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    <title>ATLARGE 2003 on BARGE.org</title>
    <link>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/</link>
    <description>Recent content in ATLARGE 2003 on BARGE.org</description>
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    <lastBuildDate>Tue, 01 Apr 2003 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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    <item>
      <title>ATLARGE 2003 Bustout List</title>
      <link>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/2003_bustout_list/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 2003 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/2003_bustout_list/</guid>
      <description>Order of elimination from all ATLARGE 2003 tournaments.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Buckshot</title>
      <link>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/2003_trip_report_buckshot/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 2003 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/2003_trip_report_buckshot/</guid>
      <description>Preface: &#34;Once in a great while, there comes an article so breathtakingly
stupid, so heroic in its inanity, that as one reads it, even inanimate objects
in the surrounding area seem to radiate intelligence by comparison.&#34;&lt;br&gt;
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;-Some guy on the
Internet&lt;br&gt; That pretty much sums up this report!  &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;ATLARGE 2003&lt;/b&gt; &lt;p&gt;
Oh me, oh my. How to begin this report? To tell you the truth, I didn&#39;t really
do much with the fellow &#39;Argers. I attended the smoker, took some video for
posterity and that was about it. I did play some Pink and PL in which I got
thoroughly spanked. After getting raped in both games I decided not to play in
them again. I hear afterwards two PL games were started in the suite but I
didn&#39;t get wind of it until after the game broke. I would&#39;ve been Steve
&#34;IFSATG&#34; Carbonara&#39;s bitch anyway considering I can&#39;t seem to put enough chips
into the pot after saying raise. I heard raising $5 just makes him lick his
chops.
&lt;p&gt;
	Ronald &#34;Baltimore Ron&#34; Wilson, Dennis &#34;PSU72&#34; Frey and I made the trek
together and bunked together. We talked much about the upcoming weekend. I made
resolutions to play solid and make a final table or two, as did the other guys.
Unfortunately, I didn&#39;t do either. I played pretty solid and made some
&#34;sketchy&#34; 3-bets according to my friends but there&#39;s history there that
supercedes all rationalization. But I digress. I&#39;ll go into a little detail
about the few hours that preceded the Smoker.
&lt;p&gt;
The first game I plopped down in was a nice $15-$30 Holdem game. I didn&#39;t make
any headway for the first hour and was almost down to the felt from my initial
buyin of $400.  At about the same time a young Asian guy with a root beer and
some sort of snack he tried to pawn off to the table hunkered down. He looked
an awful lot like a guy I saw on the Internet. A guy named Terrance Chan, but
this guy had a smooth haircut much like mine. I decided he was ultra cool, you
know, because of his haircut and all. It also didn&#39;t hurt that he was Asian, so
there&#39;s a natural affinity there. I was on a small run when I finally buckled
down and asked if he was who I thought he was. He confirmed my assumption and
we made formal introductions. Terrance is a great guy and has the typical Asian
constitution. I heard he only had a couple of hours of sleep before the HOE
tourney. I had QQ cracked by a set of 33&#39;s and I was about to go noodle on the
entire table. But I staved off the tilt and proceeded to charge forward. I wish
I recalled all the hands that brought me back from the cellar but the only
thing I remember is catching flops and leaving the table for the smoker
positive $150 in about an hour. I asked Terrance if he was going to the smoker
to which he replied, &#34;What, and leave this fishy game?&#34; Seriously, I think he
mentioned something about an aversion to smoke. Eh, to each his own.
&lt;p&gt;

	I was a bit off about what time the smoker started and since I already
picked up from the $15 game I was standing around like a dorf. I managed to hop
into a newly started $10-$20 Holdem game. Shortly afterwards I was joined by a
studly gentleman by the name of David &#34;Greatplans&#34; Fruchter. I introduced
myself and felt that I made a new friend in Dave. I asked Dave if he planned on
attending the smoker. He said he wouldn&#39;t miss it for the world. We had a great
time talking and playing together. After about a hour and half and getting Aces
cracked by an UTG caller with 3h7h I decided to take my winnings and start
drinking a little early. I found my friend Dennis sitting in a $5-$10 Holdem
game so I decided to sweat him for a while. I was quickly bored after I watched
him throw Presto away in the BB after a raiser and 3 cold callers. I was
getting that poker itch again and settled into a $3-$6 game. After all, I was
drinking so there was no reason to play any higher and besides, I could put
everyone at the table on tilt with my loud drunken ways. There were about 3
people able to collect social security at the table. What better way to bring
ATLARGE to a screaming start than getting the locals all riled up. It didn&#39;t
take long since I had a little help from my newly made friend, David Fruchter.
I played blind Holdem raising and reraising. It reminded me of BARGE &#39;01 when
Robert &#34;ActionBob&#34; Hwang and I did the same thing to the locals at Binion&#39;s
playing $4-$8. This time, I was with Dave. There was one hand where Dave and I
were in together, playing blind of course, and we were headsup after the flop.
On the turn I bet then turned a card up after Dave called. I think I had a pair
and Dave has some sort of draw. We were laughing so hard I was shooting beer
from my nose. I ended up taking it down with that same pair. But what we didn&#39;t
notice was that one of the older ladies complained to the floor about our
behavior and the fact we turned up our cards before the hand was over. Dave and
I continued to laugh and carry on and I think the lady eventually left. One
time I was laughing and yelling so loud that the table behind us was starting
to grumble. I took a stack of white chips and tipped everyone at the table.
Then I tipped the dealer a redbird. Needless to say, they didn&#39;t complain
again. I took about $200 out of the game with my antics. Dave and I racked up
and headed out.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Smoker&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;

	The smoker was a pretty good time. Rob drove Ron and me after I got my
video camera from the room. I&#39;m a little upset with myself that I didn&#39;t use
the camera more often in the tourneys. I should&#39;ve at least recorded the final
table action. Maybe if there&#39;s a BARGE this year I&#39;ll try to make more of a
concerted effort. I bought a couple Don Diego Playboy&#39;s, AVO #10, and a H.
Upmann Tubos for Rob and myself. I kept the AVO and we smoked the rest. I
recommend the Playboy to anyone who likes a smooth Connecticut wrap. Nothing
much happened at the smoker except Matt &#34;Treasure&#34; Treasure hitting on every
woman in the joint, and maybe some guys too. What do you do if Bill Chen moves
in with the biggest stack at a final table behind a short stack all in? Oh, and
in case anyone missed it, Matt won $10,000 at a Pokerstars.com tournament in
February and you call right behind him with Queens. With that being said, it
was a good time shared by all. Russell Fox shared a Mike Laing story that can
only be executed as succinctly by him so I won&#39;t make an attempt. Congrats to
Chuck Taylor for winning the over/under and giving me a piece of the action
after talking him out of bidding $1,800. Sheesh, Chuck, what were you thinking?
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Holdem, Omaha, Eight or Better&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;

	The H.O.E. tourney. I forgot to write down who the other players at the
table were. From memory I&#39;m going with Linda &#34;Llew&#34; Lewis, Chris &#34;Chris&#34;
O&#39;Connor, Dave &#34;Dave!&#34; Croson, Sabyl &#34;Sabyl&#34; Cohen and my arch nemesis, Paul
&#34;prm&#34; McMullin. That guy made the 3rd level so horrible for me I thought he was
a prop in an online game. Every Omaha hand I played at 75-150, whether or not I
raised made no difference; Paul made sure he was in every pot. Like a scorching
case of Hemorrhoids, he was a pain in my keister. I must&#39;ve lost every hand on
the river to him, hence the reason for the expression on my face in the paper.
But no hard feelings, I&#39;ll exact my revenge at BARGE or next year&#39;s ATLARGE.
Just you wait and see. Anyhow, I never claimed to be an Omaha expert and I
think I just played too many hands during that round. Joan &#34;AlwaysAware&#34; Hadley
and ActionBob made their way to our table. Bob eventually made it to the final
table. Congrats! I exited the tourney in 36th or something. Looking over my
notes I noticed that I did play way too many hands in Omaha. Not the choice
recipe for Omaha success.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;My favorite hand&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;

	I&#39;m sitting in this game with a few decent players; one of the better
players is 2 to my right. The guy on my immediate right is Vkotlyar, a regular
2+2 poster.  This one Asian guy (the local&#39;s call him Mumbles) and I were in a
hand that caused some confusion because he didn&#39;t understand I was checking
blind on the river. He got a 30 minute penalty after being obnoxious but never
left the area of the table. Unfortunately, since this guy was funding everyone
at the table we tried our best the get him to stay and we couldn&#39;t talk the
floor into changing their minds. Anyway, he comes back into the game and in 1/2
hour I&#39;m about down to the felt from some set backs. I have close to $50 in
mid-late position. UTG limps, Vkotlyar limps and I look down to see 9hTh. Not a
bad hand, eh, considering the action? I know that Mumbles will be calling and I
figure that both blinds will call too. Maybe even more! Everyone else folds and
the blinds call. There are 6 people in this pot.  The flop comes down 7h 8c 4s.
This might be a good flop for my hand, eh? It gets checked around to me so I
bet. Mumbles calls and everyone folds to the UTG guy, he calls. Vkotlyar, right
next to me calls. Now, I&#39;m about all in here. So….4 way action on the turn
and a Qh falls. UTG checks and Vkotlyar bets. Well, shit. What am I going to do
here? I do the most obvious thing. I raise all in. I figure it&#39;s the best bet
and I have many, many outs. Mumbles, the UTG and Vkotlyar all call. I figure it
was promising there wasn&#39;t a reraise. So now there&#39;s a small side pot. The
river brings a 2c. Now I&#39;m all fucked, right? UTG folds his hand in disgust.
Vkotlyar and Mumbles check. Vkotlyar shows 6d 9d and I stay very still since
this is for the side pot. Mumbles shows Tc 6c and I&#39;m just about to bust out of
my seat! Mumbles takes the side pot and I proudly show my Th 9h for the main
pot! Ship da Cheese!
&lt;p?
&lt;b&gt;NL Tourney&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;

	At the onset of the NL tourney I was pleasantly surprised at the table
lineup. Excuse me if I get any of your names wrong. Starting with Seat 1 and
working clockwise: Steve &#34;Rookie&#34; Zang, Matt &#34;jacksup&#34; Matros, Ron &#34;Baltimore
Ron&#34; Wilson, Rick &#34;Rick Becker&#34;, Barry &#34;FourThree&#34; Kornspan, Peter &#34;Pocket AK&#34;
Edivan, Me, Pat &#34;CtheTurn&#34; Kirwan. Shit. I&#39;m missing someone. Cest Lavie. After
Matt busted out, Warren Sander, the guy that crippled me, replaced him. I was
doing real well at the table up to that point I was the table chip leader with
~T2200 at the 3rd level. I had AsAc UTG and bought it in for $100. Warren cold
called near the button and we&#39;re heads-up on the flop that was K22 2 diamonds.
I checked hoping he hit the King to trap him, but he checked behind at which
point I said, &#34;Diamond, please.&#34; A diamond hit and I bet, I think, T200. He
comes over the top to make it ~T500? I reraised again putting T1,200 then he
jams. Well, shit, I fold. He showed Ad5d for the flush. I said, &#34;Nice call
preflop,&#34; and went ahead on my business. Ladies and Gentlemen, if there&#39;s
anyway to butcher a hand that was the way.  I get moved to the table of death
and I see: Sabyl, Ira &#34;J-E-T-S&#34; Pilser, Mitch &#34;ADB BFB&#34; Firestone, Matt
&#34;Roswell&#34; Kiristis, Scott &#34;Bwana&#34; Byron, Chris &#34;8-2 Chris&#34; Raimondi, Bill &#34;ADV
Bill Chen&#34; Chen, and a guy named Mike. I tried to bust Bwana out with some
suited crap (I think it was 8dTd) since I was the 2nd shortest stack with ~T600
and he had something like T325. He picked me off with AcJc. After the break I
get moved to Steve &#34;Crunch&#34; Daniel, Bruce &#34;ADB Big Boy&#34; Kramer, Peter &#34;Tray
Racer&#34; Segal, Johnathan &#34;RollaJ&#34; Cohen, Mitch &#34;Mitch&#34; Kramer, Edward &#34;Pizzaman&#34;
Pizzarello, Bert &#34;Toast&#34; Hackney and some guy named Chris. I went all in a
couple of times at this table. The first time with 9sTs and Crunch called with
something and catch a Ten on the turn. The last time with Presto and lost (how
the fuck does that happen?) when Bruce has Queens in the SB. The nerve!
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;America&#39;s Playground&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;

	There was a ton of stuff that happened during the ATLARGE weekend that
made it memorable for me. I especially liked the Ten high showdown win. At the
suite Goldie and Fruchter were discussing politics and stuff when Goldie said
something about him being Jewish and Dave retorted something of a political
nature. It had to do with the war and money and such and I pretended to be
entirely rapt in the conversation. Then at an intense moment during their
debate I interrupted the conversation and said, in all seriousness, &#34;Wait a
minute, wait a minute, guys.&#34; I stared directly at Goldie and said, &#34;You&#39;re
Jewish?!?!&#34; Meeting Fruchter was a riot and playing the $3-$6 no peek, blind
raise with him was even more riotous. It&#39;s too bad I didn&#39;t get a chance to try
some of his homemade pasta. I hear he works wonders in the kitchen. It was also
great to see Matt, Goldie, Chic, Joan, Carbonara and others again. I wish I had
the time to make the trek up to AC every week like I did last year. It was also
great to meet Terrance. I hope to swap stories and trade secrets with him in
the years to come. Terrance, I&#39;m planning on making it to Costa Rica soon. I
promise.  There was only one time when a gruff and asinine dealer disrupted the
festivities. Goldie, ActionBob and I were playing $15-$30 when a dealer named
Andy sat in the box. He had an attitude about &#34;something&#34; and we all noticed
when he sat down. Whatever was the catalyst of Andy&#39;s aggression Goldie didn&#39;t
really help matters by telling him to &#34;Shut up and deal&#34;. Andy responded
immediately by telling Goldie to never say shut up. After that we got a little
quite and Goldie stopped telling Andy to shut up and deal, instead, he was
telling him to shuffle up and deal. This got us laughing again except Andy
didn&#39;t find it amusing. Eventually a heated exchange ensued between Andy and
Goldie and Goldie racked up and left. I said, &#34;Thanks a bunch, dealer. You got
the biggest fish in the game to leave.&#34; ActionBob and I never tipped Andy and I
vowed to never tip him again. If a dealer can&#39;t have fun at one of these events
with a bunch of tip reckless drunks hamming it up at a table, then he/she
probably should find a different line of work.  I ate dinner with Russell and
his wife, Anne. There were other &#39;Argers at another table but we ended up at
the kiddie table. It was nice to chew the fat with them. Anne described their
first date and the best part was Russell asking her back to his place. Oh, and
congratulations on the little one.  All in all, it was another successful event
with memories I&#39;ll enjoy for years to come. I&#39;m certainly hoping BARGE will be
held someplace so we may again enjoy the company of friends. I&#39;m all for
soliciting the Palms to host the event. Anyway, take care everyone!
&lt;p&gt;
~stephen&lt;br&gt;
aka Buckshot</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Don Perry</title>
      <link>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/2003_trip_report_don_perry/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 2003 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/2003_trip_report_don_perry/</guid>
      <description>As usual LenG and I traveled down to AC together for ATLARGE. Len insists on
driving simply because I am a gimp and can&#39;t get my right leg to the brake
pedal as quickly as possible in years past.  Not a gamb00ler, Len. He wants
the &#34;nuts&#34; even for a simple car trip. Not wanting to listen to him whimper
all the way down I let him drive, knowing that I would suffer in terror all
the way because of his inveterate tailgating. As usual I could trim my nose
hairs using the rear view mirror of the cars ahead of us, we were that f&#39;ing
close. I wore my &#34;Ooops, I Crapped My Pants&#34; brand  adult diapers for the
trip. The package said they were good for &#34; Up to 225 pounds&#34;, so I knew I
would be able to get away with only one diaper for the whole weekend ! A
bargain,  but a bit uncomfortable by the time I got home.
&lt;p&gt;
    We stopped at the White House and picked up a couple of Philly Cheese
Steak Subs on the way to the Taj. Best food I ate all weekend. Len&#39;s first
time there. If you don&#39;t know about the place make it a point to grab one
the next time you are in AC, it&#39;s a must !
&lt;p&gt;
     As always Len and I shared a room at the Taj. Len made the reservations
and stepped to the check in desk to register with his credit card and as
always I stood right behind him and told the girl behind the desk that  I
was really looking forward to the weekend because it was Len&#39;s turn to &#34; be
the girl&#34; which always brings a welcoming smile and sets the tone for a
weekend of mutual ball-breaking and laughs.
&lt;p&gt;
     Next stop was the elevator where I  waited for the right moment in a
silent and crowded elevator to ask Len just quietly enough for everyone to
overhear , &#34; did you remember the personal lubricant? &#34;
&lt;p&gt;
    On to the poker room. It&#39;s been way too long since I&#39;ve seen my &#39;arg
friends and there&#39;s a bunch already playing. Baby Pl game starts up almost
immediately and that is virtually the only game I play, almost non stop. all
weekend, except for a few lonely forays to the BJ  and roulette tables where
I go of necessity to make back some of my lost income, (these games are more
positive EV for me than poker). We are playing half HE and half Omaha and to
my left is a &#34;rounder&#34; explaining to me how he uses the &#34;snake&#34; to make
money playing BJ. Seems he starts at one end of the boardwalk and snakes
through every casino for some BJ action, playing till he&#39;s ahead $200. then
moving to the next casino. Asked why he moves after a $ 200.00 win, he says
in all seriousness that he doesn&#39;t want to attract the attention of the pit
bosses !! ( Walter Rulla take note !! ). The young rounder helps me out with
my poker skills, kindly answering all my queries ( Omaha is the game where
you get 4 cards down ? ) till the inevitable happens and Fich cleans him out
in one biggish hand, bye bye rounder. Fortune smiles upon me however and
Fich (a/k/a ADB Conduit) has an accident when a 3rd A  the turn drops like a
scud missile against his rolled up presto and he and Sander cough up about $
600 to me. I play my usual tight and disciplined game till about 11:30 and
I head for bed. A stop at a roulette wheel nets me another $ 600 or so after
careful selection of numbers using the Doctrine of Maturing Chance ( a
number which hasn&#39;t come up is more likely to come up) and some advice
purchased from the TV psychic Miss Cleo shortly before her indictment.
Ca-ching.....a g00d first day for this r00ler.
&lt;p&gt;
    Up at 8 AM for some breathing exercises (using a pack of Marlboro
Lights) and a healthy breakfast ( donuts and insulin  ) and it&#39;s downstairs
for the NLHE tournament .  We can skip over the tournament. They&#39;re all
about luck !!
Once the grueling 15 minutes I spent in the tournament are finished I head
to a real game of skill ( BJ ) where I pick up $ 925.00. I take a nap. watch
some war news and wander back to the poker room for some more baby PL.
&lt;p&gt;
   I am now in the groove and seem to fold hand after hand rarely looking at
a flop. Despite this I drop about $ 1000.00 ( must have been the crushing
blinds !! ) over the course of the day. Time for dinner. 2 knuckleheads ( Le
nnie and Pizzaman) insist on going to Dynasty ( the &#34; upscale&#34; Chinese
restaurant ). Great company, mediocre overpriced food. I WILL never again
eat at a Chinese restaurant in any casino. $ 40 for a dinner I can get at
the local takeout place for $9 at home. Back to the PL game, one set up just
for the arg group. Thank you Taj !!
&lt;p&gt;
    Barry Kornspan, Raydon,LenG, Steve Carbonara, Big Al, Pizzaman, Russ Fox
and a few others play a very tight game for hours and again I rarely get
involved, losing quite a bit being blinded away, The only hand I do recall
is one in which my J 10 suited fills up and I clean out Raydon, who, lets
face it. is, a maniac who plays ANY two Cards ! I drop another $ 500 or so
( in blinds I guess) and I head back to roulette, buy in for $ 175 ands hit
a zero with $20 on the 2nd spin for a 700 win and leave with a $ 680 profit.
Off to bed.
&lt;p&gt;
    I sleep late ( a night filled with disturbing dreams involving Tammy
from the poker room and a pair of handcuffs) and we leave  at about 10 AM
after saying our good-byes to the few we find in the poker room. I leave a
PokerStars Jacket with Barry Kornspan to be returned to Steve Goldman, our
organizer. Barry is asked to tell Steve that I found it hidden in Len&#39;s
suitcase.  Big Al and I were in the hospitality suite the eve before
rummaging through the shirts and stuff generously provided by Pokerstars (
we both wear  size XX-muscular) when Al opens a box with a  medium jacket in
it. Al said &#34;I guess the jackets were the first thing to go&#34;. I grab the
&#34;last&#34; jacket and say &#34;heck, I&#39;ll give it to my daughter. I didn&#39;t know they
were giving away JACKETS !&#34;  During the PL game that night I hear Raydon
talking about the fact that someone has walked off with jackets meant to go
to the tournament winners ( oops!).
&lt;p&gt;
     On the drive home we stop at a rest area on the Garden State Parkway
and I buy a Danish pastry and a coffee and notice a very attractive brunette
at the condiment bar putting &#34; fixins&#34; on a hot dog. In an attempt to strike
up a conversation I asked her to hand me a couple of packets of mustard,
which I am then forced to squeeze across the surface of my cherry Danish so
she won&#39;t suspect my real motive for the request, taking several bites to
further allay any suspicions. It is a long ride and queasy home.
&lt;p&gt;
   My deepest thanks to the Taj Mahal, Pokerstars and Steve Goldman for a
great weekend at ATLARGE and to all the &#39;arger&#39;s present for a weekend of
laughs. When does BARGE registration open ?</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Roswell</title>
      <link>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/2003_trip_report_roswell/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 2003 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/2003_trip_report_roswell/</guid>
      <description>Disclaimer: Much of this trip report, including names, times, or what
the flop was, may be inaccurate or wrong, or I might have made it up.
&lt;p&gt;
        I woke up early Friday morning and set out for AC.  The drive
usually takes me about two hours from Rockland County (suburbs of NYC)
and traffic was light so the trip down was uneventful.  I checked into
the Taj a little after 11. Taking the advice of Roy West via Tiger,
the first thing I did upon arriving was UNPACK. I guess this is
supposed to help with your patience or discipline or something.
&lt;p&gt;
        After a bit I headed down to the poker room.  The Taj has always been
my favorite place to play in AC; the wide open space and bright
lighting keep me in a better mood.  I can usually play for nearly four
hours at the Taj without getting severely depressed and bored. At the
Trop it takes about two.  Unfortunately the Taj usually doesn&#39;t spread
H/L Stud which is the only poker game I&#39;m any good at so I have booked
most of my hours in the Trop.
&lt;p&gt;
        The poker room was quite sleepy at first. The ATLARGERs were playing
in the HOSE tournament and the rest of the room was pretty dead.  I
started up an interest list for 1-2 PLO/PLHE and waited for people to
bust out.  Shortly afterward a 3/6 HOE game started.  I sat in this
game and played with a bunch of folks including Jerrod from
California, a rather nice woman named Laurie, a guy named Len who I&#39;ve
played with online, and Steve Carbonara whom I had met before.
&lt;p&gt;
        So I sat in the HOSE game for a while and started getting really
bored because I hate 3/6.  I was a little wary about wearing my
&#34;Roswell&#34; badge because I always insult people when playing online and
I was afraid someone would see it and want to kick my ass.  But
eventually I put it on and wore it with pride.  Since I was so bored I
started playing a little nutty.  At one point when we were playing
holdem I raised it up with 92s and kept betting the whole way. Steve
Carbonara called me down and checked on the river.  The board was
something like KJ8 with a flush out there.  I had to check it back and
he won with pocket 6&#39;s.  That hand really steamed me.  He probably
would have mucked if I bet. I mean, if I was going to play like an
aggressive monkey I should at least follow it through to the bitter
end. Despite my monkey play I left this game down about $20.
&lt;p&gt;
        At this point me and Steve started up the 1-2 PLO/PLHE game I tried
to get going earlier.  It quickly filled.  I bought in for around $400
and most folks had around two, except for ADB Fish who had me covered.
 I thought it would be all RGP&#39;ers but somehow an Eminem-wannabe-kid
found his way into the game.  At first he appeared to know what he was
doing, but it soon became evident that he had no clue when he said &#34;I
call your 25 and I raise 50.&#34;  Of course everyone jumped on his ass
for that as they well should have.  Steve Carbonara was the first guy
to take this kid&#39;s stack with a brilliant read, then ADB Fish busted
him for another $500 or so when Fish flopped a set. Fish filled up on
the river, and the kid bet his whole stack into him and got sent
packing.
&lt;p&gt;
        I played only one big pot this whole time.  Basically I didn&#39;t want
to get involved with ABD Fish without the nuts, because he was the
only who had me covered.  So on this hand he raised to $7 from the
button and I called with a crappy KJ of clubs.  The flop was AQc4c.  I
checked to him and he bet the pot. Thinking I could blow him off I
checkraised him the pot.  He thought for a few seconds and called.  So
here I am in the worst situation in pot limit: out of position with a
draw against a deep stack.  Lucky for me the turn was a 2c giving me
the second nuts.  I decided to get cute and knuckled the table
quickly.  He didn&#39;t bite and checked right back.  The river paired the
deuce and I quickly bet the pot ($175) without thinking.  Of course
this is not a very smart bet; if I think I&#39;m best I should bet
smaller, maybe half the pot, so I can make a little money from the
hand.  Then again he probably wouldn&#39;t have called anyway because ADB
Fish seemed like he was too smart for that shit. In any case, he
mucked.
&lt;p&gt;
        This was the only big pot I was involved in, and I won it, but
somehow I managed to lose $200 in the game, mostly from seeing flops
that missed, then mucking.  The game broke soon after the Eminem kid
busted out.  At this point I was really steamed because I couldn&#39;t
remember where that $200 went.  I think I went over to the Trop for a
while but I couldn&#39;t get a game, so I headed back to the Taj.  We
tried to start pot limit again, but this time the ATLARGERs put on a
$200 buyin cap.  I was a little annoyed by this so I was playing a
little nutty preflop, raising and straddling a lot. Then a hand came
up where I had QQ in the BB and there were like 6 limpers. I popped it
up and everyone called, there was about $75 in the pot.  The flop was
Q47.  I wasn&#39;t giving any free cards into 6 people so I led out for
$30 and everyone mucked.  I was kind of annoyed about that. Soon
after, I noticed the Taj had a 10-20  H/L Stud for some reason, so I
went and played in that for about five hours.  An RGPer named DavidK
was in the game and shortly afterward a very nice gentleman named Bo
joined us.  Apparently he had won the HOE tournament earlier in the
day.  He was doing a crossword and needed a four letter word for Bob
Dole&#39;s running mate in 1996.  &#34;Jack Kemp!&#34; I said.  I think I was
right, I&#39;m not really sure.  At some point during this period, the
room started to go nuts over something on TV.  The cheering got so
loud that I thought maybe we won the war, but it turned out to be some
stupid basketball thing.
&lt;p&gt;
        So I hung around there until about 1 AM until I just couldn&#39;t take
anymore. I left even from that game and called it a night.
&lt;p&gt;
        After a completely unrefreshing sleep I woke up ready for the NL
tournament.  This tourney had a very good structure, giving us T1500
with only 5/10 blinds to start, and 30 minute rounds.  To the best of
my recollection, my table featured Sabyl, Big Al (I think), Bill Chen,
some guy named Garnish, Jester, some guy who looked like Chris Kattan,
and some other people I don&#39;t remember.  Quickly it became known as
the busting table because some double-ups happened right away.  I was
playing good and getting good cards. One hand I limped with PRESTO in
a 5 way pot. Flop was T95 no flush draw.  I bet T25 from UTG hoping
someone would pop it, but I got two callers. Turn is a 3 and I was
through screwing around so I bet 150. The Goldiefish called. The river
was a K and since QJ was a reasonable hand for him I checked.
Goldiefish bet 300. I called... he showed K5 and I took it down with
PRESTO amidst many oohs and aahs.  So now I had run my stack up to
about 2500 and I was feeling good, like I was r00ling the table.  Few
hands later I make it 100 UTG with Aqo. Two callers including Sabyl on
the button... flop is Q55.  I liked it. I checked and Sabyl bet 200. I
popped it up to 600 and she flat called.  Now I should have known I
was in deep shit.  Turn was a blank... I shoved it allin.  She beat me
into the pot with her 55 which had flopped quads.
&lt;p&gt;
        Now of course everyone feels dumb when they run into quads, but I
made a huge mistake here.  Basically you should never go all-in in a
NL tourney unless
&lt;p&gt;
1) You think you might get called by a worse hand&lt;br&gt;
2) You may get a better hand to fold&lt;br&gt;
3) You are bluffing
&lt;p&gt;
        Obviously none of these conditions were true... I had about 500 left
and hung around for a while longer but couldn&#39;t do much and that was
that.  I really have no one to blame for this besides myself.  I was
running really hot and getting cards, getting lucky, then I blew it.
Ah well.
&lt;p&gt;
        So now it was off to the Trop to play 15/30 H/L Stud, which is my
main game.  I&#39;m pretty much a loser at every other form of poker, but
I have a good hourly rate in this game.  Well when I got there the
lists were full... and I noticed a 30/60 two way game, omaha and eight
or better.  I made about the 142nd  mistake of my ATLARGE trip by
sitting in this game, where I got pounded right in the ass. It was a
good game, and I was playing good, but a bunch of starting cards that
don&#39;t get there in 30/60 can easily make you lose more than a dime,
which is exactly what happened...
&lt;p&gt;
        Around this time I was pretty disgusted so I moved over to 15/30 H/L
Stud, which I had wanted to play to begin with... once more I was
getting crushed...  Then I got into an argument with everyone at the
table about the war in Iraq... without going into details it was pretty
much all seven other guys against me.  A shouting match broke out and
two floor people came over... I said &#34;Let&#39;s just play poker.&#34; I had
pretty much said my piece and didn&#39;t see the point of continuing to
argue.  Everyone was pretty steamed and there was even more hatred and
animosity at the poker table than usual.  I wasn&#39;t getting any cards
here so I moved back to 30/60 for a while... There was this one lady in
the game involved in an Omaha pot.  The flop came down and her husband
brought her some food they had ordered.  She started swearing at him
in Chinese. &#34;I&#39;m in hand! What&#39;s matter with you! Idiot!!&#34; The husband
comes over and said &#34;What did you say? Are you fucking crazy?? I&#39;ll
fucking crack you right here! Don&#39;t fucking talk to me like you talk
to these people!!&#34; (indicating the rest of the room.)  Witnessing that
little exchange made me feel a little uncomfortable.
&lt;p&gt;
          Meanwhile I&#39;m getting more and more depressed as I surrender
my $5 ante every single hand.  The 30/60 game was just burning my ass
so I had to leave and go back to a different 15/30 h/l game, at which
point I got dealt rolled up 8&#39;s, made quads on 4th st, and got half of
a very big pot.  &#34;Didn&#39;t you just sit down?&#34; asks the dealer.  Yes,
but I&#39;ve been folding every shitty hand for about 20 hours now and I&#39;m
still stuck huge. Even making quads didn&#39;t get the gambling chemicals
flowing in my brain, I had pretty much stopped caring by this point.
I played another hour until the cards started getting completely
meaningless.  My ears started ringing and my eyes grew heavy...  I
just sat and sat waiting for the big scooper hand, but it never came.
Finally got up.  Headed back to the Taj to look for RGPers... the
clackety-clack of the chips and the ding-a-ding-dong of the slot
machines was driving me nuts... Even though I had the room for another
night I just couldn&#39;t stand the thought of hanging around the casino
any more.  I got in the car and headed back home broke.  Overall it
was kind of a shitty trip.
&lt;p&gt;
Roswell</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trip Report: Terrence Chan</title>
      <link>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/2003_trip_report_terrence_chan/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 2003 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.barge.org/atlarge/2003/2003_trip_report_terrence_chan/</guid>
      <description>Standard trip report disclaimer: All events are reconstructed to the
best of my memory; however, my memory seemed far worse this trip than
others.  I am a very poor person with both names and faces. As a
point of fact, I may be the worst poker player there is when it comes
to remembering names and faces.  If I screw up your name, confuse you
for someone else, make an inaccurate physical description of you, or
completely forget about you, rest assured that it&#39;s my fault and I
enjoyed your company.  Russ Rosenblum -- whom I introduced myself to
twice in three hours -- can attest to the complete ineptitude of my
facial recognition skills.  My severe sleep deprivation made my
normally poor memory even worse both with regards to faces and
incidents.
&lt;p&gt;
For those of you who like lots of detailed poker action, I can&#39;t
remember the hands well enough for you to get a lot out of this
report.  For those of you who like wacky antics outside of the poker
room, there are none.  For those of you who like meandering, vague
recollections of crap...man, you&#39;re in luck!  
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Monday, March 17&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
It was with my great anticipation that I embarked on a number of
firsts.  Not only was this to be my first ARG event, this was to be my
first trip to the East Coast, my first time leaving Costa Rica (albeit
since arriving last September), my first trip to New York, my first
trip to the arena of the New Jersey Devils, a team I&#39;ve had an
affinity for since 1988.
&lt;p&gt;

It was thus with no slight disappointment that my trip was delayed
leaving Costa Rica, both boarding and departing.  However, this was a
very minor commuting bad beat, as the pilot evidently gunned it, or
the winds were in our favour, or something, arriving just a few
minutes late.
&lt;p&gt;
Once in Newark, New Jersey, I was greeting by my excellent Newark-area
hostess Christine Gonzalez and her red Jeep.  We commuted quickly back
to her place and to Continental Airlines Arena for a much anticipated
game between the Devils and the rival Philadelphia Flyers.  First
place in the NHL&#39;s Atlantic Division was up for grabs, but the Devils
didn&#39;t play like it, putting up a dispirited effort in a disappointing
4-2 loss.  The game was not sold out, but the crowd was sufficiently
rowdy to make up for the vacant seats.  That it was St. Patrick&#39;s Day
likely didn&#39;t hurt.  Of note, President Bush&#39;s speech was broadcast in
the stadium.  Despite what seems to be a fair bit of anti-war
sentiment in the area, the speech received four loud ovations.

&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Tuesday, March 18&lt;/b&gt;

&lt;p&gt;
Today was my one day to do what I think everyone else in the world but
me has done already -- tour New York City.  What a vibrant city, so
full of life, so...purposeful.  I felt almost ashamed to be a tourist,
since those around me all seemed to have somewhere to go; I felt as
though I were a parasite, sucking time and leisure out of a city which
had precious little of either to spare.
&lt;p&gt;
New Yorkers, contrary to their reputation (or what I thought was their
reputation), are a friendly species, but in a different sort of
friendliness.  After taking a two-hour cruise around Manhattan Island,
I visited (in order) Times Square, Rockefeller Plaza, the New York
Stock Exchange, the WTC site.  Although I&#39;d been told that there isn&#39;t
much to see at the WTC site -- and in fact, this is true enough -- I
felt very much compelled to see it, and am very much glad I did.  I
didn&#39;t do so to pay my respects to the victims and heroes of 9/11
(btw, I dislike how these are considered equivalent sets), although I
did.  I mused how odd it was that an event so horrific, tragic and
damaging to the world could paradoxically bring forth so much
positivity and strength, as we somehow find a profound connection with
complete strangers.  It is strange.
&lt;p&gt;
I returned via subway to the port authority terminal, where I embarked
back to Tina&#39;s.  We went out for dinner, then to a bus station named
Cheesequake (there has to be some interesting etymology surrounding
that name) for the 2-hour bus to Atlantic City.
&lt;p&gt;
One thing I don&#39;t ever think I&#39;ve done before is travel a very long
time and distance to a major cardroom and not play that first night,
regardless of how tired I&#39;d been.  Unfortunately (perhaps), I did have
to do this on Tuesday night.  The Taj has a weird policy regarding
opening new games and changing and breaking existing games. There
were some 14 or 15 names on the 10/20 list, but no game opened for
over two hours.  When I realized I was falling asleep at the table
waiting for games, I decided that sleep to start again in the morning
would be the better play.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Wednesday, March 19 / early Thursday, March 20&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
The waiting list strangeness continued Monday.  I started playing a
must-move 10/20 game at around 8am (and it was a surprisingly good 8am
game), and also had my name on 15/30.  There were two 10/20s and a
number of players there were also on the 15 list, like me.  At some
point, a floorwoman goes to the main 10/20 and says that she knows a
number of players from that game are also on the 15/30 list, so
instead of breaking the game and starting a 15/30, she asks if anyone
objects to making this game a 15/30.  Sounds reasonable enough.  Two
players object, so the game does not change.  Again, reasonable
enough.  However, the policy is that despite the fact there are well
over 10 players actually playing 10/20 who are on the 15/30 list, they
do not open a 15/30 game!  Evidently, the rationale is that opening a
15/30 would break up the 10/20 -- the same 10/20 in which eight of ten
players would rather play at 15/30, despite a huge 15/30 list.  This
all seemed par for the course to the locals, but seemed simply quite
nuts to me.
&lt;p&gt;
I also had my introduction to time pots Wednesday.  For those who do
not know, a time pot is where instead of all active players paying the
time charge on the half hour, one player fronts the entire amount for
the table.  For example, time in a 10/20 game is $5 on the half hour,
so at a full table, the table&#39;s time is $50.  The time is then
returned to the player posting the time by the first two players to
win a pot over a trigger amount.  Thus, in a 10/20 game, the winner of
the first two pots containing over $120 pays the person who posted the
time $25 each.  This, obviously, results in some dramatic strategy
changes as until the time is paid, there is a staggering $25 rake on
pots over $120.  An almost absurd level of tightness becomes correct;
hands like AQ and maybe even JJ/AK seem (to me) unplayable from early
position.  Yet, players waded in with small suited connectors, pairs
and offsuit garbage hands -- hands largely unplayable even in non-time
pot hands -- in the time pot.  
&lt;p&gt;
The inventor of the time pot is clearly a genius.  It so deviously
exploits poor, loose players, who for the most part, manage to be
completely unaware it harms them the most.  Anyone who has any idea
recognizes that a time pot heavily favours tight players, yet bad,
loose players actually like time pots as well!  The bad players argue
that you only pay time if you win a big pot, and if you do that, you
profit some substantial amount anyway, so a time pot is win-win --
either you pay time and make profit by winning the time pots, or you
do not win any hands and &#34;play for free&#34;.  Gee, that&#39;s not
results-oriented at all.  This is what is so brilliantly devious about
it -- bad players are convinced something that totally screws them is
in fact great for them!
&lt;p&gt;
Players are allowed to not participate in the time pot; to do so, a
player must merely pay his time charge to the person posting the time.
The rake from the time pots are reduced (for example, if one player
opted out of the time pot in a 10/20 game with the $5 charge, instead
of $50 owed in the two time pots, there would be $45, or two pots
where $23 and $22 are paid) for the players participating and the
player not participating in the time pot pays nothing if he wins a
large pot.  This brings up an interesting theoretical situation.
Consider the situation in which there are 10 equally tight and equally
skilled players.  If they&#39;re all doing the same thing, clearly none of
these players&#39; expectations are affected by whether collection is
taken the normal way, or via time pot.  However, if one player sits
out, this player has a distinct advantage. His opponents are trying to
play correctly taking the time pot into consideration -- i.e. very
tightly -- and this will allow the non-time pot player to steal blinds
and small pots with an excellent rate of success.  So in this case,
the equilibrium would be for no one to be involved in the time pot.
There are then two points for the game where no one holds an advantage
over anyone else (I think these are Pareto efficient points); no one
pays time, and everyone pays time.
&lt;p&gt;
In reality, however, no poker game is like this; there are tight
players and loose players.  In a semi-loose game, I&#39;m pretty sure that
it is correct for all tight players to be involved in the time pot; I
don&#39;t think a tight player can improve his position by opting to pay
time and exploiting the other tight players given the presence of even
a handful of looser players.  However, in an even somewhat tightish
game, some interesting situations are created by the time pots in
blind attack and defence situations.  If it is folded to you on the
button in a time pot, should you steal the blinds more aggressively or
passively?  The time pot dictates more passively, since there is a
prohibitive rake for breaching the trigger point.  However, the blinds
also realize this and will defend far less (at least in theory).
&lt;p&gt;
The time pot also creates some weird postflop strategy adjustments to
avoid paying time as well.  I open-raised in a 15/30 game (where the
trigger was $180 and time raked was $25/hand) with AK on the button.
The big blind called.  $70 in the middle.  The flop came K-x-x.  He
checks, I bet, he calls.  $100 in the middle.  The turn is another
rag, and he checks.  Note that if we both put in two big bets from
this point, the pot becomes $220 and thus is a time pot.  If we both
put in one big bet from this point, the pot is only $160 and does not
trigger the time pot.  Suppose the pot is $160.  Now, even assuming no
risk of being raised by a better hand, you are actually laying 6:1 to
make a value bet!  (If you make a value bet and get paid off, you win
$30, but because you triggered the time pot, you lose $25 of that for
a net of $5.)  So I check back the turn.  The river is another rag, he
checks again, I bet, he calls, I show and win a $160 pot and avoid the
time.  (In retrospect, betting the turn and checking the river might
be better, to avoid losing to a free card.  But the main point is the
absurdness of it all.)
&lt;p&gt;
Enough about that.  So any time I&#39;m on a poker trip, I always try to
play the late evening and graveyard shifts, since that&#39;s usually when
the action is.  Most casual players play the late evening, and by
graveyard everyone&#39;s stuck and tired.  So I typically plan my days to
wake up around 5:00 PM and go to bed around 9:00 AM when I play poker.
So after a brief 4.5 hour session where I made $268, I went to nap.  I
went to play again at 6:30 PM, an 11.5-hour session lasting until 6:00
AM where I make poker minimum wage of $219.  Not the most impressive
start, but at the same time, I&#39;m not stuck either.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Thursday, March 20 - early Friday, March 21&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Today, some of the ATLARGErs started to trickle in, but still, I was
playing with mostly locals and non-ARG tourists.  The first one I
recognized was Tiger123, who sat in my late evening 15/30 hold&#39;em
game. (I thought he didn&#39;t play hold&#39;em?)  The 15/30 was a good but
not great game where I made $632 in six hours; the 20/40 had two fish
but a number of solid players as well; I lost $499.  Another sub-EV
day, but again, beats being stuck.  
&lt;p&gt;
The reaction to my PokerStars t-shirt was interesting among the crowd.
When I took my last poker trip to Vegas and L.A. last April/May, the
number of people who had even *heard* of PokerStars was a minority.
This time, they all asked me how much I played at PokerStars and what
my screen name was.  When they found out I *worked* for PokerStars,
they had an endless number of the usual questions.  It was also great
to see the other ATLARGErs proudly bearing their support for
PokerStars and their sponsorship of ATLARGE.
&lt;p&gt;
I went to bed at 6:00 AM, waking up at 10:00 for the H.O.E. in the
morning.  I do not consider myself someone who does well on little
sleep (add foreshadowing music).
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Friday, March 21 - all of Saturday, March 22 (I didn&#39;t sleep any of it)&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
This was the first official ATLARGE event, the H.O.E.  I play hold&#39;em
well and O/8 passably; my leak is clearly the &#34;E&#34;, or Stud/8.  I read
the Stud/8 section of HLSFAP and the Russ post and played some online
to get myself accustomed to the fundamentals, but I still have played
less than 15 hours of Stud/8 in my life.  PokerStars added $600 to
this first event (as they did for all three tournaments), and I felt
it would seem very improper if a PokerStars employee finished in the
money, so I selflessly busted out in 50th of the 54 players.  There
were only two hands to note.  During the hold&#39;em round, I picked up AK
and open-raised from middle position.  Jerrod Ankenman 3-bet me with
AJ.  The board came down A-J-x-y-z and I was forced to call him down
and thus got in trouble very early.  Bent but not broken, in the
Stud/8 round, a queen up (the owner of which I cannot recall at this
time) completed Jeff &#34;ADB Jester&#34; Woods&#39; bring-in.  I re-raised with
(A3)A.  Jester called both raises with his deuce (!) and the queen
called.  On fourth, I have (A3)A3; Jester  caught another low card
(6?), and I dont&#39; remember what the queen caught, only that it didn&#39;t
look at all threatening.  I lead and I get called on both spots.  I
have (A3)A38 on fifth and bet again.  Jester catches a straightening
low card and calls; the queen folds.  I brick with a jack on sixth and
check to Jester&#39;s fourth low card on board; Jester checks back.  I
check again on the river, Jester bets, I call and he shows me a
straight 7 to scoop, having started with some razz-type hand and
backed into a freakish straight. :p  That pretty much does it for me
and I bust out 50th of 54 players shortly after that hand.
&lt;p&gt;
I know; I owe a buck to the pot at the next ARG event.
&lt;p&gt;
I also learned for the first time that H.O.E. is actually pronounced
&#34;hoe&#34;.  I had assumed it was called &#34;H-O-E&#34;, but &#34;hoe&#34; provides for
much better double entendres (&#34;hoe event&#34;, &#34;busting in the hoe&#34;,
&#34;where did you finish in the hoe&#34;).  If someone asks what a &#34;H.O.E.
event&#34; is, I think the explanation would be invariably disappointing.
&lt;p&gt;
The bust-out allowed me to go nap after getting very little sleep the
night before.  I woke up fresh around 5:00 and headed down to the
hospitality suite, where Matt (jacksup) is watching the college hoops
tournament.  I learn that Matt is not like most casual fans, as he is
evidently a star player at his college, which I understand is renowned
for its men&#39;s basketball program.  Matt takes a phone call from Joan
Hadley (AlwaysAware) and evidently they are both heading down to the
$120 buy-in, $100 rebuy Tropicana NLHE tournament.  I figure that
sounds like a good practice event for the ($60, no rebuy) ATLARGE NLHE
event the next morning, so I head down with Matt.  This marks the
first time that I leave the Taj property since arriving in AC.
&lt;p&gt;
The Trop&#39;s poker room is an attractive room, although a glance at the
board indicates that their mid-limit hold&#39;em game selection is a bit
lacking.  The structure of the tournament is fairly good as well.  I
take a rebuy fairly early on, after trying to run an all-in bluff
against aces full (the fish called, if you can believe it). The rebuy
was funny because I didn&#39;t realize I had to pay for the rebuy; after
playing rebuy tournaments in Costa Rica where all rebuys are done on
credit, I completely had forgotten I had to pay in actual cash!  At
the break, I have exactly the 500 in chips that I started the
tournament with, except being down a rebuy.  I rebuy again to &#34;double
through&#34;, so I&#39;m in for $320.  The rebuy takes me to an averagish
stack.
&lt;p&gt;
After the break, I double through with the powerful hand of Qd4d.
With three people limping in, I limp on the button with my monster.
The flop comes down rather unimpressively for my hand, A-Q-8 with one
diamond, but it&#39;s checked around to me and I take a free card, an
offsuit 4.  The small blind, who is *terrible* but has a huge stack,
bets out about half the pot.  It is folded around to me.  I raise
all-in (maybe 1.5x the pot).  He agonizes and calls.  He has A5 and I
dodge his redraw two pair outs to double through.  Shortly after that,
I try to steal with some crap hand and knock someone out when he
defends his blind and I suck out.  After that, I am raising nearly
everything under the sun, putting a lot of pressure on everyone.  I
get them to fold when I have nothing and get them to call when I have
big pairs.  At the second break, with blinds of (I think) 300-600 and
50 ante, I have a staggering 20,000; I nearly have the table covered
-- that is, covered *combined* -- with two tables to go.
&lt;p&gt;
After the second break, I am raising about 60% of all unopened pots.
I am taking down almost all of them uncontested.  At 14 players, I
finally get caught when I raise early with QT and ATLARGEr Rick (whose
name tag says &#34;Rick&#34;) calls all-in out of the SB with JJ.  His hand
holds up.  Rick had only about 3000 chips and someone (Matt?) notes it
&#34;barely makes a dent&#34; in my stack, and he&#39;s right; it&#39;s a sixth of my
stack at best.  However, a couple laps later on my big blind, it is
folded around to Rick who now has around 7000-8000.  He triples my
blind from the button.  I call with Ad3d. The flop comes Ac-8c-3x and
I figure if I check, an approximate pot-sized raise of his pot-sized
bet would put him all-in.  So I check-raise him all-in.  He calls,
turns over Jc9c and hits a flush on the turn.  Aces and threes again
are my undoing.  Minutes after having the entire table covered, I&#39;m
short-stacked at about 6000 chips.
&lt;p&gt;
I win a few pots to take me back to 20000 (except now this is below
par instead of way out in first) hang on to make the final table and
the money.  I haven&#39;t played a hand at the final table and I&#39;m about
7th in chips.  Rick, my nemesis, open-limps for 1000 in mid-late
position.  He has a big stack.  Normally when someone does this, guys
in the next state put the limper on aces.    But I have seen Rick do
this a couple of times with small pairs, face-face, suited connectors
and A-small hands.  So looking down on the button I find Ks7s,
although I fugre my hand is not so important.  I figure that since I
am raising a limper, the blinds will respect that and fold dutifully
without a real hand, and that Rick will fold because my read on him is
that he is not strong.  I make it 5000.  The blinds cooperate, but
Rick does not.  He calls, which am I unhappy about.  I do not put him
on a big pair though.  The flop comes down 9-6-2 with two spades.  So
even though I started with crap, I got what seems to be a good flop;
dodging all the high cards he might have and giving me a flush draw.
Rick bets 7000, I move in for about 16000 and Rick is compelled to
call with his A9.  Ugh.  Even worse, his ace is a spade, so I am
drawing to only 8 outs, and if I hit one on the turn he has a redraw.
Turn and river blank off, and I feel rather disgusted with 9th place
money of $432.
&lt;p&gt;
My rides, Joan and Matt, have ditched me, so now I am forced to endure
the agony of requiring a ride home with Rick, the man who tortured me
and robbed me of my ability to coast to a big win.  Actually, he is an
extremely nice guy, so if I had to blow off all my chips to someone in
that thing, I&#39;m quite glad it was him.  Rick finished in 3rd.  In the
interim, I played the famed $7.50/$15.00 game at the Trop.  As
advertised, the game was full of people with just absolutely no clue.
However, Jerrod soon occupies the 9 seat (I&#39;m in the 6), to
significantly change my game EV.  I decide that since this is probably
the smallest game I&#39;ll play on the trip that I will forego the EV for
some conversation that is not completely mind-numbing (as it was with
the 5 seat, an annoying loudmouth hotshot kid) and move to the 8 seat.
Jerrod has obviously put a lot of thought into game theory and poker,
and he is kind enough to explain everything to me twice and use simple
words.  I make a mental note to myself that it would be very edifying
to re-read Jerrod and Bill&#39;s [0,1] posts and put some effort into
understanding them.
&lt;p&gt;
When Rick goes out, it&#39;s back to the Taj.  Keep in mind that my
morning is now 5:00pm, so wide awake for some 2:00am (read:
mid-afternoon) poker.  Of course, the big crown jewel of the ATLARGE
event is 11:00am, so I know I can&#39;t play too late.  The plan is go to
to bed around 3-4am and wake up at 9:30 for the pre-NLHE breakfast.
That plan quickly goes to all hell as the 15/30 hold&#39;em game is
totally off the hook from 1-6am.  (Editor&#39;s Note: My usage of modern
urban slang to describe the expected win rate of a poker game is the
fault of PokerStars player &#34;Regency&#34;, a young pro lady player who used
that term during my conversation with her at the Taj to describe the
30/60 hold&#39;em game at PokerStars.)  We have a solid hour-long period
with an average pot of $600.  In one particularly memorable pot (which
I was not involved in) the pot was capped 7 ways preflop, and the
player on my immediate right -- a good player -- had QJs.  The flop
came down T-9-3.  It is capped again 6 ways, with the player on right
putting in the last raise.  The turn blanks; this time it is checked
to the nut straight and three players call.  The river is a 3.  The
player on my right bets, and tells me in a low voice he has the nuts.
An absolutely clueless guy raises.  The player to the right of nut
straight guy mentions out loud that the board paired on the river.
Nut straight guy hears this, re-checks the board, gets scared and
calls.  The clueless guy turns over A3, having invested four bets on
the flop with bottom pair, then had the audacity to raise the guy who
capped it on the flop when hitting his trip card.  Yes, it was a good
game.
&lt;p&gt;
A few fish leave and the game starts to wind down.  But by the time I
realize the game is no longer that good, it is about 7:00am.  The
problem at this point is that I would like to attend the ATLARGE
breakfast and have the NLHE tournament, and going to bed to sleep for
2 hours seems like it would do more harm than good.  So I grind out
the last two hours, then head up to the breakfast, up $468. That&#39;s
over 1.5 BB/hour, but I estimate that to be sub-EV considering the
lineup.  I think in certain games which are totally fishy, one can
make well over 2 BB and even upwards of 3 BB/hour.  The 1 BB/hour
figure that a good player is &#34;supposed&#34; to make is really just an
average of all the good and bad games you play in a year, I think.  If
you have the luxury of being game-selective, I think a 2 BB/hour long
run is doable.
&lt;p&gt;
I&#39;m fully expecting to be knocked out of the NLHE very early after
making some stupid decision or misreading my hand, since I had already
been playing poker for 16 straight hours (albeit with just one
mistake, limping in with 9s8d thinking it was 9d8d) before the first
card of the tournament is dealt.  Despite the memorability of this
event, I really can remember very little about it.  I can&#39;t remember
many interesting hands; in my sleep deprivation, I was playing on
autopilot.  I remember the table next to us busting what seemed to be
about 8 of the first 10 victims, with Sabyl taking out almost all of
them.
&lt;p&gt;
I don&#39;t remember holding a lot of cards. I definitely was able to pick
up a lot of blinds at my first table, as I was able to steal blinds
frequently on my button and SB, and got a few walks and free looks in
my big blind.  This allowed me to stay on pace for the level
increases.  
&lt;p&gt;
I remember knocking out the defending champion, Dave Fruchter and
winning the $100 black chip bounty.  I also win two bottles of upstate
New York wine.  I wish I could remember the individual who had very
generously donated these bottles, but I cannot. :(  Please post to
this thread if that is you.  I get asked a couple of times if I am
re-bountying the $100.  This seems extraordinarily -ev to me, so I
decline.  In retrospect I don&#39;t know if that was a breach of ARG
ettiquette or anything.  I hope not.  
&lt;p&gt;
At four tables, I was moved to Seat 1, with Sabyl in Seat 2, Patrick
Milligan in Seat 3 with a huge stack, and then they later would move
Bill Chen to #7 and Jerrod Ankenman to #8 with medium stacks, and thus
my easy ride picking up blinds and having my BB unchallenged was
history.
&lt;p&gt;
At two tables I bust someone (again, the memory thing) and receive a
cool 1994 BARGE chip (again, please let me know who you were).  On one
hand I do vaguely remember, I open-raise on the button with Q4s.  Both
blinds are very short stacked.  IIRC, we are playing 200/400 and I
make it around 1200.  The SB, Crunch, moves all-in for about 1800.  I
have to call with two cards.  He has AK, so I&#39;m acceptably live.  The
flop&#39;s door card and last card are both queens, and Crunch is
unhappily out.  I get a t-shirt to commemorate busting Crunch out of
ATLARGE 2003.  It is at this point that I realize I did not bring a
bust-out gift for anyone, and so I will have to win the tournament to
save face.
&lt;p&gt;
During this tournament, there is an inordinate amount of Presto.
While it&#39;s true that you have to show Presto every time you win with
it -- thus creating the impression it is showing up a lot -- there
seemed to be far more Prestos dealt than expectation.  The most
notable thing is that we all seemed to have excellent Presto
Detection, since although I remember 7-8 blind steals with Presto, I
can only remember one soul being foolish enough to challenge Presto
all-in.  I would also think that there is a weird subconscious effect
on everyone&#39;s preflop strategy going on where people were throwing
away 44, 66 and 77 in identical situations in which they raised with
Presto.
&lt;p&gt;
I arrive at the final table in seat #9 as a slightly above average
stack.  It is my great misfortune to have Jerrod with a whole crapload
of chips on my immediate left in seat #1.  Identically repeating his
H.O.E. performance from the day before, &#34;Action&#34; Bob Hwang from the #8
seat is first out of the final table, making us 8-handed for a very
long time.  We play about an hour of the most tedious no-limit hold&#39;em
the rail ever had the displeasure of viewing.  It is raise and take it
nearly every hand, with some occasional raise, re-raise and take it.
We see two flops in three half-hour rounds, and zero showdowns.
Jerrod, Brad and 8-2 Dave are the ones seeming to pick up more than
their fair share of blinds.  
&lt;p&gt;
We play some more raise and take it poker.  There is a hand that
dramatically changes the complexion of the final table.  8-2 Greg
raises UTG with an above-average stack.  Jerrod from middle position
moves all-in (his stack size is irrelevant, since he is chip leader by
a hefty margin) with AK.  Greg calls with AJ.  Neither player is
suited, but Greg miracles a flush with his ace.  Jerrod is now well
below par, and as ugly as the suckout was, I am very happy to see the
chips move from him to Greg.  
&lt;p&gt;
Finally, we get another elimination as Patrick Milligan raises from
the #4 (?) seat into me in the #9 seat with the SB holding 77.  I make
a raise slightly over the pot size, putting him all-in.  He thinks for
a while and calls.  I am ecstatic to see his 66 instead of AK/AQ.
It&#39;s all air and Patrick is done in 8th.
&lt;p&gt;
I make another kill on the very next hand, when it is folded to me in
the SB with KQ.  I make a standard raise and Jerrod moves all-in from
the BB.  I am getting over 2:1 and have to call.  He shows KT, so
again I am very lucky to have a dominating hand with someone notched
just under me.  
&lt;p&gt;
At this point, I take the chip lead as pictured in
http://ygc.collectionsoftware.com/atlarge2003/Img0591.JPG.  I am not
able to be an overly aggressive big stack unlike last night at the
Trop, as people keep moving in in front of me, or when it is unopened
in early position, I have total and utter crap that I can&#39;t even steal
with.  Andrew Richman and Jeff Calkins are gone in 6th and 5th
respectively (no hands --remember that I am at this point at HOUR 25
of continuous poker without sleep).  At four-handed, I have about 40%
of the chips, the two 82-ers, Greg and Dave have about 25% each, and
Brad Edmonds has 10%.  However, I have played a lot at other tables
with Brad and have a very high opinion of his play, so I grow
concerned because he keeps hanging around.  Dave eventually takes him
out to pull about even with me in chips.  I am stuck between the two
members of the 8-2 poker club, who seem more than willing to go to war
against one another.  After 30-45 minutes of 3-handed jousting that
accomplishes very little, Dave takes out Greg.  With that hand, he
takes a 95,000-40,000 chip lead on me with blinds of 1000-2000 (no
ante) as we start heads-up.
&lt;p&gt;
It is over on the first hand.
&lt;p&gt;
The clock has just hit Hour 26 on my poker marathon, and I make the
first decision I regret in the tournament (and second of the night).
Dave makes it 8000 on the button.  I look down to find QJ.  My first
thought is that this is a well above-average hand and could easily be
better than what Dave has.  That much was true.  In the heat of the
moment, I thought that my best play was to re-raise all-in, since that
would only be a slight overbet of the pot.  I seriously underestimated
the play remaining; I could have just called to see the flop.  I also
knew that Dave was not someone who would keep firing chips if the flop
missed him, meaning that I had a good advantage over him knowing where
he was.  Perhaps I am being results-oriented, but I feel I should have
tried to play a multiple street game instead of moving all-in, which
is what I did.  Dave thought it over but called fairly quickly with
KJ, and won.  Congrats to him on a really great tournament; I truly
think he played well and is a worthy champion.  That does not mean I
am not incredibly pissed off at myself.  I wandered around the room
for a while, talking to myself saying that I didn&#39;t have to move in on
him.  I&#39;m a good enough heads-up player and with money left to play,
calling to see the flop was clearly the play.  It takes only one
mistake to ruin a well-played NLHE tournament.  In reality, my mistake
(if in fact a mistake) was not all that large in terms of just raw EV
against the distribution of possible hands for him, because at these
blind sizes, moving in with any decent hand is very rarely a bad play,
but I was in a situation where I was probably the better
multiple-street player (although not necessarily) and instead chose to
gamble.  That is where the mistake was made.  I was very upset at
myself and if you were one of the many people who came to me with your
heartfelt congratulations and I accepted them with a very cool
reception, I apologize for that.
&lt;p&gt;
Jester gave me the second place added money from PokerStars, but
collecting the actual second-place money from the Taj was a
bureaucratic mess of forms.  I can see now why that poker players
greatly prefer tournaments that don&#39;t issue tax forms.  I took a $400
bad beat with the 30% tax taken out of my winnings, effectively
winning 3rd place money for finishing 2nd.  
&lt;p&gt;
Reeling from my defeat, I stumbled into the ATLARGE banquet.  It was a
table with some tough players.  Matt, ADB Fich, Jerrod, Sabyl, Bill
Chen and Jester are at the table, although I can&#39;t remember the
specific seat assignments.  Despite this tough draw, I am easily able
to spot the fish, as I think everyone ordered the sea bass. I am
actually misdealt sea bass despite ordering steak, but it&#39;s a very
minor beat.  The slightly bigger beat is that for lasting to get
heads-up in the NLHE event, the open bar that was made available is
now closed.
&lt;p&gt;
After dinner, we all walked down to the poker room.  I think Jerrod,
Sabyl and Bill wanted to start the 5-5 PL, so I knew it&#39;d be a soft
game (cough).  However, I was now in Hour 27.  I was actually tempted
to sit and play limit hold&#39;em, as I literally can do that in my sleep.
But my brain finally figured out that it was time to make the
conscious decision to shut down.
&lt;p&gt;
So I went and took a two-hour nap.
&lt;p&gt;
I came back down at 1:00am in a good 15/30 hold&#39;em game where the only
downsides were playing with &#34;Buckshot&#34; Stephen B. and ActionBob (yes,
that nickname is a reverse tell, btw).  These guys play g00t, but the
other fish were more than plenty bad to make up for their presence.
I&#39;m up $1191 when I notice Buckshot and ActionBob are dropping down to
the 10/20.  They graciously tell me it&#39;s a great game (or maybe that
it will be a great game if I show up).  It ends up being a pretty good
game, but I lose $299.  At some point, ActionBob moved back to the
15/30 (hmmm...was it just a ploy to get me out of the game...?).  He
late came over to my table and asked me if I ever slept.  I responded,
&#34;I *was* sleeping&#34;.  I&#39;d fallen asleep on the flop and ActionBob had
startled me back into the conscious world just as a bet was being made
on the river.
&lt;p&gt;
I decided then to take my $900 and get some real sleep, the kind you
get in a bed. 
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Sunday, March 23&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
I didn&#39;t pre-register for the Stud event, but nevertheless I woke up
at 10:30 to rush down to see if late registration was still available.
It looked like I was out of luck, until it was realized that Jerry
Gerner was not able to make it, so I took his seat.  (Jerry, if you
are reading this post, I owe you $75.  Please e-mail me; I have
e-mailed you with no response.)  I have played less than 5 hours of
Stud in my life.  Ignorance being bliss, I thought I actually played
rather well.  However, my only mistake my have cost me any chance of
winning.  The bring-in is folded around to me, and I have split aces.
I raise and Patrick calls with a 4 up, all others fold.  I catch air
and Patrick catches ostensible air as well, a 10.  I bet and he calls.
On fifth, he pairs his 10 and bets out.  I estimate from there that if
I call him down, I will be nearly busted if I lose (I thought the
limits rose *very* quickly in this tournament).  Patrick is one of
these guys who handles his upcards very neatly, and for a moment
--**and through absolutely no fault of his** -- I thought the first 10
was his doorcard.  That induced me to fold, but immediately after
folding, I looked again and saw his board was 4-T-T, not T-4-T.  Now,
he probably had two pair, but my aces have plenty of odds to chase two
pair.  I am a dog anyway, but by folding there incorrectly, I was
nearly crippled.  I busted out just as two-table play started, when I
had the bring-in almost all-in with (84)3 and was busted by someone
(names again) making a full house in five cards for complete and utter
overkill.
&lt;p&gt;
I go and play some 10/20, which for the absolute first time is not a
completely easy lineup.  I have Arty Santella and Chris O&#39;Connor and
some other people who know what they&#39;re doing.  I transfer to the
20/40, and it is one of the absolute best 20/40s I&#39;ve ever played.
The bad players were bitching about the worse players, which I found
hilarious.  There was only one other guy in this game with a clue.  A
huge pot was dragged at one point by 93s limping UTG on a hand that
was subsequently 3-bet behind him.  On one hand, I get a free ride
with K3 in the big blind.  The flop comes down K-8-6.  I bet and get
called only by the small blind.  The turn is a 3, making me kings up.
The SB checks, I bet, and he raises.  I re-raise and he 4-bets!  Now I
am scared he slowplayed a set of 8s or 6s and of course just call.
The river is another king!  He checks and calls, turning over AK.
Basically, he managed to play each street wrong.  
&lt;p&gt;
As I&#39;m playing this game, the stud tournament is playing out the final
table, with the requisite cheering every time someone busts out.  The
locals in the 20/40 game have no idea what to think.  They all seem to
think perhaps that we&#39;re razzing the bust-out.  I hear them talking
about the pink game that went the other night and how it must suck to
play so few hands per hour.  They think we&#39;re insane.  Here&#39;s what I
think:  I think we&#39;re the only fucking people in the place that know
how to have fun playing poker.  The rest of them are miserable SOBs
who play this game because they have no other hobbies, social lives,
or redeeming abilities.  They bitch at suckouts, they bitch at
dealers, they bitch about everything.  It should come as no surprise
that a group like this should find the ATLARGErs so distasteful; the
ATLARGErs are actually in a poker room having a good time!  The nerve!
&lt;p&gt;
Anyway, I beat the miserable fishy SOBs for $708 when Joan informs me
there is an impromptu dinner.  I love taking money from these terrible
players, but I love the company of RGPers too.  We go to a restaurant
that seems way too classy for me.  We all have a good time laughing
about the menu, which is just beautifully pretensious.   The menu
informs that there is a $12 (!)charge for sharing plates.  It also
says, &#34;to preserve the integrity of the chef&#39;s creations, please, no
substitutions&#34;.  (I wonder momentarily whether this is just some
protective measure against someone like, ordering ham and asking it to
be substituted with lobster, but then I realize I&#39;m actually in a
classy restaurant where people probably don&#39;t do stuff like that.)
&lt;p&gt;
The food is good (presumably due to the integrity of the chef&#39;s
creation being preserved) albeit damn expensive for a cheap bastard
like me.  However, what I lose in differential between the cost of
this nice expensive meal and a ham/turkey sandwich from the snack bar
at the Taj, I gain in quality conversation.  My proudest moment in the
weekend was not 2nd place in NLHE but answering a stud question that
had been puzzling Bill Chen (note that I was up to 8 hours of stud
experience by that point).   I visited the grand house of our
illustrious ATLARGE organizer, Stevan Goldman, which actually served
as the poker compound for Bill, Sabyl, Matt, Patrick, and Arty.
&lt;p&gt;
After lost dinner EV, I went back to the Taj 20/40 hold&#39;em, which was
then officially the best 20/40 I had ever played in.  Very few 3/6
games are so loose-passive.  Three players seemed very inexperienced;
one was cited for a string raise and was very close to being cited on
a number of occasions; others showed their inexperience by handling
cards and chips poorly, never seeming to know when its their turn,
calling with A-rag, and the typical newbie stuff).  Four players were
experienced but very bad.  One player, a lady on my immediate left,
played well, but she was constantly walking.  One guy was not
terrible.  And me; clowns to the left of me and jokers to the right.
&lt;p&gt;
How good was the game?  I won an $880 pot with an unimproved KK with
an ace on the flop.  It was limped by five players to me on the button
with KK.  I raise, both blinds call, and 2 off the button says, &#34;build
the pot&#34; and re-raises. I  cap, only the BB drops.  Seven of us for a
cap, 30 bets in the pot.  The flop comes A-8-3.  I start to feel my
stomach turn.  It is checked around to me,  I throw in my &#34;I know I&#39;m
way behind, but I&#39;m willing to take the 30:1 odds that I can win this&#34;
bet.  One folds so there are only 6 players left to see the turn.  The
turn is a J.  It is checked around to an absolutely terrible player on
my immediate right who bets.  There is $760 in this pot.  If I can
raise and check down the river, my effective odds are 800:80.  I am
probably beat, but for the small chance he is betting less than an ace
into me, I must raise.  This flashes through my mind very quickly, and
I raise very quickly to represent trip aces.  All fold but the bettor
who calls.  The river is another 8, so as I&#39;m thinking I&#39;m now also
screwed if he was semibluffing an 8, he checks.  I am happy to check
back.
&lt;p&gt;
&#34;Two pair,&#34; he says.  
&lt;p&gt;
&#34;Which two?&#34;
&lt;p&gt;
He looks downcast.  A glimmer of hope arises in me.  I table the
kings.  He bitches about getting counterfeited by the 8 (you know what
that necessarily makes his hand, right?) and mucks.  Someone over in
middle position slams his fist into the table, saying my raise on the
turn made him fold 87.  I feel good and proud, strong enough to take
on the world.  Some may call this results-oriented; I call it,
&#34;another example of do whatever the hell you can to win when the pot
is gi-freaking-gantic&#34;.
&lt;p&gt;
Let&#39;s view this hand from another perspective: the pot was capped
7-ways preflop and no one had an ace (the BB who folded to my cap --
one of the three non-horrible players in the game -- claimed to have
had one).
&lt;p&gt;
After what had been a terrible start to the session, I pull from $300
in the hole to +$400.  I win a few more, then take a few inevitable
loose-game beats, to book a $406 win in 4.5 hours.  Now that&#39;s well
over 2 BB/hour, but again, I&#39;m arrogant enough to think that variance
actually was unkind to me; that my EV was in fact higher.  I will be
struck dead by the poker gods, I&#39;m sure.  I am getting a ride with
Goldie and Patrick to the airport early tomorrow (this) morning, so I
head back to my room after the fish start getting replaced by decent
players, pack and grab a quick nap.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;General observations on the Taj:&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;I found the games were generally very passive, far different than
equivalent hold&#39;em played in either LA or Vegas.  Flush draws
frequently check-called instead of betting or jamming for value.  Very
little semibluff raise on the turn -- epidemic among Vegas regulars.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Overall I felt dealers were good and efficient, with few weak spots.
There were a couple of dealers who had lousy attitudes, even they
tended to be efficient, at least.  For this, I toked them despite my
better judgment.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;li&gt;The ATLARGE tournaments were well-run and I thought the tournament
staff were quite friendly and efficient.
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;li&gt;Drink service is the worst I have ever seen in any poker room.  A
local player told me that the waitresses evidently feel the poker
players don&#39;t take care of them well enough.  I&#39;m sure that poker room
waitresses make less than say, those serving high-limit baccarat, but
I imagine they do better than those at the slots.  But regardless,
their income is linearly correlated with the number of drinks they
serve, and so it&#39;s completely ridiculous for them to be out once an
hour to serve drinks and take orders.
&lt;/ul&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;5-day poker totals:&lt;/b&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Ring:&lt;/b&gt; +$3040, 50 hours, $60.80/hour&lt;br&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Tournament:&lt;/b&gt; $545 in buy-ins/tokes, $2046 in winnings, +$1501, 18 hours, $83.39/hour&lt;br&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Total:&lt;/b&gt; +$4541, 68 hours, $66.78/hour&lt;br&gt;
&lt;b&gt;Sleep:&lt;/b&gt; $0, 24 hours, $0.00/hour.  Sleep is overrated!
&lt;p&gt;
It&#39;s always nice to book a winning trip, of course, but I&#39;m sure I&#39;d
have had fun no matter what the results.  It was absolutely great to
be able to meet the men and women behind the screen names.  My
sincerest gratitude in particular to goldie, for doing a great job as
organizer and for the lift to the airport; and to Tina, Joan, Matt and
Rick who generously provided various ground transportation on the rare
occasions I wasn&#39;t in the Taj poker room.  With all impartiality,
thanks of course to PokerStars, as well as the Taj.
&lt;p&gt;
Hope to see you all at my first BARGE.   
&lt;p&gt;
&lt;pre&gt;-- 
Terrence Chan
http://www.sfu.ca/~tchand/ 
&lt;/pre&gt;</description>
    </item>
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