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  #1  
Old 08-31-2001, 05:23 PM
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Default Mason plays $30 - 60



Mason Malmuth plays $30 - 60 Holdem. He has said that his circumstances may soon allow him to play higher. However as far as I know he plays only $30-60.


Roy Cooke plays $30 - 60 Holdem. I played in Vegas at Bellagio's for 8 months straight to years ago. I never saw Cooke play above $30 - 60.


Cissy Bottoms plays $30 - 60 Holdem. I've not seen her in the bigger Vegas games either.


I read Sklansky's definition of a World Class player. He's wrong. These 3, in my opinion, prove him wrong. they are all world class players.


One of the most important ingredients, a necessity, for playing high limit poker is Bankroll. Mason has said that bankroll requirements have kept him from playing higher. I believe him. The other two may have other reasons for not moving up, I don't know.


I don't believe we've seen an accurate deinition of "a world class" poker player. Maybe there isn't one. There certainly are an order of magnitude more mid limit games spread in the world than high limit. I guess I don't understand why a mid limit winning poker player is not considered "world class".


Vince
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  #2  
Old 08-31-2001, 05:52 PM
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Default Re: Mason plays $30 - 60



Vince writes: "I guess I don't understand why a mid limit winning poker player is not considered "world class. "


If these regular mid limit players are considered "world class", then what do we call players that are better? Or are you saying that players like Lenny Martin or Dan Negreanu and others are not better. They just have the bankroll?


"One of the most important ingredients, a necessity, for playing high limit poker is Bankroll. "


Ok. Say one of the players mentioned were bankrolled. Could they win at the highest levels? Are their skillsets transferable?


Now if 30-60 is all there is to being world class, I regret the several now serious poker players (two of whom live in my house) that I brought into poker.


World class means to me that you can play any table in your field and not feel outclassed. This doesnt mean you should play there, that's bad game selection. But it means you should be able to hold your own.


Pick your game. Take the nine best players in the world and sit in the last seat. Can you hold your own? (Not many could beat the rake in such a game, if anybody). If you can't hold your own, then you are not world class.


Vince, don't you think serious poker is a waste of effort if all you can ever hope to make is 60 or so an hour? I think that is just fine if that's a fall back. but not as a fixed ceiling.


Do you think this forum assist someone on a trek to being a great player?
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  #3  
Old 08-31-2001, 06:36 PM
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Default Re: Mason plays $30 - 60



Mason does fit my definition Vince. Read it again.
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Old 08-31-2001, 07:01 PM
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Default Re: Mason plays $30 - 60



I reread David's definition. Yes he does include players of Mason's ilk as world class. Sorry, David, but now we must address backdoors question. Does the prospect of only earning $60/hour make poker a worthwhile endeavor?


Backdoor, I can only answer for Vince. I never had any goal other than being a consistent winning poker player when I began playing. I have not altered that goal much in the years I have been playing. I would like to be both a winning live poker player and a winning tournament player. Right now I can say that this is the case for bothgoals. I am a winning live poker player as well as a winning tournament poker player.


I cannot tell you my win rate for live or tournament. It's positive is all that I am sure of. For tournaments it is extremely positive for this year. But i really don't care what it is I play to win. If I average 1 bb/hr or .5 bb/hr, only means that I may need to improve my game if I'm at the lower number.


If you told these two friends of yours that there was fortunes to be made at poker I hope you explained to them how to go about making that fortune. And if you have please let the rest of us in on it. I might just change my goals.


vince
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  #5  
Old 08-31-2001, 07:48 PM
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Default Re: Mason plays $30 - 60



Hm. I sat in a 40-80 game with Mason the weekend before the world series, in the Mirage. The game did have an uberfish, which is probably why he was in the game -- it certainly was why *I* was in the game.


So he's clearly not restricted only to 30-60.


- target
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  #6  
Old 09-01-2001, 03:54 AM
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Default Re: Mason plays $30 - 60



Vince, if a middle limit player can be considered "world class", what about a low limit player? I know several guys in Vegas who make between one and two big bets per hour playing $4-$8. Why can't we have a "world class" $4-$8 player?


I have asked some of the "world class" $4-$8 players why they don't play higher. They tell me they just don't have the bankroll.
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  #7  
Old 09-01-2001, 08:03 AM
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Default Re: Mason plays $30 - 60



when backdoor asks the question are players like lenny martin and dan negreanu not better or do they just have bigger bankrolls. i think the answer is there not necessarily better just becuase they play bigger. just because someone plays bigger than someone else doesn't mean there better. you have to judge the player. not the limit he or she plays.
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  #8  
Old 09-01-2001, 08:14 AM
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Default Re: Mason plays $30 - 60



to respond to jim. if lenny martin lost all his money in the stock market tomorrow or some business venture. and now was broke and forced to play 4-8. would he not be world class anymore?
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  #9  
Old 09-01-2001, 09:26 AM
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Default Re: Mason plays $30 - 60



"Vince, if a middle limit player can be considered "world class", what about a low limit player? "


I don't know. Badger seems to think so. If Lenny Martin or Daniel Negreanu or David Sklansky were to play 4 - 8 with your winning 4 - 8 players who would have a substantial edge? Maybe "world class" has not been defined well enouh to make that determination. I will definitely yield to you with regards to low limit and mid limit poker for the following reason. Besides bankroll and knowledge and talent there is also a "balls" factor. Some big time players are able to overcome short comings in one area with "big balls". They might be cautious but they are never afraid. I get this impression whenever I talk with Daniel Negreanu. It seems to me that guys like him do not fear going broke. I believe this gives some players without a big bankroll what they need to play higher limits than what most of us would consider optimal.


Until I see a definition of "world class" that I can live with I believe I'll just get out of this discussion. BTW- Nice taliking to you Jim.


vince
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  #10  
Old 09-01-2001, 09:39 AM
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Default Re: Mason plays $30 - 60



Vince,


I think that this:


"I read Sklansky's definition of a World Class player. He's wrong."


Contradicts this:


"I don't believe we've seen an accurate definition of "a world class" poker player."


If we haven't seen an "accurate definition," then how can David be wrong?


Further, how can someone ever be wrong when making up their own definitions? It is routine in lofty discourse to define key terms and then procede under the presumption that the reader will play along with the definition. Otherwise, no meaningful communication is possible. As evidence, note that this thread quickly became a semantical debate.


Over time, terms that were initially hazy can become rigid, but only after one definition is agreed on. "World class poker player" is apparently still in the earlier, flexible, needs-to-be-defined by each user, phase.


"I guess I don't understand why a mid limit winning poker player is not considered 'world class'."


Here's a possible reason, using me as an example. The only reason I win is because I make 'better' decisions than my opponents, on average. That I happen to win says very little about my ability compared to rest of the poker world. It just means I'm fortunate to sit with this batch of opponents.


If seated with Vinces and Davids and Masons and Daniels and TJ's, I don't think I'd fair well at all, but then, I wouldn't play. Which reminds me, isn't game-selection a universally agreed upon criteria of poker smarts? Would I move up in rank just because my game selection is good?


(And it is. It's very good. One of the few parts of "my game" that I'm consistently happy with. To me, game selection doesn't merely mean staying in the $20-40 because the $40-80 is tough today, though that's an important piece. Game selection is short range AND long. It means (and here comes the term-defining part) city selection, tournament selection, day-to-day game selection, quitting when faltering, not going to the casino unless rested and spunky, etc. It's just as much a function of 'know thyself' as it is 'know the opponents.')


Tommy, an area-code class player, so far



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