Friday, July 31, 2009

Feeble Cerebral

The promised 'pissy swipe' post is coming, but for now something brief just to make sure I get into the habit of updating this thing regularly.

I'm an NFL nut (and gambler) and here and there I've seen new Detroit Lions coach Jim Schwartz described as 'cerebral'. Then I read this quote from him: "If I find an author - David Morrell, Mario Puzo, John Grisham or any guy I hear is good - I'll read everything he did. I don't read books by women. I've tried to, but their perspective is different, so I stick with what I like."

Still, he may indeed be cerebral within the ranks of NFL head coaches.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Guess Who's Back

After a ridiculous hiatus, 89TJ is back.

I can't decide whether to do some kind of catch-up post or just let stuff filter through over time. I do know that this post will just be a rather shapeless piece of shit, but don't worry I will get back on form soon enough. I guess I missed the boat in terms of parlaying this blog into a life of 'freelance writing for the gaming industry' as so many of the old favourite bloggers seem to have done.

I now live in the States, which for a poker player snd sports bettor obviouslyabsolutelytotallyandcompletely sucks. I will never, ever get my head round how this nauseatingly self-proclaimed land of freedom will happily allow my greencarded ass to buy a gun but not to play online poker nor stick a few dollars on the Miami Dolphins to come crashing down to earth repeatedly this season.

Of course, I still do both these things anyway so why don't I just shut up and move to Russia or something, eh? Actually I like America a lot more than I expected, but this peculiar, mentally-ill-seeming attitude to gambling is one of the things I can't come to terms with at all.

Until recently I've been mired in poker mediocrity since I last wrote here in 2006. Different sites, different games, same array of false dawns and a general run of more or less break-even hell. Thankfully it hasn't been that important.

What has energised me to boot 'Double Through' up again is a move into playing almost exclusively in LOLdonkaments. I read the best poker book ever written recently and it has simply transformed my tournament game. I can't play in many proper full-on tourneys as I simply don't have the opportunity to sit four or five hours very often, so I'm generally playing two- or three-table sit and goes. I'm up around 40 percent ROI without running amazingly good or anything, which is very acceptable indeed in my eyes. A move up in stakes should be in the offing, but I'm not rushing anything.

Tonight I played a 45-seater, 27-seater and 18-seater. 20th in the 45-seater, where a 60% shot went down instead of putting me 9th in chips. A nicely-played 1st in the 18-seater. And - since it wouldn't be 'Double Through' without bad beat whining - an absolutely sickening cash in 4th place in the 27-seater. Four left, I get all-in on the flop versus a shortie and a guy with 400 chips more than me. I'm 86% favourite with top two pair only for the other two to share an unlikely runner-runner straight. Win the hand and I take the chip lead with three left and the third guy having less than 1BB. Monstrously profitable situation in theory, irritating mini-cash in practice.

I take these things a lot better now, though. I could say it's maturity, meditation, perspective, whatever, but really it's because I am winning hand over fist.

I read this entire blog from start to finish a few days ago (when I decided to resurrect it) and I have to say it was damn good. It made me laugh repeatedly and also made sense of something my wife said to me recently... I have a peculiarly strong affection for the erstwhile Ted Danson sitcom 'Becker', and when I wondered out loud why this should be the case, my wife pissed herself laughing and said "It's because you are Becker!". I couldn't see it at all, but re-reading some of my stuff here I had to reluctantly concede she has a point.

I'll be treading that path again in my next entry where I'll be taking a pissy shot at Patri Friedman (even though I really do enjoy his blog).