Editor's note: This post covers Day 3 of Stout's final table run at the recent WPT Foxwoods main event. To play catch up check out Days one and two before reading this.
I went into Day 3 of the WPT Foxwoods event with a slightly above
average stack of 174k @ 1200/2400 (300) and immediately went on a
heater. On the second hand of the day I received something that you
rarely get in $10k events: a gift!
A player decided that they were going to stack off 8♠ 8♦ against my T♦ 8♥ on a 10♥ 9♠ 6♥
flop for about 75k after they min-raised before the flop and I called
from the big blind ... basically because I suspected that they might do
something as redonkulous as that after the flop.
I was running great after that at the softest table in the room, and
even may have missed some value on two sets that I flopped in the next
two levels by playing them too fast. I wasn't too concerned though,
since I had skyrocketed to 370k in the first level back while we dropped
from 70 to 57 marked cards lenses players.
Then I got there in the only big pot I played as a
significant underdog for the entire tournament. My buddy Dan O'Brien
three-bet my open when I was holding the T♣ 8♣, and I'd have folded before the flop if the guy in the small blind hadn't flatted and priced me in.
I ended up flopping a flush draw against his A♥ K♠ on a K♣ 7♥ 3♣
and put him all in on the flop for about 120k total. Unfortunately, he
called. Fortunately, I turned a gutterball and rivered a flush.
Weeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
I hate busting people I like in tournaments, but you need all the chips in play to take it down ...
That brought me to ~465k @ 2/4k with 46 players remaining. My dream
table toughened up, though, as they added Steve "$teveyMoney" Merrefield
and Vinny Pahuja to replace two players who busted.
Lee Markholt was there as well and is a very solid grinder, but was
on my right just where I want him and wasn't getting in my way.
Then when we were near the money bubble I showed Alexi Lammi that it
isn't a good idea to check-raise double barrel bluff into trip Aces.
His failed attempt to do so helped me increase my stack to nearly
700k as we entered the money at 36 players, and I ended Day 3 second in
chips with 687k at 3/6k (500) with 27 players remaining and the average
stack at 392k.
Although I chipped up a bit when he tried to bluff me, I was highly
impressed with this kid's play. He had no major tournament cashes prior
to this event and told me that he doesn't usually play online.
He said he had just left a job in finance and that this was his first $10k event. I'm not sure if all
of this was true, but if it was I'd really like to know where the hell
the kid learned to play so well!
He even pulled what we dubbed the "bathroom bluff." A hand came up
between Alexi and the player on his left early in the day where Alexi
had defended from the big blind and called a flop bet on a A♥ 2♣ 4♦ board. After the 3♠ fell on the turn, he raised after his opponent led out.
Each time his opponent grabbed his cards and got ready to fold, Alexi
started reaching for his cards and getting ready to slide them towards
the dealer. After this happened two or three times, his opponent finally
showed the A♠ and folded while pointing to the turn and saying, "that was agood card for you."Alexi replied, "Yeah, I thought it would scare you."
It ended there for the moment, and I was left with the impression
that Alexi had a big hand (either a five or 5-6 of course), and that he
was trying to set the guy up for later juice cards.
Boy, was I right. Later a hand came up where he three-bet from button and the same opponent flatted. It went check-check on a K♥ 2♠ 4♦ flop, and his opponent check-called on the T♣ turn. After the 7♥ fell on the river and his opponent checked, Alexi overbet the pot to put him all in.
After a few moments of thought making the same move with his cards as
he'd done in the previous hand, his opponent finally announces, "I
think I gotcha" and calls it off. Alexi obviously shows K♠ K♦ and busts the guy.
The real fun begins when the guy exits and Alexi explains that the
guy had come up to him in the bathroom when we were on break and asked
about the hand.
Alexi told the guy that he had bluffed him, so the guy used his
"tell" on Alexi from the previous hand to make a read that busted him
out of the tournament. Nice hand, Alexi. Sick bathroom bluff!
Matt Stout
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