#11
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Re: Unknown holds all the cards to win WSOP
[ QUOTE ]
Greg Raymer, a patent attorney from Connecticut, qualified on PokerStars and caught the cards to win the prestigious 2004 World Series of Poker. [/ QUOTE ] Wow. I guess I should be lucky when I catch a T8 and push all-in with it. [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] |
#12
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Re: Unknown holds all the cards to win WSOP
Jedi made me laugh
[img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] |
#13
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Re: Unknown holds all the cards to win WSOP
Just be thankful he didn't try it on Annie Duke [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img]
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#14
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Re: Unknown holds all the cards to win WSOP
Greg Raymer noted that he only got 2 bad beats the whole tournament. Maybe he's diminishing the actual number in the name of humility, but that's pretty amazing to me after 6 days of playing. Both a testament to his luck and his skill. (I must be doing something wrong, I get like 2 beats on average in a 2-hour ring game session!)
I always wonder what the variance of the luck factor is at different stages of the tournament. Based on my own experience, it seems to be a much bigger portion near the end of a tournament, as the beginning levels play more like a standard ring game, and you don't have to take as many chances. |
#15
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Re: Unknown holds all the cards to win WSOP
Skill means having a 1/100 chance of winning it, luck is hitting that 1% (or .01% for a fish).
Looks to me like luck is more important. Craig |
#16
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Re: Unknown holds all the cards to win WSOP
Of course he was an unknown. He hadn't written a poker book, nor was he on TV before. He was not a famous name in the poker world. He's an attorney, not a professional poker player. While it plays as a better story with him being an unknown, it's also accurate.
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