Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 12: Dealing with a Target on Your Back
This past weekend I had the opportunity to serve as one of three ��celebrity�� bounties in a $300 buy-in tournament at my local casino, Ho-Chunk Gaming Wisconsin Dells. I hadn��t had the opportunity to play a tournament in months, so I was really looking forward to getting back in the game �� especially since my buy-in was covered and I was freerolling.
While winning was on my mind, it wasn��t my first priority. This was a charity event designed to help raise money for the Lake Delton Fire Department while simultaneously providing a competitive event for players. As an invited guest, my primary goals were to have fun and be a good ambassador �� something I wrote about in a previous edition of Hold��em with Holloway. I certainly feel I accomplished those goals.
In the past I have mentioned that I like to read at the table, but for this event I didn��t bring anything with me other than a pair of Blue Shark Optics and my coveted World Series of Poker gold bracelet, which I only break out for charity events. I was determined to stay focused while observing and interacting with the other players, and not bury my head in a book. It was important to me that everyone had a good time.
The Holiday Celebrity Knockout Event attracted 134 total entries plus three celebrity bounties in Lake Delton Fire Chief Darren Jorgenson, PPC Pro Mark ��P0ker H0�� Kroon, and myself, with each of us having a sizable bounty on our heads. Half of the optional add-on went to the fire department, and I��m proud to say the event raised $1,370 for a great cause.
After a few levels I played an interesting hand, but before I get into that, let me reiterate that I had a $400 bounty on my head, which had a huge bearing on my strategy. Knowing that I would often have little-to-no fold equity meant I needed to wait for quality hands. Unfortunately they were few and far between.
In the aforementioned hand, the blinds were 100/200 when a player in middle position opened for 425. The player in the small blind called, and I looked down at QxQx in the big blind. I was sitting with around 10,000 in chips and popped it to 975. The original raiser folded, and the small blind �� clearly an inexperienced player there to have fun �� looked as if he were going to fold as well. However, before releasing his cards he reconsidered, said something about this being his only chance to get my bounty, and put in calling chips.
When the flop came down 9x3x3x rainbow, the small blind nervously tossed out three red T1,000 chips for a big bet of 3,000. I certainly wasn��t expecting that to happen, and I had to take a moment to consider what was going on.
If he had a 3x, why would he lead out so big? Wouldn��t he want to trap? It didn��t make sense, so I immediately ruled out a trey. Now a 9x, that would make sense. If he flopped two pair with something like 9x8x, 10x9x, Jx9x, or Qx9x �� all hands I felt were in his range �� then I could understand him leading out (though the size of his bet still threw me).
In hindsight I wish I��d have just called and given him rope to hang himself on the turn, but I didn��t. Instead I opted to move all in figuring that if he did have a nine he��d make the call. The call never came, though, as instead he gave a sly smile and slid his cards to the muck.
��I had to take a shot at it,�� he explained. I have no idea what he had, but obviously it wasn��t a trey. My guess is he bet with complete air, but if he did have a nine and found a fold, good on him. It was a nice boost to my stack, but I can��t help but feel I could have gotten more.
I hate to say it, but that was pretty much the only notable hand of the tournament for me. Chief Jorgenson was the first of the celebrities to go, and I followed him out the door about an hour later. I never got anything going and my stack dwindled as the blinds took big jumps every 30 minutes. Before long I was sitting with under 10 big blinds and card dead. Given the bounty it was too dangerous to shove light, so I had few options other than to sit and wait for a hand. Talk about feeling helpless.
Then, in Level 7 (500/1,000/100), Joseph Donny opened for 2,500 and I moved all in over the top for 7,300 total. Donny called with A?K?, which dominated my A?Q?, and he held after the board ran out clean. I congratulated Donny, handed him my $400 bounty chip, and wished the table luck.
I was disappointed in what turned out to be a rather ��blah�� tournament as far as my cards and chips were concerned, but upon reflection there wasn��t much I could have done differently. Sometimes the cards never come, and when something halfway decent comes along you��re fated to run it into the one hand that has you dominated. As they say, that��s poker.
Anyway, it was still a great charity event. The staff did a great job, everyone had fun, and money was raised. My good friend Kroon was the last celebrity standing, though he exited outside the money a couple hours later at the hands of Holly Lawler, who received a $400 bounty for doing the deed. The tournament eventually ended in a five-way chop between Pat Kellogg, Patrick Walsh, Eric Borcherding, Terry McCaughey and Steven King, each of whom took home $5,070.20.
This weekend I��m heading up to the Twin Cities for the Mid-States Poker Tour (MSPT) Season 5 finale at Canterbury Park, which is actually the first card room in which I ever played. I��ll be playing the $1,100 Main Event.
Win or lose I plan on highlighting some of my more notable hands in next week��s Hold��em with Holloway, so be sure to check back then.
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In this Series
- 1 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 1: Making Reads and Trusting Them
- 2 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 2: Playing in Poker Charity Events
- 3 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 3: Throttle Back Before You End Up Punting
- 4 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 4: Punish the Satellite Bubble
- 5 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 5: What is Proper Accumulator Strategy?
- 6 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 6: A Chip and a Chair Story with ��SirWatts��
- 7 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 7: 15 Things About Poker I Wish I��d Known Sooner
- 8 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 8: Examining the Largest Overlay in Poker History
- 9 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 9: Differences Between Rebuys and Reentries
- 10 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 10: Five Must-Read Poker Books of 2014
- 11 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 11: When Will You Finally Break Through?
- 12 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 12: Dealing with a Target on Your Back
- 13 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 13: Knowing When to Call It Quits
- 14 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 14: Embarking on a Year-Long Weight Loss Journey
- 15 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 15: Navigating Multiple Decision Points in a Poker Hand
- 16 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 16: Chris Moorman Tells Me How Badly I Play Poker
- 17 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 17: Richard ��nutsinho�� Lyndaker on Getting It in Marginal
- 18 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 18: Getting Inside the Head of Poker Pro Brian Rast
- 19 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 19: Stupid Calls & Lucky Draws in MSPT WI Championship
- 20 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 20: Talking Ante-Only Strategy with Greg ��FossilMan�� Raymer
- 21 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 21: Contributing to Jonathan Little��s New Book
- 22 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 22: Consequences of Acting Out of Turn & Tossing in Chips
- 23 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 23: When It Comes to Chops, Do What��s In Your Best Interest
- 24 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 24: Accepting Bad Beats & Lessons in Selling Action
- 25 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 25: Heinz�� Ace-High Call Shows Why He's a World Champ
- 26 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 26: Is Keeping the Short Stack Alive Collusion?
- 27 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 27: Great Laydown or Bad Fold on Poker Night in America?
- 28 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 28: Calling Hellmuth with Jack-Deuce Offsuit
- 29 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 29: The Philosophy of "No-Chop" Chad
- 30 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 30: Preparing to Play the World Series of Poker
- 31 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 31: Staying on Your Grind at the World Series of Poker
- 32 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 32: The Perilous Decision to Call Off with Ace-Queen
- 33 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 33: Using Poker Skills in Reality TV Competitions
- 34 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 34: Esfandiari Explains How to Recover from Bad Beats
- 35 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 35: Tilly vs. Brunson in Super High Roller Cash Game Hand
- 36 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol 36: Unconventional Play Leads to Good WSOP Main Event Start
- 37 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 37: Lessons in Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Low w/ Evan Jarvis
- 38 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 38: Things to Say and Do When You Bust a Poker Tournament
- 39 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 39: How Much Did I Have to Raise to Get You to Fold?
- 40 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 40: Practicing Patience in My Deep PPC Poker Tour Run
- 41 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 41: Analyzing a Questionable SHRPO Main Event Hand
- 42 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 42: Analyzing the Play of Neymar Jr. at EPT Barcelona
- 43 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 43: The Value of a Reliable Poker Reputation
- 44 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 44: John ��KasinoKrime�� Beauprez Rips My PLO Game Apart
- 45 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 45: Satellite Dilemmas -- To Call or Not to Call
- 46 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 46: Seiver Leverages the River in Super High Roller Bowl
- 47 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 47: What Untraditional Moves in Poker Might Mean
- 48 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 48: Thinking About the Future with Sam Grizzle
- 49 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 49: WCOOP Champ ��Coenaldinho7�� Offers Up His Biggest Hands
- 50 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 50: The Peril of Shoving Weak Aces
- 51 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 51: The Importance of Not Giving Up in Poker Tournaments
- 52 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 52: Does Asking ��Check�� Actually Constitute a Check?
- 53 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 53: Thomas Cannuli Impresses Even After Main Event Bustout
- 54 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 54: Dealers Aren��t Always Right
- 55 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 55: Don��t Get Married to Pocket Aces
- 56 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 56: Bazeley��s Survival Instinct Leads to Continued Success
- 57 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 57: Playing ��Deuces Wild�� on the European Poker Tour
- 58 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 58: The Wildest Hand in European Poker Tour History
- 59 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 59: Death, Zombies & Spending Time w/Phil Hellmuth
- 60 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 60: How the Unstoppable Fedor Holz Managed to Win Again
- 61 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 61: Lessons To Be Learned When You Hit the Big Stage
- 62 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 62: Steve O��Dwyer Explains the ��Oreo Cookie Tell��
- 63 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 63: What Would Happen to a Chip Stack If a November Niner Died?
- 64 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 64: Forgetting One Chip -- Should It Still Be an All-In Bet?
- 65 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 65: Todd ��sharkslayerrr�� Breyfogle on Bankroll Management
- 66 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 66: Cash Game Pro Daniel Arfin Offers Sound Bankroll Advice
- 67 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 67: Honeyman Plays Kings to Keep in Opponent��s Bluff Range
- 68 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 68: Why Do I Even Bother Drinking at the Poker Table?
- 69 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 69: Is Your Favorite Poker Pro Left- or Right-Handed?
- 70 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 70: In Order to Live You Have to Be Willing to Die
- 71 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 71: How to Amass a Big Stack Early in a Poker Tournament
- 72 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 72: Answering User-Submitted Poker Scenarios
- 73 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 73: Saying Goodbye with a Top Five List
- 74 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 74: We're Back, Baby!
- 75 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 75: Jivkov on Exploiting Capped Ranges
- 76 Hold��em with Holloway, Vol. 76: Matt Bretzfield Gets Tricky With Aces
- 77 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 77: Joseph Cheong Gets Crazy with a Pair of Ladies
- 78 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 78: Wyoming Poker Action & Wild South Dakota Hand
- 79 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 79: Calling Controversy at WinStar
- 80 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 80: Going for Value with Matt Hunt
- 81 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 81: Bracelet Winner Ryan Leng on Bad Call
- 82 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 82: Romeopro33 Recounts XL Eclipse Victory
- 83 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 83: Men The Master Doesn't Get Paid
- 84 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 84: Harman Hits Back-to-Back Miracle Turns
- 85 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 85: Jamie Kerstetter on Dealing with Bounties
- 86 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 86: Matt Stout Develops a Limp Dynamic
- 87 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 87: Matt Alexander Caught in Between w/ Two Red Aces
- 88 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 88: John Beauprez on Why He Folded a Set of Jacks
- 89 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 89: Alex Aqel Lets Opponent Hang Himself with Aces
- 90 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 90: David Peters Makes Beastly Call Against Will Givens
- 91 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 91: Poker Lessons from a Game of Risk
- 92 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 92: My Upstuck Diagnosis by the CLC Squad
- 93 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 93: Alex Foxen Coolers Nick Petrangelo in SHRB
- 94 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 94: My $25,000 PSPC Experience at 2019 PCA
- 95 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 95: The Equity of Leveraging Time Extensions
- 96 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 96: Dan O'Brien on Developing Healthy Routines
- 97 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 97: Big Hands From the WSOP-C Potawatomi
- 98 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 98: Simon Deadman Rips Apart My NLH Tourney Play
- 99 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 99: Shoving 10-6 Smack Dab Into Pocket Aces
- 100 Hold'em with Holloway, Vol. 100: The Revived Re-Entries Debate