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1  Poker Forums / Live Tournament Staking / Re: FULL VERSION: Stu Rutter, WSOP Staking Package, including the Main Event, at 1.0 on: June 30, 2023, 07:22:05 PM
$10,000 Deuce to seven

This is my first visit to the new venue, having been absent last year. Being an avid fan of the WSOP, though, I am staying at the Rio, for old time's sake.

I do have one complaint about the new venue. I know that alot of themed Vegas hotels get a bad rep, for being nothing like the place they are meant to resemble. But, with it's friendly locals, helpful staff, and waiters who don't look down their nose at you if you order the wrong bottle of wine, this place "PARIS" is the worst imitation of the lot.

šŸ‘šŸ»

Good luck!!
2  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Prose from a Poshboy on: June 30, 2023, 07:20:03 PM
Clearly penned by AIex Goulder

Hope youā€™re keeping well, Al
3  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Prose from a Poshboy on: March 08, 2023, 11:03:43 PM
Glad you're enjoying the rivival guys! I am too. Enjoying a return to form also.

I have squeaky bum time scheduled in for 12pm local time: Day 3 of the Wynn Million Championship Event, 157 left, 134 paid, $8.4k min cash and $650k ftw. I have 22bbs which is bottom 20. Superb structure 90 min levels, which means the bubble could last a little while. And a 2.5buyin min cash means I can't do much without a big hand. Plan is AA > AKo hand one to ease the tension. Updates on pokernews.

Been enjoying playing cash at the Wynn, from 10/20 to 25/50/100. I've been torn between locking up a nice winning trip by playing soft 10/20 or pressing by playing tougher but bigger. Mainly opting for the former, especially on the days off between tournament days, when it can mess with your mindset.

Sending some Gascoigne Rungood - the worldā€™s second most valuable currency after the elixir of life.
4  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Bill and Ted's Excellentes Aventures on: January 21, 2023, 03:11:11 PM
After a VERY enjoyable lunch in the owners and trainers we resurfaced into the sun and it became apparent we werenā€™t the only ones that had noticed Rothersā€™ mark slipping. Someone, somewhere, had punted him into around the 10/1-12/1 mark.

More excitingly still (certainly for) the Coles had been having a very strong Glorious Goodwood and, if they could nail one more win, would be top trainers for the meet. They no longer have a huge string of horses so this really would be quite the coup and could help to re-raise (see what I did there?) their profile.

Gathering on the steps the start for this trip is deeper down and out of sight, so you watch on the screen rather than on the binos. As the crowd cheered, appointed jock William Carver (remember the context here) appeared to be finishing a Rothmans, and was left about 12 lengths at the start. Now, winning a big field handicap is chuffing difficult at the best of timesā€¦.doing so giving the field a headstart is like running A7o into Aces.

All hope seemed lost. ā€œLetā€™s get a horseā€, he said. ā€œItā€™ll be funā€, he said. Suddenly the four hour round trip wasnā€™t such funā€¦.

ā€¦.then, as the horses spread across the track, old Rothers seemed to remember that he was once a c95 rated horse. With around 3f to go he started running them down like Ali Mallu in a rebuy.

He couldnā€™t, could he? He was still miles back. As we (I) started to roar him on he was closing and closing on the Godolphin owned Gifts of Gold. The mightiest racing operation in the world Vs the plucky underdogs. David and Goliath. The improving 3yo Vs a horse the world had given up on.

Alas, it wasnā€™t to be. Our boy finished third. Good for the each way money, but given an extra half a furlong, just 110yds more, he would have got there.

 Click to see full-size image.


Truth be told whilst it was a shame not to win we were delighted - what a day, we thought. We were all smiles in the Parade Ring for the prize giving. Mixing it with the big boy on our grand day out with a leased horse. Friends in it together. The sun out. A journey home of glorious ā€œwhat might have beensā€ ahead of us.

Until, out of the corner of my eye, I caught former Champion Trainer Paul Coleā€™s eye as he ā€˜debriefedā€™ (read, simmered) with William Carver. He missed out on top trainer of the week by just 2 1/4 lengths, having seen the horse give up 12 lengths at the start. Then the penny dropped. Whilst we had one of the ultimate days out for Paul and Ollie this was a real ā€˜crossbarā€™ moment. Their chance to get back into the big time.

A flopped flush draw with A7o against aces. An up and down draw picked up on the turn. An absolute brick on the river.

What a game it is. I was hooked.
5  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Bill and Ted's Excellentes Aventures on: January 20, 2023, 07:46:06 PM
For those who havenā€™t had the pleasure to visit Goodwood is just the most wonderfully picturesque place to go racing. Great views of the South Downs, good facilities and, if you can forgive the track the awkward journey there/away an all round fantastic day out.

And so, with each way vouchers at 25/1 all round, this merry band of men decamped for their big day out. Muggins here had been left in charge of the jockey selection, and we managed to secure William Carver who I thought was excellent value for his 5lb claim (jockeys have a sliding scale of weight allowance as they ride their first races/winners). Little did we know that the jockey booking would put me in Cole Snrā€™s bad books for months to comeā€¦

 Click to see full-size image.
6  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Bill and Ted's Excellentes Aventures on: January 20, 2023, 07:39:05 PM
The first flat horse I was involved with was Rotherwick, pictured below. Iā€™m very fortunate to work in an amazing office environment with very many colleagues who have become great friends.

ā€œLetā€™s get a horseā€, I said. ā€œItā€™ll be funā€¦ā€, I said.

Old Rothers, bless him, was already in Paul and Ollie Coleā€™s yard. Iā€™d come to know Ollie through his brother in law, Henry, who is Director of the Racing Bank at Weatherbyā€™s - THE horse racing institution. Formerly owned by a big owner of theirs Rothers was now running in their own silks, reasonably common if an owner no longer wants to keep the horse, but the yard feel there may still be mileage in him. After a good 3rd in a reasonable handicap, and with the option of a lease agreement on the table (pay ā€˜keepā€™, but no purchase) this seemed like a no brainer.

Here are the FLM silks in all their finery on the way down to the start at Windsor:

 Click to see full-size image.


Alas the handicapper seemed to have his number but, as he fell in the weights, we spotted an opportunity for (a) a tremendous day out and (b) to try to win a race on a big day. The closing day of Glorious Goodwood was an apprentice jockey handicap for 0-95 horses if my memory serves me correctly. Old Rothers would be getting a decent amount of weight, and we remained suspicious there was one last day in the sun in himā€¦.

 Click to see full-size image.
7  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Bill and Ted's Excellentes Aventures on: January 20, 2023, 07:06:58 AM
As a first topic what do we prefer out ofā€¦

Racehorse ownership and a reflection on the state of the game

Musings on the allure/attraction of poker for a VERY infrequent player

ā€˜General lifeā€™ update - family, work, writing a book on ā€˜moneyā€™


As youā€™re ā€œfirst in, best dressedā€ letā€™s roll with thisā€¦..now to find the time to pull thoughts together!!

Horse Racing - State of the Nation

Right thenā€¦.where to begin? Letā€™s start with a bit of my background ā€¦

Contrary to how it may appear now that Father swans it up at Cheltenham each year, Iā€™m not from a racing family. Rather my passion for the sport began when working with the racing team at Betfair from 2008-2011 - tough not to develop an interest in something when itā€™s on the team TV 24/7!! Through those years my interest was principally in the betting side of affairs - the knowledge around me was incredible and anyone with half a brain could turn a gradual profit with such insights. Accounts, of course, got restricted and closed until eventually even getting Ā£50 on something was a pipe dream. The monetary edge wasnā€™t great enough for me to bother running around shops // trying to open multiple accounts, and so the betting interest broadly fizzled out (big days aside) when I left the industry in 2013.

My love for the game persisted, however, and I continue to go racing ā€˜semi regularlyā€™ (8-12 times a year?) to this day. A love for NH over flat gradually waned as my older, softer, self realised the weather is much kinder in the summerā€¦..and also that if I was ever to broach life as an owner in any ā€˜meaningfulā€™ capacity then Iā€™d rather do so in a space where there is better resale potential.

Since my early days Iā€™ve had interests in jumpers called Asian Prince and Malangenā€¦ and then on the flat Rotherwick, Gordonstoun and Jack Darcy. Iā€™ve also now got interests in a ā€˜stringā€™ of 2 year olds coming into 2023 *gulp*.

The common thread throughout has been social ties with the co-owners. For those uninitiated in the sport the annual cost of keeping a horse is, at the lower end around Ā£25,000 and at the upper end approaching Ā£40,000. This is true whether you bought the horse bargain basement or absolutely emptied the clip. The financial barriers to entry in the game are prohibitively high for any individual, almost agnostic of their net worth. Over time more and more ā€˜racing clubsā€™ have proliferated to seek to bridge this gap, but with regret an awful lot of them increase drain from the racing economy owing to selling 4,000,000 Ā£69 shares for something of a true value of Ā£80,000 (permit artistic licence, please). Ownership of a true % share with a group I know and trust remains my preferred approach. I would also rather have multiple %s in horses adding up to 100% than one single horse outright from a diversification standpoint.

What I find truly fascinating about racing is that an awful lot of very bright, successful, monied people (God bless them, the game would die without them) continue to pour vast sums into something which, provably, is a loss-making exercise. In France or Australia, where the prize money is kinder (principally as a result of their persisting with the PMU / TAB rather than permitting myriad bookmakers offshoring themselves and making insufficient levy based contributions) it is genuinely possible to break even on the game or perhaps turn a small profit.

With the economics of racing in the UK that is very, very hard. This drives people (in part) to ā€˜plotā€™ horses (setting them up to win a particular race), which the bookies etc. moan about, and the vicious circle goes on. Bookies may do well to remember that without horses in training there is no racing, without racing there is no entertainment, without the entertainment there is no betting market etc etc. As humans I typically find many are sadly very selfish / short-termist however.

A perception that trainers in the UK are coining it is, perhaps with a couple of exceptions, woefully inaccurate. Those that are lucky enough to earn their yards outright have a chance at making a modest living. Those that lease their yard always have to proverbial wolf at the door. To understand how Ā£xx,xxxā€™s pa can so easily go up in smoke I would encourage anyone to take a yard visit and witness the sheer hive of human activity that is required to deliver these beautiful animals to the track in top condition. Tens of people, myriad logistical challenges, constant financial pressures. As glamorous as it may appear I can promise you that for all bar the lucky handful (typically driven by a large, single, owner in the yard who has multiple horses with the trainer) the life of a trainer is chuffing hard work.

In the next post Iā€™ll talk about Rotherwick and Gordonstoun (Iā€™ll dig some pictures up) and then we can move to Jack Darcy and what will be a ā€˜make or breakā€™ 2yo campaign with *cough* 9 yearlings bought into at the back end of last year.
8  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Bill and Ted's Excellentes Aventures on: January 19, 2023, 08:23:22 PM
As a first topic what do we prefer out ofā€¦

Racehorse ownership and a reflection on the state of the game

Musings on the allure/attraction of poker for a VERY infrequent player

ā€˜General lifeā€™ update - family, work, writing a book on ā€˜moneyā€™


As youā€™re ā€œfirst in, best dressedā€ letā€™s roll with thisā€¦..now to find the time to pull thoughts together!!
9  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Bill and Ted's Excellentes Aventures on: January 19, 2023, 08:01:53 PM
As a first topic what do we prefer out ofā€¦

Racehorse ownership and a reflection on the state of the game

Musings on the allure/attraction of poker for a VERY infrequent player

ā€˜General lifeā€™ update - family, work, writing a book on ā€˜moneyā€™


Played a big chunk of Saturday with you Ed and did not join the dots.  Scottish fellow drinking stupid quantities of dark fruits!  Good to share a table.

Ahah!! I had no idea either - good to play together and hope you ran deeper than I did.
10  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Bill and Ted's Excellentes Aventures on: January 19, 2023, 06:23:06 PM
As a first topic what do we prefer out ofā€¦

Racehorse ownership and a reflection on the state of the game

Musings on the allure/attraction of poker for a VERY infrequent player

ā€˜General lifeā€™ update - family, work, writing a book on ā€˜moneyā€™
11  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Bill and Ted's Excellentes Aventures on: January 19, 2023, 06:09:33 PM
Following a trip to the ā€˜home of pokerā€™ this weekend I may try and find time to make a few posts on broad life updates on here.

 Click to see full-size image.


Herewith (if Iā€™ve managed to upload the photo successfully) the fam
12  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Prose from a Poshboy on: January 10, 2023, 09:25:07 PM
Alex!!

Remember visiting our cottage in Wimbledon? I told you that London would be a good move šŸ˜ƒ

Great to see you posting again.

I do indeed! May I hazard a guess that family life has trumped poker in the last few years for you?

That would be fair - 6yo Toby and a fulfilling life of work commitments mean poker is but an occasional hobby now - perhaps two or three times a year.

The game still feels soothingly familiar though šŸ™‚
13  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Bill and Ted's Excellentes Aventures on: January 10, 2023, 07:21:56 PM
Right I need an idiots guide to uploading photoā€™s from my iPhone to this site please. Instruct as if speaking to a 9 year old.

A 9 year old that was born in 1956
14  Poker Forums / Diaries and Blogs / Re: Prose from a Poshboy on: January 10, 2023, 07:21:07 PM
Alex!!

Remember visiting our cottage in Wimbledon? I told you that London would be a good move šŸ˜ƒ

Great to see you posting again.
15  Community Forums / The Lounge / Re: Official cryptocurrency thread (Bitcoin, Ethereum, Altcoin) on: March 03, 2022, 08:22:24 AM
NFTs donā€™t have to be a JPEG.

Rather IMO in their next use case they will be a digital receipt of ownership of a tangible real-world asset.


The image example was obvious because of the art comparison

And what is the advantage of an NFT receipt compared to - just a receipt?

Oh I wasnā€™t having a dig - I find it fascinating that society (more broadly) has come to conflate ā€œNFTā€ with ā€œJPEGā€.

The digital receipt, effectively, makes the item tradable 24/7 to a global audience without process involvement beyond an exchange/similar listing. Immediate transaction, full log of ownership and history, NFT can be used to capture key information through the itemā€™s life. Information capture can be used to drive improved customer experience / increase monetisation.

The example Iā€™ve given to people is if my golf club operated membership by NFT.

Scan on gates on the way in, automated message to welcome me by name. ā€œMr Gascoigne weā€™ve noticed you typically like a bacon roll and a white Americano before you tee off - would you like that today? // We know youā€™re a terrible golfer who loses lots of balls - would you like a box of Pro V1s marked up for you before you start? Weā€™ve got you booked for a 1040 tee with Steve, John and Dave - their Satnavs show theyā€™re all doing alright but Dave may be a little late - in case that happens weā€™ve held a 1120 tee for youā€ etc.

Iā€™m sure plenty of businesses do this already with 101 different systems. I could, however, see a decentralised system effectively consolidating this market.

Eg I go to a DIFFERENT golf club, arrive at the gates, ā€œMr Gascoigne we know you typically likeā€¦ā€¦ā€
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