Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Welcome July. Aims and goals



Very first day in July, a good morale booster to start the month off.

Goals for this month:
1) Aim to clock 30k hands. A pretty lofty goal I pressume, given my schedule and stuff thats going on.
2) Aim for 4PTBB/100 at least. My first 10k of 200nl has gone pretty decent, at about 8PTBB/100. I figured this winrate is pretty sustainable, given that I do not make any glaring errors. On 2+2 the biggest winner at this stake gnomeontilt has a long term 130k hands at about 5-6 ptbb/100. Certainly aiming to emulate this good player.
3) Enjoy poker. This is something that is pretty refreshing for me at 200nl. A new challenge, enjoying playing the hands and seeing the results. I've been running standard thus far for the last 10k hands. Though I would not like a downswing, I believe it will certainly come one day or another and I'll be better able to cope with it.
4) Spend more time playing in the 'A' game zone. Tommy Angelo is the nuts.

Monday, June 30, 2008

June Summary




$168/hr

+ $289.35 FT rakeback
+ $79.10 NOIQ cashback

Total Profit = $3125.32


Have barely played the minimum required to get an ironman level this month...So a $100 mid year bonus is waiting for me to clear.. Guess it will be cleared in no time in FT at 200nl.

On a whole, I think i ran okay this month, about even in sklansky bucks. So pokergods have already repaid me in whatever they have owed. Certainly finding myself in good spots aganist fishes as well as the regulars. Managed to do a checkraise shove allin on the river with the 2nd nuts and got paid off by a regular with top pair(who surprisingly must have given me too much credit for attempting a checkraise bluff. Thats how bad my image on the table is)

Certainly a good month in terms of profits but not so in terms of volume. Work really saps you out and the timings left to play aren't really that conducive. Had to make do with weekends and such.

Coaching as been going well too. Am glad that one of my students really took to the knowledge imparted and gained some newer perspective towards poker. There are a few budding newer players who definitely have the character and attributes to make it in online poker. Some of them have so much drive and passion that it somehow made me ashamed of my volume. Given today's availability of free resources, it is almost a cardinal sin to not make use of them for newer players. As always, my advice to them is to take it slowly, and study more, play more. It took me close to a year before something clicked and poker never looked the same again. Keep working hard and find your own eureka moment..it is always there for you to search.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

3rd Week - First 10 buyins at 200nl



$148/hr

+ $217.46 FT rakeback
+ $79.10 NOIQ cashback

Total Profit = $2155.53


Definitely running well in this short sample of hands, would gladly take the hourly anytime. This is probably the easiest and most relaxing 2k month ever. Goal is to continue grinding at 200nl to realize the true win and hourly rate. Its definitely possible making a decent livnig at this level with the correct parameters, like multitabling with a suitable winrate.

One influence this month is seeing leatherass post his long term highstakes winrate. Seeing his rather nitty PF stats further validates a point that PF stats are not significant parameters that govern your winrate, rather its the postflop analysis and lines taken. Postflop is where all the big money is made or loss. I play probably in the converged region of 23/19 which is probably standard TAG at these stakes, but my PF game is pretty much dynamic and based on table conditions. An implication is that sacrificing a little preflop ev, is probably worth it if you can make it up postflop. No point of getting unneccesary into 3betting/4betting aganist regulars unless it is a damn obvious play to make.

Another concept that I've been using instinctively but have not realised in general poker concepts is that of leverage. CTS vids probably shows this very well. The idea of making good sized raises that forces opponent to either go all in or fold is a very good leverage concept. E.g. 100nl, CO raise 4bb, Btn 3bets to 13bb, CO 4bets to 29-31 bbs. Concept of leverage is that you get good value with your bluff raises when they fold, and as well as forcing the player to commit (which you are going to call with hands that you 4bet with). This can apply to draws, made hands, and bluffs as well and it works tremendously well if you balance your range well.

Gotta pen this down before I forget all about it.

Comparison of luck factor in Cash and Tourney Games.

This article shall discuss the luck/variance factor and attempts to show the difference between Cash and Tourneys. (Readers please take note that I'm a primarily a Cash game player and thus they maybe be some form of inherent bias, but there is objectivity in the discussion that follows)

For the purpose and direction of this article, let us limit luck to the form of badbeats only (Times when you put your money in good, but end up bad). Speaking of positive variance is no doubt essential, but it is something we prefer and not dread aganist.


Main Premise
Be in Cash or tourney, the short term luck factor is the same. In X number of hands, on a reasonable luck, you will hit Y number of badbeats. However, we do not know in which sequence or series this Y number will occur. Yet surprisingly, this fact alone has different implications for both cash and tourneys.

Suppose in a span of 1000 hands:

-For Cash: having a bad beat stretch in the last 900-1000 hands is not a big deal. It is theoretically possible to regain your lost dollars and sklansky bucks in the future. As cash is played in a continual basis, having a bad stretch does not seriously matter.

-For tourneys: suppose that 900-1000 hands is near the region of your final table. Especially when the payouts are crammed into the top 3 positions and they are especially huge, having a bad stretch in that period have more sinister implications. If that bad stretch occurs early in the tourney, it probably doesn't matter as well since it will be hard to go deeper. (Note, I have not spoken of positive variance which may occur in the similar stretch, and in most tourneys, you need them to occur in the right timings in order to win big)

So what are the deductions from this simple thought experiment?

In tourneys, the luck factor, both positive and negative, appears to be more significant. The reason being is, I propose, that due to the nature of tourneys themselves, at the later stages, chip stacks are shallower, M's get smallers, there is more Preflop, less significant postflop decisions, and thus a Good players edge aganist a weaker player is more diminished. (Think about it, the number of mistakes made/hand by a bad player is at most limited to 1 or 2 streets, preflop and flop)

In cash, the luck factor is essentially non-existent by virtue of the law of large numbers.(see my sklansky bucks article). Most of the money is made postflop with deeper stacks than tourneys, and a good players edge aganist a weak player can be maximised through more streets of play. By increasing the no of mistakes made by players across all 4 streets of holdem, it appears in literal sense to double the EV compared to tourneys.

In tourneys, the heavy payouts and the "idea of higher variance" may give a player the appearance of being really good (when they are running good) or being really bad (when actually running bad). The nature of tourneys and escalating payouts makes the game impossible not to ignore the emotional aspect of poker in short term poker. You need to embrace this aspect to do well in tourneys.

In cash, the emotional aspect has to be dealt with differently. Short term wise, one has to be emotionless with regards to his results. In a sense, grinding cash game is more suited to the milder and less emotional temperament players.


Last but not least, its important to consider the long term aspect of winning players in these 2 games. In the long term, the good tourney and cash player, who ride through their variance train, will also come out winners. ROI of tourneys and ptbb/100 in cash ultimately translate to $/hr. However the path of getting to this $/hr is very different indeed. One is a gentler gradual path, the other is an emotional rollercoaster. One cannot ignore the fact that winning a big tourney has serious life changing implications - like Jerry Yang or Jamie Gold. But in all sense you just need to be very lucky in order to take down huge tourneys.

Takeaways
A good understanding of the nature of different games helps in your game selection. Different games cater to different mental psyches of different players. If you find yourself liking the adrenaline of playing tourneys, and don't mind the variance train, by all means play them. If you are like me, who prefers to be able to maximise my edge on weaker players, being able to rebuy and sit back with donks, play cash.

While its important to be good in all areas, the saying of "Jack of all trades, master of none" is very applicable in poker due to the sole reason that all games are different and are catered differently for people with different needs and mental psyches. Try out different games, and select the one that best suits your character. It might do you good in the long run!

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Mid June Update (updated)





+ $113.44 FT rakeback
+ $79.10 NOIQ cashback

Total Profit = $ 1217.81

June has been minimal poker so far, logged only close to 4k hands when its already 2/3 past June. Well the reason being is that someone who matters so much more than poker is in town, and had to take a week off to finish my sch work, which ends this week.

The move up to 200nl has gone decent. According to Poker EV, the poker gods still owe me about $400+ worth of sklansky bucks, and this is definitely pleasing to know. Have spewed a few stacks here and there, played pretty bad in certain spots imho.

Has been contemplating too long for the move up to 200nl, and after a few k hands, in general the style of play is similar to 100nl. Fishes are as bad, however the pool of thinking regulars has increased. It sounds contradictory, but as you move up, its easier to put regulars on hands because they just don't play weirdly, and partly because most of them play the same style as you. Anyway the general rule is to not mess with good regulars, table select for fishes, and exploit weak regulars.

Work resumes next week, and that leaves me with even less time for poker. Coupled with MGS4, I guess id be happy if I hit 10k hands this month with a decent profit.
The goal is to log as many hands as I can, during good traffic timings, and aim to have a good sample size for 200nl. I figure the worst I can do is around 2-2.5 ptbb/100, and thats inclusive of alot of spewy plays. With that, I aim to do about $75/hr 6 tabling 200nl. We will see at the end of the month.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Another reason why Poker is so Great




Kudos to FTP and Vpost.

Another $550 worth of Value. May rocks.

Life isn't a bed of roses. End May Updates





+$140 NoIQ bonus
+$182.33 NoIQ cashback
+$416.16 FTP rakeback

Profit = $2519.74


Had a pretty frustrating last week of may, ran really bad and played equally bad. Been getting into real good tables with 3-4 fishes, but as usual, getting outdrawn when the money is good and especially on the river.

In all, had about 8 KKs vs AAs all in PF last week alone, and a few of my AAs vs underpairs didn't really hold up. Typical AK vs AQ PF didn't go that well. Running about -$200 in luck equity this month, nothing spectacular in fact.

I guess its enough for this month, don't wish to play any further and decided to give myself a good break. As for goals for this month,

[x] big month in terms of hands
[ ] not so big month in terms of results
[x] cleared my 100k hand mark
[x] completed a few coaching sessions
[x] wrote some more outlines for my poker book
[x] sch is going great

So in a way, mission accomplished. Gonna chill out, and have some fun over the weekend with some live poker and regenerate my desire to play next month. Till then, cya!