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  #11  
Old 01-01-2005, 06:57 PM
Seadood228 Seadood228 is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 5
Default Re: My thoughts

Here's a post I wrote a few months ago on another site. The ROI and BB/hr. numbers are a little inflated , but in these examples I took data from some of the best players. Most players, myself included, will be right around 75% of these numbers.

At lower levels, it's hard to argue that SNGs aren't more profitable. Personally I find them to be less swingy, but I suspect that will change as the buyins increase coupled with a decrease in ROI.


I think you can argue either way which is more profitable, but in the end it all comes down to bankroll. We have to factor out the players skill level , because if we didn't there would be no reason for having this discussion. So assuming the player is in the top 10% skill wise in each game, the only factor that comes into play when determining how much you can earn is the amount of money you are willing to risk.

I'll use a 2 table at a time example and expected ROIs from an excellent player on the 2+2 SNG forum. I've added a bigger bankroll with the increase in buyins..

$10 STTs - 50% ROI - 2 tables = 3.2 SNGs/hr =

$17.6/hr - Bankroll needed around $300

$20 STTs - 42% ROI - 2 tables = 3 SNGs/hr =

$27.72/hr - Bankroll needed $700

$30 STTs - 44% ROI - 2 tables = 3 SNGs/hr =

$43.56/hr - Bankroll needed $1100

$50 STTs - 35% ROI - 2 tables = 2.6 SNGs/hr =

$50.5/hr - Bankroll needed $2000

$100 STTs - 26% ROI - 2 tables = 2.5 SNGs/hr =

$71.25/hr - Bankroll needed $5000

$200 STTs - 20% ROI* - 2 tables = 2.2 SNGs/hr =

$94.6/hr - Bankroll needed $10000+

<font color="green">* not many players post their ROI at this level, this was taken from a ZeeJustin post, so I'm pretty positive you are looking at the absolute maximum ROI here. </font>

In comparison to playing limit ring games:

I'll assume 1.5BB/hr, a 400BB bankroll, and 2 tables

.5/1 - $400 BR - $3/hr

1/2 - $800 BR - $6/hr

2/4 - $1600 BR - $12/hr

3/6 - $2400 BR - $18/hr

5/10 - $4000 BR - $30/hr

10/20 - $8000 BR - $60/hr

15/30 - $12000 BR - $90/hr

30/60 - $24000 BR - $180/hr

Assuming 1.5 BB/hr 2 tabling at all levels, the Bankroll Risk/Earn rate will start to even out at around the 15/30 - $215SNG level.

At the lower levels however, a good SNG player can theoretically earn much more in relation to the relative risk. Of course we are assuming that the player in question is in the upper echelon of players at that level.

Another point you could add is the difference in learning curves. I think the SNG learning curve starts out much lower but progresses more rapidly than someone playing limit. Limit rings take longer to master IMO, but the degree of short term luck allows for a poor limit player to lose less in the short run, whereas a new SNG player might lose much more in that period of time. After some experience, a SNG player can learn to breakeven and then become a winning player at quicker rate. These are just opinions though...

I still think it's imperative to become at least a competent limit ring player before you venture into any other form of holdem. I know I didn't start winning SNGs until I became a ok ring game player...

Hope that helps..
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  #12  
Old 01-01-2005, 10:28 PM
Mons Mons is offline
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Default Re: My thoughts

Nice post. They should put this in the FAQ (assuming they ever find it).
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  #13  
Old 01-02-2005, 01:55 AM
skaboomizzy skaboomizzy is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Tampa, FL
Posts: 290
Default Re: My thoughts

Also, I think regularly playing SNGs gives you a better idea of MTT strategy should you decide to play a $10 or $20 MTT. Given the payouts at the top few places of those, it's well worth it to be able to make tournament-style adjustments.
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  #14  
Old 01-02-2005, 03:28 AM
FishBurger FishBurger is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 47
Default Re: My thoughts

[ QUOTE ]
I still think it's imperative to become at least a competent limit ring player before you venture into any other form of holdem. I know I didn't start winning SNGs until I became a ok ring game player...

[/ QUOTE ]

I have never been able to beat a limit ring game but I have made several thousand playing the $16 Turbos on Stars and the $11 and $22 NL SnGs on Party.

In my opinion, the skills needed to beat a limit ring game and the skills needed to beat a NL SNG are totally different. In limit ring games, you have to play the same boring style all day to be successful. In NL SNGs, you get to open it up at the end of the tournament and that's when the fun begins. Furthermore, mathematical skills play a big part in limit ring games. Understanding folding equity is more important in SNGs than being a mathematical genius.

I lost $500 when I first opened up my Party account playing 0.5/1 and 1/2 limit ring games. It wasn't until I switched to SNGs (limit at first, then NL) that I became a winning player. Lack of success in limit ring games did not correlate to a lack of success in SNS in my experience -- quite the contrary.
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  #15  
Old 01-02-2005, 11:37 AM
1C5 1C5 is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Hippo Island, South Pacific
Posts: 846
Default Re: My thoughts

Were you a winning player right at first at Party $11? Did you follow the FAQ guide on this forum to get your feet wet or just do trial and error until you figured it out?
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  #16  
Old 01-03-2005, 12:12 PM
harthag12 harthag12 is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 2
Default Re: My thoughts

I have to agree with the statement on Ring &amp; Sit &amp; go not corresponding exactly. I have wanted to be good at Ring games, and have read and played smart, and have a friend who plays only ring games and has made alot, and I just can not win. I'm only playing at .25/.50 and I am down. However at $5/.50 on Party I'm a winning player, up money. A small loss in the sit &amp; go doesn't hurt as much as in a Ring game. At the end of the game you can wait for people to bust out, and stealing blinds becomes important. In the .25/.50 game that is never possible, and I just find that luck wins out way to much of the time. Umm, I'm not sure if this is relevant to the original topic, but I'm at work &amp; distracted, so I'm posting it. [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img]
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  #17  
Old 01-03-2005, 12:20 PM
UMTerp UMTerp is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 26
Default Re: My thoughts

[ QUOTE ]
In my opinion, the skills needed to beat a limit ring game and the skills needed to beat a NL SNG are totally different. In limit ring games, you have to play the same boring style all day to be successful. In NL SNGs, you get to open it up at the end of the tournament and that's when the fun begins. Furthermore, mathematical skills play a big part in limit ring games. Understanding folding equity is more important in SNGs than being a mathematical genius.

[/ QUOTE ]

The endgame of SNGs is almost all math.
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  #18  
Old 01-03-2005, 01:09 PM
stillnotking stillnotking is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Oregon, USA
Posts: 148
Default Re: My thoughts

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
In my opinion, the skills needed to beat a limit ring game and the skills needed to beat a NL SNG are totally different. In limit ring games, you have to play the same boring style all day to be successful. In NL SNGs, you get to open it up at the end of the tournament and that's when the fun begins. Furthermore, mathematical skills play a big part in limit ring games. Understanding folding equity is more important in SNGs than being a mathematical genius.

[/ QUOTE ]

The endgame of SNGs is almost all math.

[/ QUOTE ]

And the math says, "Raise".
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  #19  
Old 01-03-2005, 01:13 PM
stillnotking stillnotking is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Oregon, USA
Posts: 148
Default Re: Why SitnGo\'s?

[ QUOTE ]
Hi,

I was wondering why so many of the guys playing for a living (or serious cash) are playing Sit n go's. I know they are fun, and quick etc. But i was wondering if it was determined whether they are more profitable (or have other advantages)than other Hold'em options

Is there an financial argument for playing sit n go's over other options such as limit or no limit ring? Other than just the enjoyment factor.

thanks [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img]

[/ QUOTE ]

I don't play for a living or for what most people would consider "serious cash", but I greatly prefer low-buyin SNGs over low-limit ring games or low-stakes NL ring games. There are two reasons:

- Much lower variance. It is extremely rare for me to play 10 $10 SNGs and finish a loser (I have 50% ROI at the $10 level). It is extremely common for me to play the equivalent amount of ring games and finish a loser (I make about 2 bb/hr at $2-$4).

- Players make more mistakes. Most people are not good at tournament strategy and not good at NLHE. SNGs give them opportunities to screw up both ways.
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