More High Stakes Poker on TV
Tuesday, 31 January 2006 20:48I watched Episode 3 of High Stakes Poker on GSN last night (I note that I am behind on these, so perhaps you all saw it already; it repeats enough that I can pick my night for viewing). As I wrote about before, this show continues to live up to its promise: "real poker", in a cash game format, on television. It's funny, actually, how the announcers have to explain how cash games work (e.g., players being able to leave any time they like). They must assume an audience familiar only with tournament poker!
On the topic of announcers, I want to take a moment to note about Gabe Kaplan. I firmly believe that he is the best poker announcer that I've ever seen on television. It's clear that before (or after?) he played Mr. Kotter, he gained some broadcasting experience. I've seen him do some older WSoP broadcasts (late 1990s), and the National Heads-Up Championship on NBC, and his skill as an announcer is far above the rest. The main reason is that he doesn't usually over-dramatize the situations (ala Mike Sexton), and he explains in reasonable details why players might make decisions that they do. It's actually considered and well-thought-out commentary on what is happening, rather than empty verbiage designed primarily to induce a false sense of excitement.
I should note, however, that even he was unable to explain on of the strangest hands I've seen yet on the show. Perhaps one of you can help me understand the thinking behind it.
The pot in question was between Daniel Negreanu and Barry Greenstein.
Dan had over $1 million and Barry had about $170,000 (remember, this
is real cash, not tournament chips!). Dan had raised from late
position with K
9
and Barry called with A
J
. The flop came 3
7
2
.
Dan of course checked, and Barry bet out about the size of the pot
(about $15,000). Dan check-raised for $1 million total. Now, I
think Barry has to put Dan on a small flopped flush. I agree that
with the second nuts, Dan's play is a bit unorthodox, but perhaps
Dan has read Barry for exactly the A
. However, more likely, I suspect that Dan thinks Barry is
either on a total bluff (in which case he calls nothing anyway) or
has flopped a smaller flush and will probably put all the money
in.
Amazingly, Barry called this massive overbet! Why would Barry call
with A
J
. He has to puts Dan on something like T
T
to make this call correct:
990 boards containing 7c 3c 2c cards win %win loss %lose tie %tie EV Ac Jh 519 52.42 471 47.58 0 0.00 0.524 Ts Th 471 47.58 519 52.42 0 0.00 0.476
Indeed, even if Dan has the T
, Barry is no longer a favorite because of the blocker in
Dan's hand:
990 boards containing 7c 3c 2c cards win %win loss %lose tie %tie EV Ac Jh 493 49.80 497 50.20 0 0.00 0.498 Tc Th 497 50.20 493 49.80 0 0.00 0.502
I can only think this was a mistake on Barry's part. Did I miss something? Other than pure tilt/gamble, how can he make this mistake? What read can he reasonably make here that makes the call mathematically correct? Is he so sure that Dan has a pair lower than jacks and not a club in his hand? Does he just want to show Dan that he can't dominate the table anymore with his big thud of a million dollars wrapped in bands?
Anyway, the story ends with the J
on the river and more money being shipped to Barry than
nearly all USAmericans make in a year.
crazy call..
Date: 2006-02-02 15:06 (UTC)By the way, thanks for the recommendation of the show. It is nice to see the people hang out and chat with each other while they play. In tournaments, there are too many people to be able to stick with one group for an extended period.
T