Hello guys, its good to be back. After 5 years playing the game, a few months ago I finally took the decision to open a bank account to keep my poker money entirely separate from all other funds and decided to finally get my head around the idea of bankroll management. Since then I"ve virtually given up tournament poker to concentrate on grinding away on the cash tables. As I had nothing at all interesting to write and I"ve not played in anything APAT related for a while, I gave up posting on here. However, things changed a bit last night...............
When this year"s GUKPT schedule was announced, I was delighted to see there was a "Club" event planned for Great Yarmouth. Financially, it makes sense for me to play this rather than any APAT live event. As the Grosvenor Yarmouth is only 20 miles from home, spending £200 on a tournament entry with no travelling involved is no more expensive than a £75 event when I have to fork out on extra petrol and at least one night in a hotel. As £200 represents the highest buy-in tournament I"ve taken part in, my trip down the road to the east coast in 2 weeks has been my major focus for several months.
On thursday night, I took part in a Nuts poker pub shovefest just because I haven"t played live in ages. I didn"t have anything planned for this weekend, so friday night I was looking for a bit of microstakes deepstack action and took part in a 2.75 euro game on Ladbrokes. Ok, my reward of 15 Euro-ish isn"t anything to write home about, but I was pleased with my 9th placed finish from 498 starters. On saturday night, I returned home after a short trip to the gym and again went looking for a deepstack tournament. My decision to participate in last night"s English Online Championships had absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with brand loyalty. I was looking for something to give me the best possible preparation for Yarmouth and if there is another 10000 chip 15 minute blind tournament out there, please point me at it immediately. Although the cost of last night"s tourney and the GUKPT club entry represents a far larger proportion of my bankroll than the Chris Fergusons of this world would advise, it far from bankrupts me and leaves a huge number of buy-ins in my account for the cash level I"m currently playing at. In addition, with a GUKPT main event seat for the winner and 4 seats for the APAT event at Luton on offer, with only around 100 competitors this meant that the upside was potentially huge and well worth the risk.
Things didn"t start well. A few minutes into level 2 and I called a late position raise from the big blind with A 5. I flopped 2-pair, but my opponent had A 4, so the fours that came on the turn and river gave him a full house. I lost about a third of my stack, but in some ways was actually quite pleased as I think the damage could have been a lot worse. I don"t know quite how I managed it, but I remained in the bottom ten players from then for about the next four hours by finding the occasional hand, a shove here and a cheeky little bluff there. It wasn"t until the final two tables I really got moving and if I remember rightly, I reached the final table in around 4th place. I don"t think I"ve ever played in a tournament where I"ve picked up a hand at exactly the right time on as many occasions as I did last night. For the final hand, I had A 7 of hearts and if my memory hasn"t been blunted by the late night, my opponent had K 10 spades. The flop gave me middle pair to my opponents flush draw, all the chips went in and he hit one of his outs on the river. I"ve never played in a professional event and the GUKPT seat for the winner was what I had my eyes on throughout, but I"m not going to complain about my luck as I had plenty of it and quite honestly the winner played better poker than I did on the final table so deserved his victory.
With no disrespect meant to anyone I played last night, when I was runner up in the same event last year, the final table collectively had an almost ridiculously good poker CV for a group of amateurs. Apart from WSOPE-cashing and Oh-FFS-how-many-more-APAT-tournaments-is-he-going-to-win Paul Pitchford taking the thing down, there were live and online national winners as well as several players who have had big paydays in pro events. However, I think I"m right in saying that, in common with every other time I"ve made an APAT final table, I won big early and managed to stay amongst the front-runners throughout. I think last night was my most satisfying APAT result to date as I"ve never had to work so hard for so long. I"d go so far as to say that I don"t think that last year I"d have been capable of losing a chunk of my starting stack early, getting nowhere for fours hours and still final tabling. Maybe that suggests that I"ve improved by playing cash games.
October could be a very,very good month. See you in Luton.