April 04 2007, Dennis Waterman


on the button and he has raised a lot of times when he is first in on the button so I am looking for a decent hand to play back at him with. I look down at 
and re-raise to 40,000, at this point the big blind shrugs and puts his last 12,000 total into the pot. His name is Ben Ludwig and he told me afterwards that he was intending to move all-in with almost any two cards—in this case he held 
. Now Tuazon went into a long think and used his one time extension of thirty seconds. Well when I say "long think" I am speaking relatively as in the Dome you have only 15 seconds to act every time it comes to you. At the end of his time extension he mucked his hand! I do not feel that one has the luxury of mucking such a big hand with so few chips. You have to gamble a bit and get lucky at some point. Why not now with this huge drawing hand? If you were to win the hand you would have the chip lead! The all-in player should not be a factor in his decision as he will have to commit all his chips and beat Dennis in order to win. So does Dennis have only an ace high? Or worse? If Tuazon could see the hands he is against, he would call instantly. Of course Tuazon is a genius when the flop comes 

and he would have been knocked out. Some days are like that and you are destined to win no matter what you do!

. Once you arrive at heads-up it is no-limit before the flop as well as after. There are two other ways to play the hand, of course—and you can make an argument for passing or raising, especially if you know the result of the hand. Tuazon checks and it comes 

and he bets out 15,000 at which point I do not believe he has an ace, but am not sure he would muck his hand if I move all-in. He might call with a flush draw or with a ten. Is all-in correct? Is mucking correct? I believe that by raising a lesser amount that he might have to respect my hand more and so I raise it to 35,000. Clearly I would love to have a blank come off, I am not sure what a blank might be but he has to act first and I get to observe him after he sees the turn card and how he acts when he sees it? Or do I? The turn brings a
and now the light begins to count me down! What is going on? I not only have not seen him act, I might lose the hand! If I act first then he might still be given the chance to act! I am confused, I ask Matt Savage, the tournament director, what is going on? Now Tuazon bets 20,000 into a pot of 110,000 and clearly I should call, but now confused I let my time run out. I have too much to think about, I don't have time to think about it. I know we were only playing for one million dollars but someone should have been able to keep it straight! What did I have to think about? Well, for starters if he had a flush how big was it? If he held 
or 
I should pass as I have only two sevens and two aces that I could catch to beat him. If my Jack of clubs is good if a club comes off then I have enough winners to call as long as he does not hold the ace that I have not put him on—if I can win with a flush then I have 13 cards or possibly only 11 to win with and that would mean I am only a dog of 13 to 31 or 11 to 33, in other words I am getting 5.5 to one when I am better than, or no worse than, 3 to 1! Lastly if I muck right away I still hold a 153,000 to 147,000 chip lead and can possibly bust him on the next hand. Too much to think about in such a short period of time and distracted by the incorrect light I made an error that might have cost me the win. He actually held 
.

and making it 38,000 to go. Tuazon now moved all-in. Of course I knew I was an underdog in this situation but many factors made me lean to the call. If I win the hand he will be crippled as I will have a 250,000 to 50,000 chip advantage. If I muck the hand I thought I did not have many hands to choose from as I thought that in practical terms I had to play one of the next four. The actual hands I have left if I don't play any is seven. Tuazon is raising every hand on the button, so do I want to go all-in with some other holding or right now? If I muck the hand I have to win at least two hands—what a big difference that is from having the possibility of crippling him right now. If he has 66 or any other small pair should I muck? If he has AK should I muck? I am getting almost two to one on my chips to call—87,000 to win 250,000 with 163,000 in the pot. Of course if he has a pair 77 or higher my call is stupid, and it was. He had 99. Watching the replays does not make me feel any better and writing this column does not either!
| News | Videos | Learn Poker | Play Poker | Live Reporting | Freerolls & Tournaments | Forum | Quick Room Review |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PokerNews.com is the world's leading poker website. Among other things, visitors will find a daily dose of articles with the latest poker news, live reporting from tournaments, exclusive videos and so much more.
At PokerStars, players can not only play with the pros, but take part in a variety of different poker games and variations, like Texas hold'em. New players can brush up on the poker rules, and learn poker strategy from the pros. Sign up for a PokerStars account today.
© 2003-2012 PokerNews.com All rights reserved
No comments yet. Be the first to post one!