only fulls and horses

Monday, February 25, 2008

Not sure I believed it .......

....... but on 21st November I posted that I was "half-way to Oz" and on 23rd November I won the opportunity to go the whole way by winning the weekly Aussie Millions final on Blue Square !

So on 11th January I travelled to Melbourne to play in the Aussie Millions and what follows is my report leading up to and including Day One of the tournament :-

It’s a long way is Australia, especially if you haven’t been before like me (not that it gets any closer if you go a second time). 12 hours to Hong Kong followed by 9 hours to Melbourne, but I’ve always been good at doing nothing so doing nothing on a plane is no great hardship. With Cathay Pacific there are enough films to keep you awake if you wish but one player we met in Oz had flown with a cheaper airline without any video or music the whole way, which might have made the journey a little longer !

For 48 hours before we arrive the temperature in Melbourne had been 40 degrees but for most of our ten days it is a more manageable 23-25 degrees, although it doesn’t matter a great deal when you are in a casino from noon to midnight. I have not yet been to Vegas so the Crown Casino impresses as the largest I have ever been in. Downstairs finds the card room, adding to the lack of sunlight on this trip so it is a good thing that day one has three flights and everyone gets at least two days off.

Most of the players are given the choice of which flight to play but I am just given flight 1A, which actually I would have chosen anyway – the thinking, to be honest, being that I’ve got the rest of the week free if I don’t survive my day one ! As it turns out they continue to hold main event satellites whilst flights A & B take place and the numbers grow each day from 216 in 1A, up to 294 in 1B, ending with 338 playing 1C.

There are some big names playing 1A (according to pokernews), including Allen Cunningham, Andy’s Black and Bloch, Erik Seidel, Jennifer Harman, Jimmy Fricke, John Juanda, Marc Goodwin, Mark Teltscher, Mel Judah, Mike Sexton, Thomas Bihl and Tony G – and I don’t get to sit with any of them (not today anyway !)

Day One is mainly uneventful for me but when my one and only target is to survive to play day two it doesn’t need to be. My wife Helen has been given tickets for the Australian Open tennis so this is the only day when I log my chip count at each break because I send her my progress by text. 20,000 starting stack, 90 minute blinds starting with 50/100 - by the first break I am on 24,100 and I don’t remember how other than taking 100 from the sitting out BB on the very first hand (his stack was removed one hand later).

Early on I remember I was folding a lot of hands pre-flop which would have won, mostly to the benefit of one particular player, so on the second level I must have thought I should start playing and I end it down on 13,450. The only other professional tournament I have played was in Goa in March 2006 – the blinds there were 40 minutes and I lasted three hours (going out with black Aces v red Kings, diamond flush on the river) so surviving longer than that was at least a first target.

Level 3 was kinder, back up to 17,100. Level 4 kinder still as I was up to 27,800 at the dinner break – it was on this level that I took out the first of only two players that I would knock out during the whole tournament. The average at the dinner break was 29,861 and this is about the closest I ever get to it !

Not that I can remember specific hands from levels 1-4, but levels 5-6 see me play even fewer hands and I drop to 24,000 (average 35,800) on level 5 and then end the day on 18,200 (average 44,791). But I have reached my target of survival and if you’d offered me 18k at the start I’d have taken it.

Andy Black leads with 167,800 (45k more than second) and in 22nd on 64,600 is Alexander Kostritsyn, but more about him later. 96 players are still in, including 14 on less than me so I’m happy enough.

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