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  #21  
Old 08-20-2005, 01:58 AM
microbet microbet is offline
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Default Re: Irieguy will back me up on this

Mr. J got what I meant.

With as many people playing poker as there are, there would still be a few who have been so damn lucky that they would be winning over the course of a year or two years or whatever, even if there were no skill involved. There very well could be enough "pros" to populate a forum.

I think skill is important and that there are more pros than there would be if it weren't.
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  #22  
Old 08-20-2005, 03:10 AM
citanul citanul is offline
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Default Re: I dont get what a huge difference there can be between limits

[ QUOTE ]
Compare a 22 to a 55. I dont see how there's a major difference here. People get down to 4-5 handed, and everyone starts stealing blinds and pushing in position. I can safely say they might not play it nearly ICM perfect in a 22, but over a long period of time it is who win's the most 60/40's and coinflips near the bubble which takes a large sample size and luck on you side.

What am I missing here?

[/ QUOTE ]

a) in a 22 what you describe as the norm is just not what happens. hell, it isn't even what happens with the 55s. the players who beat the 55s are the players that understand kinda how often you should be pushing. the average player at the 22s does not play the bubble NEARLY correctly. this includes both pushing and calling standards. the average player at the 55s does it a bit more correctly.

b) over the long run everyone wins 60% of their 60/40s. in the long run everyone wins 50% of their true coinflips. in the long run these games are not luck.

c) the difference between a player who wins and a player who doesn't starts with understanding a and b above. it then continues with more, perhaps d, below.

d) the good player of certain types will:
1) survive to be 4 and 5 handed more often
2) have more chips 4 and 5 handed more often
3) know when to push and when to call more correctly
4) understand his opponents' pushing and calling standards better
5) be able to identify his opponents' mistakes better
6) be able to capitalize on his opponents' mistakes better

than his inferior opponents.

e) if the games were actually a crapshoot luckboxing competition, intelligent people would not play them.

f) statistics exists.

citanul
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  #23  
Old 08-20-2005, 03:24 AM
TheNoodleMan TheNoodleMan is offline
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Default Re: I dont get what a huge difference there can be between limits

[ QUOTE ]


What am I missing here?

[/ QUOTE ]
an understanding of how long the long run really is.
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  #24  
Old 08-20-2005, 03:36 AM
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Default Re: I dont get what a huge difference there can be between limits

[ QUOTE ]
Technically the long run, is really that: the long run. When I run a pokerstove it might run the hand 50,000 or 40,000,000 times. That's alot of hands to play so you can profit on a mistake your opponent made that made you a 60/40 favorite.

[/ QUOTE ]

Sorry to be rude; don't play poker.
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  #25  
Old 08-20-2005, 04:00 AM
Scuba Chuck Scuba Chuck is offline
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Default Re: I dont get what a huge difference there can be between limits

[ QUOTE ]
You know when you have AA in level one and someone raises to 45. You bump it up to 150 and he comes over the top with 88.

I suspect you won't see that as often at the 55s. And doubling up more often in level 1 does help your ROI a bit.

[/ QUOTE ]

That's not completely true. I think you will see 88 call/push. See they are "trickier" there. But, there's fewer donkeys who call with A9 or any other Ax. So the fewer Ax donkeys is one way that the higher levels have more difficulty. Fewer donkeys who will just giv eyou their chips.
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  #26  
Old 08-20-2005, 04:07 AM
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Default Re: Irieguy will back me up on this

[ QUOTE ]
Mr. J got what I meant.

With as many people playing poker as there are, there would still be a few who have been so damn lucky that they would be winning over the course of a year or two years or whatever, even if there were no skill involved. There very well could be enough "pros" to populate a forum.

I think skill is important and that there are more pros than there would be if it weren't.

[/ QUOTE ]

I am still not sure what you mean...do you think that luck is the overwhelming factor in poker? Or are you simply saying that even if hold em were a face up card game, and now no deception could be made, and all draws were shown and no implied odds existed that people would still try to be pros at this game? Sure, I guess, but like I alluded to before, there would be no difference between them and those that bet many casino table games (of which, yes, there are many pros at this too). Plus, I don't consider someone who has a good run for a year or two to be a pro at anything.
I have ALWAYS thought of poker as a skill game first with lots of "luck" involved...this is why it attracts MIT students, internet billionaires, and world class chess champions as well as the degenerate gamblers (like myself).
Remember that poker has been around a long ass time, but only until TV made the hole cards visible did it really take off...why? Because people saw that it *wasn't* luck, it was simply "poker logic".
Do you have the thread that shows the coin flip scenario? I would like to read it...
Any other thoughts?
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  #27  
Old 08-20-2005, 04:13 AM
ilya ilya is offline
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Default Re: I dont get what a huge difference there can be between limits

[ QUOTE ]
Remember this?

[/ QUOTE ]

What a cool little gadget! Once you pass the $5 crazyland, it seems that the starting chip counts make by far the biggest difference: try the charts for $10s vs $30s, $30s vs $50s, and $50s vs $200s.
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  #28  
Old 08-20-2005, 04:21 AM
Newt_Buggs Newt_Buggs is offline
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Default Re: Irieguy will back me up on this

You really should play around with Aleo's confidence calculator before making unsuported claims.

On a side note:
[ QUOTE ]
Or are you simply saying that even if hold em were a face up card game, and now no deception could be made, and all draws were shown and no implied odds existed that people would still try to be pros at this game? Sure, I guess, but like I alluded to before, there would be no difference between them and those that bet many casino table games

[/ QUOTE ]
Although the margin would be much smaller, I could still beat my competition in SNGs if everyone played with their hand face up.
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  #29  
Old 08-20-2005, 04:37 AM
microbet microbet is offline
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Default Re: Irieguy will back me up on this

We really aren't arguing. I don't think poker is all luck.

I think there was an entertaining story posted about a guy who had a roulette system, like bet on black? I think Irieguy posted it. The search function isn't that hard to use.

The point is that there is a lot of luck involved and there are a lot of people playing poker. A lot of people have had a lucky week, some people have had a lucky month, and out of the millions of people playing worldwide some people have had a lucky year or more or whatever. It seems pretty clear that some of the "pros" are just lucky. Luck works both ways and certainly some "losers" are very good players.

The players who are doing absolutely the best are most likely very good players who have also been very lucky.

On the whole, better players make more money.

Capiche?
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  #30  
Old 08-20-2005, 04:41 AM
microbet microbet is offline
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Default Re: Irieguy will back me up on this

[ QUOTE ]
Plus, I don't consider someone who has a good run for a year or two to be a pro at anything.

[/ QUOTE ]

I should have read your post more carefully. I guess we are just arguing over the definition of the word "pro". I was using the definition that it was someone earning their living by playing poker.
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