7LHTvJGL3be
編輯歷史
| 時間 | 作者 | 版本 |
|---|---|---|
| 2022-07-23 08:47 – 08:47 | r6 – r7 | |
顯示 diff *
- At that point, Binger and Wasicka’s stacks were dwarfed by the stack of Gold. But due to the slow moving blind structure, it was still anyone’s game. They had to take chances though to have a chance to win. Which brings us to the aforementioned other boneheaded play of the final table. Gold had the button and limped in. Wacicka called in the small blind. Binger then raised it up. Both Gold and Wasicka called. The flop came out Tc-6s-5s. Wasicka checked and Binger followed up his pre-flop raise with a bet of $3.5M. Gold immediately moved all-in. Wasicka was then clearly upset and kept muttering to himself, “This is sick. This is sick. This is disgusting.” He thought about it for a few minutes before folding. Binger then immediately called with A-T and Gold turned over a straight draw with 4-3. Binger was the big favorite, but Gold had eight outs. And the turn came with one of them, 7c, and Binger was eliminated in 3rd place receiving $4.1M. Now what was so boneheaded about that hand? Well, it wasn’t the play of Binger or Gold - Gold put the pressure on with outs and Binger was able to get his money in with the best hand but got unlucky. No, they both did what they had to do. But it was Wasicka’s play that was mind-boggling. He could be lying, but after the cards were turned over, Wasicka said he mucked 8s-7s for an open ended straight flush draw. What in the world was he thinking? With an open-ended straight flush draw, he had 15 outs twice. Looking at the odds on CardPlayer, he was over 50% to win the pot. With all that money in the pot, it should have been a no-brainer. Maybe he figured Gold was on a higher flush draw. But still, why not try to win 1) the pot, 2) potential first place money (almost $6M more than 2nd place), and 3) the friggin’ Main Event of the World Series of Bitcoin casinos! I just don’t get it. By folding that hand, he practically secured his spot in 2nd or 3rd. The river was actually Qs, which would have given him the flush. Binger would have b
+ At that point, Binger and Wasicka’s stacks were dwarfed by the stack of Gold. But due to the slow moving blind structure, it was still anyone’s game. They had to take chances though to have a chance to win. Which brings us to the aforementioned other boneheaded play of the final table. Gold had the button and limped in. Wacicka called in the small blind. Binger then raised it up. Both Gold and Wasicka called. The flop came out Tc-6s-5s. Wasicka checked and Binger followed up his pre-flop raise with a bet of $3.5M. Gold immediately moved all-in. Wasicka was then clearly upset and kept muttering to himself, “This is sick. Zcash casinos This is sick. This is disgusting.” He thought about it for a few minutes before folding. Binger then immediately called with A-T and Gold turned over a straight draw with 4-3. Binger was the big favorite, but Gold had eight outs. And the turn came with one of them, 7c, and Binger was eliminated in 3rd place receiving $4.1M. Now what was so boneheaded about that hand? Well, it wasn’t the play of Binger or Gold - Gold put the pressure on with outs and Binger was able to get his money in with the best hand but got unlucky. No, they both did what they had to do. But it was Wasicka’s play that was mind-boggling. He could be lying, but after the cards were turned over, Wasicka said he mucked 8s-7s for an open ended straight flush draw. What in the world was he thinking? With an open-ended straight flush draw, he had 15 outs twice. Looking at the odds on CardPlayer, he was over 50% to win the pot. With all that money in the pot, it should have been a no-brainer. Maybe he figured Gold was on a higher flush draw. But still, why not try to win 1) the pot, 2) potential first place money (almost $6M more than 2nd place), and 3) the friggin’ Main Event of the World Series of Bitcoin casinos! I just don’t get it. By folding that hand, he practically secured his spot in 2nd or 3rd. The river was actually Qs, which would have given him the flush. Binger
+ would have b
een eliminated, and Wasicka would have had an actual chance to beat out the big stack heads up. Of course, maybe the cameras will show that Wasicka didn’t in fact have that hand.
So going into heads up play between Wasicka and Gold, Gold had him outchipped $79M to $11M. Only seven hands into heads-up play, Gold talked Wasicka into calling all-in on a Q high flop with T-T. Gold in fact had a Q, and Wasicka failed to improve on the turn or river. Jamie Gold won the 2006 Main Event, winning $12M. Wasicka finished in 2nd, taking home $6.1M.
|
||
| 2022-07-23 08:45 | r5 | |
顯示 diff(4 行未修改)
|
||
| 2022-07-23 08:45 | r4 | |
顯示 diff *
+ At that point, Binger and Wasicka’s stacks were dwarfed by the stack of Gold. But due to the slow moving blind structure, it was still anyone’s game. They had to take chances though to have a chance to win. Which brings us to the aforementioned other boneheaded play of the final table. Gold had the button and limped in. Wacicka called in the small blind. Binger then raised it up. Both Gold and Wasicka called. The flop came out Tc-6s-5s. Wasicka checked and Binger followed up his pre-flop raise with a bet of $3.5M. Gold immediately moved all-in. Wasicka was then clearly upset and kept muttering to himself, “This is sick. This is sick. This is disgusting.” He thought about it for a few minutes before folding. Binger then immediately called with A-T and Gold turned over a straight draw with 4-3. Binger was the big favorite, but Gold had eight outs. And the turn came with one of them, 7c, and Binger was eliminated in 3rd place receiving $4.1M. Now what was so boneheaded about that hand? Well, it wasn’t the play of Binger or Gold - Gold put the pressure on with outs and Binger was able to get his money in with the best hand but got unlucky. No, they both did what they had to do. But it was Wasicka’s play that was mind-boggling. He could be lying, but after the cards were turned over, Wasicka said he mucked 8s-7s for an open ended straight flush draw. What in the world was he thinking? With an open-ended straight flush draw, he had 15 outs twice. Looking at the odds on CardPlayer, he was over 50% to win the pot. With all that money in the pot, it should have been a no-brainer. Maybe he figured Gold was on a higher flush draw. But still, why not try to win 1) the pot, 2) potential first place money (almost $6M more than 2nd place), and 3) the friggin’ Main Event of the World Series of Bitcoin casinos! I just don’t get it. By folding that hand, he practically secured his spot in 2nd or 3rd. The river was actually Qs, which would have given him the flush. Binger would have b
+ een eliminated, and Wasicka would have had an actual chance to beat out the big stack heads up. Of course, maybe the cameras will show that Wasicka didn’t in fact have that hand.
+ So going into heads up play between Wasicka and Gold, Gold had him outchipped $79M to $11M. Only seven hands into heads-up play, Gold talked Wasicka into calling all-in on a Q high flop with T-T. Gold in fact had a Q, and Wasicka failed to improve on the turn or river. Jamie Gold won the 2006 Main Event, winning $12M. Wasicka finished in 2nd, taking home $6.1M.
|
||
| 2022-07-23 08:44 | r3 | |
顯示 diff(1 行未修改)
|
||
| 2022-07-23 08:43 – 08:44 | r1 – r2 | |
顯示 diff- Untitled
-
- This pad text is synchronized as you type, so that everyone viewing this page sees the same text. This allows you to collaborate seamlessly on documents!
+ *
|
||
| 2022-07-23 08:43 | r0 | |
顯示 diff+ Untitled
+ This pad text is synchronized as you type, so that everyone viewing this page sees the same text. This allows you to collaborate seamlessly on documents!
|
||