Spotting And Playing Against The Aggressive Poker Player

Nowadays, a new kind of poker player is developing. They are the backwards players, tilted backwards and they have one significant attribute that can be appreciated because they have no idea what a nut means. These players are not inexperienced players. They will usually understand draw odds, they know the fact that on a high percentage all other players won’t start with cards that are considered to be the nuts and that players don’t keep a hand that is probably locked. Backwards players aren’t just plain unintelligent. They can develop into good players but they still have to learn. And they hold their money dearly, so they will believe every time that all the players they encounter will do the same with their stacks, that no one will ever risk to lose money for playing them or follow an important purpose.

A backward player will do mostly the opposite of what an experienced player does usually. They will be aggressive most of the times, excepting the situations they have a winning hand. They are players easy to tell, they do what in real poker a scared player does. Once they see an opportunity of winning, they get scared of losing and hold that hand dearly through safe and passive play. So, according to this pattern a backward player that has something will mostly check or bid less when he has a real hand that can aim for the pot. Of course, this seems to any one a bad even crazy idea, to bet less when you actually can win. They are minimizing their winnings through their behavior at the poker table. If they can get to the right table they can actually make a profit out of their gaming style. The right table for a backward player is a table where all players are tight and take no chances, a table where people will fold every time the backward player raises in his usual style.

So, take advantage of the existence of the backward player and go on a hunt for them. They are quite easy to spot. All you have to do is look for that particular table where you can see a player that has a stack much bigger than all the others and that player just keeps on betting his huge bets.

To play a backward player you must know his two great fears: when he is being checked-raised and when he has the winning hand and no one calls. He is not a player that bluffs, he just wants everyone out of the table and will bet as much as he can afford to get them out.
If you check raise a backward player you will let him know that you know his style and you are willing to risk everything just like him because you know you can make a huge profit. He can go all-in here if the is hoping for a draw, fold if he truly has nothing or check when he thinks (and he will probably do this) you will let him be on the turn and the river.

A backwards player, once losing his stack through many consecutive re-raises from you will not give up. He will keep on coming back and if you manage to get his money every time you will get his entire bankroll. So you will get rich in just one poker room in a couple of hours if you can find your backwards player and check-raise him often until he is completely messed up.

Mr. Money Relocates To Louisiana’s Clear Creek Stud

Owner Chester Thomas is following the money: In this case, moving his five-time graded stakes winner Mr. Money from Florida to Louisiana's Clear Creek Stud for the 2023 breeding season.

Thomas bred 24 mares to Mr. Money in 2021, with 16 foaling in Louisiana this year while they also remain eligible for Florida's stallion stakes series. Thomas bred 20 mares to Mr. Money this breeding season.

Spendthrift Farm also is a partner in Mr. Money.

A fan of the Louisiana breeding program and racing in the Pelican State, Thomas decided to go all in by relocating Mr. Money to Clear Creek Stud near Folsom. With the breeding industry getting revenue from the state's legalized sports wagering, the purses for Louisiana-foaled and Louisiana-sired horses are expected to explode. In addition, historical horse racing gaming terminals, which are being installed at tracks and their off-track-betting facilities, will boost purses for all horses racing in the state.

“I just really like the way the Louisiana program is heading,” said Thomas. “I think Mr. Money has everything it takes to be a successful sire, and I believe having him at a top farm in a growing regional market gives him the best chance to show what he can do. Most of my horses race in New Orleans in the winter anyway, and I'm sure going to have a lot of Louisiana-bred Mr. Money babies. I thought I might just as well take advantage of having Louisiana-sired as well as Louisiana-born Mr. Moneys.

“We think he will excel in Louisiana. They have one of the best — if not the best — breeding programs outside of Kentucky. I'm hoping a lot of people cash in on Mr. Money in Louisiana, me included. It's exciting to have him there with such good people as those at Clear Creek.”

Mr. Money, out of the Tiznow mare Plenty O'Toole, is the son of two-time Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile winner Goldencents and grandson of international super-sire Into Mischief. He won six of 18 starts, including the Grade 3 quintet of the Pat Day Mile, Matt Winn, Indiana Derby and West Virginia Derby as a 3-year-old and Churchill Downs' Ack Ack at 4. Mr. Money's earnings of $1.36-million include finishing second by a neck in the G1 Pennsylvania Derby. He was fourth in the 2018 Breeders' Cup Juvenile at Churchill Downs off of his maiden victory.

Among the horses that Mr. Money defeated on the racetrack were future Horse of the Year Knicks Go, Preakness winner War of Will and Grade 1 winners Improbable, Spun to Run, Mind Control, Math Wizard and Hog Creek Hustle.

“Mr. Money was an unbelievable racehorse,” Thomas said. “He beat a multitude of Grade 1 horses that year, just got a little unlucky and didn't get the Grade 1 himself. His babies are coming out and are looking like stone-cold runners. They've got a lot of leg and their physicals are unbelievable. I'm very, very excited with what we're seeing.”

Mr. Money's third-year stud fee will be $3,500 if paid by Sept. 1 or $4,000 live foal. A limited number of lifetime breeding rights are available.

Clear Creek Stud is one of Louisiana's premier stallion operations, including standing leading Louisiana sire Star Guitar.

“Mr. Money is a very attractive individual,” said Clear Creek general manager Val Murrell, who has been at the breeding farm since 1977. “He's put together well, which likely explains how he held together so well while successfully competing in top company, retiring clean and sound. Talent and longevity are super significant.

“He complements an already strong roster. It's a known sire line. Everybody knows Goldencents and Into Mischief. That's going to appeal to our breeders. He was very successful at middle distances and beyond. Just as important around here is speed, and he had speed. I've seen some of his foals that were conceived in Florida. They're a pretty impressive group. Muscle, bone, balance, put together very well. That goes a long ways. People get to see those, and that will make a difference.  He's an exciting addition to a pretty great Louisiana program.”

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Hollywood-Ready Story: Al Gold Goes From Cancer Diagnosis To Travers With Cyberknife

“It's like a movie, isn't it,” marveled Al Gold. “It's really very shocking how everything fell into place.”

Gold, who races under the nom de course Gold Square LLC, is living the life already filled with the stuff Hollywood couldn't have scripted any better. His heartwarming story can take yet another good turn on Saturday at Saratoga Race Course when his dual Grade 1-winning colt Cyberknife tries for his third top level score in the 153rd renewal of the $1.25 million Runhappy Travers for 3-year-olds.

“I've had so many horses and you never know if one is going to step up and separate from all the others and this one just did it. It's such a shock,” said Gold, a 66-year-old New Jersey native and Saratoga Springs resident who has been a horseplayer for 50 years and has owned thoroughbreds since 2004, but never had a Grade 1 winner before.

Gold purchased the son of sensational first crop sire and 2017 Horse of the Year Gun Runner and the maternal grandson of 2005 Travers winner Flower Alley for $400,000 at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Select Yearlings Showcase. Then he went in for a routine medical checkup only to receive the dreaded diagnosis that he had prostate cancer.

On Dec. 7, 2020 – the day of his 65th birthday – he underwent the first in his series of treatments performed with Accuracy Inc.'s robotic radiation therapy device branded as the cyberknife. Despite its ominous name, the cyberknife is a non-invasive procedure that delivers radiation to the cancer cells without damaging other healthy tissue or cells.

Gold had usually given his horses comical names or named them after TV show characters, but he gave this serious horse a serious name to get the word out to others that prostate cancer is treatable and no longer a death sentence. Fortunately, he is now in remission and thoroughly enjoying the ride with the best horse he's ever owned.

“Cyberknife is the best. He's the horse of a lifetime, at least so far,” said Gold, who got his start betting horses when he was 16 years old and on a family vacation at a resort in the nearby Catskill Mountains. As he tells it, one day some of the men were talking horses and they touted the kid on a standardbred on that night's card at Monticello Raceway. He went to the track, bet on the trotter, cashed his ticket for a big price, and never looked back.

Gold currently owns about 25 horses with several different trainers, but he selected reigning two-time Eclipse Award winner Brad Cox for Cyberknife. It's been a perfect match.

Cyberknife has a record of 5-2-0 in nine starts with earnings of $1,596,250, and among his four wins in six 2022 starts are Grade 1 victories in the Arkansas Derby and the TVG.com Haskell Stakes in track record time. The chestnut colt is the only 3-year-old male with two top level scores this year and is only one of a handful of horses of any age or gender with more than a single Grade 1 win in 2022.

“Fifty years in the game and here I am. I say the cicadas come every 17 years and make that noise. When I started in the game I had a really good horse my first year, and it took 17 years to have another good one. I'm like the cicadas,” said Gold, whose other graded stakes winners are Little Miss Holly [2011 Iowa Oaks-G3] and Chace City [2006 Saratoga Special Breeders' Cup Stakes-G2]. He also co-owned 2014 Grade 3 Toboggan winner Candyman E.

Florent Geroux has been in the irons for seven of Cyberknife's last nine outings and under his brilliant ride Cyberknife was the upset winner of the Haskell at Monmouth Park on July 23. That day is one Gold will never forget, and it isn't only because the Haskell is a “Win and You're In” race for the Breeders' Cup Classic.

“This is a very big victory. The Arkansas Derby was very big, and the Haskell is also. This is a very big deal,” said Gold, who grew up on the Jersey Shore and frequented Monmouth Park for 35 years, right after the race. “I started betting horses when I was a kid and have owned horses for years. You always have fantasies. You want to win the Derby and all the big races, but this is one of the ones I really wanted to win. And we're on our way to the Breeders' Cup. We go to the Travers next and we'll see where we are.”

There is more than an all-expenses paid trip to the Breeders' Cup and the Travers purse at hand. There is the matter of the $1 million Betmakers Bonanza, offered by the partnership of Betmakers Technology Group and Monmouth Park, to any horse who can win the Haskell, the Travers and the Breeders' Cup Classic.

What's more, a Travers win would strengthen Cyberknife's argument for a divisional championship should he prevail at the 1 1/4-mile distance.

“This horse is really coming into his own. He was a nice 2-year-old and always had ability but now that he's older he keeps getting better and better. He's a very talented horse,” said Gold, who earlier this summer sold Cyberknife's breeding rights to Spendthrift Farm to begin with the 2023 season. “He worked great here on Saturday when he breezed five furlongs in a minute flat and looked very sharp.”

Gold, who is retired from a career in commercial real estate, splits his time now between homes in South Florida and Saratoga Springs, where his house is recognizable as the one with the twin spires reminiscent of Churchill Downs.

“I put the twin spires on my house here when I built it. It was something I always wanted to do,” he said. “I have a room in my house which is like a barn. I have a painting on the wall of a couple of horses I owned. One never made it to the races and the other one I lost my shirt on, but they photographed well and a fellow I know did the painting, so I have a little barn setting here. It's a comfortable place to relax.”

Nonetheless, he isn't chilling these days as excitement builds up to the Travers.

“You'd think I'd enjoy it more and sleep better, but I'm only sleeping two or three hours a night because I can't relax. I'm too old for this,” quipped Gold, who goes to the track every morning to visit his horses and watch them go through their routines.

Gold is known for being kind, generous, giving and sharing his good fortune with family and friends. When Cyberknife ran in the Kentucky Derby, where he finished 18th after trying to chase the wicked pace, his owner chartered a private jet, invited his large posse, and picked up the entire tab for the trip.

“We had the big thing for the Derby, which didn't work out too well for the horse. Other than the two minutes we all had a great time there. It was very, very nice. But for this race it's just going to be my wife, Hilary, my kids Bryan and Dayna and their families, and three of my good friends who are coming up. It will just be 10 or 12 people,” he said.

Gold has been a spectator at the Travers for the last 10 years or so. Now that he's a participant he isn't creatively visualizing himself standing in the coveted winner's circle next to Cyberknife draped in the blanket of red carnations.

“No, nothing like that,” said Gold, who gets to watch Cyberknife carry his silks just twice more before the colt goes to Spendthrift. “I'm trying not to get too far ahead of myself.”

But looking back over the recent months, he beat a cancer diagnosis, won his first Grade 1 in the Arkansas Derby, had his first Kentucky Derby starter, won his second Grade 1 in the Haskell at what was his home track while earning a guaranteed spot in the Breeders' Cup Classic, and now has the chance to win the prestigious Grade 1 Travers in his adopted home town and perhaps even an Eclipse Award with his horse of a lifetime.

“Isn't it a wonderful thing? It's amazing when you think about it all,” he said. “I hope we have another one like Cyberknife, but obviously I'm really enjoying this one. When this amazing year is over and the horse is retired, then I'm going to sit back and really appreciate it all more. It's going to be even better afterward.”

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Turf Stakes Victories Net Umberto Rispoli Jockey Of The Week Title

Jockey Umberto Rispoli has an affinity for turf races at Del Mar. Specifically, turf stakes races. His two turf stakes wins added to his grass stakes victories this meet to earn Jockey of the Week honors for August 15 through August 21. The award, which is voted on by a panel of racing experts, honors jockeys who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 1050 active, retired and permanently disabled jockeys in the United States.

Riding for East Coast trainer Graham Motion on Friday, Rispoli was aboard Sister Otoole in the CTT and TOC Stakes for fillies and mares three-years-old and up. The pair trailed early in the 1-3/8 mile grass race but on the backside, Rispoli sent her outside advancing to third and away from compromising traffic trouble. Sister Otoole prevailed by a half-length over Scarabea in 2:15.27.

Rispoli continued his winning ways on the turf on Sunday for trainer Craig Lewis aboard Warrens Candy Girl in the Solana Beach. Breaking from post position two, Warrens Candy Girl was fourth on the backstretch following the leaders around the turn then moving to the outside entering the stretch. While race favorite Eddie's New Dream took the lead in early stretch, Warrens Candy Girl determinedly overtook the leader in the final yards to post a head victory in 1:35.23 for the one mile turf test.

“When you travel in hand with the horse your hands get itchy; you want to let your horse run and so once I gonna let her run, I wish that she is going to respond,” said Rispoli. “She did it. Just before the chute I knew I was going to get her (Eddie's New Dream).”

The CTT and TOC and Solana Beach were Rispoli's fourth and fifth turf stakes wins of the Del Mar meet after taking the Oceanside, the G2 San Clemente and the G2 Yellow Ribbon.

Rispoli, a native of Naples, Italy, rode full time in the United States beginning in 2020 at Santa Anita and Los Alamitos after riding in Hong Kong, France, Japan and Italy. He moved his tack to Kentucky this past spring but returned to southern California towards the end of the spring/summer meet at Santa Anita. He is currently in second place in the Del Mar standings with 19 wins and more than $1.6 million in purses.

Other contenders for Jockey of the Week were David Cabrera who returned to riding after a serious on-track accident to win the Governor's Cup at Remington Park, Tyler Gaffalione who travelled to Del Mar to win the G1 Del Mar Oaks, Jose L. Ortiz with two stakes wins at Saratoga, and Irad Ortiz, Jr. who won three stakes races including the G1 Alabama.

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