The time had come. Day 2 was here. Considering how well things went on Day 1, I decided to stick to my routine. I slept in as much as I could after being up until ~3:00 am the night before, but I found I couldn’t sleep past 10:00 or so. The excitement of playing Day 2 with a healthy amount of chips prevented me from laying around too much. I showered and decided to go with room service waffles again
We would begin playing at 3:00 pm, so in the meantime I called a few people and updated them on my progress in the tournament, in addition to just relaxing and preparing myself for yet another long day. When you’re used to playing ~90 minute online sessions, playing for 8 to 10 hours live is actually pretty exhausting. I’m not going to go so far as to say it’s hard per se (I mean, you’re just sitting there playing cards), but there is definitely a period of acclimation.
Before I knew it, the time had come to head on over to the Rio. I found my table and walked around for the last bit of time I had left, knowing I’d be sitting on my butt for extended periods of time. Before the tournament started, I got a quick scouting report on a few players at my table. Unsurprisingly Jason Mercier was deemed a tough player, Hooman Nikzad was apparently a decent nit, and Jared Bleznik had too much gamble in him to play well at all times.
Eventually we got started and these reports all turned out to be pretty much spot on. Jared played decent, but made several mistakes from just spewing too much. When Mercier called him out on it (in a friendly manner), he just said, “man, it’s only $2,500, and it’s LIMIT! Who the fuck cares?” Needless to say, I was happy he was on my direct right.
As the day went on, I was pretty stagnant. I’d lose some chips, then win a couple pots here and there. I managed to bluff Mercier after he had been the aggressor in position throughout the hand. We both drew 1 on the 3rd draw and I had seen many pairs up to that point. My 3rd draw resulted in yet another pair, meaning it was less likely that Mercier made a hand, so I donked into him and he begrudgingly folded. For those familiar w/ Triple Draw, I made 5 #1s on Day 1, along w/ several other 7s. On Day 2, I was forced to win pots by getting creative or by making rough 8s when I wasn’t bricking. I was way above average to start the day, and gradually my stack became slightly below average as the blinds went up.
Eventually, people starting busting from our table. Galen Hall came over and sat to Mercier’s left. A kid with a ton of chips sat in between Mercier and me. He noticed my Deuces Cracked hoodie and said, “I hope you’re just a member and not a coach.” Somehow in a very short amount of time, Mercier took about 75% of his chips and I took the rest. Fortunately, he was replaced by one of the aggressive fish from my Day 1 table. Hooman was knocked out and replaced by online high stakes Triple Draw crusher, Oogee. I eventually busted Bleznik on my right, who was replaced by Eugene Katchelov. Numerous people were coming and going, but Mercier and I remained. My stack was still going up and down for the most part. I’d play a pot vs Mercier and lose. Then, I’d play vs someone else and win. It turns out that it is much easier to win a pot vs someone who doesn’t have insanely good luck.
Speaking of Mercier’s rungood, at one point right before I busted Bleznik, a very attractive blonde girl who could have been a Playboy bunny was watching our table from the rail. Bleznik silently signaled her presence to Mercier and all of us took notice. The guy who was standing near her eventually whispered something to her and pointed at Mercier. She walked over and tapped him on the shoulder, asking “are you Jason Mercier?” He told her he was, and she began rattling off the most bizarre string of questions you’d never expect.
How are you doing?
Is this a cash game?
Oh is this a last longer?
Do you still blog?
When was the last time you blogged?
How come you don’t blog anymore?
Would you mind if I interviewed you?
They walked away briefly, returned, and Mercier continued playing. Bleznik just looked at him with disgust, “You lucky son of a bitch. You run so damn good.”
After the table had a good laugh about it, including Galen mentioning the extremely weird questions, we all got back to playing poker. Shortly afterward, I busted another top pro.

Greg Raymer took Katchalov’s place which was pretty cool. He and Mike Sexton are the 2 nicest guys in poker so it was a joy playing with him.
After stacking Katchalov, I was back up to around an average stack. As opposed to Mercier’s famous chip castles, I went with the Great Wall motif.

The Great Wall of Tecmo
Meanwhile, as per usual, Mercier was running hotter than Chase Berger in a donkament. Don’t get me wrong, he was playing well, although some of his fundamentals could use some work, but it’s hard to make many mistakes when you’re drawing 3 and patting after the first draw. He started the day with 20k in chips, while I started with 40k. After a few hours, I was around 35k and he was well over 100k, getting closer and closer to 200k. I managed to win a big multi-way pot against him at one point when I binked a good 9 on the 3rd draw, but that was one of the few pots he lost that day. In fact, PokerNews even posted the following update:

Luckboxen
One of the rare pots he loses happens to be against a short-stacked Galen Hall lol. Speaking of Galen Hall, no disrespect, but that guy has no idea how to play Triple Draw. He was definitely one of the soft spots at the table, and could be heard talking to his friend on the rail every so often asking for further strategy advice. Really nice guy, but even he would admit that this wasn’t his game.
Play continued into the night and soleztis aka TJ showed up to sweat the remaining DC guys in the event. It was really nice having him, everyone on Twitter, and everyone on Facebook cheering me on as I got closer and closer to cashing. It was especially nifty to see the random collection of people who were actually interested. Many were following my progress via WSOP.com or PokerNews.com. Their support made the experience a ton of fun.
As play continued, the blinds were getting bigger and bigger and I needed to start getting some hands. I got into a couple big pots, and even attempted a big bluff, but nothing was working out. Once you get deep into a limit tournament, if you make it all the way to the end of a hand and lose, it gets pretty devastating. I bricked out on all 3 draws a couple times and was left with a short stack.
At this point, there were ~35 people left, and 30 people cashed. I knew all I needed was to win 1 or 2 pots and I’d be fine since any pot was big relative to the stacks. I picked my spots carefully and did my best to not make any mistakes at this critical juncture, but ultimately my fate would be decided by the next hour’s level of luck. I was making 7s left and right on Day 1, but only managed to make 1 7, a #4, on Day 2. This left me struggling to find the smallest of edges to win any chips.
Eventually, as I watched the giant TV monitor displaying the current tournament stats, the number began to fall. 34 people left. 33 left. 32. 31…
Unfortunately, while the number of entrants were falling, so was the number of chips in my stack. I tried to hold on as long as I could, but the following PokerNews updates sum up my final hour.



1 away from the money. My first goal was to make it to Day 2 and I did that and then some. My second goal was to cash and I came ever so close. It was surprisingly heartbreaking to bubble the money, especially considering I’m just a recreational player who had to scrap and claw to even get the chance to play in this tournament. Not to mention the fact that my previous 6 months of studying and playing put me ahead of most of the field in terms of skill (such as Galen Hall, who would go on to finish 12th). But alas, it was not meant to be. Luckily, a fellow Deuces Cracked guy was able to cash, as he finished in 21st. He’s one of the best Triple Draw players in the field and definitely deserved it, although I’m sure he wanted much more than 21st.
Overall, the experience was fantastic. I got the chance to play a game I love, which isn’t taken for granted now that I can’t play it online. In addition, I got to play with some top pros, even busting a few. I accomplished my goal of making it to Day 2. And to top it all off, having the support of so many people was ultimately what made it an experience to remember.
I’ll be back next year for sure, hopefully with an even deeper run and much less Jason Mercier.