Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Don't Try This At Home...

I didn't play at all last night until about 9:30 and it wasn't a good idea. I had been to Logan's and Jose's and had about five beers so I was feeling no pain. I sat down and jumped into a $1 NL game for $50. The first hand I picked up 9-7 in the big blind. It's only me and one other guy. The flop comes 10-9-7. I checked, he bet $25 and I went all in. He thought for a second and called. He flipped over A-10 and rivered and A for a higher two pair. GG me.

So I was tilting/pissed and moved to another $1 NL game and bought in for $50. I donked that off in about 5 hands. None were memorable except for the bad play on my part.

So I'm down $100 and steaming pretty good. I have no idea what possessed me to jump into a $2 NL game but I did and bought in for $100 bucks. I was making some lose calls and fluctuated from $15 down to $15 up when this hand arose. I picked up J-9 in the big blind. I called a $7 raise from some guy who raised every pot. The flop came 8-10-Q. So I have a really good straight. The guy raised to $25 and I went all in. He called and the straight held up. I had a little over $100 when the hand started so now I'm back to even or maybe even a little on the plus side.

I'm still kinda excited from winning the big hand. The next hand (small blind for me) I picked up 3-6 of clubs. I called the extra .50 and the flop comes 9-K-8, all clubs. I bet out $10 trying to pick it up right there and pad my winnings. But I get called by the guy I had beaten in the previous pot. The turn is a red 2. I'm feeling like I have the best hand so I go all in. He calls for his last $80 with k-8 of spades. The river was no help to him and I won another fatty. I couldn't outta that game fast enough.

So I'm cashing out with $312 all because I was stupid and on tilt and got a lot lucky. I cashed out $125 which I was extremely excited about. All this happened in about 30 minutes. I could hardly believe it.

So the pokerroom BR is at $387 (which is $1 more than yesterday) and that puts me +$272 above my origional investment in Pokerroom.

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