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Navigating Day 1: Playing the WSOP Main Event with Benton Blakeman

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Benton Blakeman playing Day 1B of the 2017 World Series of Poker

When Benton Blakeman first played the WSOP Main Event in 2012, he psyched himself out by thinking about the tournament's enormity. Many first-timers do.

"I was always worried about my own financial investment as well as the investment of the people who I sold shares to," the Las Vegas-based poker pro said. After he failed to cash in 2012 and 2013, he reminded himself: This is just another day of work. Armed with a fresh outlook, Blakeman finished 282nd for $38,684 in 2014 and cashed again last year for $17,232.

A poker pro since 2004, Blakeman specializes in the Bellagio's deep-stacked $5/$10 and $10/$20 no-limit cash games. This summer he played in four WSOP preliminary events, cashed in three, and yesterday entered his sixth Main Event in a row as a member of Monkey's Minions, a staking group run by Will "Monkey" Souther. (You can read more about "The Wondrous Tale of Monkey's Minions" here.)

Blakeman actually chose yesterday's starting flight partly because of superstition, as both of his previous cashes came when he played Day 1. But he also did so because, in his words, "Day 1B also has a field with a good mix of amateurs and professionals and it's not nearly as chaotic as Day 1C during breaks."

Home Court Advantage

For Blakeman, who grew up in Thibodaux, Louisiana, the WSOP offers a home court advantage thanks to his wife Kim and their six-year-old son Brayden.

Navigating Day 1: Playing the WSOP Main Event with Benton Blakeman 101
With son Brayden on their home turf

"Living in Vegas is great during the Main," Blakeman said. "I don't feel like I'm out here alone. I can run home during dinner break, have a home-cooked meal, and give my wife and son a hug before going back. I think that helps a lot."

Blakeman's support system also includes his parents, who live in Louisiana; his mentor David, whose life and bankroll management advice has prepared Blakeman for the gambling world; and his close friend Joe Tehan, who has a World Poker Tour title and over $4 million in live cashes.

"No one has influenced my poker game more than Joe," Blakeman said.

He's also part of the poker texting group that thanks to popular vlogger Andrew Neeme has become well known across Vegas. "Mostly we joke around," Blakeman said, "but the group is always there to discuss hands and get different perspectives."

How does a successful pro navigate his way through Day 1 the Main Event? Let's take a look.

Having a Game Plan

In the early stages, Blakeman planned to assess his table and rely on his experience in deep-stacked cash games.

"I will practice patience and good hand selection, especially in the early pre-ante levels, and play my positional advantages as often as I can," he said before yesterday's start.

"As I get familiar with the table I will start to exploit my edges if someone isn't peeling three-bets when they should because of stack depth, or folding the big blind too much to 2.5x opens. Overall, I just pretend I'm in my normal Bellagio cash game."

Blakeman took his place at Table 27 inside the Amazon Room and got to work.

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Blakeman starts Day 1B in the Amazon Room

In the first level, with the blinds at 75/150 and 50,000 effective stacks, Zach Gruneberg raised to 400 from first position, Blakeman reraised to 1,400 with AxAx on the button, and Gruneburg called.

After his opponent checked, Blakeman bet 1,000 on the Q?10?3? flop and was called. On the 3? turn, Gruneberg check-called Blakeman's 2,700 bet, and the pair saw the 2? land on the river.

"He's gonna show up with a pretty tight range of king-queen or better by the river," Blakeman said. "I wanted to get value from king-queen, ace-queen, king-king, which are his most likely holdings."

He bet 6,200, and Gruneberg called and mucked. "Obviously it was a dream runout for me," Blakeman added.

Of course, playing in the Main Event doesn't only involve value-betting aces on favorable runouts. During the second level (150/300), Blakeman held 6?4? in the cutoff and joined three limpers and the blinds to see a 10?8?4? flop. Action checked to Blakeman in the cutoff who also checked, and Takao Shimizu bet 900 from the button. It folded around to Blakeman who called, then the 8? came on the turn and Blakeman led for 3,000.

"He should never have an eight," Blakeman explained, "and I have a ton of them when I check-call."

After Shimizu called, Blakeman bet 3,200 on the K? river �� "as a blocking bet and to get value from a ten" �� and Shimizu called with 9?5?. "Pretty bad turn call by him when I have a distinct range advantage on the turn and he has to call a pot-sized bet with nine-high," Blakeman said.

Picking up Steam

In the third level (150/300/25), Blakeman opened K?J? from the cutoff with about 62,000, the button called, and Derek Alley three-bet to 3,400 from the small blind with about 45,000. Blakeman called, the button folded, and Alley then bet 2,500 into about 8,000 on a Q?Q?3? flop.

"I'm getting 4-to-1 to call and only need about 20 percent equity to continue," Blakeman said. "And the Q? is pretty nice because I have a three-card ladder draw (K?Q?J?) and I block my opponent from having queen-jack and king-jack. For these reasons, I called."

Alley checked the Jx turn and Blakeman pondered his options. "While it would be pretty standard for me to check back here, I've seen him call somewhat light, plus I think I have an easy fold versus a check raise and I can check back rivers," he said. "So I decided to bet 3,700 for value and hopefully set my showdown price."

Alley called, both players checked the river, and Blakeman's pair of jacks was enough to beat his opponent's two tens.

Blakeman went on dinner break with 60,550 chips.

Value Betting Top Pair

In Level 4 (200/400/50), Blakeman raised under the gun to 1,000 with AxKx-offsuit, Shimizu called next to act, and the rest of the table folded. Then on the Kx10x9x-rainbow flop, Blakeman bet 1,500 and crafted a plan.

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Blakeman looking to accumulate

"[Shimizu] is super sticky, plus he doesn't believe me," Blakeman said. "So I'm going to bet tiny with draws and size up with value, because he won't adjust correctly." After Shimizu called the flop, Blakeman bet 3,200 on the 2x turn and his opponent called again.

The river was the 9x. While Blakeman conceded that Shimizu might have a nine, "it's more likely that he has a king-queen or king-jack hand, or he'll just say 'YOLO' and call down with jack-ten, queen-ten, or a pair-plus-draw hand."

As a result, Blakeman decided to value bet 7,300 and fold to aggression. "If [Shimizu] raises I'm always toast," he said, "because he bets big when bluffing but hadn't bluff-raised."

Shimizu called, mucked his hand, and Blakeman's stack grew to over 80,000.

Battling for a Bag

In the final level of the night, Zach Gruneberg raised from middle position to 1,200 and Blakeman just called from the big blind with K?K? and 80,000 effective. "I decided to flat to keep his range wide," he explained, "and my perceived range is gonna be pretty loose because I defend the big blind light."

The flop came J?7?4? and Blakeman check-called 1,600. He check-called again on the 8? turn, then considered his options on the 4? river.

"I have the K? so I'm not terribly worried about backdoor flush," Blakeman explained. "But I think he'll check back a jack a lot because of the backdoor flush coming in. So I led 6,400."

Gruneberg called, then showed 10?9? to win the pot with his turned gutshot straight.

After a long day, Blakeman bagged 59,700 chips and reflected on his performance.

"It's not the stack that I wanted, but I'm happy to bag 100 big blinds for Day 2," he said.

"I'm happy that I get to play a game for a living. And I'm happy to still be in the Main Event. Six Mains in a row and seven total, and I've never busted on Day 1. Some people dream of just getting to play the Main Event once. I get to do it every year. So yeah, I'm happy."

Ben Saxton is a teacher and a writer from upstate New York who has played small stakes poker, both live and online, since the early 2000s. Ben lives in New Orleans and covers poker on the Gulf Coast.

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