Two Plus Two Older Archives  

Go Back   Two Plus Two Older Archives > Limit Texas Hold'em > Small Stakes Hold'em
FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #11  
Old 12-09-2005, 10:48 PM
MEbenhoe MEbenhoe is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: La Crosse, WI
Posts: 410
Default Re: Why small stakes players should move up in limit as soon as possib

[ QUOTE ]
If you think most 2/4 players start off by depositing a grand or more you are seriously mistaken

[/ QUOTE ]

whether they're depositing it or earning there way up to it, if they're not playing with a proper bankroll, they're not playing winning poker, they're gambling. And suggesting to this type of player that they should move up is not in their best interests.

[ QUOTE ]
and I find the difference now a days between 2/4 and 5/10 to me minimal at many tables.

[/ QUOTE ]

If you've played a significant amount of hands at both limits and seriously believe this, I'm starting to understand where your flawed logic is coming from.



[ QUOTE ]
THE ANSWER IS NOT PLAYING FOR MINIMUM WAGE WITH A RAKE OF $7 /100 hands

[/ QUOTE ]

thats how most of the successful players on this site started.
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old 12-09-2005, 11:12 PM
theriverwild theriverwild is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 76
Default Re: Why small stakes players should move up in limit as soon as possib

Look most players spend way to much time playing low limit instead of moving up, and most of the time you take a shot at the higher limits without a massive bankroll, you can always drop back down. I know plenty of people who have been playing low limit for a couple of years and that is a waste of time. After a while you need to move up in limit to significantly improve you game. Keeping playing 2/4 all you want but you're playing 4 minimum wage and not learning much after the first 20 thousand hands or so assuming you spend time studying the game.

And yes recently I've played in many 2/4 games where 80% of hands are raised preflop and the average pot is 3 way. If you don't think the games been getting tougher u need a reality check.

Where I'm coming from is this. I started with 300 bucks online playing low limit I made more and kept moving up. Inside of 5 months I was playing in 10/20 and 15/30 games. A year after that I had been dabbling in 30/60 and the occasional 50/100 game.

Yes there were plenty of times when i got wacked because I wasn't use to the higher limit and ideas needed, but I learned them quickly, and when I started playing some 30/60 and 50/100 I got wacked good a couple times becaue the game is different/harder, but the fact of the matter is you cannot just overprepare to death before moving up because YOU CAN'T BE READY FOR IT, BECAUSE YOU'VE NEVER DONE IT B4.
You need to take a shot a higher limits from time to time because you will learn at least 5x faster than playing some low limit game.

Playing higher limits is how you get better and the better you get the more you win. PLAYING FOR MINIMUM WAGE IS A WASTE OF TIME AFTER YOU'VE LEARNED THE BASICS.

I don't even believe focusing on winning is that correct in poker. Of course over the long term if you are good that's what happens, but it's a result not a cause. Winning is the result of playing better than your opponents and playing enough hands to let that come through. Play good poker and winnings will come. I moved up quickly and became a better player in 6 months than most do in a year or two because I played higher limits, NOT JUST TO WIN BUT TO GET GOOD and at times it was a short term financial sacrafice but the long term gains have paid for it many times over.
Reply With Quote
  #13  
Old 12-09-2005, 11:23 PM
damaniac damaniac is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Not stopping running QB\'s
Posts: 60
Default Re: Why small stakes players should move up in limit as soon as possib

[ QUOTE ]

I don't even believe focusing on winning is that correct in poker. Of course over the long term if you are good that's what happens, but it's a result not a cause. Winning is the result of playing better than your opponents and playing enough hands to let that come through. Play good poker and winnings will come. I moved up quickly and became a better player in 6 months than most do in a year or two because I played higher limits, NOT JUST TO WIN BUT TO GET GOOD and at times it was a short term financial sacrafice but the long term gains have paid for it many times over.

[/ QUOTE ]

What do you think 2p2 low limit players are doing here? Playing hands, posting questions about decisions they didn't understand, getting feedback, taking those lessons and applying them to the game, and seeing what happens. Over time, they get it, they have a bigger bankroll, and they move up.

I agree that some lessons can't be learned at 2/4. Some of the skills and plays you'll make and see at higher limits are totally inapplicable in a lot of 2/4 games. However, if you haven't mastered the lower game, you'll still be making fundamental mistakes that better players at higher limits will just devour.

Furthermore, moving up too fast and "learning" as a losing player at a high limit is an expensive price to pay. Moving up steadily always leaves you with a solid bankroll to handle the swings and a solid grasp of good poker skills. Moving up to a high limit in a short time could teach you something, but you may not be there long enough to understand what's going on. Or you may not have a good enough undersanding of it yet. Or you might run good and get stuck with some bad habits, then start losing and attribute it to a bad run and before you know it you are way down.

Finally, glad you were able to learn so much more than the rest of us so fast. Wish I were that smart. Must be why I'm still playing 5/10.
Reply With Quote
  #14  
Old 12-09-2005, 11:33 PM
TripleH68 TripleH68 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Ohio
Posts: 390
Default Re: Why small stakes players should move up in limit as soon as possible.

[ QUOTE ]
Recently i dropped back down from 10/20 and 15/30 games to 2/4 to perfect my game.

[/ QUOTE ]

What does this mean?

FWIW I don't think most posters here should be in a hurry to move up.
Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old 12-09-2005, 11:48 PM
Harv72b Harv72b is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Baltimore, MD
Posts: 1,347
Default Re: Why small stakes players should move up in limit as soon as possib

I agree with your subject line. I don't agree with your reasoning (if the rake at 2/4 were unbeatable, nobody would play it. The fact of the matter is, many people beat the 2/4 game, and its rake, for a very good win rate). And I think you need to devote a lot more thought on what exactly constitutes "as possible".

[ QUOTE ]
Look most players spend way to much time playing low limit instead of moving up, and most of the time you take a shot at the higher limits without a massive bankroll, you can always drop back down. I know plenty of people who have been playing low limit for a couple of years and that is a waste of time. After a while you need to move up in limit to significantly improve you game. Keeping playing 2/4 all you want but you're playing 4 minimum wage and not learning much after the first 20 thousand hands or so assuming you spend time studying the game.

[/ QUOTE ]

Different people have different goals. There are people who make a living by multitabling 2/4. Could they make more money by moving up in limits? Probably, but they would then have to devote more of their money towards bankroll and endure greater variance (in terms of dollars, obviously, but also in terms of BBs as the competition gets stiffer). They're comfortable with that game and with the lifestyle it provides them. Much the same as a person who enjoys his day job and turns down a promotion which would earn him more money, but create inconveniences and lessen his overall job satisfaction.

[ QUOTE ]
And yes recently I've played in many 2/4 games where 80% of hands are raised preflop and the average pot is 3 way. If you don't think the games been getting tougher u need a reality check.

[/ QUOTE ]

I'll buy that. I haven't played 2/4 very recently, but I have noticed that it's tougher to find good games at 5/10, pretty much since the Party/Skins split. I'm not sure how this supports your argument, though, as the difference is almost certainly present at every limit, and not just small/micro stakes.

[ QUOTE ]
Where I'm coming from is this. I started with 300 bucks online playing low limit I made more and kept moving up. Inside of 5 months I was playing in 10/20 and 15/30 games. A year after that I had been dabbling in 30/60 and the occasional 50/100 game.

[/ QUOTE ]

I started off with $20, playing .02/.04. Inside of 10 months I was playing 15/30, and almost even had the proper bankroll to do so. After the inevitable downswing, coupled with some personal expenses, I dropped back down to 1/2 and 2/4 to work my way back up. Six months later, I am now comfortably bankrolled for 5/10 again and eyeing 10/20. I know exactly where you're coming from on moving up quickly.

However, all false modesty aside, people like you and I are the exceptions to the rule. We learn quickly. We think well on the fly. Somewhere inside, we were born with a certain amount of what it takes to be a successful poker player. That is not true for the majority of poker players. Those people need more time to learn, may the lack the discipline to stick within their bankroll or shrug off losses, or may not have the confidence to move up to a new limit after only 10 or even 5 thousand hands. I'm not saying I'm a great player, mind you--just saying that I have learned quickly to be a good enough player to beat the limits that I've played.

[ QUOTE ]
Yes there were plenty of times when i got wacked because I wasn't use to the higher limit and ideas needed, but I learned them quickly, and when I started playing some 30/60 and 50/100 I got wacked good a couple times becaue the game is different/harder, but the fact of the matter is you cannot just overprepare to death before moving up because YOU CAN'T BE READY FOR IT, BECAUSE YOU'VE NEVER DONE IT B4.
You need to take a shot a higher limits from time to time because you will learn at least 5x faster than playing some low limit game.

[/ QUOTE ]

I played tennis in high school (yeah, I know--a real jock). I improved my game a lot faster when I played against people who were better than I was. The difference is, when those better players mopped up the court with me (and they did, regularly), all it cost me was an hour or two of sweat and a loss.

By moving up to a new limit in poker before you're ready, it can cost you a lot of money. I know you don't dispute this and pretty much inferred that in your paragraph above, but it needs to be stressed because many people who play poker, especially small stakes, can't afford to lose that kind of money. Even if they've done well enough at 2/4 or 3/6 or what have you that they are properly bankrolled for a jump up, they may be planning to cash some of that money out. They may not be able to take the emotional trauma of losing a month's worth of 3/6 profits in a few hours of 5/10 play. That's what I mean when I say that you need to better define "as possible".

[ QUOTE ]
Playing higher limits is how you get better and the better you get the more you win. PLAYING FOR MINIMUM WAGE IS A WASTE OF TIME AFTER YOU'VE LEARNED THE BASICS.

[/ QUOTE ]

"The basics" change as you move up in limits. I'm sure you're aware of this. And getting better at poker isn't exactly going to make you more money if it busts you and/or shatters your confidence.

[ QUOTE ]
I don't even believe focusing on winning is that correct in poker. Of course over the long term if you are good that's what happens, but it's a result not a cause. Winning is the result of playing better than your opponents and playing enough hands to let that come through. Play good poker and winnings will come.

[/ QUOTE ]

On this point, I agree with you 150%.

[ QUOTE ]
I moved up quickly and became a better player in 6 months than most do in a year or two because I played higher limits, NOT JUST TO WIN BUT TO GET GOOD and at times it was a short term financial sacrafice but the long term gains have paid for it many times over.

[/ QUOTE ]

Congratulations on your run. Now, put on a different hat and consider what would have happened to your game and poker career if you'd hit a massive downswing right after moving up to 15/30.
Reply With Quote
  #16  
Old 12-09-2005, 11:58 PM
Net Warrior Net Warrior is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 154
Default Re: Why small stakes players should move up in limit as soon as possible.

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Recently i dropped back down from 10/20 and 15/30 games to 2/4 to perfect my game.

[/ QUOTE ]

What does this mean?

FWIW I don't think most posters here should be in a hurry to move up.

[/ QUOTE ]


Yeah, I agree. Moving down to $2-4 to perfect your game sounds silly to me. I take it you moved down because your bankroll got clipped pretty hard and now you're in a rebuilding phase. It sounds to me like you moved up too fast. 10k hands isn't enought know what your talking about. No offence...I'm just warning other readers not to get over-impressed by your story and start taking shots that are way over their head.
Reply With Quote
  #17  
Old 12-10-2005, 12:22 AM
SNOWBALL138 SNOWBALL138 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: LA
Posts: 518
Default Re: Why small stakes players should move up in limit as soon as possible.

Uh-huh. According to this article Freddy Deeb turned 60 dollars into 100k in one poker session. Who cares? To me, these kinds of events have the same entertainment value as bad beat stories.

Needless to say, I think your advice is terrible and comes from a minimal knowledge base. The rake at 2/4 is very very beatable. The extremely loose or extremely aggressive players pay more than their share of the rake, because you are in less pots and don't give as much loose action as they do. On top of that, you get RB from their generous contributions to the drop.

Also, playing 2/4 is much much better than minimum wage. I can't believe you said playing 2/4 makes you minimum wage. You've heard of multitabling, right?

Like Harv said, congrats on your good run. But I think your experience or advice doesn't apply to anyone. (yourself included maybe?)
Reply With Quote
  #18  
Old 12-10-2005, 12:30 AM
SNOWBALL138 SNOWBALL138 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: LA
Posts: 518
Default Re: Why small stakes players should move up in limit as soon as possible.

a lot of 2/4 players are adept bonuswhores too, so the hourly rate of a good 2/4 multitabler is a lot lot higher than "minimum wage."
Reply With Quote
  #19  
Old 12-10-2005, 01:37 AM
McGahee McGahee is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 735
Default Re: Why small stakes players should move up in limit as soon as possib

OK I'll bite:
What should I do with my $1800 b/r? I was thinking of getting to $2400 before moving up to 3/6. Bad plan ya think?
Reply With Quote
  #20  
Old 12-10-2005, 01:56 AM
SNOWBALL138 SNOWBALL138 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: LA
Posts: 518
Default Re: Why small stakes players should move up in limit as soon as possib

3/6? Psshaw!
If 100 dollars is too big a bankroll for 2/4, then your 1800 bankroll is already too big to be playing anything below 30/60.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:03 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.