Friday, April 24, 2009

25K Downswing, Coaching, Vegas and More…

Well I’m a retard. I’m now on a 25K downswing but this one is so different from my last big downswing. For one, it’s basically self-induced. I looked at the break-down of my lifetime stats on HEM and noticed that I was up for everything except 2/4 Full Ring (-$800), 3/6 HU, (-$1700), 5/10 HU and 10/20 6-Max. So what do I do? I decide that before I continue playing 5/10 and 10/20 I should treat poker like a video game and ‘complete’ every level. So I wander over to 2/4 Full Ring and decide to quickly win two buy-ins so that I’m up there lifetime. Obviously within an hour I’m down $2200…I then decide to play 3/6 HU, ignoring the fact I know I SUCK at HU, and a week later I’m down over 12 buy-ins there too…so that’s 10K I’ve lost for no reason.

My 6-max results have also obviously been bad during this time. I should’ve had a 10K session the other night (thanks largely to two double-ups at 25/50) but managed to turn it into a break-even one with bad value-betting, bad bluffs and bad call-downs at 5/10 and 10/20. That’s pretty much my week in a nutshell (I haven’t won many races either!). I think I’ve been a little bit unfocused and my head hasn’t quite been in the right place to the degree that it needs to be to beat 5/10, probably because every session I’m in a little bit of a rush to make money because I know I need to stop playing to do uni work soon.

The good thing about this downswing though is that, unlike last time, I’m not really worried about being unable to get it back. I’m very confident in my 5/10 6-max game, I recovered from a 37K downswing just two weeks ago, and, as I said, half this downswing was just me being a retard. So all in all I’m not too worried. In fact I’m actually quite happy that I’ve gotten the chance to play more HU. It’s allowed me to practice playing more pots where I call an open out of position or a 3-bet in position. Both these scenarios are directly applicable to my 6-max game and are actually probably two of my biggest weaknesses at the moment so hopefully this practice will help me out in the long run.

I’ve also finally decided to get a coach (two actually – iRock and DJ Sensei). I had my first session with iRock last night and it went really well. We reviewed a session I recorded and it was interesting to see the sort of things he pointed out. I could definitely see why he’s one (or more) levels above me. It wasn’t that I did anything terribly bad, it was more that I could do a lot of things slightly better. For example, there was a pot where Leatherass checked back on an AJx flop as the preflop raiser. In the video I said that I wasn’t going to bluff because Leatherass probably had a Jx type hand. iRock said that he would bluff because Leatherass probably had a Jx type hand…

In other news Vegas is now completely confirmed! We had a few last minute pull outs so in the end there’s only going to be six of us in Vegas from the 2nd to the 13th of July (I’ll stay behind if I’m still in the Main Event obviously). We’re staying at the Bellagio for 5 nights and the Mirage for 6. Curiously, the flights cost way more than the accommodation...

Finally, ANZPT Sydney is next week so that should be a nice break from the online scene. I’m hoping that some good cash games run since this will be the first time I’ve really had enough money offline to play the higher stakes live games but from what I’ve heard it’s highly unlikely anything above 10/20 will get off the ground. That’s ok, because I’ll be busy winning the tournament anyway!

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Hit $100,000 for the Year!

I’m super happy right now. For one, I’ve completely dug myself out of the 37K hole I made for myself a few weeks ago (and made an extra $5,500 to boot!). Secondly, I’ve hit the $50,000 mark for cash game winnings this year. Thirdly, I’m halfway to completing my goal of making 100 buy-ins at 5/10 this year before ‘graduating’ from it to 10/20+. Fourthly, and finally, I’ve now crossed $100,000 USD in poker winnings for the year (+52K in donkament winnings, -1K in staking)! Four semi-milestones all completed in the one day; not bad if you ask me!

Surprisingly I’ve been having most of my success on Full Tilt. Of my winnings $46500 has come from there and I’m up $42000 there at 5/10 in 20K hands. This is surprising because last year literally 90% of my winnings came from Party and were it not for some well-timed 10/20 shots I would’ve been in the red at FTP for the whole year, a period of over 50K hands at 2/4 to 5/10. I have a few ideas why I’m not doing as well on Party this year (regs can change screen names every month, 5/10 regs aren’t as spastic preflop as 3/6 ones) but I definitely know why I’ve been doing better on FTP: I learnt to play deep-stacked! I remember I used to be really apprehensive about playing the 200bb tables and I would only buy-in for 100bb because that’s what I was used to. After watching a few of DJ Sensei’s videos on deep-stacked play though it suddenly all clicked. He summarised the differences in about two lines (one for in position and one for out of position) and suddenly I felt ready to tear up the tables. So if you’re reading this DJ (which I know you’re not, since DC is the only training site that doesn’t have a blog section…), thank you!
Anyway, I’ve got to start working on another assignment now (apparently I have to read about 1000 pages…) so I’m going to lock myself out for a week and focus on that. For the rest of you, good luck at the tables.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

10/20 is Rigged IMO

Here are my results for the year so far...can you spot the problem?

Friday, April 10, 2009

My WSOP Dilemma and Why Postflop Stats Suck

(NB: I’ll go over the hands from my last blog in my next entry. I really wanted to talk about these things today.)

I have two weeks off for Easter now so that’s pretty sweet. I’ve got a couple of law assignments to do but other than that I should be pretty free to do whatever so I’m hoping to get in a good deal of hands and make some money to fund my Vegas trip. Speaking of Vegas, it looks like it’s definitely going ahead now. We’ve still got to sort of the specifics but it looks like there’ll be 9 of us (5 guys, 4 girls) heading to Vegas and New York for 10 and 5 days respectively. I’ve always wanted to go to New York so this really should be a pretty sick trip. The only thing I’m unsure of is (ironically) whether to play the Main Event. Initially that was the whole purpose of the trip, but I’m beginning to have second thoughts. I have these visions of spending day after day at the poker table, min-cashing for some irrelevant amount while my friends have the experiences and memories of a lifetime at the pool or at the nightclub or wherever. I did some research on the payouts for last year’s Main Event and realised that even if I made the top 200, I’d ‘only’ get $50,000. Sure, $40,000 profit is great, but is it really worth skipping five days in Vegas with your friends? That $40,000 isn’t going to change my life, and in 10 years it’ll be probably become completely insignificant, yet the chance to spend five days in Vegas as a 21 year old with your friends only comes once. Now I know in all likelihood I’ll bust on day 1 or day 2 and this won’t be an issue, but in some ways that makes it even worse. It becomes a no win situation; I either lose $10,000 or I lose precious time! Not a great deal if you ask me. Anyway, I’ll definitely ponder it some more in the coming weeks and I’ll let you guys know what I decide.

In other news I’m coming out of my downswing quite nicely. I’ve recovered 24K of the 37K I lost and have only played about 30 hours. I have to admit though I’m still struggling playing completely HUD-less. It’s definitely helped me in that it’s forced me to pay careful attention to my opponents and their tendencies but at the same time I’ve found that when I’m playing too many tables it can all get a bit too overwhelming, especially if I have too many iPoker or Party tables going (my reads are much worse on these sites as I’m new to iPoker and the players on Party can change their screen-names every month). I think what I might do is go with a ‘preflop only’ HUD; the only two stats I’ll have are VPIP and PFR and then in the popup I’ll just have 3-bet stats and nothing else. While I realise that preflop stats are much maligned and people often point to the fact that the difference between two players is not to be gauged by whether they’re 23/18 or 24/17, I do think that there is something to be said for knowing if someone’s 22/18 versus 18/14 versus 40/10; not only you can narrow down their initial preflop range very quickly but you can also make a load of assumptions about how they play and what they’re capable of. At the same time though I do acknowledge that postflop stats are pretty damn useless and this is why I want to get rid of them. I used to try to rely on them in tough spots but I’ve come to realise that they hurt more than they help and that taking detailed notes is just a hundred times better. To see why this is, I thought I’d do a little spiel today and I think lower stakes players would be well advised to think about this carefully.

The most common problem with postflop stats is that they don’t tell you anything at all about the hand you’re in because all they do is average out your opponent’s actions. To illustrate, imagine that you’re deciding whether to double barrel your opponent on a bluff. You look at your opponent’s fold to double barrel percentage and after seeing that it’s 50% you decide to fire a bet just under the size of the pot. Why? Because half the time you’ll take down the pot and half the time you’ll lose your under-pot-sized bet – a winning proposition you tell yourself! The problem with this reasoning is that it completely ignores the nature of the board (or indeed anything else about the hand). To keep things simple, imagine there are only two types of boards and that they come out with 50% frequency each – dry boards and wet boards. It may be the case that your opponent folds to a turn bet 100% of the time on the wet board while he calls 100% of the time on the dry board. If this was the case then obviously you should not fire a bet on every turn just because your opponent folds 50% overall. You’d pick and choose carefully. You’d fire every wet flop and you’d check/fold every dry flop. If you relied purely on the fold to turn bet stat however, you’d never make this vital adjustment.

Another good example of useless averages is the Won $ at Showdown stat. Quite simply, misunderstanding or misapplying this stat is going to be the most costly mistake you’ll ever make. Imagine that you’re facing a huge river bet in a now massive pot after being triple barreled or check-raised or double check-raised or something equally ridiculous. In deciding whether to call, you sneak a glance at their W$SD stat: 42%. Quite low, you think to yourself, and you call it off (making sure to time down so you don’t look a complete fool if you’re wrong). What’s the problem with this? In short, your opponent’s W$SD stat in a situation like this is completely meaningless. To see why this is, picture for yourself the great spectrum of hands that go down to showdown to average out to be your opponent’s W$SD figure. The great majority of these hands will be small to medium sized pots where your opponent had weak to medium strength holdings. Your opponent’s W$SD stat will thus largely be determined by these pots. The pot you just played, however, was not one of these pots. The pot you just played was a rare event, an outlier that will have a negligible effect on your opponent’s W$SD stat. Moreover, because your opponent’s range in this spot was likely to be incredibly skewed, his W$SD was likely to be closer to 0% or 100% than it was to the 42% figure you used. If the latter, your reliance on the stat just proved incredibly costly!

In addition to not telling you anything, some stats can also tell you the wrong thing, at least if you don’t know how to interpret them properly. One stat that readily illustrates this point is a player’s aggression factor. You’ve probably been told that people with high aggression factors are more likely to be bluffing while players with low aggression factors are more likely to be value betting. One thing I learnt very early on however was that it was quite the opposite for players with low aggression factors; when they bet they were almost always bluffing! The reason for this is quite simple when you think about it: players with low aggression factors DON’T value bet top pair. That’s why they have a low aggression factor in the first place. They pot control and check/call top pair all day long so that they can get to showdown. This means that when they do bet their range is a lot more polarised than you’d think and that second pair might be an easy call on your part. Another stat that ties in with this idea is someone’s double barrel stat. If someone double barrels you and you see their double barrel stat is extraordinarily low, don’t automatically fold your middle pair. If your opponent is a pot controller, as his low double barrel stat might indicate, then the double barrel you are facing is very likely to be a semi-bluff or even a pure bluff.

Anyway, that ends my spiel about stats. Hopefully some of you out there learnt something.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Two Unorthodox Hands: What Am I Thinking?

I’ve had a reading week this week (meaning no classes) but with an assignment due next Monday I’ve been busying myself with that. I played a bit of poker last weekend and continued my downswing all the way down to -37K as of Thursday night but fortunately managed to recover 16K on Friday and Saturday. I locked myself out on Saturday night to focus on my assignment and haven’t played since.

The more perceptive of you may have noticed that I just commented on how well I went in a session, something I said I’d no longer do! Well, it took me a while but I soon realised that a poker blog without such updates isn’t really a poker blog at all. So I’ve decided to continue giving updates on how well I’m doing but I definitely won’t be posting any monthly graphs or stats still.

I said in my last blog that I’d try to do some more strategy-type posts in the future. Well I’ve been brainstorming about some things to talk about and already I’ve got five or six really interesting topics in mind (and illustrative hand histories to go along with them!). I don’t have time to write one up now though so what I thought I’d do is just post the hand histories and get you guys thinking about the hands (perhaps post in the comments what you think I’m thinking?) and then I’ll explain them fully in my next post when I get the time. I actually got this idea from Greg’s montage videos on Leggo where he showed a series of ‘sick’ hands with no explanation in one video and then explained them fully in a later video. I thought it was actually quite remarkable how ‘sick’ a hand can look in isolation yet, when you hear the full explanation of it later on, it all seems very standard and straightforward.

Anyway, I thought I’d start off with a bang and show two hands where I obviously came out on top in a big way.

In the first, villain is a reg who plays up to 25/50 (he doesn’t seem to have discovered the auto-rebuy function though).

No-Limit Hold'em, $10.00 BB (6 handed) - Hold'em Manager Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com

MP ($1373)
CO ($1476)
Hero (Button) ($1000)
SB ($965)
BB ($884)
UTG ($2633)

Preflop: Hero is Button with 8, J

3 folds, Hero bets $25, 1 fold, BB calls $15

Flop: ($55) 3, Q, 8 (2 players)

BB checks, Hero checks

Turn: ($55) 4 (2 players)

BB bets $41, Hero raises $123, BB raises $341, Hero raises $852 (All-In), 1 fold

Total pot: $819

Results:
Hero had 8, J (one pair, eights).
Outcome: Hero won $1409

In the second, villain was a complete unknown but in the two orbits or so he’d been at the table he’d exhibited reg-like stats.

No-Limit Hold'em, $6.00 BB (6 handed) - Hold'em Manager Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com

CO ($609)
Button ($338.95)
SB ($690.45)
Hero (BB) ($1213.65)
UTG ($1349.25)
MP ($238.80)

Preflop: Hero is BB with 7, 7

2 folds, CO bets $21, 2 folds, Hero calls $15

Flop: ($45) 4, J, 5 (2 players)

Hero checks, CO bets $30, Hero raises $93, CO calls $63

Turn: ($231) 9 (2 players)

Hero checks, CO bets $198, Hero raises $1099.65 (All-In), 1 fold

Total pot: $627

Results:
Hero had 7, 7 (one pair, sevens).
Outcome: Hero won $1525.65

Rounders

High Stakes Poker - Daniel Negreanu Versus Gus Hansen

Joe Hachem - WSOP Main Event 2005 Champion