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Heads Up Play
Written by: Dave Colclough (2004-06-25 01:10:30)
Hi,
Well after six weeks in Las Vegas, I needed 2 weeks
off to acclimatise to the real world again. Eventually
I dragged myself back onto the European Tour again,
and flew down to Barcelona (it is such a hard life).
The major competition of the week was the Worlds Heads
Up Championship, with a first prize of 100,000 euro.
Not bad for a week's work, but it wasn't to be.
Heads Up poker is completely different to 9 handed or
even 6 handed poker. If you fancy a change, try it on
the Bet365poker.com 1 v 1 tables.
My first round opponent was Daniel Holm, one of the
young Scandinavians that are changing the way poker
is played in Europe. Generally they play considerable
more aggressively, raising considerably more starting
hands than I would. If they suspect any weakness after
the flop they will fire away trying to pick up the pot.
There have been players like this in the past, but certainly
not the same number.
Personally I dislike playing against this type of player,
because I much prefer to be the aggressor myself. I
prefer to be the one who dictates when I want to play
a big pot (preferably when I have position and good
cards). I am not quite so keen on playing big pots every
third or fourth hand. But this is inevitable against
some opponents.
My strategy for playing against this opponent is to
rarely raise myself but to call with big hands and marginals
such as suited connectors or say K7. (King high is much
stronger heads up than you may think. The average starting
hand for Heads Up play being only Jack high). I would
then tend to do a lot of check calling until my opponent
realises that he can't steal too many pots from me.
The first round match went very much along these lines.
I took an early chip lead when I called a raise with
A10. I flopped an Ace, checked to my opponent and called
his bet (which turned out to be a bluff). After about
30 minutes, I flopped top pair against his flush draw
and the rest of his chips went in. Fortunately for me,
he missed his flush and I progressed to the next round
to face the intimidating Rob Hollink.
In my opinion, Rob Hollink from Holland is one of the
top ten all-round players in Europe. He plays live cash
games and competition poker equally well. He is a prolific
winner on the internet, and is also one of a very few
players who repeatedly win Omaha competitions (myself
and the great Dave 'Devilfish' Ulliot being the only
others who spring to mind). He won last years online
WCOOP Heads Up Tournament. So I knew I was in for a
Battle Royale..
Wrong! Rob raised the very first hand. The blinds were
100/200 and he raised 300 more. I looked down at Kd4d
and called the 300, as there was already 700 in the
middle. The pot odds were good and the hand was average.
The flop came down 10h4h3d. I had second pair so thought
I was probably in the lead. There was 1000 in the pot.
I checked and called Rob's bet of 700. Making a pot
of 2400. (I don't think either of us wished to be playing
a pot this big on the very first hand). The turn card
was 10d, so I now had 10s and 4s with a King kicker.
Surely I was in front? So I trap checked, as I had also
picked up the flush draw. Rob bet 1700 and I quickly
raised all in. I nearly fell off my chair when he called.
He had 10J and my only out was a diamond. It didn't
arrive, and now I am the proud owner of another record:
the only player eliminated from a WHU match on the first
hand.
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reserved
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