Sunday, 4 September 2011

It's Loud


When I first started this blog, I always envisioned that I wouldn't be one of those bloggers that only updates once every 76 days. You gotta keep the millions happy after all...buuuut as I can't remember the last time I updated I'm already officially slacking. Well, here we go , a new update!!!! (my loyal 14 followers will think Xmas has come early). 

I'm writing this post amidst a scene not unlike Saigon circa 1969. There are 6-year-old kids screaming that they don't want to visit Windsor Castle AGAIN, Total Wipeout blaring in the background and a chaotic scene in the kitchen as three women frantically rush about preparing seemingly thousands of egg and cress sandwiches. We're here in Windsor for my girlfriend's father's 70th birthday party. It'll be fun. Its just a bit loud right now. 

I'm on my iPad writing this so I dont have any access to poker gimpiness I.e. graphs and hand histories. This makes me happy as it means this update will be far less effort than usual. So what's been going on?

- I got an iPad 2 with PKR points. It's awesome. 

- Poker was really good in August. I played 55k hands, won $8200 in cash games and about $3k in tournaments. I ran a little above EV but also feel like I'm playing really well at the minute much of the time. 

- Been watching a lot of aejones's training videos on LeggoPoker.com - great stuff. 

- Amazing UFC show in RIO. Big Nogs KO was an awesome upset while Anderson Silva again proved what a monster he is. Going to BAMMA courtesy of PKR next weekend which should be cool too. 

- Had a nice day in Margate recently visiting my uncle Tony Jarvis who was the main inspiration for me getting interested in poker in the place. From about 1975-2000 he was a professional poker player - well before the term was widely accepted - playing every day in the Vic in London. Back then, no limit Hold'em barely existed of course and so he made his living playing in the country's biggest 7-card Stud games. It was around a £1,000 buy-in back then which, with inflation and so on would obviously be a really big game in today's money terms. Tony always has some great stories about the characters from those days. He basically played with everyone (and was friends with) who has ever been 'famous' in UK poker, including Devilfish, Donnachea O'Dea, John Duthie, the Hendon Mob and so on. Apparently the best player by an absolute mile was Ben Roberts, who earned so much money from those games in the 80s that he was able to buy the newly built penthouse flat directly opposite the Vic itself. Nice commute to work. 

- Off on holiday to the Greek island of Symi in about two weeks. Very excited as it'll mainly involve drinking beer and eating great food in the sun.

I'm being summoned to help out with party planning now - presumably to blow up balloons or similar - so I'm off. 

Cheers for reading Starchites and I wont leave it as long between updates next time. 

Have a good one! 

Saturday, 6 August 2011

The Nation Doesn't Expect

My good friend Nick Roberts recently started up a football blog at http://inoffthebar.org/ which you should all check out. I wrote a little piece on the England football team for him this week - you can view it here. As always, any comments, criticisms or - especially - praise :) are always welcomed. I'll be back with another poker blog in the next few days but until then...

The Nation Doesn't Expect

I’m one of those rare football fans that has never really supported a team. Sure, I’ve had dalliances with Leeds United, Chesterfield FC and – due to a man-crush on King Jose Mourinho – Chelsea, but I’ve never felt the same passion for the club game that all my friends have. Instead, my love of football has always been directly linked with the most miserable, frustrating and infuriating football team of them all: England. 

Every one of my defining memories of football involves England. I was five years old when I saw tears streaming down my brother’s face in the summer of 1990. I thought someone had died. I later learnt the tears were due to some dude with a mullet attempting to revolutionise the space race.

Six years later and I was loving Euro 96. My best friend Rob and I alternated going round to each other’s houses to watch the England matches. It started off well with Shearer’s goal against Switzerland before that quickly deteriorated into one of the dullest games of all time. Then Gazza killed the Scots, we battered the Dutch and Psycho Pearce finally found his smile again to knock out the Spanish.
 
So onto the semi-final of all semi-finals against the hated Germans. It’s one of those games where you can literally remember every single minute. It had that rare ingredient that can turn some football matches into unforgettable pieces of history; drama. As Shearer headed us into the lead within five minutes, my young naïve self thought that life was always going to be this great – that football was always going to be this great. Little did I know that Gary Neville’s cross, Alan’s stooped little header and his eternally crap ‘one hand in the air, everyone say yay’ celebration was as good as it was going to get football-wise – EVER. As soon as that bastard Andreas Moller tucked away his winning penalty with stereotypically Germanic aplomb (and had the audacity to strut too, grrrr!), I bombed out of the living room and wept on the stairs. The next day at school everyone heard about me crying and proceeded to verbally batter me like only 11-year olds can do. I just couldn’t understand why the others didn’t care as much.


It's all downhill from here....
1998 was basically the same, except with a different opponent. I missed Michael Owen’s goal because I was having a wee. Although the onset of alcohol has likely increased my enjoyment of football in the long-term, a much neglected aspect of beer is that it forces you to relieve yourself during some of the most iconic memories in sporting history. Owen’s goal, Di Canio pushing the ref, Zidane’s headbutt – all missed because I was having a tiddle.

It’s probably best to skip over the Keegan and Erikkson years. Besides ‘Germany 5-1’ does anything truly stick out? Be honest with yourself and you’ll say ‘not really’. Keegan sucked. Erikkson was what he was – a fine manager of a good-but-never-great England team. We specialised in competence and never excellence, hence our prolific run of quarter-finals. Looking back it would have been better if we’d just got battered 8-0 in every World Cup game instead of limping out in the QFs, at least that way the press would have some truly interesting things to write about. 

Let's not even mention McClaren.

Did this really happen?
No, the last great hope for England fans was Fabio Capello and his voyage to South Africa and the 2010 World Cup. All the ingredients were in place – a great qualifying campaign, one of the world’s best players in Wayne Rooney and a manager who absolutely, positively TOOK. NO. SHIT.
 
It was a disaster. We won one match. Against Slovenia. Even while watching Frank Lampard’s disallowed goal against Germany it was impossible to really summon up any great feelings of anger or injustice. Sure, it should have been a goal. But then they’d have just gone on to beat us 5-2 anyway. They were great, we sucked. 

What does the future hold for England? I’m not going to lie, it will probably look much like the last 25 years. Miserable. Come Brazil 2014 there will be a lot more toddlers in England wondering who died as their brother storms up to his room, tears in his eyes, muttering ‘fucking Andy Carroll’.

Wednesday, 27 July 2011

July Review

Barring a disaster in the next few days July was a really strong month. As I mentioned in last week’s blog I have been running super-hot in tournaments on PKR, with profits of around $8,800 this month. I can’t expect to replicate that every month of course but it’s definitely made me realise the potential benefits of adding more MTTs to my weekly schedule rather than just dismissing them off-hand while I 9-table the cash games.

I do wish that PKR had a few higher buy-in tournaments though, as it’s sometimes hard to get motivated to play MTTs where you must finish in the top two spots to get a prize over $1k. I guess that’s just a common downside of playing mid-stakes cash games where you’ll regularly have $800+ pots every hour. However, the fields are always much weaker in an MTT than at a $2/$4 cash table so it just about evens out in terms of EV and hourly rate etc. The other bonus of tournaments is that you instantly get more exposure. I’ve had more people on PKR just this month add me as a friend or now consider me a good player for doing well in a few tourneys than being a winning cash player for over two years. I certainly consider cash games the more skilful variant but, still, it’s nice to get any form of acclaim – even if it is just from the PKR Forum! Hopefully my performances this month will get me nominated for MTT Player of the Month too – I’m planning to win another tournament this weekend so that they can’t possibly leave me out…

Cash Games

I haven’t got as much volume in this month as I’d like but my results have still been quite good. Here’s the graph, and as you’ll see, I actually ran BELOW EV for once! 


Around $5k profit is solid for just 31,000 hands (in June I played over 70,000 hands by contrast) and it’d be much improved if I hadn’t lost a ton of money every time I played PLO in July. I’m currently just playing Hold’em to retain my sanity.

It’s hard to believe that my monthly profit in July is around seven month’s salary in my old job at PokerPlayer magazine. I realise how lucky I am to have a job which I love doing and – when it’s going good – pays really well. However, I know that this might not last forever so I’m going to try and make the most of it right now by putting in a ton of hours at the table, working hard on my game and not taking it for granted. That’s why I’ve made sure to keep writing as much content as possible for Stacked and PokerPlayer - I want my options to always be open if poker ever falls through.

Incidentally, my first regular column, titled The Daily Grind, is featured inside PokerPlayer this month. It’s a great honour to have come full circle in working for them, initially just as an ‘Online Writer’ three years ago to having a regular column now – thanks to Alun Bowden for the opportunity.

Hands

1)
Seat 1: zisiszamuck (Dealer) ($657.60)
Seat 2: IJoker (SB $2) ($1,170.73)
Seat 3: MrStarch (BB $4)  ($487)
Seat 4: japete ($893.76)
Seat 5: Rhymenoceros ($709.03)
Seat 6: WongaMan ($716)

Dealt to MrStarch



Preflop: (Pot: $6)

FOLD japete
FOLD Rhymenoceros
RAISE WongaMan, to $12
CALL zisiszamuck, $12
FOLD IJoker
CALL MrStarch, $8



First of all, this is a pretty tough lineup for a PKR $400NL game. The only reason why I was playing here is that I had direct position on IJoker who seems to be a massive fish. Flatting Wonga's raise with 66 from the BB is pretty standard and obviously I'm looking to flop a set or get some kind of cool flop that I can try and steal the pot from.

Flop: (Pot: $38)


BET MrStarch, $26
CALL WongaMan, $26
CALL zisiszamuck, $26



I've been experimenting with donking out a lot more in cash games and thought this was an interesting spot to try and take it down quite cheaply. Wonga's hand is often just going to be two overcards, and while zisiszamuck's range is considerably wider he is also going to have a load of QJ, 33 type hands that will fold to a donk bet. The hand being three-way also makes it harder for Wonga to raise me as he has to worry a little about the player acting behind, as well as me. Even with an overpair I think he'll sometimes flat this bet. As I get called in both spots I plan on just giving up on a lot of turns.

Turn: (Pot: $116)


CHECK MrStarch
BET WongaMan, $82
FOLD zisiszamuck
RAISE MrStarch, to $225
FOLD WongaMan
MrStarch wins the pot of $420

Besides another 6 this is the best possible turn card for my hand. Leading out would be fine and the usual line to take but I felt a check-raise gives me the best possible chance to get Wonga to fold. It also looks like I have a hand better than one pair almost always. The only downside is that I commit myself to the pot and would have had to call off the remaining $200 or so if Wonga decides to jam. Still, I think this hand was played quite non-standard and creatively and I like my line.

2) It's quite possible I got owned - as usual - by Muzone in this hand.

Seat 1: MrStarch ($666.10)
Seat 2: BrotherMuzone17 (Dealer) ($706.37)
Seat 4: Crusader33 (SB $2) ($897.56)
Seat 5: robburgundy (BB $4) ($451)
Seat 6: LtViper ($416.44)

Dealt to MrStarch

Preflop: (Pot: $6)

RAISE MrStarch, to $12
RAISE BrotherMuzone17, to $40
FOLD Crusader33
FOLD LtViper
RAISE MrStarch, to $97
CALL BrotherMuzone17, $69

I open QQ from the cut-off and Muzone 3-bets me from the button, as he does about 50% of the time. The thing that makes this hand tricky is that our stacks are at about 170BBs deep. Despite that, I'm still more than happy to get QQ all-in preflop against Muzone. While he'll show up with AA and KK a fair amount of the time, he's also prone to jamming worse hands, obviously AK and occasionally a big bluff.

However, because we are deep he can flat my 4-bet in position with a much wider range than would ever be profitable if we were just 100BBs deep. In fact, at 100BBs deep I don't think there would be a single hand that Muzone would flat a 4-bet with. But a little deeper here he knows he can put me in some torturous spots later on in the hand. Most likely his range will be TT, JJ, AQ, smaller pairs and suited connectors but, really, he could have just about anything except AA, KK, QQ and AK.

Flop: (Pot: $212)


BET MrStarch, $130
CALL BrotherMuzone17, $130

Good flop for my hand and a standard c-bet. I'm still happy to call if off at this point obviously.

Turn: (Pot: $472)


CHECK MrStarch
BET BrotherMuzone17, $467.37
FOLD MrStarch

Pretty ugly turn in theory but then again it doesn't change much as Muzone can't really have KJ or have floated the flop with a hand with a King in it (besides something weird like K8 suited). With hindsight, maybe this is a call but I think I walk into JJ or 88 a fair amount of the time. It just seemed hard for him to bluff in this spot as my hand still looks really strong and I think he would expect me to call with QQ in this spot most of the time - therefore making his range a fair bit stronger.

That's why Muzone is so good though, he continually puts you in tough spots that other players don't and has you second-guessing yourself constantly. Almost a week after this hand I'm unsure whether I played the hand well or not. Hopefully Bro will let me know what he had so that I can sleep at night...

3)

Here's the final hand I'll post. This is the biggest pot I won this month.

Seat 1: Najammq ($1,729.25)
Seat 2: langechuckyy ($1,083.80)
Seat 3: BHeisterkamp ($466)
Seat 4: MissFORGETFUL123 (Dealer)  ($2,588.75)
Seat 5: MrStarch (SB $5)  ($1,517)
Seat 6: japete (BB $10) ($1,060)

Dealt to MrStarch


This was about as good a line-up as you'll get at $5/$10. Japete is awesome and Najammq is fine but everyone else is probably a big loser in the game.

Preflop: (Pot: $15)

RAISE Najammq, to $30
FOLD langechuckyy
FOLD MissFORGETFUL123
CALL MrStarch, $25
RAISE japete, to $130
FOLD Najammq
CALL MrStarch, $110


I'll 3-bet KQ suited a fair bit under usual circumstances but you can rely on Japete to squeeze in a spot like this almost all of the time, with or without a usual hand. That's one of the reasons why playing him is always difficult (but fun) - each pot quickly balloons in size. Anyway, while it sucks to be out of position versus a good player, I can't fold KQ suited here so I call. The plan is to hit any part of the flop and just check-call him down as he'll definitely fire multiple streets - especially as he likely considers me scared money at $1000NL. (I used to be, I'm just about un-scared money now...)

Flop: (Pot: $300)


CHECK MrStarch
BET japete, $155
RAISE MrStarch, to $440
RAISE japete, to $765
CALL MrStarch, $480



Incredible flop for me with a good flush draw and two overcards. I'd be quite happy if Japete just folds to my check-raise but I'm still going to have around 50% equity against his range so it's fine to just get it in here and now.

Turn: (Pot: $1,985)

River: (Pot: $1,985)

SHOWS MrStarch


SHOWS japete

MrStarch wins the pot of $2,147


A cool King on the turn and I out-race his JJ to win a $2,150 pot. Easy game eh :)

Good luck at the tables everybody and have a great week. Follow me on Twitter @Starch_Jarvis!

Monday, 18 July 2011

A Memorable Weekend

The signs weren’t good that I would have my best ever weekend in poker at around 5pm on Thursday afternoon. I’d lasted approximately three hours in the £560 UKIPT Brighton main event and didn’t quite know what to do with myself. I was a little disappointed as my starting table was really easy but nothing really went my way, even though I felt pretty good about the way I played.

My bustout hand was fairly interesting and I posted about it here - http://www.pkr.com/en/community/forums/tournaments/my-bustout-hand-from-ukipt-brighton-main-event-55998/ - so you can check that out if you like. I’m still fine with my play but I did feel like a moron when he turned over a better hand. It sucks to be knocked out of tournaments where you really want to do well. I’d imagine it’s akin to hearing your opponent’s name read out at the end of a boxing (or MMA, a far superior sport) match that has gone to the judges – only without the violence.

Enjoying myself at UKIPT Brighton. I was KO'd shortly.

I was also disappointed because a few mates from PKR – WongaMan, BrotherMuzone, Rhymenoceros, MrNiceness – all hail from Brighton (or close by) and it would have been good to make it through the day, have a load of beers and catch up properly. As it was, I sulked off back to London right away and played some of the worst poker of my life for an hour online, dropping $1,000. Friday wasn’t much better either, as I played poker for nearly twelve hours and lost $1,500. It wasn’t boding well.

I was originally supposed to be going to my girlfriend’s 7-year old nephew’s birthday party on Saturday. It would have been quite fun as Louis is cool, he likes playing Pro Evo on my PES3 and we were going to play football in the park and other assorted kiddie things. However, as it was the 16th of the month and I had so far earned exactly -$500 for my monthly salary I decided to put some more hours in online instead and felt a bit guilty about sending Hattie off on her own to the party. With hindsight, it’s pretty good that I let my professional (selfish?) side take over as by the time I went to bed I’d won $7,500 – my best day online ever.

Cash games were a pretty steady upward spiral with some super soft $2/$4 and even a few fishy $5/$10 games running all afternoon. About $3300 in profit came from there after I ran pretty great and played good too. As it was still only about 7pm by this point I decided to register for three tournaments for a bit of a change while I grinded the cash. I crashed out of one early but had accrued pretty big stacks in both the PKR Open ($22 buy-in) and Monte Carlo ($77 buy-in) and made it to both final tables by about midnight. I’ve never been a big tournament grinder at all but making final tables is still the biggest buzz you can get in poker, and I was determined to try and win both of these in one night. It’s not something that happens often and it would be a cool accolade to have. An hour or so later and I was proud to take this screenshot
:)

For some reason my avatar looks like a hollow man dressed in a gimp suit but rest assured, that IS MrStarch...

Woohoo!

Sunday started off good with my Sunday Times subscription (surely I can’t be just 26?) and a good lunch with Hattie at High Road House. The main event of the day – just nudging out The Apprentice final, yes Tom! – was PKR’s first-ever ‘PKR 500’, a new monthly high-roller tourney with a $560 buy-in. I bought straight in after my run good the day before and was lucky enough to get a soft starting table full of people I had never heard of. When you consider all the usual PKR big names were also playing this could have been one of the best bits of luck that I had all tournament. I was able to play pretty aggro and get away with some stuff that wouldn’t have worked against better players.

I did have one really tough hand early on though against a player who went on to finish 3rd. I’m still not sure if my fold here is correct or not but I liked my discipline in not giving up even though this put me quite short early on. Annoyingly I don’t have the hand history on my hard drive but I had Ah-9d on a 9c-7s-2d-Ac-Tc board. I cbet flop, he called, turn went check/check, I value bet river and he then jammed on me for all my chips. I just had the feeling he wasn’t good enough to be bluffing and eventually I folded. No idea if I was right or wrong.

It all went really smoothly until we got to the final table bubble and I was out of position against betonme who I felt played brilliantly. He was putting pressure on everyone as a big stack and 3-betting me constantly whenever I tried to steal the blinds. I was pretty much card dead at this point so never had anything to play back at him and the one time I did try - four-betting him with As-9s - he jammed on me and I had to wipe away a small tear as I folded. Still, I made it to the final table despite being in the perilous 15-20BB zone and then found a great spot to double-up, moving all-in for 15BBs with A-J and getting called by K-J. A King on the river and I was out in 6th for $3,600.

It was a great score and now that it’s morning I’m happy but I really would have loved to win the tournament, get the $16,500 (!!!!) for first and complete a weekend mini Triple Crown. Still, I’m incredibly happy with how it all went and I know as much as I played well I needed a lot of luck along the way too. Thanks to all those on PKR who railed me and left me good comments on the forum.

I’m now ranked 241 (from about 3000 odd on Friday…) in the MTT rankings and while cash games will always be my home I’m coming for the MTT Top 10 too…

Monday, 20 June 2011

Training Day

I saw Senna yesterday. What an amazing film. Despite being force-fed Formula One every Sunday afternoon by my car-obsessed Dad throughout my childhood (or, come to think of it, because) I've never actually been interested in cars or racing at all. However, that didn't stop me thinking this was one of the best films I have seen in a long time. I'd highly recommend that people go to see it - it's funny, dramatic, exciting and incredibly moving also. Everything that Formula One usually isn't. Here's a trailer if you need more convincing...



The rise of feature documentaries is a fascinating development in Hollywood/cinema over the past fifteen years. Due to their relative scarcity almost every doc that is released in cinemas is great. Just over the past few years there's been Man On Wire, Inside Job, The September Issue and now Senna to name a few great examples. This also looks amazing, out next month or so;





I hired a poker coach this past week. It's something I've been meaning to do for the past six months but as they're quite expensive - $750 for 5x80min sessions - I wanted to make sure I got the right coach first. I eventually settled on Alan Jackson who makes training videos for BlueFirePoker.com and plays the same stakes as me. He's a very technical, stats-based player/coach which should be ideal for me as those are areas I'm pretty weak in. We had our introductory session last week and it went really well so I'm very excited to get started tomorrow.

Ironically, despite currently being in the midst of a great run, I think now is probably the best time to get coaching. Even when you're playing (and running) well it can never be a bad thing to have somebody from outside come and give an objective look at your game. As anyone who has played a lot of poker knows, it can be quite easy to grow a big ego regarding the game, which in turn can obviously lead to playing badly and not actually analysing or reviewing your own play. All of our sessions are conducted via Skype and cool software that allows Alan to see my screen and vice versa. I'm sure it will more than pay for itself over time.

A big shout out to Sam Grafton over in Vegas who finished 14th in the $2,500 Six Max WSOP event for about $24k. I'm sure he'll be gutted to come so close - 1st paid over $600k! - but he's an awesome player and a cool guy so he'll have plenty of other chances to do well soon. If poker were definitively defined as a sport (which it isn't really) then it would probably be the UK's best all-round sport. Certainly better than our amazing football team...and, in about two day's time when Andy Murray is the only Brit standing, our tennis team too....

Last time out I said I'd post a few interesting $5/$10 hands and in the interests of retaining a cohesive narrative, here we go.

Seat 1: khalidzahoor16 ($980)
Seat 2: Zilog ($1,000)
Seat 3: MrStarch ($1,286.44) (BTN)
Seat 5: vakostar ($391) (SB)
Seat 6: japete ($2,763.81) (BB)
Dealt to MrStarch

Preflop: (Pot: $15)

RAISE khalidzahoor16, to $30
FOLD Zilog
RAISE MrStarch, to $95
FOLD vakostar
FOLD japete
CALL khalidzahoor16, $65

Flatting or 3-betting this hand on the button is fine. Khalid is one of the worst players at $2/$4 and $5/$10 so there's no way that I can ever fold and avoid playing a hand in position vs him. He calls 3-bets a massively high % of the time so I think that makes just calling marginally the better option actually.

Flop: (Pot: $205)


CHECK khalidzahoor16
BET MrStarch, $95
RAISE khalidzahoor16, to $210
CALL MrStarch, $115

Nice flop! I don't think that there is too much point reraising his check-raise. A lot of the time Khalid will just have Ace-high type hands (for a gutshot) or something like 77-99 which he may be able to fold if I jam on him. His actual hand was definitely at the very top of his range I think.

Turn: (Pot: $625)


BET khalidzahoor16, $275
RAISE MrStarch, to $981.44
CALL khalidzahoor16, $400

Awesome turn and he's pretty much committed to the hand at this point so it's an easy shove and he's drawing to just two outs. Woohoo!

River: (Pot: $2,281.44)


Showdown:

SHOWS khalidzahoor16

SHOWS MrStarch

MrStarch wins the pot of $2,278.44

The swings in $5/$10 can be pretty gruesome though and it's a main reason why I only play when the tables are pretty soft. A few minutes later a steaming Khalid got his revenge by playing abysmally in this hand;
Seat 1: khalidzahoor16 ($1,003) (BB)
Seat 2: Zilog ($1,046)
Seat 3: MrStarch ($2,224.77) (BTN)
Seat 6: japete ($2,746.48) (SB)
Dealt to MrStarch

Preflop: (Pot: $15)

RAISE MrStarch, to $30
FOLD japete
RAISE khalidzahoor16, to $90
RAISE MrStarch, to $200
CALL khalidzahoor16, $130
I raise TT on the button and Khalid 3-bets from the small blind. Given his frail mental state and all-round spewiness I'm quite happy to get this all-in right here so make a small 4-bet which hopefully he'll either fold or jam over. Anyway he does the unexpected thing instead and just calls. No matter what hand he holds that can't be a good play ever, especially out of position. Miserable.

Flop: (Pot: $425)


CHECK khalidzahoor16
BET MrStarch, $260
RAISE khalidzahoor16, to $520
RAISE MrStarch, to $1,734.77
CALL khalidzahoor16, $253

Anyway I flop top set as usual, we get the money in and what does he have? The old 5-6 suited of course.

Turn: (Pot: $2,932.77)


River: (Pot: $2,932.77)



UGH!!!

Showdown:

SHOWS khalidzahoor16

SHOWS MrStarch


khalidzahoor16 wins the pot of $2,010


In general though poker is going pretty good this month. It's the 20th June today and I've already played about 45,000 hands so far. My aim for each month is 50,000 so I should smash that easily, hopefully have another good week (while watching Wimbledon in the background) and make a nice withdrawal in a few days.

Cheers for reading.