![]() |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
Sorry in advance if this post doesn't belong here.
I've been playing in this game for about six months. I'd say I'm breaking even. The problem I'm having is that when I have a big stack usually I'm walking from the table short from what I was up. ex: Last night in the first hour of play I was up about 400 plus my 200 buy-in. I left up 150. This happens quite a bit. I can't seem to make a big stack grow. Usually only happens if I suck-out on someone or get lucky that someone calls a big hand and it holds up. I've seen players sit at these games for long sessions and walk away with 2000 to 5000. I just can't seem to swing it. The most I've walked w/is 1200.(mostly luck not skill) Could it be that: -The seat charge is pretty steep $7/hr -I'm not defending my blinds. -I'm playing too tight when big stacked. -I'm playing too loose when big stacked. -I always limp on the button w/limpers before me, should I be raising w/any two. -I will call a reasonable raise in position w/any two. -I limp too much out of position. Also, Let me know your feelings on limping in cash game as I think this could be a major leak for me. |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
Remember that this isn't a tournament, so wielding your big stack as a weapon isn't going to work. That said,
- Defending blinds isn't important in NL - Just because you have a big stack doesn't mean you have to drastically change your playing style. Sure you can play a few more speculative hands assuming all the other stacks are big as well. - Calling raises with any two is spew. - Limping OOP is mostly spew. - Raising with any two is spew. - Raising OTB after limpers can be a good play but raising any two is spew. - $7/hr seems pretty reasonable to me but I have no idea whether that's actually big/normal/small. Edit: And people walking away from a 200 BI game with 2k-5k is most certainly a huge positive variance rush and has little to do with playing excellent or whatever. It's just a matter of flopping 15 sets in a night and getting paid off on all of them. |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
[ QUOTE ]
Remember that this isn't a tournament, so wielding your big stack as a weapon isn't going to work. That said, - Defending blinds isn't important in NL - Just because you have a big stack doesn't mean you have to drastically change your playing style. Sure you can play a few more speculative hands assuming all the other stacks are big as well. - Calling raises with any two is spew. - Limping OOP is mostly spew. - Raising with any two is spew. - Raising OTB after limpers can be a good play but raising any two is spew. - $7/hr seems pretty reasonable to me but I have no idea whether that's actually big/normal/small. Edit: And people walking away from a 200 BI game with 2k-5k is most certainly a huge positive variance rush and has little to do with playing excellent or whatever. It's just a matter of flopping 15 sets in a night and getting paid off on all of them. [/ QUOTE ] |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
Sorry about the seat charge. It's actually $7/˝hr per every dealer change.
Thanks for the comments |
![]() |
|
|