Reset after Vegas, rebuild your routines, and arrive sharp at WCOOP — alongside four other pros doing the same work.
A long summer, the routines you'd built quietly fell apart, and a few results are still spinning around in your head weeks later. Now WCOOP is right around the corner — a long festival, the day 2s that decide your month, a buy-in calendar with all the variance that comes with it.
The instinct is to push through it — more volume, more hours, will it back into shape. That's usually how a tired stretch turns into a bad one.
You don't get back to form by grinding through it. You rebuild on purpose.
The gap between your A-game and your C-game is rarely technical. You already know the spots. The gap is what happens when you're tired, three buy-ins deep on the day, in a downswing, or short on sleep — when the decision is the same one you'd make cold, and you make a different one anyway.
That's the off-table work: focus, tilt, recovery, and the routines that decide whether your best poker actually shows up deep in a day 2 — or stays home.
European tournament pros, in English, on a weekly slot that works for your timezone. Twelve weeks built as one arc — three phases, timed to the series.
Decompress from Vegas, rebuild the routines that fell apart over the summer, and plan the series before it starts — not in the middle of it.
High support while it's live: managing the grind, the swings, and the fatigue in real time, with the group there the whole way through.
An honest review of the series — what held up, what didn't, what stays and what goes — and a clear plan for what's next.
You're not performing for the group — you're working alongside people who sit in the same spot you do. When someone talks through a session that wrecked them, you recognize your own patterns in it. When a player you respect comes through a downswing in one piece, it moves what you believe you can handle. And the isolation this game runs on — the sense that you're the only one — quietly lifts. It's honest, and it moves faster than you'd expect.
The science of tilt, focus and sleep in plain language — only the part you can actually use in a session, nothing to impress you.
One person brings a real problem from their game or their week, and the group works it together. You'll see your own situation in someone else's.
Each week you say what you're working on, out loud, to people who'll remember. It's harder to quietly let it slide.
Your own — built around how you actually play, not a template — that survive a long day 2.
A small network of pros who were in the trenches with you, long after the twelve weeks end.
Your A-game showing up more often — fewer days where the result and the play come apart.
The math is simple: one tilted decision on a WCOOP day 2 costs more than the whole program.
Write me, and we set up a short call — no commitment, just a real conversation to see if this fits, both ways. If it's not right, I'll tell you.
"The most valuable part is that he helps me plan each individual trip — morning, day and evening routines for the days I'm playing — so I stay focused and in a good mindset through these tiring stops, and perform at my best consistently."
"Alan has been a game-changer for my career and well-being. Working with him I've improved my relationship with myself and others. I'm grateful and proud to have him in my corner, and consider him a friend and an ally."
"The biggest transformation has been how I've structured my life outside the tables: optimizing my routines to consistently deliver my best in the sessions. For me, Alan is the ultimate reference when it comes to peak performance."