perkdog and stevek played hold'em last night....

in Sports Talk
you'll never be able to outrun a bad diet
2
you'll never be able to outrun a bad diet
Comments
I read that headline and just assumed you were talking about their pre-scheduled I told you so battle over whether or not Sheduer will be the Browns starter by week 5. Some things are worth more than 15M 😎
Eric
Erikthredd’s MJ Collection: https://www.psacard.com/psasetregistry/publishedset/395035
Erikthredd’s Nike Air Jordan Collection: https://www.psacard.com/psasetregistry/basketball/key-card-sets/nike-poster-cards-michael-jordan-1985-1992/alltimeset/408486
Bad beat, no question about it. But Jungleman even with the ace on the river, only had the fourth nuts.
He of course was beat with the quads, or aces full, or tens full. Sometimes those baby boats can be stack killers. Yes it's a pretty hand, but sometimes not pretty enough.
If I played poker heads-up against Perkdog, within an hour he'd own my house, car, everything, including my card and coin collection.
But as I'm heading out the door to walk to the homeless shelter, I'd ask him please can I keep the Chuck Bednarik rookie card, it means so much to me.
Perkdog is a nice guy, I think he'd let me keep that.
It would be a fun time going up. against your skills and smart gambling mind against my gunslinger ways lol
It would be fun no matter who won and of course we would finish the session with a handshake
Pic of stevek after a poker session with Perkdog:
I'm still trying to figure out who is who in the video?
One of us is the shady looking character and the other is the creepy flamboyantly dressed fella 😂😂😂
The one player Jungleman, real name Daniel Cates, I've seen him play in quite a number of high stakes games. Paste his name into Youtube search, and I'm sure a lot of videos will pop up with him.
I only enjoy watching the high stakes games. Other than that, I don't follow like "every" poker player out there. So I don't know who is the young kid in that video. He might be really good, and he did play that particular hand extremely well to extract maximum value with the stone cold nuts.
I never watch poker, I'll. watch slot and table game gambling on you tube which is obviously based on luck but poker I just don't get enjoyment watching it for some reason
One of these days we may have to chip-in and sponsor Galaxy to play at the 10k buy-in WSOP main event. If I'm remembering right, I think a few years ago, Galaxy posted a screenshot of an online poker tourney he won. I think it was from the Ign website which is known for poker.
Sure would be cool if we all bought in for say 1k each, and Galaxy made the final table. Forget about the money for a second, it might turn out to be the top thread ever at Sports Talk. And we would insist that Galaxy please bring back some WSOP chips, so we can send them to PSA to be slabbed.
If he's a nice guy, and he won the tourney, he could sign the chips for us for free. Might be worth some good money selling it on Ebay, a WSOP chip, PSA authenticated sig of the winner. 😉
true story
about 18 years ago i met a guy at a sports bar i frequented that had nightly hold'em tournaments. i befriended this guy primarily because we shared similar backgrounds. at the time, i knew more poker than he did. he was a genuine neophyte, but he took the game way more seriously than i did. fast forward almost two decades and the guy won a circuit event in Oklahoma for 6 figures, he's played in the WSOP Main Event on multiple occasions and made the money twice, and probably the most surreal thing i've ever witnessed in my life -- his game has evolved so much over the years that i've personally watched clips of him on youtube draining Phil Hellmuth in cash games here in Houston
i actually sent him a message on Facebook not too long ago........"from nightly tournies at SRO for points to cash games with Phil Hellmuth & Nick Wright. quite an ascension brother!"
he's a very sharp internet entrepreneur who plays poker on the side. he told me in that same conversation, "i'm smart enough to know that i could never play poker full-time for a living."
you'll never be able to outrun a bad diet
Does your friend ever play in the televised games at the Lodge? If so I may have seen him.
Beating up on Phil Hellmuth, a double digit bracelet winner. That's some dam good poker. And winning a six figure tourney, as well as getting in the money, past the bubble twice in the WSOP, speaks for itself.
I've thought about one day playing in the WSOP main event. The entry fee is no problem. The problem is, and perhaps your friend was alluding to this. To win the WSOP, you really have to be willing to use amphetamines. I've never popped a single amphetamine in my entire life, despite the fact that in my high school, amphetamines were a plague. College wasn't much better, but I still refused to do it.
If I were to enter, it would have to be played without the pills. Hence the problem. I'm confident that I would play well and be competitive, even dominant in the early rounds against the many fish. And build up a nice stack. However hours and hours later, one lapse in judgment because I'm dog tired, one mistake, and poof, I'm felted. I see all that coming, so I haven't gone and probably never will.
Your friend mentioned the pro thing. It's a similar scenario as I just mentioned. Countless hours of poker each week, and unless you're popping the pills, you could actually be a better player than the others, but not when you're tired. That's when you get beat, even by lesser skilled players who are swallowing the pills like candy.
i'll have to ask him. good chance he has. he has his own youtube page and i found the cash game vid with Hellmuth. it's about half an hour long, but if you don't want to sift through the hands go to the 34:00 mark where he and Hellmuth share a brief back-and-forth on camera after it was over. you get the gist of what happened based on the semi-kvetching by Phil lol. i love Wes' line at the end........"i really wanted to make you mad but i never found a spot to do that."
i watched some of it again and one thing stood out at me: Wes never spoke at the table. he was focused the entire time. he turned into a very cerebral player. meanwhile, Hellmuth would not shut up. yapped the entire time.
you'll never be able to outrun a bad diet
I guess you saw the hand at 30:00
Sorry Wes, but ya gotta at least call after that flop with a boat or quad possibility, considering it wasn't a large raise for this game. In that spot after the flop, trip 5's is almost always the best hand at that point. And Wes would have rivered quads.
Ya just can't put the guy on a flopped straight. I took a guess, even against a flopped straight, I think you'd still have around 35% equity. I see on the board it was actually 39% equity. I would have figured him for pocket 7's to pocket 10's, or a nut flush draw. The only real screw hand is if the opponent flopped three 6's.
That being said, every poker player makes mistakes. Except I'll tell ya, on the games I watched over the years, I never saw Doyle badly play a hand. He was amazing. RIP
Hellmuth, I could never do that chit he does. But it seems to work for him. Players like Airball do it as well.
I can't recall seeing Wes on any shows I've watched. But I'll look out for him, and of course I'll root for him for sure. 😊
I looked at that hand and it was a tough fold but he knew he was beat on the flip and he was right. The 1k bet was the right move and the fold after the raise was solid. He knew he was beat. He wouldn’t be playing for quads. That is insane and no one would stay for the turn. Not to mention a club on the turn. If it wasn’t a limp in I could see the angle that the raise is pockets but the 5k raise was all about keeping the flush draw out of the pot. I question your poker skill dude.
Thank you. I appreciate that.
When someone like you questions my poker skills, then I know I'm doing something right. 😂
"on the flip"
BTW - it's called a flop, not a flip.
You're welcome. 😉
I don’t question why iPhone corrects some things.
Well. You’ve never played me and I’ve never played you. I’m talking about this one hand and the betting on that hand.
i must concur with bgr -- it was a great fold. just didn't work out for him. no one at that table was jamming 10k on a draw -- he knew he was beat. he played beautifully that entire session and, not surprisingly, won the most when the dust settled.
you'll never be able to outrun a bad diet
the graphics made that hand confusing, but if i followed correctly, the initial raiser got out when the fireworks started. thus ruling out an overpair was a relatively safe assumption imo. so Wes' bet was met with a 5k raise and a jam. no one at that table would pull a stunt like that with a draw, so i assure you he knew he would need help if he poured another 8.4k in. right move imo, unlucky outcome.
i'll ask him about that hand one day
edit: had it been me i would not have mucked those 5s. but then again, i'm a donkey who has a difficult time getting away from big hands
you'll never be able to outrun a bad diet