#1
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moving down in limits
recent financial situations will be forcing me to move down in limits for the first time ever. i'm not sure i can handle it though. its really a huge blow to me and my ego and if i played i'm not sure i would be able to give it my 100%. sugggestions?
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#2
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Re: moving down in limits
With the proper attitude you will prosper.
After reading SSH for the first time I realized that I had many more holes in my game than I had thought. So. I swallowed my pride and moved from 10-20 to 4-8. Well for me the gains for me have been outstanding: 1. With a smaller bankroll needed I am a now able to spend some of my winnings. 2. My win rate, both as the number of bb's and % of winning sessions have gone way up. 3. My losing sessions are much smaller. 4. For an ego boost, you will find that you are clearly the best player at the table. As a matter of fact it will be rare that you run into more than 1 good player (at least at Foxwoods). Good Luck, Eric |
#3
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Re: moving down in limits
If it's your financial situatin, and not your poker playing abilities, then your ego shouldn't be involved at all. Just keep reminding yourself of the real reason you're doing what you're doing. If your abilities carried you to 15/30 or wherever you were playing before you had to move down, they can take you there again...
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#4
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Re: moving down in limits
You are making a prudent adjustment to preserve your bankroll and thus your long-term ability to play poker. This is a good time to evaluate your game and plug any leaks. The most important thing is not to play less than your best game just because the limits are lower than you are used to. Rebuilding isn't fun but it beats watching from the rail. Another thing to work on is game selection, that is only choosing to sit at tables that are not overly tight using the pot averages as a guide, and to play the game (holdem/omaha/limit or no limit) that in your experience you most easily beat. The biggest adjustment of course is that the lower the limit and the looser the game, the more you have to just play ABC poker and not try too many moves that only work in bigger limits against tighter players. I won't wish you good luck but that you play your best game all the time (one of Mike Caro's best admonitions).
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#5
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Re: moving down in limits
I want to add one more thing regarding bankroll. You did not actually state that the financial situations that are forcing a move down involve losing. If that is not the case then it is because you are spending part of your bankroll on other matters, presumably that you regard as emergencies. If you rely on poker for any substantial part of your income, then it is critical that you don't do this, although of course I am not in your shoes and don't know what you might be facing. Besides building and preserving a bankroll you also have to build savings from your earnings which take care of life's necessities and emergencies. Mike Caro and others have also warned about spending pieces of your bankroll. If you use part of a bankroll on other things even emergencies, then you just fall into a downward spiral where you can't now earn as much as formerly to provide for life's necessities and emergencies. Again, I don't know your exact situation and this is easy for me to say, but it is true.
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#6
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Re: moving down in limits
What does ego have to do with the level you're playing at?
Yeah, I can see that playing at a lower limit can be frustrating in terms of lower $/hour. I can see that it might be less fun if you don't get to play with your usual opponents. But ego? I would suggest that if your ego is tied to the limit you're playing at, there are bigger psychological fish to fry. Given an equal ability to win at limit X or less, then the only things dictating what limit you're playing at is what your bankroll can accomodate and game selection. |
#7
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Re: moving down in limits
Ego has killed many a good player's bankroll.
With your skills, you can easily crush a lower limit game. You will look a like shark to your opponents (which should help the ego), and you will be able to move back up to where you want soon. |
#8
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Re: moving down in limits
Same game. Same run of cards. Different opponents.
Just need different reading glasses. /M |
#9
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Re: moving down in limits
Get staked. OK everyone is against this but if anyone could do it the right way it would be you because you are such a proven winner... unless of course you went broke playing your current game...
Anyway, I would possibly try to get enough money from somewhere to play at least a modest sized game. I mean are you really starting at 2/4? You will probably be able to move up every 10k hands which will probably only be a weeks time if you play alot but I would try and get enough for 5/10 so you can advance much faster. Aside from getting more money in any way, take this as a great way to learn humility. Hopefully this will encourage you to pound out more hands so you can move up much faster. For you I would move up once you have 300BB because you won't risk losing it all but I dont think you need anymore than that untill you get to 5/10 6max if you are at 2/4. Just remeber, you are playing with donks like me now so it shouldn't be too tough, but remember to adjust to our suckiness and revert to the SSHE days, not HEFAP |
#10
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Re: moving down in limits
I don't know what you mean by "financial situations", but I am assuming you needed to withdraw a lot of money for a one time thing from your poker account. If this is the case, then the only reason you need to move down is because of too small a bankroll. You are a very good player, so you should be able to make enough money at the lower limits (at a higher BB/100) to bring yourself right back to the higher limits.
If you want quicker results, get a stake from someone. I'm sure you could find quite a few people who are confident enough in you to stake you (at a very minimal interest rate [img]/images/graemlins/cool.gif[/img]) |
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