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he Guardian Poker Column |
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Victoria
Coren |
Wed 24 Mar 2010 |
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A trap that went horribly wrong - or did
it?
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I love
a blinds skirmish. These are hands where it's all passed round to the small
blind looks like an irrelevant deal, but, instead, a vast coup develops
between the two remaining players. Often, because of the position, each of the
blinds suspects the other of having nothing.
Last week, recording
commentary for this year's $20,000 high-roller final in Nassau, I watched a
massive blinds skirmish develop between two unusually strong hands for the
situation. |
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With blinds at 10K-20K, Will Molson, a
young Canadian, limped from the small blind with K Q. This cunning slow-play induced a raise of 40K from Tobias
Reinkemeier with K 9 in the big blind. I expected Molson to snap the trap
shut, ending the hand with a large re-raise, but he just called. Dangerous.
The flop came J 8 T. Huge for Reinkemeier. Molson, who had been
70% favourite before the flop, was still technically ahead but (against this
dazzling draw) had become 48% underdog. Thus the danger of the flat call.
Molson checked. Reinkemeier bet 65K. Molson raised to 180K. Reinkemeier
announced "all in" covering Molson, who had 845K behind.
What a
horrible situation for Molson. Having disguised his hand before the flop,
inducing a raise from any two cards, he had no idea what he was up against. An
enormous pot had come from nowhere. To my surprise, Molson made the call
perhaps figuring Reinkemeier for a massive bluff? and both players raced
for a 2m+ pot.
Turn . . . T. River . . . A !
Reinkemeier missed; Molson made a straight and doubled up. With hindsight, it
all worked out beautifully. But, in truth, Molson should have three-bet
strongly in advance and stopped that thorny flop from coming down at all.
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