Archive for June, 2008

Not being short term results orientated

I’ve noticed that a lot of new and upcoming players tend to be far too short term results orientated (myself included in the past).

To help overcome this concatenate all of the poker sessions you have played, are playing and will play in your mind into one big session. In this session you are no longer short term results orientated - you are still early into the session (since it’s lifelong) and are focusing on playing a solid, winning game. Don’t have odds to peel the flop? Fold - The situation will come up many more times this session. Don’t have a good enough hand to raise the lag blinds? Fold - you will get a hand later on in this session and their play style will pay you off.

Case in point - It is far better to be long term then short term results orientated and in doing so you will play better and can avoid being so focused on your bankroll figure but instead on your quality of play.

I think you need to think of this but additionally also think of yourself as consistently profiting as you play the game. You may have only made $50.00 in one session but on the flip side made $180 worth of good decisions.

Poker isn’t just a game against your opponents it’s also a game against yourself - take control of the you factor by forgetting short term results and instead focusing on the decisions put in front of you at the table.

Comments

Week end report (13/06/08)

Well my first week truly focusing on No Limit is over - so how did I do? Overall I’ve had a pretty odd week, I started on the deepstack $1/$2 (400bb’s deep) No Limit tables and made almost $1500 in just under 150 hands with one incredible heater (I doubled up early and then doubled up through another big stack with a set of Aces verses a set of Ten’s on a dry board). Unfortunately this pretty much closed the books on my No Limit action for the week since I spent the rest of the week mostly doing StoxPoker work and playing a few hands of Limit Hold’em here and there.

Overall I’m quite surprised at how easily a lot of the 200NL players are willing to stack off for 100 big blinds or more. I can’t understand how so many players are happy going broke with top pair / top kicker on dry boards. If a player is willing to stack off with you on a relatively dry board then he is either way ahead or way behind you, so why are these players happy putting the money in so easily? I am seeing so many players finding creative ways to call with the most ridiculous of hands. I love it - but it’s hard to understand what’s going on in these players minds.

Comments (1)

Limit Hold’em player in a No Limit World

For almost eight years now, I have been playing and studying this wonderful game called poker. I’ve played Limit Hold’em professionally, coached numerous players, written many a forum post, and currently work as the production manager for StoxPoker.com – the best job and people to work for in the world.

Although I’ve played and studied many different variants of poker – from 2-7 triple draw, to Razz, to No Limit Hold’em – I’ve never really taken the time to get my No Limit Hold’em cash game to the same level as my Limit Hold’em cash game (I usually play up to $20/$40 Limit Hold’em a few hours each week when I’m not busy doing StoxPoker work).

The aim of this blog is to document my progress from being a profitable player at .50c/$1 No Limit Hold’em (currently 7.2BB/100 after 48,600 hands), towards being a profitable player at $5/$10 No Limit Hold’em. I hope to make this jump over the next 18 months (gradually moving up limits), and want to prove to myself that I can beat, as well as document, the different limits along the way.

Points to remember and take with me on my journey:

  • - In Limit Hold’em, protecting your hand is more prevalent than it is in No Limit Hold’em. In No Limit Hold’em, you should be focusing on controlling the size of the pot, as well as protecting your implied odds and the money sitting in front of you.
  • - Your goal is to finish the hand with a particular sized pot; not to get money in as quickly as possible.
  • - Control the pot in position - even if this sometimes means checking a street.
  • - Protect your implied odds on non-draw heavy boards.
  • My aim is to fit in some poker study where possible each day – fortunately this is already included in my daily work routine (reviewing StoxPoker videos before release). Added to this I have pretty much every book in the TwoPlusTwo library, have pulled out “Harrington on Cash Games” Volumes I and II to study, and intend to follow that up with Ed Miller’s “No Limit Hold’em - Theory and Practice”.

    Hopefully over time I can post meaningful content (and hand histories), which might help others who begin the same transition.

    Enjoy!

    Comments