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Old 10-26-2006, 08:50 AM
peterpjames peterpjames is offline
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Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 154
Default Re: \"Official\" WSOP on ESPN thread (10/24) (1K NL and 50K HORSE)

[ QUOTE ]
talk about friedberg overplaying hands and sucking out.

[/ QUOTE ]

He posted this in response on P5s:

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Hi everyone! Hope you all enjoyed watching me "sleep with all of the angels" on ESPN last night. I have received one or two questions about the hands that were aired, so I thought I'd provide a little more diagnosis than what Ron and Lon chose to do.

I had a great time watching last night with my family and some friends, despite the fact that I was given little credit for winning the event by the commentators. The show aired approximately 20 minutes of poker from a final table that lasted 10 1/2 hours. For whatever reason, the producers chose to only show the hands that I pushed all in on...2 of which I got lucky in after making aggressive plays (see below for further explanation). There were MANY key hands throughout the final table that ESPN chose not to air...and several hands that I felt were insignificant that ESPN did air. Obviously it is important to inject some entertainment value into poker TV or only poker players would watch it. That said, please read below if you are curious as to my thought process during any of the hands that were broadcasted. And thanks to most of you for all of the support!!

1. My 68 off vs Kevin O'Donnell's AJ -- During the later stages of Day 2, Kevin was sitting to my immediate right just as he was at the final table. In 4 out of 5 times when it was folded to him, he raised my BB. I never had a hand and surrendered every time either preflop or on the flop. This time I chose to make a stand, with what I felt could easily be the best hand. J84 is not a bad flop in a HU pot during a blind battle with a 68. I pushed, which still would have left me with chips in case I lost, and I ended up getting lucky on the river to win the hand.

2. My 88 vs Mike Pomeroy's A9 -- Mike was making a TON of preflop raises and re-raises with complete garbage. On the flop of 79J, I was quite certain that he did not have a good enough hand to call my all in with. I was correct that he did not have a hand good enough to call with...however he called anyway. It was a bold move on my part...an absolutely terrible call on his behalf...and thanks to BelowAbove, a 10 came to save me.

3. My 78 vs. John Phan's 88 -- Norm made a brilliant comment about how I had "bad instincts" even though I was chip leader...after I pushed John all in this hand. Let's look at this and a little closer. I had 2,000,000 chips...John had 300k...the BB was 40k. Taking the chip counts into consideration and the size of the blinds, I am pushing in with any mediocre hand in this spot...as would most tournament pros. Anyone who questions this play or thinks it was bad instincts simply should give up on poker because he/she will never win a tournament.

4. My 55 vs. Mike Pomeroy's Q3 -- This was one of the best traps ever executed on poker TV (so I have been told), however the hand was very poorly explained on TV. Because of my prior hand histories with Pomeroy and others, I was able to get Mike to call off all of his 1,200,000 in chips on the river with only a pair of queens and no playable kicker....after he called a 400k bet into a 160k pot on the turn. I personally have never trapped a player any better than this in my career thus far. Nothing was mentioned by the commentators about this play, other than me winning the pot.

5. My K5 vs Phan's 66 -- While heads up and with a 4 - 1 chip lead, I mucked a K5 on flop 10-5-10. Norm struggled to admit that this was a "nice fold by Friedberg". Thanks Norm.

Jon F.
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