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Day 3

by Phil Hellmuth |  Published: Apr 24, '07

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OK, I know this is a plug, but it is true. Every morning I get up, eat room service, skip my morning coffee, and then I carry a can of Pro Player Endurance drink (drinkproplayer.com) to the table with me. This is the first tournament that I have ever used Pro Player at, and now I'm the chip leader with over $1.8 million in chips!! I believed in Pro Player before, but now I'm never leaving home without it!

After another risk free day, I was a little bit at risk late in the day. Before I describe that pot, let's tell an average pot for the day. Phil raises to $16,000 to go with K-K, Player A studies forever then calls, then Player B pops it up $40,000 more out of the big blind. Phil has a feeling that his opponent has 10-10 or J-J. Phil calls, Player A studies forever, then mucks his J-J (good lay down). Flop comes down 8-8-2, Player B bets out $40,000, and Phil calls. Turn comes a seven and Player B checks. Phil bets $50,000, and Player B calls. River is a six, Player B checks, Phil bets $120,000, Player B calls, and Phil wins another big pot. Same way almost with my pocket queens, except I only won $90,000 on the super slow play.

Late in the day, I raise the button with A-9, little blind reraises, I think I have him beat, but lay it down and show him, saying, "Y'all always underestimate me." Next hand, Player B (who's table I've been drawn to five hours later, opens for $60,000 when the blinds are $5,000-$10,000. Phil calls, flop is K-Q-4, and Player B bets out $70,000. I muck up face up saying, "See y'all underestimate me." The very next hand, I open for $20,000 (mini-raise) with 6-6. Player C makes it $80,000, I call saying, "OK, I've got him set up too, don't dissapioint me dealer." Player C says, "You've got me set up huh?" Like he has pocket queens or something. Flop is 9d-5d-2c, and I check. Player C bets $120,000, and I think that I have him beat, but I'm confused a bit: I call. The next card is the 4c, and now I bet out $90,000, just in case he has K-Q or something. He calls, and the river is the 10d. I check, after all, the flush hit, and an over pair is still good. Player C bets $200,000, and now I'm thinking that if I call and lose, that I'll be down to $800,000 or so. Still, I don't believe him, but I'm not confident in my read one way or another. All day long, I KNEW when people were weak and strong, but this time I wasn't sure. I call, and he says, "That's good," and mucks his hand.

Now I stand up and scream (for the first time in 21 hours I screamed), "Yo, don't mess with me y'all, I just called $500,000 with two sixes!!" I won the next hand as well, and then they called it a day 11 minutes early because we were down to 54 players, and they thought they would redraw tonight. I missed my big blind because of this, which was nice. Also, I won the last two pots that I played in, and ended the day with the chip lead. I passed Raymond Davis, who was steaming that he didn't have the lead anymore, saying, "That guy juts gave you $500,000!" Not really Raymond, it was not the easiest call for me to make.

With $1.827,000 in chips, I should make it through the day tomorrow.

Learn more about Phil by going to his website, www.PhilHellmuth.com and visit his Web store at www.PokerBrat.com.

 
Any views or opinions expressed in this blog are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of the ownership or management of CardPlayer.com.
 
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