Archive for February, 2009

Full House in Las Vegas at the WSOP Cash Academy

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

This past weekend I was the lead instructor at the second ever WSOP Cash Academy. What a great weekend! There was a huge turnout and the students scored high on their poker IQ tests.

Jeff Haney from the Las Vegas Sun attended the two day event and wrote about his experience in this article Like war games, but for poker.

In the dealer’s perch for once, rather than in his familiar position in a player’s seat, Mark Seif was shuffling a deck of cards and holding court at a poker table in a Caesars Palace ballroom.

One of the participants in last weekend’s World Series of Poker Academy, a two-day instructional camp focusing on no-limit Texas hold ’em cash games, had just asked about the possibility of learning optimal strategy through a chart listing which starting hands to play from various positions.

The essence of Seif’s reply: It wouldn’t work in no-limit hold ’em. Although such charts are commonly used in teaching limit hold ’em, the no-limit version of the game contains many more nuances, rendering the by-the-number, chart-based approach ineffective.

Here’s a more powerful technique, Seif explained as he dealt the next hand. The “live hand demonstration” portion of the poker academy allows the participants to play out sample hands just as they would in a live cash game, and provides for a dissection of the action afterward that touches on important facets of poker theory.

Seif was one of four poker professionals serving as instructors for the latest World Series of Poker Academy, along with Alex Outhred, Mark Gregorich and Michael Gracz. This was only the second camp — and the first in Las Vegas — to focus on Texas hold ’em cash games rather than tournaments, and it drew more than 50 participants. The cost was $1,899 — typical for the seminars, which regularly sell out.

The students arrived with varying levels of talent and experience but with a similar goal: to sharpen their skills and ultimately make more money in no-limit cash poker games.

In the ensuing sample hand dealt by Seif, the flop revealed two 3s and a 10. Two players went to war, and it turned out one guy was holding pocket aces against his opponent’s pocket 4s.

Seif’s postmortem of the hand was illuminating. He had no problem with the pocket 4s raising the aces’ postflop bet. After all, that flop probably missed a lot of hands. But Seif did take issue with the 4s calling after the guy with aces thought about it for half a second before re-raising all-in.

One table over, Outhred was analyzing a hand he had just dealt. It was fine for a limper to enter the pot with pocket 6s, although a case could also be made for raising in that spot. Raising from the position of one behind the button with king-8 suited? Well, it’s not a play Outhred would normally make, though he seemed satisfied with the player’s explanation that she sensed weakness from her opponent and figured she could take the pot down right there. Calling that raise on the button with ace-5 offsuit, however, was a mistake, Outhred said. It’s a hand that can run into all sorts of trouble if an ace happens to flop.

“It’s OK,” Outhred said. “That’s why we’re here, to talk about this stuff.”

Sunday’s session concluded with a discussion of all 30 hands in a tough test of no-limit hold ’em play all of the participants took on a computer. The pro instructors as well as the students often disagreed among themselves on the correct course of action on certain hands. Seif, a former prosecutor for the district attorney’s office in Los Angeles, demanded logically coherent explanations rather than just “right” answers to the problems.

Overall, the participants’ scores on the test were substantially higher here at Caesars than they were at the first cash game academy last month in Atlantic City, Seif said.

In fact, in Seif’s estimation at the conclusion of the camp, 90 percent of those in the room were already better than 90 percent of the players in a typical $2-$5 no-limit hold ’em game on the Strip.

After two days of detailed, hard-core poker teaching, Seif and his colleagues wrapped up the camp with some more far-reaching advice.

“Always be a student,” he said. “The game is changing at this moment.”

How you act at a poker table, Outhred said, can be seen as a microcosm of how you deal with other people in society at large.

“The better you get, the more ‘bad beats’ you’re going to take,” Outhred said. “There’s no point in getting grumpy. Don’t let that happen to you. Enjoy yourself, challenge yourself. If you enjoy this game and you enjoy making the best decisions you can, the ‘bad beats’ and the ugly stuff won’t really matter.”

3rd Annual Memorial Poker Classic Charity Tournament Benefiting the Fallen Heroes Fund

Thursday, February 5th, 2009
Fallen Heroes LA

Fallen Heroes LA

For the past 3 years the poker industry has supported the Memorial Poker Classic benefiting the Fallen Heroes Fund charity. The Fallen Heroes Fund, Inc. is a non-profit organization that was founded in 2007 to help provide financial support for the families of law enforcement officers who have lost a loved one while on duty. To date, the Memorial Poker Classic tournament has raised more than $50,000.

The 20010 Memorial Poker Classic takes place on February 19, 2010,  at The Bicycle Casino. I’ll be co-hosting this tournament alongside James Woods and will be joined by some of the top poker professionals such as Chad Brown, Nam Le, J.C. Tran and many more!

Steven Murphy of CardPlayer just published a great article on the event to read the article click here. For more information about the Fallen Heroes Fund go to http://www.fallenheroesla.org

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2008 WPT Borgata Poker Open Final Table

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

Back in September I made the final table at The Borgata Poker Open. The first half of this WPT Final Table aired for the first time this past Sunday on GSN (Game Show Network). The second half of the show is coming up this Sunday so I won’t spoil it for you but I can’t resist telling you that I had A A up against opponents 10 10 for a 12 million dollar pot and of course my opponent sucked out! Ouch! I’m still feeling the pain. The first half of the show is broken up into four separate videos. This video is the first segment.


 

To see the rest of the first half of the show check out the videos page by clicking here.

WSOP Cash Academy featured in the Las Vegas Sun

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

The WSOP Academy recently launched it’s newest poker training event - WSOP Cash Academy. The first cash game event took place in Atlantic City  a couple of weeks ago (I’ll write more about that a little later). To sum it up the cash game academy was a huge success and received a flurry of attendee praise. 

The next one takes place this coming weekend at Caesars Palace, Las Vegas.

The WSOP Academy Cash Camp is featured in the Las Vegas Sun today in an article titled A poker survival skill: Cash game play by Jeff Haney. 

Here’s the Article:

A poker survival skill: Cash game play

On the surface, the distinctions between poker tournaments and cash poker games are minimal.
The most obvious is that when you run out of money in a cash game, you’re free to reach into your pocket to buy some more chips and continue to play. When you bust out of a tournament, you have to get up from the table and slink away (and usually go off to join a cash game).

Yet the differences between the forms of poker run much deeper. In fact, when the stacks are deep in a cash game — meaning the players have a lot of money on the table relative to the size of the blinds — pure poker skill carries more weight than it does at many stages of a typical tournament.

Mastering the strategy behind cash poker games is the goal of this weekend’s World Series of Poker cash game academy, a two-day instructional camp at Caesars Palace.

“Obviously there are a lot of people who are casual poker players, who might sit down and play some poker when they go to Las Vegas,” said Brandon Rosen of Post Oak Productions, the company that created and owns the World Series of Poker Academy, which produces educational poker events. “But there’s also a significant market made up of people spending significant amounts of time and disposable income to poker, live or online. If they’re serious about winning — and why shouldn’t you be if you’re spending that much time on it? — we’re going to make you better and your results are going to improve.

“It’s that population of people who might not consider themselves professionals, but are serious about their game and want to be able to generate income and have the results to be able to play poker indefinitely.”

Known primarily for conducting instructional camps focusing on tournament poker, which sell out consistently, the company held its first cash game academy last month in Atlantic City; it was led by professional players Mark Seif, Paul Wasicka and Alex Outhred.

Seif and Outhred return for this weekend’s event at Caesars. They will be joined by fellow pros Michael Gracz and Mark Gregorich on the team of instructors.

“Tournament players get the fame, the glory, especially when someone wins a big tournament, because of all the TV coverage and the online attention afterward,” Rosen said. “But a poker player’s longevity and success are largely determined by their cash-game play. Even good tournament players, if they’re cashing in 10 percent of the events they play in, they’re considered an excellent player, whereas most poker players have to earn their living at the cash games, to grind it out.

“For a lot of players, it’s often their success in the cash games that allows them to take a portion of their bankroll and play in tournaments. That’s the reason we’re doing a cash game academy.”

Outhred, for example, parlayed his success in the cash games in Los Angeles into some strong showings in major tournaments. He cashed in his first World Series of Poker event in 2005, and later made the final table in a World Poker Tour event at Mandalay Bay. Outhred finished in 54th place in a field of more than 6,700 in last year’s World Series main event, winning $135,000.

Seif owns two World Series of Poker championship bracelets, and Gracz has one World Series bracelet and a World Poker Tour title.

Gregorich, who competes in Las Vegas cash games, has advanced to the final table in the World Series of Poker in five separate forms of poker: no-limit Texas hold ’em; limit hold ’em; HORSE, or mixed games; Omaha high-low 8 or better; and 7-card stud 8 or better. He helped coach Orel Hershiser when the former baseball pro made his surprising run to the final eight in last year’s National Heads-Up Poker Championship at Caesars.

The cash game academy will include seminars, question-and-answer sessions, live play workshops and video hand analysis. It will also include a cash poker competition with a spot at stake in a special tournament for academy participants during this year’s World Series of Poker.

“What people like the most is when the pros are sitting at the table with them doing hand analysis,” Rosen said. “These guys are all really approachable and very passionate about poker. I think people appreciate being in that kind of learning environment.”

Mark Seif will be among the poker pros teaching a World Series of Poker Academy clinic this weekend at Caesars Palace on how to master cash games, which organizers say are vital to long-term success in poker.

On the surface, the distinctions between poker tournaments and cash poker games are minimal.

The most obvious is that when you run out of money in a cash game, you’re free to reach into your pocket to buy some more chips and continue to play. When you bust out of a tournament, you have to get up from the table and slink away (and usually go off to join a cash game).

To check out the upcoming Cash Academy or future events go to click here.