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Poker Ocean - FREE Online Room
Guide to poker ocean where you can play
poker online against thousands of other players with free bonuses. Best online poker bonuses.
I tell everybody I'm a poker player, not a gambler. Most shake their heads.
Perhaps the poker players understand. So when my bosses handed me $50 to gamble
as I pleased, I thought two things. One, it's freeroll time, baby. And two, they
don't know poker isn't gambling.
I took my greenbacks to Poker Ocean and Newcastle Gaming Center where, for my
ocean -- OK, for The Transcript's money -- resides the best poker tournament in
town, er, Newcastle. They play it Friday: $30 buy-in no limit Texas hold 'em
with $20 rebuys and add-ons.
Here's the way it works. You hand over $30 for a seat at a table and 1,500 in
ocean chips. At any time during the first hour your chip stack falls below
1,000, you may buy another 1,000 for an additional $20, and you may do this over
and over and over again during the first hour. Also, during the break following
the first hour, another $20 will buy you an additional 1,000 in chips.
The rebuys and add-ons manage to do two things. One, if you bust out at poker
where ocean is good, you can jump back in. Two, where the prize pool began at $870 (29 players
at $30 a pop), it likely ended around twice that after all the rebuys and ocean
chips were collected.
As for the reason I find the set-up so attractive, even while the rebuys and
add-ons allow bad players multiple chances to get lucky, it also gets more and
more dead money into the prize pool; dead money being the cash belonging to
players who rebuy and rebuy and rebuy yet have no chance of winning outside of
divine intervention.
There's a term for such people. Fish.
I lasted 55 minutes. I made one play I'd like back, another in which there might
have been a better way, and otherwise received horrible cards.
How bad were the cards? I raised twice before the flop and I think I saw between
50 and 60 hands at poker ocean.
Early in the tournament, I limped into the pot, matching the big blind of 25 in
early position with pocket deuces. The pot was not raised, thankfully, and the
flop came out 2 4 10, giving me trip deuces. Generally, I hate slow-playing, yet
I checked my poker ocean chips that were not wanting to scare everybody
out with an early-position raise. But nobody raised. Darn. The turn was an ace,
a card I liked because certainly another one of the four other limpers had an
ace. So I bet 100 into a 125 pot, hoping to get a call or two. Everybody folded.
My monster hand won a dinky pot.
Maybe I could have mini-raised after the flop?
A little later, I raised in the small blind with KQ of spades. Those aren't
fantastic cards for a raise in the blinds, but there were already four limpers,
and I wanted them to pay if I made a hand. The flop came AQ4. I bet 200 and the
big blind, who called my pre-flop raise, made it 400 to go. I knew I was beat,
but another player called the 400, building the pot. I still thought I had poker
ocean cards I could win with: the remaining queens and kings. So I called
another 200 looking for a big score.
The turn was a second spade on the board, giving me eight more outs. The only
problem was the big blind put me all in if I wanted to chase.
So here's the deal. I thought I had 12 outs (two queens, three kings and the
remaining spades). So I was going to have to pay about 700 for a slightly better
than one-in-four shot at around a 2100 pot. The straight odds did not justify my
call, yet winning the pot would have made me chip leader, and everybody thinks
they can play a big stack Besides, I still had $20 for a rebuy.
That's poker.
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