Negreanu
Plays 'Small Ball' to Earn Big Win on WPT
Lee Markholt, a poker pro from
Washington state, had just been eliminated from
the final table of the World Series of Poker
circuit tournament at the Tunica Grand casino
in Mississippi last Friday night.
Lee
Markholt, a poker pro from Washington state,
had just been eliminated from the final table
of the World Series of Poker circuit tournament
at the Tunica Grand casino in Mississippi last
Friday night.
Before
he went off to collect his $183,160 prize for
finishing fourth in a field of 241 entrants,
Markholt was asked if anyone could beat Daniel
Negreanu, the tournament's chip leader.
"No,"
Markholt said, "as long as he keeps playing
'small ball.' "
Markholt's
prediction was on target. Negreanu continued
to embrace that "small ball" strategy,
outlasting his final two opponents to capture
the tournament championship and its top prize
of $755,525.
In
the poker world, small ball, according to the
2005 book "Kill Phil" by Blair Rodman
and Lee Nelson, is a subtle, intricate strategy
that's difficult to master -- and therefore,
usually best left to the experts in big time,
no-limit Texas hold 'em tournaments.
It
entails mixing it up in a lot of small pots,
but having a feel for when to bail out and when
to move in for the kill.
In
baseball, where the term originated, think of
the Chicago White Sox from 1959 -- or 2005,
for that matter -- with their reliance on stolen
bases, sacrifice bunts, good pitching and turning
double plays.
The
diametric strategy, "long ball" poker,
is also known as "big pot" poker,
according to Rodman and Nelson. More formulaic
than small ball, it's marked by swinging for
the fences by betting all of your chips at once
-- or going "all-in."
Ain't
nothing subtle about long ball.
Think
baseball in the steroids era -- or, if you prefer,
the Baltimore Orioles teams of the 1970s, when
manager Earl Weaver boasted of building his
offense around the three-run homer.
Although
either strategy can bring home the money, it's
generally acknowledged that playing small ball
at an expert level requires more advanced poker
skills.
Which
is appropriate because Negreanu -- despite sustaining
an off year in 2005 -- is considered one of
the most talented poker players in the world.
After
winning his first World Series of Poker circuit
event title Friday, Negreanu offered an insightful
dissertation on how to play small ball -- especially
when you're sitting pretty with the chip lead.
"When
you're in that position, all you've got to do
is throw a lot of jabs," said Negreanu,
a 31-year-old Las Vegas resident. "Jab,
jab, jab, then duck.
"The
key to winning for me was that I stayed out
of any marginal hands. I didn't invest a lot
of chips before the flop, and I relied on my
post-flop abilities.
"I'm
not the guy who's going to get it all in before
the flop with 6-6 against ace-king (the pair
would be a slight favorite) and hope to stay
alive. I want to see what comes on the flop
before I decide if I'm going to make my move."
Negreanu,
who said his goal for 2006 is to win another
Card Player magazine player of the year title
after earning the honor in 2004, gave credit
to runner-up Bryant King for displaying superb
long-ball skills.
"BK
makes very few mistakes before the flop,"
Negreanu said.
King
of Spokane, Wash., collected $416,690 for his
second-place finish.
One
aspect of small ball involves setting traps
to entice your opponent to lose all of his chips
at once.
Negreanu
did just that on the final hand at the Grand's
events center, which had been given the signature
World Series of Poker circuit makeover: black
curtains with tiny white lights that created
a planetarium effect as conducive to a Pink
Floyd laser show as a poker tournament.
When
the flop revealed a king, a queen and a four,
Negreanu bet out. King raised, and Negreanu
"came over the top," or reraised all-in.
King called and showed king-three for top pair
-- but Negreanu was holding king-nine for top
pair with a better kicker.
By
leading out with the first bet -- rather than
checking his hand and trying for a raise later
-- Negreanu had induced his opponent to commit
his chips to the pot. It was a tricky, elegant
move.
King
later admitted he was bamboozled, figuring Negreanu
would try for a check-raise if he was holding
top pair heads-up.
"When
he comes over the top, I put him on a queen
with a redraw," King said.
"I
thought I played terribly heads-up against Daniel,
but until then, I thought I played great."
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