Thursday, November 22, 2012

Wynning - Life in the big time (WSOP 2013)


Alas, Caesars Entertainment have officially announced the dates for the World Series of Poker beginning on May 29th 2013 and set to run through to approximately 17th July. These announcements always get me in the mood to book my Vegas action and this time was no exception.

I've been carefully trawling the internet looking for any advanced deals and was actually pondering missing the WSOP this year to save money. Then I found a remarkable deal with Expedia, 10 nights + return flights with British Airways, staying at the Wynn in mid-June for an amazing £1280 per person!

I've seen a package deal this cheap for a location such as the Wynn. I reviewed the prices booking direct via the Wynn and it was something close to $4000 just for a standard room, so this Expedia deal really is something and it will be a new Vegas experience for me staying in such luxury (as opposed to Flamingo/Bally's) and being out there with my girlfriend.

It goes without saying that I'll be playing Poker, but probably considerably less than usual. This is perhaps a good thing as 2012 was a terrible year of playing and the first losing year I've had since I began playing.

I'm hoping with some renewed vigor and a fresh perspective on the Vegas vacation that this will turn out to be a trip to remember.

Roll on WSOP 2013!

Thursday, November 8, 2012

The return of Full Tilt Poker

6th November 2012, an enormous day for the online poker game, even the game in general! Full Tilt is back online and it goes without saying, we all thought this may never happen. The atmosphere at the IOM offices has been buzzing and I cannot tell you the sheer amount of relief we all felt when Real Money switched on at midday on November 6th.

Things have seemingly just picked up where they left off, pre Black Friday with the addition of some new promotions, a new rakeback scheme and shedding the deadwood of a bunch of red pro's that no one gave a shit about. I must admit that I was tinged with a tiny bit of sadness upon watching the masses donking off the money they'd waited 18 months to get hold of. I literally took FTP for granted when I was able to play there before PokerStars took over. I was too busy being annoyed that I couldn't play on PokerStars (my site of choice) to actually enjoy the excellent viable alternative that FTP had to offer.

Oh well, you live and learn. The moral of the story is to appreciate what is available to you now, you never know when circumstance may take it away from you!

For all those folks worried about FTP's dark past, it really couldn't be in safer hands than it is now under the control of the Rational Group. It's a squeaky clean company and does everything by the book. Get your donk on and enjoy the new Full Tilt Poker!

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Irish Winter Fest

So it's that time of the year again, another trip to Dublin beckoneth and a long weekend of Pokers awaited myself and a bunch of other PokerStars staff. The Irish Winter Festival by Paddy Power is an excellent tournament series that often provides good value and generates a decent atmosphere, albeit smaller in every sense than the Easter equivalent - The Irish Open.

I'd travelled over a couple of days in advance to have some quality time with my better half prior to the event and actually enjoyed playing the tourist for a change, rather than just making it a 100% Poker orientated trip. I even caught Skyfall over there, which was an interesting experience watching a Brit hero amongst Irish folks!

What preceded the Poker however tailed off, as my girlfriend became very ill (presumed food-poisoning) by the Friday evening. Naturally this put a dampener on things and I was quite burdened when playing my Saturday 6-Max event knowing that she was suffering upstairs on her own, however she insisted that I went as I could do nothing to help her.

The 6-Max was a €150 event and got a decent turnout (150 approx). Starting with 10k stacks, I was up to 40k in seemingly no time at all as I got the better of some blind v blind 3-bet/4-bet shenanigans with the guy on my immediate left and also got someone to stack off for a full stack with AK on a K ,10, 6, 9, 9 board vs my 66. Sadly this deteriorated not so long after as I risked chips calling some chunky all-ins when I had the best of it and also lost a decent amount of my stack in the following hand on a bluff. An older English chap to my right was very busy, raising lots of hands so I felt he was exploitable and I 3-bet him pre with K10, he calls. Flop is 6, 7, 4, with a club flush draw he checks and I bet, he smoothes and the turn brings an offsuit 9. He checks and I check back to him this time, the turn brings a 5 of clubs which is a good danger card to use as a lot of draws got there. I try and represent that I lead the flop with a draw and checked the turn to get there and bet 3/4 pot and our man goes into the tank and eventually calls with just a 6, for 3rd pair!

I was quite taken aback by the call but congratulated him on it, I didn't think for a second that he was donking off, but that he simply managed to decipher my deception. That said, it was still a very tough call for about 50% of his stack. This amongst many other hands I've played in live tournaments this year has made me realise that my residual table image to strangers is that of someone who is 'messing around' and I seem to get looked up often. This is something I definitely need to keep in mind of in my future play, as it will result in me getting paid handsomely when I have any hand with showdown value whatsoever, however it will make bluffing perhaps more difficult.

I never recovered with this setback, I was down to around 20K at this point and managed to grind down to 2 tables without getting any hands of significance before shoving J8 on an SB steal into AA and that was all she wrote. I then rested up until the following day's PLO €200 event, the tournament that I final tabled yet bubbled last year and something I'd regard as my strongest event. I was very excited to play this, however upon registered for the tournament 15mins before it started I was very annoyed that only FOUR people had registered, yes FOUR! Speaking with the tournament director about this issue he determined that the event would be cancelled if they got less than 16 runners and postponed the starting time until 90mins after. I was given the option to withdraw my registration with 15 people on the board at the cut-off time and begrudgingly continued.. I wish I had not. I doubled up from 10k to 20k in very quick time but then gone decimated by incredible donkey play, and was out quite early. I was thoroughly annoyed by the whole thing. How does a serious festival only get that many runners for an event this good? The answer was putting the €300 NL starting only 2 hours before the PLO, which was the secondary event for the whole series, it practically destroyed the PLO. I won't be playing this next year unless the scheduling is changed.

My final event was the €100 NL and this is comparable to smaller casino events in structure, by this time I was rather not in the mood to play. I'd just said goodbye to my girlfriend the night before but by this point had fallen quite sick, myself. I'd also had some aggro from a knuckle-dragger at the bar the previous evening who decided to take issue with me for no apparent reason which even after getting my head down still had me tilted. I crashed out of this event in fairly unceremonious style after earning every pot I'd won in 2.5 hours with no or little hands and finally when I get a good one got crushed by some donkey fooling around with junk.

The whole event for me for a disaster and I didn't enjoy myself (in the Poker sense) the entire time. I've decided that the experiment to go 100% tournament as opposed to cash games was an error, as only the main event holds enough value to warrant the effort required. In future I will try to qualify online for these events and if I'm not successful, I will probably not even go. I've come to realise that even with the impending excitement of looking forward to this event in advance, by the time it comes around I'm often unmotivated/disinterested. The same thing happened in Vegas this summer, the chore of playing for such extended periods doesn't really appeal... that is unless you're in it for the big one.

Ciao for now.

M

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Nice guys don't finish last


This is a some what over due blog, by about a week or so. Just a few days ago, the news the Poker community at large had been waiting for was confirmed... PokerStars had purchased the assets of Full Tilt Poker and were to restore the balances of the non-US player base, whilst paying the US DOJ renumernations to cover the balances of those players affected from the USA.

It goes without saying, that as an employee of PokerStars, this news was eagerly awaited and overly-expected for sometime, however that did not take anything away from the sheer excitement when the news broke officially.

I can't begin to tell you how happy and proud I was that day and will continue to be, at being part of such a great company. I can only assure people, that I'm not blowing the corporate trumpet for the sake of it, I truly admire the people who run PokerStars. Don't get me wrong, we are not a charity, we want to make money... a TONNE of money.. but we do so by being fair, honest and offering the best product that we continue to refine at the demand and requirements of our players.

We're lucky to have wealthy, highly knowledgable and passionate people at the helm of PokerStars and it goes without saying, the company has managed to find a solution that both suits the needs of the business and provides a lifeline to the Poker community.

After the industry's reputation has been better black and blue with scandal after scandal, it's wonderful that we have something truly great to celebrate. It's going to lead to an exciting new era in online Poker, with 2 brands owned by the same entity competitively trying to deliver the best product to the players. We have a potential re-entering into the US market to look forward to and many Millions back in the Poker economy.

It's good to see that a company that does almost everything right, getting a big reward for their efforts and players being treated as they deserve.

Raise a hand to PokerStars, I know I will be tomorrow... we're having a champagne reception at the IOM office to welcome FTP... our new friend to the PokerStars family!

Ciao ciao!


Monday, August 6, 2012

Raising the Standard


Hi folks,

It's my first blog since the recent acquisition of Full Tilt Poker by PokerStars and whilst I'm mucho excited about that, I shall save writing about that for another day.

Today I want to discuss something that comes up quite often, particularly when discussing the local circuit, in this case being the Stoke Poker Scene. This last weekend saw the Genting Poker Series come to Genting Club - Stoke, when combined with the Anniversary Cup weekend perhaps made for the biggest week of Poker in history in Stoke-on-Trent!

By all accounts it seemed to have gone very well and from the few moments I got the opportunity to view it, the live webcast seemed to be good quality. It's very odd watching your local jaunt and familiar faces playing Poker via broadcast and good to see the Stoke Scene getting some props for what is a fairly well run room week on, week out.

Today's topic comes via local Stoke player, Wendy Rees. I have just discovered after chatting a little with Wendy (when getting her permission to write about her views contained within) that she is from the Isle of Man! Tis a small world, we appear to have rotated around to replace each one another in our respective home-lands!

In the popular Stoke Poker Chat room on Facebook, Wendy raised some concerns over the Genting Poker event this weekend. Whilst giving credit for a well organised event, she felt the event was let down by ... (queue the music...) the standard of play.

Anyone who has played with me long enough from Stoke knows a little piece of me dies every time I hear someone say that, LOL! So needless to say it ground my gears enough to want to write about it. I sought out Wendy's permission to base my blog on her point of view, which she has very kindly allowed me to do, providing that I quote her directly. She asked me to post the following as a direct quote from Wendy..

"Raising with two random cards and hoping to get lucky is not Poker in any way, shape or form".

Now, before I go on a rant saying how incorrect this statement is, I'll be sure to the point very clear that only 50% of the argument is incorrect, however the sentiment is entirely incorrect. Judging by the content of the chat transcript, Wendy appears to have been particular unlucky against someone she perceived to be a bit of a solid player but took a hefty chunk of her stack with a less than premium hand, perhaps getting lucky in the process (exact hand details unknown). Wendy confounds the fact she gave him too much credit for the mediocre hand and appears frustrated that people can play that way.

Well, in my book... that's mission successful if someone can raise with junk and get credit for something stronger... that IS what Poker is about afterall.

The chat generally renounced players who play out of position and raise with weaker holdings pre-flop as fish and ruining the game with their 'low standard of play'. The very notion of this is entirely ridiculous. What immediately came to my mind when reading Wendy's (and other's) remarks about this perceived lower standard of play is as follows;

* Loose aggressive player, opens the pot about 40% of hands, weaker tight players fold, fold fold fold fold and occasionally see the flop, miss and TAG takes many many pots almost uncontested.

*When our weaker tight players get hands to play back, our LAGs stay out of the way as they know you're only playing back at them with legit hands.

*Occasionally the LAG will open the pot and will either get called or 3-bet by the tighter player and will be getting insane implied odds to hit on the flop and potentially knock out a player who'd only play the type of hand they're willing to go all the way with.

Let's be clear here. Playing lots of hands does not make you a fish. Playing weak hands does not make you a fish. Playing lots of weak hands out of position does not make you a fish. A fish is someone who calls off light, can't fold a hand when it's pretty much certain they are beat, someone who over-values hands at showdown etc.

Unfortunately confusing the typical tournament LAG with a fish means you're probably not going to be winning many tournaments yourself. Wendy is from a school of the game that plays mostly premium hands, solid poker and perhaps doesn't leave herself in too many difficult spots. There is nothing wrong with this, it's a fairly stress-free way of playing Poker and you'll either win small or lose small, the swings are minimal.

However, the tournament LAG is there for the win. They are playing a high percentage of hands to steal blinds, outplay people on the majority of flops because most players are too timid to play back at them before the flop. That last statement is the key to this argument. If Wendy is sharp enough to detect numerous fish at her table, who are throwing chips around with reckless abandon, then she really is in a great position to benefit from this and needs to play back at them . Now this means making re-raises with hands you might not necessarily play as standard, INFACT your hand doesn't really matter at all if you KNOW that this guy is often messing around in pots without a premium holding.

That is Poker. Making moves on players when you don't have much, because you know they don't have much. Poker is not about all seeing flops and hoping to make a good hand into a better hand, please don't confuse Poker with Snap!

Wendy Lees is clearly a big fan of Poker and likes to see it played a particular way, whereby people all play fairly solid, perhaps only get out of line when they are getting short stack and the the money on the table circulates and everyone just has fun playing. Unfortunately this isn't a realistic view on real money Poker, particularly a tournament with a £400+ buy-in.

Another snippet from the chat room states;

"As a single parent that prize money would have transformed my life. I was taking the game very seriously!"

I'm fairly sure everyone was! The difference being however, that some of the others are playing under different circumstances. To a single parent playing a competition with a £400 can make every decision quite critical, even added in difficulty... HELL £400 is a lot of money for a working professional with few commitments such as myself and it's never easy to make the right moves in a Poker game when you're playing out of your comfort zone.

Being able to pull that trigger, BEFORE the flop, to shut down these zany pre-flop abusers is the key to building stacks and dominating your table. They soon slow down and you gain the respect of others at the table with your raises. THAT IS POKER.

I recall a particular tournament playing at the Grosvenor Stoke, I believe it was a £100 buy-in which at the time would have been very significant money for me. I got to the final table without showing down a single hand! This was done by making lots of raises, being aggressive in the blinds, being aggressive on any flop and re-raising people before the flop, often without a good hand. I seem to recall actually not getting a big pair until the final table and actually getting it smashed (oh the irony!).

The point is, in tournament Poker, you're playing against the clock, the luxury of sitting back to stack a LAG with a strong hand is not available to you. You need to play the person and the situations they create. This will mean you sometimes have to play a pot without a good hand and you need to be brave enough to make BIG plays without that tournament defining pocket-pair.

If we all played solid, ABC Poker... well their wouldn't be many winners in the game and their certainly wouldn't be any skill involved.

I'd like to take this opportunity to thank Wendy for being a good sport and allowing me to use her recent chat on Stoke Poker Facebook as the source of my discussion today.

Needless to say, I do think playing a lot of hands (when done correctly) is a valid way of playing winning Poker and as the graphic above says...

Aggression wins pots!

Friday, April 13, 2012

Black Friday - 1 year on



It's almost a whole year since the dreadful events of Black Friday, April 15th 2011. It's the single most significant event in online poker's history and I wish to take the opportunity to recall the events of Black Friday via this blog.

A common theme I find when reading articles on the subject is where were you on Black Friday? I recall precisely where I was and whom I was with. At approximately 17:30 BST, myself and a few of my friends/colleagues from PokerStars, including a number of senior management were at the Terminus Tavern enjoying what should have been the 1st of many pints savoured in celebration of another hard worked week in the office.

Within a few moments, one of the more senior members excused himself to talk a phone call, before long a couple of other people's phones had gone off... all senior management and we knew something was up. At that very moment in time, all we knew was that the .COM domain had been seized and we were all in a panic. It didn't take long before we learnt that Full Tilt Poker had suffered the same fate, we could have barely cared less for AB/UB. Before we knew it, we'd abandoned our seats in the beer garden and were either heading home to await more news, or in my case (and a few others) I headed to the office to see what was going on. I think it's the only time in my career with PokerStars that I have ever felt insecure about my job, it was a very nervous and tense atmosphere at the office.

I was with a number of newly appointed staff, particularly Americans who had only just moved to the Isle of Man who were strangely excited by the drama, yet I'm sure they were fearful for the worst. Not a lot was going on at the PokerStars office in general, most of the staff had left, the Exec board were not there at that time. It was almost as if the DOJ bad waited for our core staff to leave before they flipped the switch and hit us HARD with almost no ability to react.

The only department in the Isle of Man which were busy were the web team. Naturally they had to assist in re-directing our sites, SEO and other such matters to a .EU domain to recover the traffic we were losing. For what it's worth they did an incredible job and worked many long hours in the immediate aftermath of the DOJ's actions. We spent the weekend wondering if we still had jobs and if our company had a future ...

Let's roll it back a little earlier, just to give you a sense of the shock involved, the timing and the magnitude. PokerStars had just announced a partnership with Wynn Casinos to potentially move back into a regulated US market, perhaps the single biggest thing to happen to our company in many years. Full Tilt Poker had just announced the Onix Cup, a series of super high stakes elitest tournaments to determine who the very best of the best in the tournament scene really were. The 2 biggest players in the game were readying themselves for massive global expansion... this was not on the cards whatsoever.

Literally out of nowhere, blackout. Having been a survivor (if you wish to call it that) of the UIGEA, the only other such event to pose a serious threat to online Poker and it certainly was a game changer. I was working a for an online gaming company that was considerably less committed to gaming (especially Poker) in the United States and folded to the legislative fear-mongering quicker than a nit facing a 3-bet. Out of the dismay of the UIGEA, the deadwood losts the industry, whilst the cream rose to the top. PokerStars became the shining becon of all good things 'Internet Poker'. Full Tilt Poker became the premier place for high stakes and legendary poker degeneracy.

Since the UIGEA, the true forces of the online game have improved the scene for all concerned enormously. We now have better promotions, better software, more security, established live events that are feeding new and exciting talent with the coverage and money they deserve. However there are such dark dark days ahead...

From my perspective, my personal concerns were almost immediately dissolved. One of the owners of PokerStars took time to personally speak to every individual (myself included) to reassure them that jobs were safe and no one would be losing their job, we faced an enormous challenge but we would get through it. Hearing that from someone so significant left me in no doubt.. especially as our owners are about as passionate about the industry as you can be. Further more the US situation actually created work for me and I had something of a career-detour for 9 months but all a good experience.

It wasn't so good for Full Tilt Poker. They were exposed as a poorly ran business, despite their technical brillance and alot of good people lost their jobs or lost their bank rolls, leaving an indelible scar on the paranoid conscience of the Poker playing public forever. Others who lost their online career based out of the US were forced to seek a new life in a far away place, the face of the game is forever changed.

What I want to end this blog is the point of something so special, that was so nearly lost.. it's damaged but it can be reborn. Do not take for granted that you can play the game you love at your local casino, in your kitchen or at a plethora of websites. Make the most of your passion for it, appreciate the people who deliver these great games and enjoy it whilst you can, you never know when your government will take it away from you.


Monday, April 9, 2012

Day 3 and accidental day 4 :-/

So after 2 days of mostly getting bust in the chops I began day 3 almost as badly. I was in a good game and had won a few little pots before getting involved in the following hand.

I raise to €20 on a straddle pot with a couple of limpers with AQ and get a call from the button, I decided to bet before the flop came out as I was c-betting anyway and this makes my hand appear stronger and generally causes some confusion. My bet was €25 on a board of 2, 8 ,Q and he calls.

The turn brings a 9 of spades giving me a nut flush draw along with my top pair, I bet €40 and he raises to €100 I decide to jam for €150 on top and to my dismay he made a set of 9's on the turn and I don't improve.

I decide to take a break for a while before rejoining the same game a couple of hours later, I see a youngish player has bought in for €800 into the €200 game lol, I managed to get some money out of him.

Folds to my button and i make it €8 to go with Qh8h and our overly rich BB calls as does the SB. The flop comes Ah Kh Jx and we check around, the turn is a blank and I check/call a bet for the BB for €12 to try and make my gutter or flush. The river brings thee gin card.

It comes a 10h and the BB makes an over sized bet of €40, something is seen him do with a nut hand earlier so I know he has a straight and I can take advantage of it, I raise to €175 making it appear that I'm trying to get him off a chop and he begrudgingly calls and is SEETHING when he sees my hand.

I scooped a nice pot there and liked he way I played the hand, by checking the flush draw on the flop I completely concealed the draw and the deck certainly helped me in creating a favourable scenario.

I then get into a hand with the guy who stacked me with 9's earlier, I raise tug with KJs to €7 and get a couple of callers. The flop is 2,7,J and I bet €15 and the guy who got me earlier calls . Turn brings another J and he checks so I check back my trips to appear I c-bet and missed... The river is another J! He leads for €25 and I tank up and then make it €80 and get he call from QQ.

By this point I'm up about €300 for the day before I drop €75 on an all-in preflop when my AKs runs into the shorty's AA. So me and Christin decide to head to the bar for the evenings beer pong free roll. Most of the dealers and many of the Internet kids are in and it took far too long to get going but was good fun. Needless to say we were both in the drinking mood by the time it concluded.

We have a few beers (including a few necked pints!) and I decide I need to get in more pokers before I head to bed and get an early night. We end back in the same game with a few faces from earlier, I jokingly (or perhaps not..) inform the table of Christin's nitty ness and she managed to stack 2 people all in pre with AQ v AK v 44, before hen going on to make quad 10's not after. Being so drunk I fail to recall any of my own hands but did leave about €30 up before Christin warned that we were getting the attention of too many pros who had began circling the table to play against the drunks, so we called it a night.

I had 2 hours sleep before I had to go the airport, I had a rapid breakfast and headed to the bus stop, unfortunate I was waiting at he public stop not he one for air coach and it went right by me,. A while later I get the next and I know I'm cutting it fine on time, I see a notification on the coach that Aer Lingus operate from T1 so get off there, however as they have taken over Aer Arann's Isle of Man flights they are based in T2 and naturally by the time I get there they have closed the flight and despite being only a few mins late they refuse to help me.

I end up having to pay €75 for a later flight and a 9 hour wait!! I decide I can't handle being stuck at the airport that long so I get the bus back to the Burlington to play for a few hours before coming back. So im here but the only €1/€2 game is with all the ringers about €1K deep... So I may be hanging around a little longer doing nothing, but will make sure I get back to the airport on time :-)

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Day 1 and 2 update

Well typically my Irish Open starts slow but this is particularly bad. I managed to drop a buy in on a particularly bad hand.

Ins €5 straddle pot, I raise it to €15 with J10s and get a call from the straddle. Flop comes 2 3 8 and I c-bet for €20 and the guy calls. The turn brings a 9 and I decide I need to push the draw pretty hard and try and force a fold so bet €40 and I get min-raised.. Pretty bleak but I'm forced to cal wig only €60 then left behind. The river comes a J and I decide to payoff due to the size of the pot, he had 89 for 2 pair, urgh!

Second hand of note for the day was against my friend , Christin who is pretty tight and playing €100 deep. She makes a €7 raise early position and I 3-bet for €17... She decides to jam for €75 which sucks but I call and she has A9!!! The flop J A 9 which is pretty whacky but then she makes runner runner for a flush :-/ that's one you can't even get mad at!

So that left me €295 down on day 1 and day 2 has start even worse. I managed to stack off on a terribly played hand, I make a button raise with AJ and get a call from a tricky player who is has a pretty high VPIP, the flop comes 9 high and I c-bet for €12 and he raises (as expected) to €30 and I call preparing to make a move on the turn. It comes a J to lock me in abut brings a 3rd diamond, I check and he bets €50, I raise to €125 and he calls asking if I have any diamonds... I know I'm dead and he had a baby flush.

I rebut and admittedly I'm probably a little steamed, I get myself into a horrible hand with 56s, I call from the button in a multiway pot for €12 and flop a guts hot and flush draw on an ace high board, it check all around and the turn brings a 10, the original raise bets €15 and a super deep donkey player calls, I decide that having not bet the flop neither have a hand that can hold up to some pressure and I raise to €60! The deep donk then decides to make it €130 and I'm priced into a shove for a little more.

The river blanks and he moved on with just 2nd pair and I leave the table in disgust. This leaves me approx €700 down and just really doubting myself, none of my moves are getting there and generally I'm getting terrible hands.

I'm chilling in my room as Willy Wonka is on the box! I'll be back at it this evening and just hope for a turn of fortune, this trip is thoroughly poor so far!

Friday, April 6, 2012

Arrived in Dublin!

So after minor delays I have arrived at the IPO!! The atmosphere is buzzing in the hotel lobby and the pro's are busy checking in before main event day 1 begins!

The first bit of action (Guinness) is going far too far well... Off for dinner before some action tonight!!

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Return to Ireland - Irish Open 2012


Apologies followers, for the long absence in my blog writing. I got into a nasty habit of keeping my live trip updates to facebook which doesn't provide the best means for later reference. I promise to be good and keep it all here in future :-)

So it's nearly Easter which means I'll be heading to Dublin for the IPO for the 3rd year running. Since my last blog update here I've had a reasonably successful trip to Las Vegas as well as the Dublin Winter Festival by Paddy Power.

It's reassuring to me that whilst my trips aren't yielding 'spectacular' wins, they've all been profitable. I hope this time to take a few more risks to achieve that massive win that is more than reasonable at the IPO's cash tables given the standard of play.

I fly in 2 days, it's going to be a blast. All updates will be here so stay tuned!

M