked the final event in the EMHD A series. Heading into the series there were a handful of EMHD-ers and TurkeyNerds alike vying for prize money awarded the top two overall point leaders. As the field of 19 gathered on a rooftop room in Virginia, Alan G. and ‘Klinker’ Bell held first and second place respectively, with Canadian Shawn in 3rd place having the best shot to upset one of them. Harry G., and Lee G. (no relation to Alan G., that they’ll admit anyways , but Lee G. and Harry G. are father and son) had outside shots, but needed lots of kills and for the top 3 to be knocked out early. Even MH62 had a chance … but his hopes were dashed when the field size didn’t get to 24.

The cards didn’t fall right for Alan G., Lee G. or ‘Klinker’ Bell, but as the final table got together, Canadian Shawn had added some chips to his stack, and Harry G. came as the short stack, due in no small part to having his Ace high flush run into Jim S.’s straight flush, and he exited in 10th place, allowing ‘Klinker’ Bell and Alan to let out a short sigh of relief.

The field further dwindled, many of the chips finding their way into MH62′s and my (Hulk’s) stack. Alan G. and Klinker were pained at every elimination that wasn’t our Friend from the Great White North . Final Table Ernie was the next to fall, followed by Brian P., Joe W., and then Faith L.

The field was large enough that the final 5 players would receive event points, and if Canadian Shawn could hold on to 3rd place he’d overtake ‘Klinker’ Bell for 2nd place in the overall standings. Joe K. had very few chips and eventually succumbed to the ever escalating blinds, and with just 4 remaining, Canadian Shawn was one position from the overall 2nd place prize … and if he could win would take down not only the A-5 event, but the A series championship as well.

With 4 remaining players , Hulk raised to 7000 Under the Gun, blinds were near 800/1600 with 200 antes. Brian M. folded and MH62 moved all (about 40k) of his chips to the middle. Canadian Shawn folded and Hulk called as quickly as he could. MH62 had KK , Hulk had AA. The Aces held, eliminating MH62 from the event and propelling Canadian Shawn into 2nd place ahead of ‘Klinker’ Bell in the overall series standings. When Brian M. fell in 3rd place, it was time for Alan G. to worry.

Hulk had been hit in the face all day with the deck and carried a sizable lead into heads up play. If there were 160,000 chips in play, he had 140,000 of them and decided to try to end it quickly and early against Canadian Shawn’s much smaller stack. The first All-In came as Canadian Shawn got the money in with A 2 , against Hulk’s J 10.  The hand played like a roller coaster A flop of [A J Rag] gave Canadian Shawn the early lead, a turn card of [10] gave Hulk the lead , and a River [2] ended the hand, giving Canadian Shawn some much needed chips, momentum and one double up away from being even with Hulk.

Alan G. had to suffer through a few more hands, but the tournament closed as Hulk’s 5 6 off suit out drew Canadian Shawn’s 77 hitting a 6 high straight on the turn. The tournament , like the event saw Canadian Shawn play spectacularly, but Hulk’s lead in the event, and Alan’s lead in the series was just a bit too much for him to overtake with his late charges.

While Alan G. was forced to watch the ending of the A-5 event he should be applauded for his overall play 2 chopped wins, an outright 3rd place finish, full participation and 5 kills built up a grand total of 2791 points. I missed some of the events for various reasons, but I know the fields he had to work through to get that many points and he should smile widely when cashing the first place check.

It’s also no surprise that Canadian Shawn made the contenders nervous with his hard charge towards the top of the overall standings. He’s got a lot of game to him, and while it’s been a while since I’ve played heads up for anything substantial, I don’t remember ever believing that an 6 or 7 to 1 chip lead was in such jeopardy.EMHDASeries

I would also be remiss if ‘Klinker’ Bell wasn’t mentioned. He played like a champion the entire series and was in position going into the last event to defend his title. I’m sure he’ll be in the money for the series again soon.

EMHD Event A-5 Results

December 14th, 2009

emhd_logo_scaledEMHD A-5 brought an end to the A series for this round of the EMHD. The field was 19 deep and this tournament saw the introduction of antes into the mix. While the drama in a poker tournament is usually pretty high as the field dwindles, this tournament was special as the top 4 point holders were in overall striking distance for the grand prize (more on that in the next post). Canadian Shawn made a lot of people sweat, coming up just short of the win. Here’s how the event finished:

  1. Hulk – 1290 (1140 Event Points + 6 Kills)
  2. Canadian Shawn – 481 (456  Event Points + 1 Kill)
  3. Brian M. – 367 (342 Event Points + 1 Kills)
  4. MH62 (Chris S.) – 278 (228 Event Points + 2 Kills)
  5. Joe K. – 114 (114 Event Points + 0 Kills)

That’s not a typo for the winner. The tournament played like the universe owed me something. If I played garbage cards to get under what I thought were big aces (8h 3h) the flop came [8 8 3] with a flush draw that got there on the turn, and my fourth 8 hit on the river. If I played a big ace it hit. Suited connectors hit double draws, or two pair. Once in the money my under the gun raise with pocket aces was countered with a shove from MH62′s pocket kings. Heads up against Canadian Shawn I had such a large chip lead that tried to end it early and drew out to a 6 high straight when he shoved with pocket 7s pre-flop and I called with 56 off suit hoping to have live cards with enough chips to withstand getting my chips in as a 40/60 dog. Before I get accused of doing some kind of overly modest  shuck and jive, I’ll give myself credit playing the cards I was dealt and having the courage to take some chances where I normally wouldn’t have. At least for one day, Hulk Smash.

EMHD A-1: Bustin’ Out First

September 11th, 2009

While it is not my preference, I was the first player out of EMHD A-1.  I don’t believe I did anything wrong per se, but it is what it is.  Here is the video and some analysis.

The Video:

Preflop: We were midway through the second level of the tournamen st.  I had received some nice hands to play (Pocket 8′s twice, pocket 10′s, A-9 suited on the button, etc.).  The hands really played themselves, but I was down to under 3k in chips.  I still had almost 30 BB’s, so it was not time to panic, but a double-up would be quite nice.

Player 4 raises in early position.  He was a new player to me, but he was invited by Klinker Bell and carried himself like a guy who knew what he was doing at the table.  He had played relatively loose early, then had tightened up.  His raise is not overly big, and MH62 calls in the cut-off.  I’m getting good odds to call, and I’m in position.  Anyone who has read Super/System knows that suited connectors can do some damage when they hit…

The Flop:

Diamonds King Hearts 9 Clubs 4

Not a great flop for me, but one with possibilities.  I have Player 4 on a range that includes AK through AJ, KQ, KJ, AA through 99.  I believe MH6-2 could have a similar range, but I throw in medium suited connectors like J-10, 9-8, etc.  If Player 4 bets, I have to contemplate a flat call to get 2 pair, trips, or a draw on the turn, but I’m also running a bit low on chips.  Do I really want to risk that much in chips on middle pair?  Probably not.  Kind of surprisingly, Player 4 doesn’t c-bet that flop.  MH6-2 thinks for a bit and checks, and I check behind.

I think the check is the obvious play here.  Trying to steal against 2 players with my stack size would be way too risky with just 1 pair and a 3 flush.

The Turn:

Hearts 10

BINGO!  The 10 is not the best card.  Obviously, QJ makes the nuts, there are hearts out there, and K-10 has me beat.  Either way, I’m probably going with this hand.  If someone has me beat, god bless em…

Player 4 bets out $900, about a pot-sized bet.  To me, this looks a little like he’s trying to protect something like a medium K (K-Q/K-J).  MH6-2 folds and grumbles about misplaying the hand.  I look and see that Player 4 only has a little more than me.  If he doesn’t have a big hand, he’s probably folding to my shove.  I go all in for $2525 more.  He immediately looks pained and goes into the tank.  This makes me very comfortable.  He definitely doesn’t have QJ.  My major worry is K-10 or K-9.

He finally says, “F it” and calls and flips over KK.  He was legitimately worried about QJ here, but if I had it, I had it.  I’m drawing dead.  Out first, but once that turn hit, it was just going in…


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