$545 NL tourney at the Bike, 178 players. Last week I busted on hand #4, so by hand #5 here I was already celebrating.
First table is just chock full o' retards, not much happens for me but I stay alive and relatively healthy. I get moved and announce to the table that I don't expect to stay long. Thankfully I get AKs on my first hand and double through someone's KQ. People tend to think you're a loose idiot when you make proclamations like that upon sitting down.
The next 5 hours or so can be summed up thusly- I get cards and win, I don't get cards and play them well, basically it's mistake-free poker and I'm building a good stack. It's one of those tourneys where you just know you're final tabling it. Then we hit a roadblock. It pays 18 (and will likely pay 19) and we get stuck on 21 players left for about an hour- I've never seen anything like it. At our table, every short stack has doubled up at least once. I've been the benefactor a couple of times. A few hands that kind of tell you how my double-the-average stack started to vanish on the bubble:
Raise in the CO with J8o to steal. This is the one and only mistake I made and it's barely a mistake. The BB pushed, and the mistake is that he had a stack size that I couldn't fold to, but it would still sting. I started this hand with 28k (double the average), and gave him about 9k. Ouch. I had all the odds in the world once the cards were up (he had ATo and I was getting 2.5x1 to make the call), but I try very hard to avoid situations like this.
Shorty goes all in, I call with 66, shorty next to me pushes, so it's 3-ways to the flop and I'm up against AQ and 22. AQ wins.
Guy raises, shorty goes all in with an amount that precludes any further action if I call (meaning the first guy can't reraise), I call with 55, the other guy calls. We dutifully check it down. Shorty wins with AJ, other guy has something less than mine.
During a break there's a proposal to just divide up the $86k prize pool 21 ways, even chop. It's 3AM and the last hour had been excruciating. Surprisingly, only one guy objects (and he didn't even have that big of a stack), I expected a whole bunch of people to. It would have been 5th place money and I had an average stack, so being that I'm not a complete fucking retard I wanted to make the deal.
My final undoing went like this, right after the break. We bust the 21st player, so its pure bubble now. I raise the tightest player's BB with KTo, for some reason he flat calls (I expected a push or fold). Flop comes down ten-high with two hearts. He open pushes, I call of course, and he has
![The Jack of Hearts [Jh]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/Jh.gif)
![The Ten of Hearts [Th]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/Th.gif)
Guy at the next table helpfully notes to me that he's seen me get snapped off at every step.
Now I've got about 4500 with the blinds at 600/1200/200. It's not an auto-call if I push but it's close. First chance I get to open-push I have AJo. Pretty damn good hand for the situation since I was going to push with any two. Naturally the BB has AK and it's goodnight from the bubble. I pulled a Harmon on the way out, knocking over one of his stacks for waking up with AK.
I've bubbled many times before but this one really stung considering how well I had been doing before getting completely cold-decked for an hour or so. I expected to win this tourney, and I've won enough tourneys at this point to know when I can rightfully expect to win one and when it ain't in the cards.
I much prefer busting on hand #4 over going 8 hours and busting on the bubble.