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Lesson: 48
Playing with John D'Agostino
Jay Greenspan
February 13, 2006
As a writer covering the poker circuit, I wasn't surprised to
see that John D'Agostino took second in the Borgata Winter Open,
netting more than half a million dollars. John is widely considered
one of the great, young, all-around players in the game. He's equally
comfortable playing limit and no-limit, cash games, and tournaments.
I got a particularly close look at John's play a week prior to
Borgata, when we shared a table in Tunica at the $10,000 buy-in
World Poker Tour event. John didn't cash in that event, but during
the hours we played together, I witnessed many qualities that make
him a great player - here are three of them.
Overcoming a Tough Stretch
In Tunica, the players started with 20,000 chips. Within the first
blind level, almost half of John's stack was gone. In a key hand,
John made a tough lay down when he deduced that his high pocket
pair hand had not survived to the river. A couple of difficult hands
followed soon after.
It was the kind of tournament start that dispirits others. After
such a difficult opening, it's not uncommon to see even very good
players overwhelmed with resignation. I've heard players utter "It's
not my day." At that point, they're sealing their fate.
John, however, settled in. He didn't make unneeded moves that would
decimate his stack. On his way to his second-place finish at Borgata,
John was able to deal with a far greater level of adversity. With
25 players remaining, John was the chip leader, holding nearly one
million in chips. A few tough hands and four hours later, John held
only 280,000 chips and was in twelfth place with 16 players remaining.
Despite these setbacks, he didn't tilt - he focused and made good
decisions. He waited for his spots and was able to build his stack
back.
During Tunica, John was keenly aware of his own stack and the stacks
of others. After the tough early hands, he was quiet while waiting
for a spot to double up. He didn't rush it. He knew that he held
more than 20 big blinds in his stack and could wait for the right
opportunity. He wasn't forced to push in on Ace-Nine or a pair of
3s.
Once he managed to build himself back, he was on the hunt, looking
for stacks to attack. Sadly for me, he noticed that I had become
the table short stack. John was in late position when I had the
big blind, and he let no opportunity go by to attack my blind. With
only 20 big blinds, I couldn't afford to fight back without a premium
hand, as any decision I'd make would be for my tournament life.
John was the only one at the table (other than me) who seemed fully
aware of the situation. Others were far more focused on their own
cards, rather than on the other factors that would give them opportunities
to pick up pots.
Inscrutable Behaviors
In Tunica, most of the players at my table offered a treasure trove
of information. They varied their bet sizes pre-flop - a little
higher when they didn't want action, a little lower when they welcomed
it. Their arm and hand movements varied wildly from hand to hand.
With time, one could draw fairly accurate conclusions based on such
tells.
John, however, offered nothing. When he open-raised, he did so
for three times the big blind every time. His motions seemed nearly
identical to me time after time. If I tried to read his facial expression,
I got only a view of his downcast eyes as he stared vacantly at
the felt. As far as I could tell, there was nothing to learn.
The Tunica event didn't go well for me, but I leaned a lot from
watching John. Without question, observing the pros is one the easiest
ways to improve one's game.
Jay Greenspan

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