Typically winter is a bad season for my poker bankroll but this year I've actually managed to come up with a positive result, showing an 18% return on investment for the months of June, July and August. My best result came from one particular one-off game I played in August. As far as my regular games go, I came up with a healthy return from my weekly Friday night freeze-out, something that is mildly surprising to me as I had the feeling that I wasn't doing all that well in that game. Most of the other regular games I play were hovering around the break-even point. The worst result came from the online tournament that I play on most weekends, showing an ROI of -43%. Although this looks bad, the buy-in is significantly lower than it is in the live tournaments, which is why I still managed to make a profit overall.
Most Wednesday nights I head down to the Landmark Bar to play in the $20 rebuy tournament. 'Rookie', the new organiser has been doing a good job but player attendance has been inconsistent. Usually we get two tables of players but we don't always get the full $500 maximum into the prize-pool. It all depends on how many players turn up and how willing they are to re-buy. There are still about 5 or 6 regulars, myself included, and then a colourful assortment of semi-regulars, occasional visitors and newbies. Although I showed a loss in this game type, it only amounted to one buy-in, so that's okay. Looking back at my records, I can see why this is the case; I haven't won a game outright in 17 games. That's a long time between drinks.

In August I went to the last game of the current season knowing that I had to make at least 4th place to have any chance of qualifying. As it happens, I did very well and ended up heads-up vs Rookie at the end of the night. He got first prize and I came second, and I ended up qualifying 6th for the Top 8 Tournament. This is a single table tournament where the 8th qualifier gets 10k chips, 7th gets 10.5k and so on up to the top qualifier who gets 13.5k. To complicate things further, players get 2/3 of their stack at the start of the game and then the remaining 1/3 as an add-on at the first break.

The other one-off tournaments I played in this winter were at the annual Clubs New Zealand North Island Poker Championship. This was played at the Petone Cosmopolitan Club in Wellington and about 8 members of my local club took a trip down to play. We flew down on Friday and this time we were staying in a motel about 10 minutes walk from the club, which was very convenient. We all played in the Friday night 'Welcome Tournament' but I got ABSOLUTELY DONKEYED by someone who called my massive pre-flop raise with K 5 offsuit and (of course) hit two pair on the flop. But Ham, one of our crew, ended up winning the whole thing and got around $600 for his trouble. Nice. This was the first time I've ever played in a bounty tournament and it's always interesting to try a new format, even if only for less than an hour.

Four of my group qualified to play in a field of 72 on Sunday while the others went into the consolation event. I was knocked out after 3 hours but some of my club-mates went deeper. One of these, Ros, made it onto the final table and ended up coming third. The final table was set up in a different room, with spectator seating and a video viewing screen, similar to what the Weymouth Club had done the previous year. This set-up worked better than the one last year although it definitely still needs refinement. In the end it was a player from one of the other Auckland clubs that won the prize. It was yet another great weekend event and I'm already looking forward to next year's tournament, which is in Hamilton (only an hour's drive from home).
Meanwhile, I keep playing in the Friday night freeze-out tournament at my club. Player numbers have picked up a bit recently and we always get three tables now and even occasionally have four. For years I've had a basic 'Green Zone/Amber Zone/Red Zone strategy in place to help me decide at what point I have to change my playing style based on my relative chip stack. I've been tinkering with this a little recently, partly as a result of reading about Dan Harrington's 'M' concept. But it was starting to get a little too complex, so I came up with a more simplified version and I've been using that through most of the winter. I intend to keep following this scheme for the foreseeable future, provided nothing dramatic happens to my results.
The other game that I regularly play up at the club is the monthly Deep Stack Tournament. As the organiser of this tournament I've been trying to get the player numbers up all year. Usually we have only two tables (up to 16 players) and in June we were playing with just 9 entrants, leaving me to wonder if it was worth continuing. Then I guess my advertising of the game finally started to pay off. In July there were 24 entrants, then 19 in August, then we hit an all-time high with 32 players last month, allowing for a nice healthy first prize of $600. Now my problem has become managing the pre-game tasks such as registration, setting out the chip stacks, allocating seats etc. It's become increasingly obvious that I'm going to need more than just my wife helping me out before the game starts. I may even have to put an upper limit on the allowable number of players so that the game doesn't run too late. Still, it's a good problem to have.

Meanwhile, I try to fit in one online session every week. I've been playing mostly in a low buy-in Pokerstars tournament that typically has up to 1000 players. I've had a few small cashes but, after playing in 17 of these so far, I'm yet to make the final table, let alone score a win. But it's still early days and I plan to keep playing in this game at least until the end of the year.
The other online game I've been playing over winter is cheap SitNGos, once again mainly on Pokerstars. I came up with a -3% ROI in this game type over winter, which is actually not bad given some of my earlier results. I've been studying articles on how to play these games over the last year and my new strategy is still a work in progress. More on this later.
So that's been my winter season; a good result overall but still plenty to work on in a number of areas. The work continues and the story goes on.
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