Saturday, December 31, 2011

2011 Review - Weathering the Storm

In 2009, the thing I remember most regarding my poker career is busting my ass in my successful pursuit of SNE. 2010 is most memorable to me for the live events I was able to play due to my SNE status earned the year before. Unfortunately, I get the feeling I will remember two things about 2011: Black Friday, and the current Pokerstars VPP distribution issue.

That isn't to say 2011 was a bad year for me, though it most definitely was a terrible year for online poker. I put in less hands than in 2010, though this was mostly due to cutting tables due to game quality. I probably put in a few less hours in total, though I get the feeling there wasn't a huge disparity in that regard.

On the bright side, my winrate was significantly higher in 2011 than in 2010 or 2009. In the 1.2 million hands I played, I took more off the tables than in the 1.5 million I played last year, and only $80 (lol) less than in the 2.5 million hands I played to get SNE in 2009. I ran decently on the year overall compared to the two previous, with the best aspect of my variance being that my runbad more often than not came at 100NL and 200NL while in the small sample of hands I put in at 400NL+ I ran fine. I think my results really improved when I started accepting that cutting tables wasn't the end of world, which came in September. Since September 1st, over 400k hands my winrate has been 3.81ptBB/100, which is pretty nuts - I'm below AIEV in this sample also, though that wouldn't surprise anyone. Hopefully I can continue to crush in 2012, as a huge chunk of my rakeback is being taken away by Stars so table winnings are going to be front and center.

Reasonably sexy graph:


One of these years I really need to crack 100k table winnings, just because. Breakdown of winnings below:


The bottom line, month to month style:
January - $10,033.32
February - $7403.85
March - $10,418.20
April - $15,940.70
May - $14,538.19
June - $1848.83
July - $11,092.13
A&S - $18,207.70
October - $11,742.25
November - $17,176.61
December - $19,360.69
-----------------------------------------------
$137,762.47 total profit.

I'm feeling pretty good about the year, though that's mostly because I finished so strong from September through the present. Hopefully online poker has a better year in 2012. If the US doesn't mess up their regulations, FTP relaunches, and Stars gets its shit together, good things could happen. The realist in me doubts more than one of those three things will actually happen though (I think FTP relaunching is more likely than the others), and things could definitely get worse.

December Review - Getting Down To Business

In December I had a concrete goal for the month for the first time since 2009 - grind out 46k VPPs to hit the 500k milestone. Given my volume of late, this was something of a non-trivial challenge from a lazy standpoint. During my "perfect" November, I put in 114 hours of poker. In December, that number jumped to 140. I think in the future I'd like to be closer to the latter on the monthly basis, though maybe the magic number is around 130.

As I mentioned in my last post game quality was very good, exceptional even during the last 10 days or so. Unfortunately I ran a little on the bad side, in both AIEV and getting coolered etc. The improved fish:reg ratio definitely helped my winrate however, and though I think I was playing a little better in November overall, I'm really happy with where my game is at the moment. Over my last 500k hands I've been winning at 3.5ptBB/100. Did I get sent back into 2008?

Early on in the month I was lucky enough to be dealt into a milestone hand, and even luckier to bink a river 2 outer to win it! Add to that cashing in a freeroll I did not even play in for $30 (unlike many of the people sitting out and being blinded off in said event, I knew when it was, I just couldn't be bothered), and I had a little unexpected profit.



The bottom line:
$13,032.62 table winnings
+$2578.07 FPP value (46,037 VPPs * 3.5 FPPs/VPP * 1.6c/FPP)
+$3200 500k VPP milestone bonus
+$520 milestone hand #71911000000
+$30 10th anniversary freeroll
---------------------------------------
$19,360.69 total profit.

My best month of the year in terms of total profit, though November still takes the cake for table winnings/winrate. I'm happy I was able to plan out a schedule for myself to put in a little heavier volume in what was a busy December outside of poker. Hopefully the work ethic carries over some in 2012.

Friday, December 30, 2011

Bright Side

While it is tough to get past the Pokerstars VIP changes (which stand to cost me personally ~12-15k next year if there is not compensation added), I am very happy with how the game quality has been over the past two weeks or so, particularly the last 7 days. Typically late December is the worst time of the year for game quality, as people scramble to finish up SNE/milestones. This year however, Black Friday crushed the dreams of many early on, and I get the feeling the fantastic fish:reg ratio of late has been caused more than anything by US regs either going home for the holidays or having used up their 6 months in Canada.

The result of this is that I'm having a very successful month at the tables in terms of winrate, despite running somewhat poorly.

Case in point, when someone has outs to having one out I'm in trouble at my normal stakes:

PokerStars No-Limit Hold'em, $1.00 BB (8 handed)
UTG+1 ($100)
MP1 ($40.90)
MP2 ($100.80)
CO ($100)
Button ($67.45)
SB ($39.90)
Hero (BB) ($105.15)
UTG ($100)

Preflop: Hero is BB with 5♣, 5♥
5 folds, Button calls $1, 1 fold, Hero checks

Flop: ($2.50) 9♦, 3♣, 5♦ (2 players)
Hero bets $2, Button calls $2

Turn: ($6.50) 3♥ (2 players)
Hero bets $6, Button raises to $16, Hero raises to $26, Button calls $10

River: ($58.50) 3♠ (2 players)
Hero bets $65.50, Button calls $38.45 (All-In)

Total pot: $135.40 | Rake: $3

Results:
Button had K♠, 3♦ (four of a kind, threes).
Hero had 5♣, 5♥ (full house, fives over threes).
Outcome: Button won $132.40


Fortunately for me, at midstakes I can occasionally fade bare backdoors. Pretty much the story of my year.

PokerStars No-Limit Hold'em, $6.00 BB (8 handed)
Hero (SB) ($600)
BB ($279)
UTG ($276)
UTG+1 ($526.25)
MP1 ($600)
MP2 ($711)
CO ($600)
Button ($240)

Preflop: Hero is SB with K♣, A♦
UTG calls $6, UTG+1 bets $12, MP1 calls $12, 3 folds, Hero raises to $72, 2 folds, UTG+1 calls $60, 1 fold

Flop: ($168) 6♠, A♥, 6♥ (2 players)
Hero bets $117, UTG+1 raises to $454.25 (All-In), Hero calls $337.25

Turn: ($1076.50) A♣ (2 players, 1 all-in)

River: ($1076.50) Q♣ (2 players, 1 all-in)

Total pot: $1076.50 | Rake: $3

Results:
Hero had K♣, A♦ (full house, Aces over sixes).
UTG+1 had 7♠, Q♥ (two pair, Aces and Queens).
Outcome: Hero won $1073.50

I've got another 1.4k VPPs to grind for my 500k milestone bonus. I'll put in another short session tonight then finish things off tomorrow afternoon. Expect my December Review and then Yearly Review shortly.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Monopoly

Edit: As of today Pokerstars announced that in response to player outcry they will be removing the rake changes but keeping the VPP distribution change to WC. Yes, this means that after them essentially saying "we're going to take back 25-50% of your rakeback but give you ~5% less rake" their answer to appease the player backlash is to cancel the 5% less rake. I have absolutely no faith that Pokerstars is being run by anyone remotely competent in light of this. At this point, things have just become insulting.

Good things very rarely come of one organization monopolizing a given space. Pokerstars is coming very close to having a true monopoly in the online poker world following after the demises of FTP and UB/AP.

Even before their most significant competitor blew itself up due to mismanagement of epic proportions, Pokerstars started pushing the envelope a bit to see what it could get away with in terms of reducing the effective rakeback of its high volume grinders. The VPP changes of 2010 are a prime example, and post Black Friday, the SNG rake changes.

Today, Pokerstars announced its VIP program changes for the new year. Without going into detail (which can be found many other places, 2p2 especially), in moving from a "dealt" to "weighted-contributed" distribution model for VPPs they will be reducing the effective rakeback (and thus bottom line) of nearly every single non-recreational player who primarily plays 6max or FR NLH (and likely PLO as well). While the VPP changes of 2010 may have given us FR grinders a ~5-10% hit in this regard, the changes set to go live in four days time appear to be reducing the effective rakeback of a typical grinder in my games by 20-50%. Pokerstars emphasizes that the VPPs being taken from said players will be given to the looser recreational players in the games. While this is the case, what they do not mention is that these players are almost all between Bronze to Gold Star VIP status, thus earning far less FPPs than the grinders who are basically all Supernova or SNE with large modifiers. Pokerstars then pockets the difference, which will end up being a hell of a lot of money. I must also add that their rake calculation model is being changed as well at some stakes, with it decreasing a little at micro and small stakes. Based on early number crunching it looks like this may reduce the total amount of rake paid by a FR player by ~5% at small stakes, which is not trivial but does not come close to making up for the money heading the other way.

What bugs me the most is how deceptively worded the announcement was. Additionally, Stars made said announcement 4 days before the start of the new year - this is not adequate warning. Finally, in the announcemnt they addressed why they chose not to instead go to a WTA (winner take all) model which would have made less of an impact on the bottom lines of their high volume players. They stated that these people would not appreciate the "VPP variance" associated with such a model. This is a flat out lie, and there is absolutely no way anyone with a reasonable grasp of the situation would think otherwise. Every single one of said players would prefer a WTA model, as you would be taking significantly less money from them.

I understand that Pokerstars is a business, and they have every right to do what they are if they think it will improve their bottom line. My personal feeling is that they believe when regulation in the US and potentially other countries occurs, their market share is going to be reduced significantly and are trying to make as much as they can now before that day comes. I fear this approach may be significantly short sighted.

In response, players are planning to mass sit out on January first, blocking games from running and cutting into Pokerstars' bottom line. I expect any response to this will be a concession that Stars has already planned in order to save some face, as they could not possibly expect to make changes like this without severe backlash from their player base.



The upside for myself personally is that the state of the games lately has made it more profitable for me to focus on playing less tables (typically the 12-16 range) to maximize winrate. These last couple months, 75%+ of my profit has been from table winnings alone. While I will be punished for being on the tighter side, I go to showdown a lot more and 3b less than many regulars, which should help under the new system. Some regs who play significantly looser than I do may actually be hurt proportionally more by the changes due to their preflop tendencies. We'll have to wait and see I suppose. If things don't change, maybe I'll be motivated to deposit a bankroll on some softer Euro sites and mix volume there.

Saturday, December 24, 2011

An Early Present

Poker since the comeback featured in the my last update has been relatively uneventful, which isn't necessarily a bad thing.

The Flames beat the Canucks in Vancouver tonight and played a hell of a game, dominating the bulk of it. Even better, we started our backup goaltender who going into the season was #3 on the depth chart (Henrik Karlsson, our #2 up until this point blew out his knee a few weeks ago). Irving has played exceptionally well in his first two NHL starts, and getting his first win against our most hated rival has got to be one heck of an experience. The game as a whole was also an awesome early Christmas present to all Flames fans!

I finished up my run through of FFT: War of the Lions for the PSP. It is my second time through that particular version of the game (probably 5th or so total), and while I tend to forget how long it ends up being when you want to unlock all the classes and get all the best equipment, it is always a thoroughly enjoyable experience. The PSP version of it really has been a godsend, as it gave Square a chance to re-translate a gem that in its original form suffered from a downright heinous localization. This got me to thinking, I'd really love to see Final Fantasy 7, Xenogears, and Lunar 2 Eternal Blue remade - the first because the first gen 3d graphics are tough to stomach, the second because they ended up having to rush through the story in the second half of the game due to budget, and the third simply because it is the second entry in a series in which the first game has been remade twice in the last ~8 years with the second being skipped though no less a gem. Perhaps one day I'll get my wish!

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Epic Comeback

After a moderately successful Friday in which I picked up ~$1k off the tables, Saturday began with one of my worst single day downswings ever in only 1.5k hands. As you might imagine it took an absolutely ridiculous combination of suckouts and coolers to make it happen.

Luckily enough, there were enough whales at midstakes the rest of the day that I managed what I believe is my largest completed "comeback" of my poker career, from ~$1.65k stuck to positive. It's hard to feel too bad about that. Say what you want about game quality these days - it may be tough to get a lot of good tables open, but the true maniac whales do still show up.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Threeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!!!!!!!!!!

On Thursday I ran into the most heinous variance I've been hit with in a long time. It's been ages since I've been one outed three times in a session, and the fun didn't come close to stopping there.

On Friday I started the day behind a quick $600 in AIEV, but as the grind wound on I managed to get myself over $1k table winnings. It was near that point that I was dealt into another milestone hand (my fourth, or maybe fifth all time - I can never remember). Unfortunately for me my Ax hand was very much dominated in the four way all-in, but I binked the river two outer to ship the pot plus double my prize to $520. In total with the $338.30 pot after rake, the river bink was worth $598.30 to me, not bad given the hand was dealt at 100NL at a table which had just started a few hands ago and thus suffered from a low VPP count over the last 50 hands. All in all it ending up being an extremely profitable day, which was quite refreshing after Thursday.

Here's the HH:
PokerStars No-Limit Hold'em, $1.00 BB (4 handed)
UTG ($40.30)
Button ($100)
Hero (SB) ($104.70)
BB ($100)

Preflop: Hero is SB with A♥, 3♦
UTG bets $3, Button raises to $100 (All-In), Hero raises to $104.70 (All-In), BB calls $99 (All-In), UTG calls $37.30 (All-In)

Flop: ($340.30) 8♦, 2♣, 3♣ (4 players, 4 all-in)

Turn: ($340.30) 7♥ (4 players, 4 all-in)

River: ($340.30) 3♥ (4 players, 4 all-in)

Total pot: $340.30 | Rake: $2

Results:
Button had 4♣, 10♠ (one pair, threes).
Hero had A♥, 3♦ (three of a kind, threes).
BB had 8♣, A♦ (two pair, eights and threes).
UTG had Q♣, A♠ (one pair, threes).
Outcome: Hero won $338.30

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Three Way Tie

To kick off December I've been grinding hard, putting in 8 hours on Thursday, 11 on Friday and another 8 on Saturday. Hands/hour and VPP/hour rates are unfortunately still very low like last month, and as a result I've been mixing in some 6-max games to help things.

I ran into some pretty awful variance on Thursday, and though I was stuck as much as $800 at one point in the session I managed to recover and book a modest win. My luck turned on Friday, in which my 11 hours of determined grinding resulted in another $2.2k table winnings day, which enters into a three way tie with a Friday from last month and a Saturday from January 2010 as my "best day ever". Sort of strange how $2.2k seems to be my magic number.

On Saturday I had a respectable showing though nothing compared to Friday. I did manage to stack both Dante63s and Ljuti_Gusar in the same day, which is something of an accomplishment as they are two of the better 100NL regulars. The hand against the latter was boring, but versus the former I think is really interesting and was spewy on both our parts, particularly my flop float and his turn play.

PokerStars No-Limit Hold'em, $1.00 BB (9 handed)
Hero (BB) ($100)
UTG ($100)
UTG+1 ($54.50)
MP1 ($100)
MP2 ($105)
MP3 ($102.65)
CO ($197)
Button ($75)
SB ($45)

Preflop: Hero is BB with Q♠, A♠
4 folds, MP3 bets $3, 3 folds, Hero calls $2

Flop: ($6.50) K♠, 9♦, 3♥ (2 players)
Hero checks, MP3 bets $4, Hero calls $4

Turn: ($14.50) Q♦ (2 players)
Hero checks, MP3 bets $10, Hero raises to $30, MP3 calls $20

River: ($74.50) 4♣ (2 players)
Hero checks, MP3 bets $65.65 (All-In), Hero calls $63 (All-In)

Total pot: $200.50 | Rake: $3

Results:
Hero had Q♠, A♠ (one pair, Queens).
MP3 had 9♣, A♣ (one pair, nines).
Outcome: Hero won $197.50