#1
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I want to believe I\'m a winning player, i REALLY do
Forgive the X-post, but it wasn't getting much play in the probability forum:
After running extraordinarily bad over the past 25,000 hands at the Party 15/30 (-0.2BB/100 ...OK not catastrophic, but a real lesson in humility), I've begun to slip into that dreaded mindset of wondering whether I'm a winning player at all at those stakes (my first 45,000 hands were at a +2.5BB/100, and i had been beating the 2/4 and 3/6 for around 2.5 to 3.5 BB/100). My question is about confidence intervals and/or standard deviations...perhaps I'm framing this poorly, but I just want to know how long a BAD stretch is "normal", and at what point I should start really taking these mediocre results to heart...i think i remember there being some spreadsheet floating around that discussed how prolonged a drought an exemplary +1.5BB/100 should expect, etc. etc. i.e. what kind of a downswing (and for how long) a 1.5BB/100 player should accept as well within the "normal" range...? |
#2
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Re: I want to believe I\'m a winning player, i REALLY do
If I had to guess, this is probably indicative of something else wrong with your game. I'd be curious to see what the statmasters had to say on this. I can just offer you this from personal experience. After beating live play middle limits for about a bet and a half per hour for about 2 years (including 5 months as a pure professional), I was unable to beat the middle limits online. This is not to say that I was losing, rather, I was playing live and online at the same time and using the same game to beat both games (except I was not beating the online version for any amount of money that could be considered "worth my time.")
The reason for this was that I had not adjusted to the changes in the game. As a second story, consider that the same live game that I'd beaten consistently over the two year span started beating me. I was playing 10/20, 20/40, and experienced a $6,000 downswing in these games. Granted, my luck was bad. In fact, it was very bad. The amount of this downswing, however, gave me reason to pause. Only then did I realize how much the game had changed in front of my eyes without me even realizing it. I had failed to adapt to my live game. In my game specifically, I had been used to loose-passive play. Television, however, had produced a lot of LAG play and I had failed to adapt at all. I'm not saying that this is your problem, but I would be concerned about this and think through your strategies because, more than likely, either your game has changed or the game has changed. |
#3
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Re: I want to believe I\'m a winning player, i REALLY do
Sounds like you're sweating your losses, so why not drop back to limits you know you can best to get your confidence (and your bankroll) replenished?
Barron Vangor Toth www.BarronVangorToth.com |
#4
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Re: I want to believe I\'m a winning player, i REALLY do
Its pretty difficult to be playing the exact same game after 25k of break even poker that you were playing after 45k of winning poker.
I'd lay money that you're probably better than a -0.2 BB/100 player, but probably worse than a +2.5 BB/100 player. Hope that helps [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] |
#5
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Re: I want to believe I\'m a winning player, i REALLY do
[ QUOTE ]
Its pretty difficult to be playing the exact same game after 25k of break even poker that you were playing after 45k of winning poker. I'd lay money that you're probably better than a -0.2 BB/100 player, but probably worse than a +2.5 BB/100 player. Hope that helps [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] [/ QUOTE ] Thanks much for the input so far guys -- still hoping someone with a real stats hard-on will be able to give some more specific quantitative intervals that might speak to what kind of downswings should still be considered well within the NORMAL range. |
#6
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Re: I want to believe I\'m a winning player, i REALLY do
It would help if you'd provide your standard deviation/100.
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#7
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Re: I want to believe I\'m a winning player, i REALLY do
[ QUOTE ]
It would help if you'd provide your standard deviation/100. [/ QUOTE ] Will do -- is that something I can find in my PT DB? for whatever it's worth, i posted my basic VPIP/PFR/etc stats in a blog post about a week ago www.zbasic.com/pokerblog.html |
#8
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Re: I want to believe I\'m a winning player, i REALLY do
Yeah, go to the session tab, and there's a more detail button. Its at the bottom of there. I'm at work though so this is from memory.
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#9
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Re: I want to believe I\'m a winning player, i REALLY do
I'm running worse than you over my last 25K hands and in fact probably worse over my last 40-50K hands.
How long is a "normal" bad stretch? Damned if I know, I figured I've had an asston of normal bad stretches and a few abnormal ones, with my current one being by far the worst. I've come to only one conclusion and that is that poker sucks! [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] Seriously, hang in there, if you are a winning player it will even out on the + side. Based on your post its difficult to determine if you are as 45K hands at any +BB/100 IMO is moot, as is 25K hands at any -BB/100. When you reach the 100K mark look at ALL your results and overall BB/100 and that may give you an indication of where you stand. Re-assess after 200K hands and see where you stand. Over time, you'll see which side of the line you are on. As far as the Party 15/30, in my experience it can be a rough game with mega high variance and really test your patience (well at least mine)...far above any other limit I've played (which is really just up to 20/40 live and 15/30 online). Could just be an indication of better players, and you certainly cannot expect to beat the 15/30 for the same BB/100 as 2/4, again IMHO. |
#10
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Re: I want to believe I\'m a winning player, i REALLY do
Too much relying on stats and results.
Don't you know how to tell if you're playing well by the hands you play and your reasoning behind the plays? Don't you review after each session? How about after you just played a hand, you don't instantly replay it in your mind if it's an iffy situation? I think many people should throw out their PTs for awhile and concentrate more on how to analyze their own game without relying on stats. Someone could have the exact same stats as you and they could mean completely different things. You should ignore your mediocre results and study your game regardless. Even if you were killing the game. There's a thread somewhere about longest breakeven streaks. Mine was 21k hands. b |
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