


Cappelletti in Las Vegas - "Stopping by" the World Series in Pokerby Michael Cappelletti | Published: Aug 23, 2005 |
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J
, I made a small "keep-them-in" raise before the flop (I don't try to grab the antes with a great hand). The flop came with the K
10
and a black queen. Thus, I had flopped the nut straight, and also had the royal flush draw and a set of kings. It would be very hard for me to lose this pot.
In what had started as four-way action, the lead bettor made it $200, which folded the other two players. I made only the minimum raise because I did not want to lose him, but he came back at me, raising about $800 and going all in. He groaned when I made a flush on the last card. I don't think he realized that he was actually a very big underdog, and actually figured to lose the whole pot about 60 percent of the time. It then occurred to me that I had just won more money in that one hand than I would make in three days of playing bridge.
Since the evening sessions of the bridge tournaments usually ran from 7:30 p.m. to about 11:15 p.m., to play at all in the WSOP, I had to buy in to the 11 p.m. second chance no-limit hold'em tournaments ($225) during the supper break. Then, when the evening bridge session concluded, I had to taxi over to the Rio Hotel but arrive late, missing the first round or two of the poker tournament.The first night that I did this, I just missed finishing in the money. But the next night, I made it to the final table. At the final table, I held no cards and quickly dwindled down to about $20,000 in chips. Finally, I picked up the A
Q
in my $1,000 small blind. It was folded around to me. The big blind/chip leader on my left was a very aggressive player who did a lot of betting and raising. What would you do here?
I decided to trap and slowly tossed in another $1,000 chip, "dredging up a call." As I expected, he confidently raised, making it $6,000 to go. I moved all in, hoping that he didn't have a pocket pair. He hesitated for a few moments, then called. I was quite happy to catch him with a K-6 offsuit. My operation had succeeded, but unfortunately he paired up and I didn't. Had I been able to win that confrontation (I was about a 2-to-1 favorite), I probably would have finished a lot higher than ninth (which paid only about $1,000).
All in all, it became very clear to me that just "stopping by" the WSOP when I happened to be in town on other business was not what I really wanted to do. I made a resolution to myself that next year I would take off several weeks and really go for it. See ya there.