Danielle Andersen Poker
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Danielle Andersen, know by her online screen name “dmoongirl”, began playing online in 2003 and is one of the highest earning female online cash game players in the history of online poker. Andersen is a highly respected professional player who was featured in the 2013 film “Bet, Raise, Fold” documenting the rise and fall of online. Danielle Andersen poker results, stats, photos, videos, news, magazine columns, blogs, Twitter, and more.
In an effort to provide valuable tools and tips that are relevant to even the smallest games, Card Player is pleased to bring you Poker Strategy For The Rest Of Us, which will focus on everyday situations that occur against the poker world’s most casual players.
Pro — Danielle Andersen
- Danielle 'dmoongirl' Andersen is best known as a cash game pro, but there are a couple events each year that can draw her to the tournament tables. Andersen usually takes time away from her cash.
- Danielle Andersen Eliminated WPT Borgata Poker Open Level 18: 2,500-5,000 The WPT Welcome Party WPT LA Poker Classic 2013 Level 9: 400-800 Danielle Andersen Eliminated L.A. Poker Classic Level 15: 1,500-3,000 Kimberly Catches Up With Danielle Andersen L.A. Poker Classic Level 15: 1,500-3,000.
Concept — Playing With Deep Stacks
Pre-Black Friday, Danielle Andersen was one of the most prolific cash game players online. She was a staple in the high-stakes six-max games, playing as high as $25-$50 no-limit hold’em under the screen name “Dmoongirl.”
Andersen was featured as one of the subjects in Bet Raise Fold, a documentary that followed the journey of three successful online poker players before and after the U.S. government action that essentially ended online poker in the country. Post-Black Friday, Andersen decided not to uproot her family from their home in Minnesota and move to another country. She has been playing on a few of the small sites that still allow U.S. players and has been traveling every few weeks to Los Angeles, to play live no-limit hold’em cash games at the Commerce Casino where she is a regular in the $10-$20 and $25-$50.
Andersen runs her own blog and can be found on twitter at @Dmoongirl.
She recently sat down with Card Player to break down a live cash game hand.
The Hand
In a live $2-$5 no-limit hold’em game, a player limped in early position, the villain ($1,400) limped in middle position and the hero ($1,850) raised to $25 with KQ.
Both limpers called and the flop fell Q63. It was checked to the hero, who bet $65. The first limper folded and the villain called. The turn was the 5 and the villain checked again. The hero bet $115 and the villain check raised to $300.
The hero called and the villain bet $200 when the 4 hit the river. The hero called and the villain showed 53 to scoop the pot.
The Interview
Steve Schult: Our hero makes it $25 from the hijack with KQ. It seems like a fairly standard open preflop, but given how deep the stacks are, what kind of range would you be isolating these limpers with and would you make the bet sizing any bigger?
Danielle Andersen: In general, I’m going to say this is fine. It’s an okay raise size. But with really weak players, I’m going to be widening my range that I’m isolating them with because I think I can get paid off in a big pot with them. I would be isolating mid pocket pairs, suited connectors, and I’ll just be raising a lot of hands.
SS: As far as the sizing goes, would you make it any bigger because of how deep the stacks are?
DA: The sizing is as small as I would go. I wouldn’t mind making it a little bit bigger. I think you could make it $35 and in live poker you wouldn’t be out of line. But at the same time you have a hand that is going to play well after the flop and you don’t necessarily be putting in too much preflop.
SS: We hit a monster flop and the only thing I can even ask you about on the flop is his sizing. Would you bet more or less than $65 into $80?
DA: I’m definitely going to bet a little less because I think that continuation bets should not be such a high percentage of the pot. He’s betting close to 80 percent of the pot there on a c-bet. Of course he nailed this flop but he is kind of hurting himself when he doesn’t have a hand.
I typically never go more than 60 percent of the pot with a c-bet. This is kind of skipping ahead, but he is betting like 80 percent of the pot on the flop and then about half of the pot on the turn. I think it should be reversed. I think our bets should be smaller on the flop and then a larger percentage of the pot on the turn. You are going to be c-betting that flop more often than you are going to be continuing on the turn, so if you are making an 80 percent of the pot bet, it’s going to have to work a much higher percentage of the time to make that a profitable play.
SS: Do you think he should be betting bigger on the turn?
DA: That particular turn card is a scary turn card because it’s my experience in live poker that people like to see the flop and limp-call with low suited connectors or small pocket pairs. So that is a card that probably hits his range because you can see him limp-calling a raise with like 5-6 suited or something like that.
SS: When the villain check-raises to $300, what is going through your mind? What kind of range are you putting him on and what is your course of action on the turn?
DA: It’s kind of the same range that I just talked about. Sets are a possibility, 5-6 is a possibility. It’s so hard without knowing anything about the player because some players just don’t like to be bullied and they might be taking a stand or something. This is a small raise so it doesn’t really matter because you are never folding. You’ve got position, implied odds, and you may very well have the best hand.
I’m never really raising here because all you are really doing is raising out hands that you have beat and could potentially get yourself into a tough situation where you get four-bet and then you are having to lay down your king-high flush draw.
Danielle Anderson Poker Player
SS: Our hand isn’t very disguised. If a club comes on the river and we shove a lot of money in there, it’s going to look like what it is. If we hit a king or a queen and he still wants to fire out for a big bet, we could still be behind. So what are your thoughts on the implied odds and is there even really that much?
DA: I guess there’s probably not that much, but the bigger thing more than the implied odds is having position here because if that club hits the river and he did flop a set or something, it is very likely that he is still going to continue to lead. Especially because when you are the preflop raiser and you are betting the flop, it is more likely that you have a queen or an overpair and he won’t be very scared of that flush card.
SS: On the river, it puts four cards to a straight out there and he leads very small. What do you make of this bet size?
DA: This is one of those things where it’s so important to know your opponent. There are some players that you can fold this to and there are some players that you are never folding this to. You know, there are some players who are just rocks and they are looking at this and are just looking to get paid what they can and are 100 percent of the time going to show up with a straight or a set and are just trying to get paid.
There are also some players that just look at board, figure you don’t have a straight and then decide to take a small stab at it. If I don’t know anything about the player though and I have no reads then I am probably not folding here because you are getting such a great price on the pot and people will sometimes show up with random stuff.
SS: How would this hand have changed if you were only 100 big blinds deep and you got check-raised on the turn?
DA: I’m probably still just flatting on the turn because I don’t think you are ever getting called by anything that doesn’t have you beat and you’re potentially pushing out hands that you do have beat. So I think the same concepts still apply. I struggle with this a little bit though because so much of what I do is player-dependent. I could play a hand two completely different ways based on who the opponent is.
SS: Do you ever turn this hand into a bluff on the river and try and make two pair or a set fold?
DA: The problem is that our line just doesn’t make a whole lot of sense if we do that. There just aren’t a whole lot of ways that we can show up with a straight. If we have a deuce, maybe we are raising, but we have to be weary of a seven because that hits their range more than ours. If it was a scenario where an ace makes a straight, then since we are the preflop raiser, we have much higher equity in making our hand look like a straight.
The other thing is that the small bet is sometimes used as a blocker bet where they have two pair or a set on a straight board and they are a little scared, but other times players are using that as well because they think this is the only way to get called. So it’s not necessarily a sign of weakness and I’m probably not trying to jam this person off a hand without more information.
*Featured photo courtesy of dmoongirl.com.
21:0627 Aug
To anyone who picked up the documentary Bet, Raise, Fold when it came out, Danielle Anderson is a name that should ring a few bells. The movie told several tales of the rise of online poker and its dark days after the Department of Justice went all Elliot Ness and kicked down the doors at Full Tilt Poker, pretty much nixing the whole enterprise of online poker in the States. Anderson was one of the main players in the movie.
After shipping out from her childhood home to uni, she then shipped out again to join her boyfriend (now husband) Kory at Illinois State. This was back around 2003, and as we all remember fondly, around that time “Chris Moneymaker had won the World Series, and that got a lot of young men interested in poker.”
Lured away from her studies to student bedsits filled with the sound of riffling of plastic chips and paper cards, she found she had a knack for sussing out bluffs and putting opponents to a decision.
To The Net
Kory pushed her to take her talent international and sign up for an online account. A wire transfer of $50 and few basic AML checks later and she was playing against the world. She didn’t do too well at first.
Danielle Andersen Poker Video
Having decided to quit if her initial stake didn’t stick, she was down as low as $13 before her fortunes rallied:
“I was $13 from never playing poker again,” she said. “We decided that if I could make $100 a week with online poker, it would really help our financial situation.”
She played for a long time at Full Tilt, even wearing their patch for a while. But then Black Friday came and with most of her bankroll tied up in the ensuing seizure of assets, she had to switch full time to playing live. She and her husband Kory live in Las Vegas, so there are worse places for it.
Post 15/02/2011
Danielle Andersen Poker Games
Danielle Andersen Poker Net Worth
She seems to have made a good recovery, getting back her bankroll when PokerStars stepped in to mop up FTP’s business, and with the small exception of strange working hours, Anderson’s life as a poker pro is rather domestic.
“It’s very normal, except that my job is playing poker. I’m almost always home for Easton [her son] after school,” she says laughing, then adding, “Unless I wind up at a table where someone is really throwing his chips around.”
She also makes the odd appearance on shows like Poker Night in America and Jason Somerville’s podcast and this year took 402nd in the Main Event at this year’s WSOP for around $30,000.
Danielle Andersen Wsop
It’s a long way to have come from being $13 dollars from of quitting.