PL Stud Hand in Boston
Tuesday, 7 February 2006 23:25While I was in Boston in January, I visited a downtown poker club. It's run by a fellow who used to work at The E. Club in NYC. As I understand it, he commutes down to Boston a few times a week and has some locals who help him run it.
I discovered that folks from the old River Street crowd, such as Ken come by
there occasionally. I saw none of the old group on the two nights I
played there, except for nick_marden who joined me the
second night.
The club was small, with only three tables. As is typical on weekend nights at these sorts of clubs, the one running game was short-handed on this Saturday. I arrived and they were playing $2/$4 limit mixed games, which was great fun and I was happy to play.
The local fish, a fellow named Josh, arrived a while later and immediately bought two grand in chips, hoping a big game would get started. He sat down in our little limit game, which was comprised mostly of off-duty dealers and that night's floorman. Josh got "bored" and asked for the stakes to be changed.
We agreed, after some argument between a newbie dealer and the floorman
that
PL
is too complicated for this n00b to deal
. It was settled; we would
play PL mixed games, including Stud, O/8, and HE, with $1/$2 blinds.
I was excited to work on my mixed game PL play. It's frankly my
preferred form of poker, but something that's tough to find in the USA
and online on a regular basis.
We moved blinds and small pots around for about half an hour, when the
following hand came up during a stud round. I'd be curious to hear
from anyone who has some PL stud experience to tell me if I simply
misplayed this hand. After much thought and input from nick_marden, I decided that I played it correctly, but I'd
appreciate hearing arguments on the subject.
( Details of the hand are behind this link, if you are interested. )
Anyway, whether I played it right or not, I lost a quick $300+ in this hand. In a later post, I'll describe how I rebought and lost another $300 to Josh just few hands later in O/8.