Matt Alexander Poker

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  1. Matt Alexander Poker Games
  2. Matt Alexander Poker Player
  3. Matt Alexander Poker Club
  1. Phillip Dennis Ivey Jr. (born February 1, 1977) is an American professional poker player who has won ten World Series of Poker bracelets, one World Poker Tour title, and appeared at nine World Poker Tour final tables. Ivey was at one time regarded by numerous poker observers and contemporaries as the best all-around player in the world.
  2. Thunder on the Bay, Alexandria Bay 2017 Poker Run Poker Run Winners. Matt Alexander and Jay Lloyd, Alexandria Bay, NY, “Aquamania” QQQ44; Robert Ackley Kingston, ON. 35′ Fountain “Fountasy” 77552, John Landry Kars, ON. “36′ Cigarette” JJK65.
Mo Nuwwarah

Covering live poker tournaments for a living affords me the opportunity to see countless thousands of hands played out, many of which offer interesting and potentially valuable insights into how players — both amateurs and professionals — play the game. In this ongoing series, I'll highlight hands I've seen at the tournaments I've covered and see if we can glean anything useful from them.

Matt Alexander Poker Games

The Scene

Matt Alexander PokerMatt Alexander Poker

Matt alexander poker You can find it on the television, in video and hand held games, and even in local tournaments at assorted community buildings. The major gripe that players had when using flat currencies such as the US dollar or British Pound was that transactions could take days and even weeks. Matt Alexander: (HPT Champ & POY Contender): 136.5k Bernard Lee: 118k Maria Ho: 68.5k. Average Stack = 103,250 Big Stack 230k. Day 2 - L13 Antes/Blinds = 500/3k/6k. Cash bubble @ 41 players today, and the winner will take down an estimated $177k. (hey, I’m not @KevMath y’all, even.inside. the tourney room.).

After I won my World Series of Poker Circuit ring, I was excited to see if I could stay hot. I headed out to the Mid-States Poker Tour Meskwaki in Iowa for the $1,100 Main Event, and as it happened, I did make a deep run there to the final table.

Matt alexander poker announcer

With a couple of tables left in the event, I was the chip leader with around 900,000 — maybe we'll talk about how that happened in a future article — when I played a key pot against MSPT reg Matt Alexander (pictured above). A veteran with over $800,000 in cashes and two HPT titles to his name, Alexander and I have battled before. I'm used to his aggressive and splashy style and have had fun locking horns with him.

Generally, I think Alexander doesn't get too far out of line in the face of raises and bets, but he will open pretty liberally and push the action if nobody shows any strength postflop.

The Action

Matt

At 6,000/12,000/2,000, Alexander opened for 27,000 from the cutoff. I defended my big blind with .

The flop came and I checked. Alexander bet 20,000 and I called. The turn brought the . I checked again and Alexander bet 30,000. I shoved all in to put him to a decision for his last 170,000 or so. He tanked for several minutes, exchanging some banter with me before he folded face up.

Matt Alexander Poker Player

Concept and Analysis

This proved to be one of the stranger hands I've played in recent memory as I accidentally turned two pair into a bluff — and a successful bluff at that. You don't see that very often, so I thought I'd dive in and explain my decision-making.

First, I'd say defending is not usually something I'd do under most circumstances. I'd guess I probably under-defend the big blind, but I figured I was in a good spot to put a lot of pressure on the other players because I had so many chips and we were so close to the final table.

When I flop middle pair, I figure it's most likely the best hand, but check-calling seems to be the most prudent course of action. Alexander opens lots of hands from the cutoff and he could definitely hit this board.

When I hit one of my gin cards on the turn, things get interesting. I check and Alexander makes a very small bet of 30,000 into a pot of around 115,000. This bet didn't look much like an overpair to me. Someone with a big pair here should be looking to charge more, as any one-pair hand on this board likely has a straight draw as well, meaning it has nine outs at worst. This might well be the last chance for an overpair to get value as many river cards could kill his hand by bringing a four-straight on the board.

The bet also doesn't look like a bluff. Why would someone bet so small as a bluff after already being called on the flop? Nothing that called the flop is likely to fold turn to this sizing.

I admit I was quite confused by this bet. The two thoughts running through my mind were that it was either thin value with a medium pair or maybe it really was an overpair with weird sizing. I considered my options, but it just seemed best to shove. My hand was very likely best at the moment, and any diamond, any card that paired the board, plus anything that made four to a straight would hurt my hand's value.

Plus, he might put me on some type of pair-plus-draw hand, especially with diamonds hitting the board, and look me up with one pair. Looking at my range, many of my bluffs would include such hands in this spot.

Matt Alexander Poker Club

I was very surprised to see him fold the hand he did. He said afterwards because of how comfortable I seemed while we chatted and the fact that I had to know he had something with his bet sizing, he felt very sure I was shoving for value. He was right, it just was a value hand worse than the one he held.

I do think from his perspective this hand is one that's a bit too strong to fold. Lower two pairs are quite tricky, but holding top two with so many draws on the board puts this hand in a strong position. His bet sizing leaves him room to be shoved on and is almost inducing something from an overeager chip-leading player. I'd probably just shove a straight or a set as well for the above reasons, but I think if you run into that, you just chalk it up to a cooler and take your payout.

  • Tags

    tournament strategyno-limit hold’emblind defensepostflop strategyvalue bettingrangesrange readingMid-States Poker TourMatt Alexander
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