Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Blom, or Maybe The RNG, Crushes Palmer

Poker News RSS / Matthew Pitt / 12 April 2011 / Leave a Comment

Scott

Scott "urnotindangr" Palmer

There is a saying in poker that goes along the lines of "it's better to be lucky than good," though it is usually used in a negative tone against someone who has just sucked out on you, in my case anyway. So what happens when a poker player is 1.) Good and 2.) Getting very lucky? A complete demolition that is what occurs!

Sunday 3 April saw Viktor "Isildur1" Blom take on fellow high stakes pro Scott "urnotindangr" Palmer in the latest instalment of the SuperStar Challenge. For those of you who have been living in a cave for the past couple of months the SuperStar Challenge sees a player take on Blom over 2,500 hands of no limit Hold'em or pot limit Omaha over four heads-up tables with blinds of $50/$100. In the 2,500 hands played on April 3, Palmer found himself in front to the tune of $5,425, a lead he took in this latest battle.

Within the first five minutes there was an all in encounter and it showed just how this particular match was going to go. A raise to $300 from Palmer was met with a three-bet to $1,000 from Blom and a call from Palmer. The flop came down Ks-Ac-Kh and Blom fired a bet of $1,200, a bet that Palmer opted to call. The Tc on the turn did not slow Blom down and he bet again, this time $2,650 and again Palmer called. The river brought the Qs into play and Blom moved all in for his remaining $5,950 and Palmer snap-called with his QdJs as he had turned the nut straight but Blom tabled AsKd for a flopped full house. First blood to Blom.

From this point on Blom continued to run hotter than the sun, including winning another stack from Palmer when he held Ad9h against Kc9s on a cooler board reading Ah-Kh-9c-5c then winning an all in preflop match-up with AhKh against Palmer's pocket nines before a disgusting hand that saw Blom all in preflop with Ad9s against the ThTd of Palmer, only to see the Swede go runner-runner on a 7s-2d-8s-6d-5d board! Ouch.

By the time they had played 700 hands Blom was in the lead by almost $45,000 though Palmer still fought back valiantly and was doing everything in his power to keep the enigmatic Blom in his sights but sometimes you just have to accept it is not your day, put it down to experience and try again some other time. Palmer had seemed destined to lose all evening and the biggest pot of the night, coming just a couple of hundred hands away from the allocated 2,500, emphasised this.

Palmer opened with a $300 bet whilst holding QdJc and then called when Blom three-bet to $1,100. The flop came down 8d-Qh-Ad and Blom kept up his trademark aggression with a $1,300 bet. Palmer elected to call and the online poker Goliath's saw the Qc fall on the turn. Blom bet larger this time, $3,150 was the total and this time Palmer sprung into action and made it $8,000 to play. Blom then made a strange re-raise to $12,850 and Palmer called. The river was the 2h and Blom bet the $8,250 that he had left in his stack and Palmer called with his trip queens only to see the $47,000 pot slide towards Blom as he held AhhQs and had turned another full house!

By the time the 2,500 hands had been played, Blom had profit of $66,607 in front of him, meaning he had won Palmer by $61,182 overall. He has so far beating the likes of Daniel Cates, Eugene Katchalov, Isaac Haxton, Tony G and Daniel Negreanu. Surely it can't all be down to simply running good.

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