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I expect many SSNLers (myself included) have green lines
well below red/blue - Nuggets above is one - and they are commonplace in uNL forum - these indicate postflop could be improved, I think - although it could also be a symptom of limp/call/fit/fold etc. One need to employ the filters to narrow it down [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img]
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This is definitely incorrect for the reasons mentioned above. Get any strong player to go play a $5 NL table. His green is going to be EXTREMELY close to his blue. Doesn't matter if he's the best postflop player in the world. The vast majority of his hands will end up with a showdown and that means green's going to be close to blue. This is a symptom of the average villain's passivity, not a player's skill or lack thereof.
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Here is a graph of a Stars .02/.05 NL player. I do not consider myself good at all. In fact I had a -$78 swing in here due to tilt and second best hands. I suspect the green above the blue for the short period of time was me folding out everything to cbets and double barrels. Around hand 15k I started asking myself what better hands fold and what worse hands call and thats when the green and blue came together. The green drop near the end was me getting over aggressive with crap hands against stations (tilt). My won when saw flop over this sample was 40.8.