Omaha Hi Lo. It is a nice game. Somewhat safe if you play truly tight, but
nothing replaces the right cards at the right time. It is the monkey on my
back.
My wife had given me a book on Omaha Hi Lo some years back I studied and
thought I understood the game. I am just beginning to, after reading the book
and with at least ten outings, each which lasted many hours. I play the low
stakes limit game. Saturday the casino begins a game at 10:00am. I have heard
they play Omaha Hi Lo Limit, or some version of it, on Tuesdays and Thursdays
also.
I have yet to walk away from a table ahead at Omaha Hi Lo. What is
particularly frustrating is that I can sit at the table for hours and win just
enough to stay in. Then I watch some seats take hand after hand, almost
effortlessly, while I can go two hours without seeing a respectable hand come my
why. I am not even tempted to go on tilt as the poor to marginal hands I throw
away would never have developed on the flop.
I understand why people sometimes switch seats when they have the chance.
Recently the Omaha Hi Lo table has been loose; near everyone in each hand. I
hope this is not on my account. The pot is often driven up pre-flop with
straddles and raises, but not always.
After a rebuy, and my stack was growing low, one such circumstance arose.
There was a straddle. I called. Followed by a pre-flop raise with a clearly
statement of intent to build up the pot. I called. I drew the nut flush draw on
the flop and hit it on the turn. The betting was quite aggressive until the
turn. I had just under two bets left (this is a limit game).
I was quite tense. All I wanted was the board not to pair. With so many
players a full house is common, and even if you make one, the chances are
someone may have a higher full house, if you don’t have the nuts. So I was
hoping only for the board not to pair on the river and it didn’t. I tried to get
all my chips in but no one raised, only one called.
It was a large pot, even split with a low hand. The comments afterwards
reflected a general disappointment by all that I had won. I soon left the game,
down for the day, but with enough to buy-in another day.
I have been discouraged by my losses at Omaha Hi Lo and it makes me want to
go back until I win. I got home. Put together the scribbled accounts of my last
several outings and got them down into the ledger. I found myself still
extremely in the black. I verified the figures and sighed happily, “Good. I
thought I was worse off.”
But I wont be going back to the Hi Lo table until at least one more
tournament wins. My last tournament I was doing fairly well and pushed all-in
pre-flop, after my raise was re-raised. I was hoping for a heads up, two still
on the hand, which I got. My 4’s met Aces and I knew right then I was out. My
mistake. I didn’t need to see any cards.
I shy away from cash games. The stability for a tight player (stability for
me is playing a very long time before busting) at a Omaha Hi Lo Limit game is a
draw for me, though I am wondering if I would be better off in the long run at a
No-Limit Hold’m table.
The comments at the table over my last big Hi Lo hand were not the only
signals I have received, that most everyone at the table, most everyone playing
at the casino regularly, knows who I am. Or at least they think they know. I am
in a position where my success in anything is taken as a threat to some.
This has been a constant in my life; whether it comes from a disgust for my
faith or for more personal reasons.
There has also been a tendency, over several of my last outings, for people
to bet out of turn over me. That is they bet without waiting for me to act. This
isn’t necessarily uncommon at a table. When it happens to me and only me, and I
do not hide my cards as some do, over and over this is an obvious attempt to
frustrate me. Yes, I am observant. That is why I do well in poker.
The tournaments at our local casino have far more over sight than the regular
daily operation of the cash games. The dealer takes the brunt of any
disagreements at the table. Don’t make the dealer’s day miserable.
In poker, however, if you know the game anything that may be considered a
disadvantage or obstacle can be turned to your advantage. If people believe you
are a person you are not, they cannot read you. If people think you will fold
when to large aggressive bets and raises…, no mystery as to how that is not an
advantage. Nor is it a mystery that you can make people who think you don’t know
the game pay. If people just outright don’t like you, their emotions will do
them in. All if you know how to play the game.
Yes, you still need the cards. You still need to be able to spot weakness or
strength. But, if you are a good player, the potential to find justice at the
poker table can be far greater than the potential to find justice in life. Your
abilities will be recognized and respected far more quickly at the poker
table than in any other profession. Success is undeniable. People who know the
game, and most at the casino do, recognize and respect good players, even when
the cards may be against you. That doesn’t mean people will like you. But if I
ever won big and became filthy rich would the falsehoods over my life
evaporate?
Don’t chase delusions. If your no good and don’t have the money stop
playing.
The busy Christmas season has kept me away from any tournaments the last
couple of weeks, not to mention the rush to make my writing goals for the month.
Click on the “My Store” tab above to find my books. They are works of fiction,
not poker tutorials.
It is time to make resolutions for the New Year. Time to talk to my wife over
our goals and how to achieve them. The Mid-States Poker Tournament coming in a
couple of weeks at The Potawatomi Casino is on my mind. I can’t attach any more
significance to it than any other game if I want to do well.
With my current winnings this looks to be a
Winter of Poker for me. How it all turns out will determine whether the
investment of time is worth the money earned. That means a lot of sitting. I
already do a lot of driving and bowling on my friends team, which also strains
my back. I recommend the Teeter Hang Up. Some warn against the inversion table,
though I have never heard their reasons (just their advertisements for their
shows on the radio) but it has brought relief to both me and my wife. Neither of
us use it excessively. If sitting for hours on end at the poker table bothers
your back this might bring some relief. One of my legs is shorter then the other
so I wear one shoe to offset the difference. I had some discomfort using the
table before that.
God Bless, Merry Christmas (it is the season) and Happy New Year.
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