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It’s that time of the year once again. PokerStars just announced the schedule for the 2010 PokerStars Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) , starting the 2nd of May 2010 and ending on May 16th.
With SCOOP Poker Tournament, being one of the biggest online tournaments with millions of guaranteed prize money, this could be your chance to win big.
This year, there’s a total guaranteed prize pool of $45,000,000 to be divided over 38 events. With a lowest buy-in of $11 and a highest buy-in of $10,300 there’s a play for every bankroll. Every event is divided into 3 different buy-in levels, low, medium and high with their own prize money.
As always, there’s the possibility to qualify for big events like SCOOP with satellites that are running right now. Click on the Events section in your PokerStars client and then select SCOOP to see the full list of satellites.
And to top it off, PokerStars.tv will be covering the SCOOP series, with articles and tweets from Team PokerStars Pro. Wouldn’t it be cool that a pro player like Daniel Negreanu or Joe Hachem could be commentating your play?
Here are some stats from last year’s SCOOP series, the first ever.
49,029 unique players (199,958 Buy-ins) played in 22 different events, totaling a total prize money pool of $38,324,830. The SCOOP 2009 Series played in 163 different countries, with 118 countries who cashed.
In total there were 33,639 players (not unique) who cashed and the United States was the country with the most cashes (13,418), followed by Germany (3852 cashes) and Canada. Belgium, my home county had 238 cashes and ended on place 20. This year, I’m going to make sure I’m one of those cashes and hopefully more than once ![]()
Are there any particular events in the SCOOP series you’re looking forward to?
Just a few months back I finally made my first $100 starting from scratch and now I already have the $200 mark in sight.
Actually if you take into account that I also won a $16,50 PokerStars SCOOP ticket, I’m over $200 right now ![]()
But that ticket is to use in the next SCOOP games on PokerStars only so I can’t cash it in for the value of the money. But On the other hand, what if that ticket wins me a lot more cash ![]()
At the moment I’m only playing tournaments with a buy-in of maximum $4, so a $16,50 tournament will earn four times as much if I’m in the prizes.
Cash games are going great lately, with winnings 80% of the time I play cash games. And the times I loose I’m still able to minimize the losses for that particular game.
The best session was when I bought myself in into $0,10/$0,05 game for $10 and ended up winning $35 in about an hour later. In that session, I almost immediately read the table and knew when to bet or to fold. And another nice thing was that I also got the cards I needed if necessary.
Besides cash games I also started playing in the Double or nothing 1-Table Sit ‘n Go’s with a $1+$0,15 buy-in. Till now with great success, 10 sit ‘n go’s played, winning in 9 of them.
But the playing experience I don’t like in this particular sit ’n go. As soon as there 6 players left, everybody starts to wait for the one that makes an error. So I start steeling blinds by then, but it almost cost me the victory in a few occasions. Most of the times when at this stage there are only 2 or 3 players who are still actually play poker then and it’s cruel that one of these players have to lose because they’re actually playing. I hate PASSIVE players.
True it’s a tactic to wait for others to make errors, but the one time I didn’t win in the Sit ‘n Go, I was really pissed, not on the player who beat me, but on the wanker that always folded. He got lucky in the round before when he almost lost on the big blind, but hit an Ace on the river, doubling him up for a few extra rounds.
I’ll keep you posted.
PokerStars is celebrating a milestone, 40 Billion hands dealt!!!
And they’re celebrating it with you. They’re organizing great value tournaments and tons of exiting cash games.
F40 Milestone hands
Poker players dealt in every millionth hand will win a cash prize of $40 for every VPP they earned in the previous 40 hands played on that table. Every player that’s dealt in will be awarded a VPP and the winner of the hand will get their cash prize doubled.
Example: Play at a $1/$2 table and get dealt into a milestone hand. PokerStars calculates that you have earned 31VPPs in the last 40 hands + the extra VPP = 32 VPPs. This means 32x$40 = $1280!!! If you win the hand it will be doubled to $2560!!!
And to top it off, at the time the 40th Billion hand will be dealt, all players will be awarded $400 for every VPP earned in the previous 40 hands.
Example: 32VPP x $400 = $12800. Win the hand and earn a whopping $25600!!!!
Multi-Table tournaments (MTTs)
F40:Sunday Million $4.000.000 guaranteed on February 21st, the biggest prize pool EVER, with at least $1.000.000 for the winner!! Buy-in $215
F40: $40 Micro Million $1,000,000 guaranteed tournament
A special F40 tournament takes place at 14:30 ET on Sunday, February 14. For a buy-in of just $40 you can play for your share of a guaranteed $1,000,000 prize pool.
F40: 40 FPP - $40,000 Specials
You can also play in a series of special F40 FPP tournaments. Each has a buy-in of only 40 FPPs and a prize pool of $40,000. Start times will alternate between 13:40 ET & 21:40 ET each day.
To register for the Sunday Million or any of the other F40 tournaments, open the PokerStars lobby, click ‘Tourney’ & ‘Special’.
Sit & Go’s
F40: Super Sit & Go tournaments
A series of 40-man Super Sit & Go torunaments will be helt 24/7 from February 14 till February 21.
F40: First Depositor Freerolls
Every player whit a first real money deposit on PokerStars using the code F40 will be awarded a ticket to all 40 of PokerStars free-to-enter tournaments with a $1000 prize pool.
Last Monday, I played my first WBCOOP 2010 tournament. No Limit Holdem with about 1500 participants.
At starters I was very careful to get my chips in as I first wanted to see how everyone was playing.
Starting with 2000 chips, I earned some 1000 chips extra in about 15 hands, but then I made a mistake leaving me with 1/3 of my stack. I didn’t panic, knowing it will get better later on. A few hands later I won my all in with pocket Queens, doubling me up and back to 1000 something chips 2 hands later when my pocket aces got broken by a set of 5’s.
But still very calm I pushed myself right into the top 50 before the first break was there. The ‘key hand’ that changed everything for me in the tournament was at the time I had 7800 chips and called an all in against AKs with my (again) pocket Queens. He didn’t pair his Ace or king and I even made a set on the river. Suddenly I was in the top 100 and climbing higher and higher in the ranking.
After the first break, there were still plenty of other bloggers left playing before we reached the 153 paying places. My game was one of the best since a long while, so I was very pleased and nothing could touch me. Before heading into the 2nd break I had placed myself into the top 10 and more importantly, I was playing the table.
After winning 3 hands in a row, with KK, AK and 37s (on the Big Blind), they seemed to be a bit afraid of me. The 3 7 hand was of course very lucky as I only had to check to see the flop. And what a bad flop for my opponent, 4 3 9. He must have had an Ace or something high to make a call pre-flop. So I made a bet, the size of 2 times the BB, he called. The turn was a 2, so again a bad card for him I was thinking. But He’d called my ‘bluff’ on the flop, so I checked this time, not wanting to lose more chips. When checked also and the river made me a 2nd pair with a 7, I checked, hoping he would make a bet. And he did
. He committed half his stack to the pot in the hope to scare me off, but hell no I would fold 2 pair how this hand was played. I raised him all in, hoping he would see it as a bluff. He called and mucked his cards while searching for the exit.
From then on, every time I called or re-raised, most of them folded and most of the time only the BB called me, trying to protect their BB. Example, sitting in late position, I re-raised pre-flop “ times the BB with only holding 2 9o in my hands. Only the BB called my bluff and with a AKJ flop, I was very scared he could have paired. But on the other hand, the way he played the hands before I was 99% sure he had nothing and completely missed the flop, just as I did. So I played my position and made a small bet. He re-raised me and now I was actually really scared, but something told me he was bluffing me. I could lose ½ my stack to him if I raised him all in, but because I felt strong, I re-raised him to an all in. He took whole his Time Bank seconds to think over what to do, but at the end he folded his cards, leaving me with a monster pot. I climbed up to the 3rd place with still more than 370 players left.
After the 2nd break I got really tired, it was already 1AM where I’m living and I guessed it would take at least another hour to get into the money places.
I made a deal with myself to stop playing at 1:30AM as I had to work also a few hours later and was desperate for some sleep.
So at 1:30AM with 250 players left, I clicked the ‘Sit Out next hand’ checkbox and went to bed.
I was very excited to see where I finished at the time I got up, so before everything else I checked my PokerStars account to see the result.
I was surprised to see I finished on the 54th place, winning me a $16,5 SCOOP ticket.
On the other hand I was wondering what if I played out the whole tournament? The poker I was playing was very good and I was pretty sure I could reach the final table. But also 1 mistake could cost me the tournament before even reaching the paid places.
Conclusion, sitting out paid off this time. It wasn’t fun for me to do it, especially because I was standing 3rd at that time, but it had to be done.
Now up to the next WBCOOP event.
Did you play?
From starting my “From Zero to Hero challenge” in February 2009, I finally passed the $100 mark yesterday evening.
The $50 mark was passed in May 2009 and I hoped to double up in 2 months’ time. I guess I was wrong
. It took me much longer than expected, but I had some other businesses to do that were a bit more important than playing poker unfortunately. But even then I didn’t reached the double up in 2 months.
What made it so hard this time was that I played more at cash tables and with that losing more. When playing freerolls, you don’t lose anything, you can only win. In cash games you better be sure you cash out at least the amount you spend to enter. And that’s a lesson I’ve learned to many times the last couple of months.
A couple of months back, I started playing more and more cash games and at first everything went really well. I had the $100 mark in sight with just a couple of cents left. But then in a $0,05/$0,10 cash game I got pocket jacks and lost to a set of 4’s on the river, losing $4 in one game.
It was the starter of a bad streak. The day after I lost a bit more than a dollar in 5 different cash games. The week after I only made profit in 30% of the cash games I played, but never enough to cover the losses.
I decided that it was time to stop playing for a while. I kept calling that it was bad luck etc… But never how I played. And that’s where the problem was. I was to confident and started bluffing the wrong way. Ok, sometimes it sure was bad luck and I definitely had some bad beats, but I was playing BAD, no doubt about that.
For a month I didn’t play at all, it was just what I needed, a little time of. (Hear me, sounding like a pro).
After that time-off I started playing safe and entered in the freerolls. And since then I’m also playing much better. It isn’t the fast money you would be expecting, but I was getting closer and closer to my goal.
Yesterday, with about $2 to go I played a $1000 and $5000 freeroll on PokerStars. In the $1000 freeroll, I won 0,85 cents and in the other I won $0,45 cents. So only about 50 cent left. And I was eager to pass that until now magical $100 marker the same day.
In a cash game on Full Tilt, I entered a $0,05/$0,10 cash game hoping to score the left cash. I waited for the big blind to really start playing, which gave me time to observe what I’m up to. With 4 games played I already won 20 cents. At the time I got AK suited (clubs) and in middle position, I raised 3x the BB to see only 1 player calling me. Flop was beautiful, although not pairing me, 9JQ with 2 clubs. I had a straight draw and a flush draw. My opponent checked and I made a 40 cent bet to get called again. If he paired, I needed a good card quick or I have to fold the hand. Luckily another spade (5) came on the turn, giving me the nuts. I could quietly sit back and figure out how many I would bet, not making him fold. He checked (as expected), I made a 20 cent bet, not too much to scare him, just enough to lure him into the trap. He called and when the river draws a 10 of hearts he made a 40 cent bet. I figured he made a straight now and I started thinking what amount of cash would make him fold or should I take the risk of re-raising and hope he would re-raise again? I could go all-in, but he definitely would fold then. So I took the bet and just re-raised him. He quickly went all-in to scare me. I called his all-in immediately. I won the hand and reached my goal!!!
Hopefully the next double up, to $200 will not take this long again ![]()