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Old 10-04-2007, 09:56 AM
bennyhana bennyhana is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: The North Pole
Posts: 4,635
Default Re: I have a problem...

[ QUOTE ]
Ulkis, those stats are so easy to beat for anyone paying any attention at all.

At fr there are a ton of opportunities you are missing here.
Raise or fold mentality is a good training exercise but I guarantee you are folding way too many here.

Kerowo is right take a couple days off and then play in some lower limit donkfests and do some aggression exercises.

These are some of the training exercises I did to learn how to improve my understanding of things:

1. Raise five hands in a row starting with the UTG+1 position and continue till you get to the dealer button. Slow down if necessary if you meet aggression but otherwise continue to bet each street.

1a) Sit down and raise first five hands you have. Then play your normal game. Leave table after 3 orbits. Go to new table rinse/repeat.

2. Play two orbits of raise/fold. Raise/bet any 5 card draw + on the flop. IE raise J9o with a flop of AK9 or Q10o with a flop of 78J. Next two orbits try to go to showdown once per orbit.

3. Raise any two from the button if you have 2 limpers or less in front of you or 1 raiser in front for an entire session.

4. Raise any pocket pair preflop and go to showdown with it if there is less than 3 in the pot.

5. RFI any hand where you have the 8 of spades in your hand 10 times before you quit. So you may have 2 clubs 8 spades UTG but raise it anyways. Bet like you have AKo. Play close attention to the next 5 hands you are in afterwards if the table is the same.

6. Play any two from the bb for an entire session, raise it if its limped to you OR donk the flop.


You may lose a lot of bb during these exercises, but I doubt it. Obviously do this at a lower level than you are currently, .02/.04 or .05/.10.

Plan ahead, look for a table that you think may be vulnerable to any of these situations. (do you pick a wild table or a loose table or a passive table?)

Where do you sit at the table where you can lose the least and win the most?

Take copious notes during these experiments on your feelings during play and your table read before sitting down. Analysis the session after you finish it as a whole, rather than a hand by hand situation.

Write down your thought process on each hand you play in before you forget. Make sure you allot enough time to do this post game analysis without distractions immediately after the session.

I did each of these experiments many times and they have proven to be invaluable. You can discuss this with others if you wish but its not necessary if you are honest with your analysis.

After a period of time, go back at it and see if you can find any new spots that come up that you can exploit for value.

For me these experiments allowed me to understand the principles of playing the table rather than playing my cards. It allowed me to get a better idea of how table selelction can make a huge difference and how to defend.

It allowed me to recognize the motiviations of other players better so that I could read their actions more accurately.

Obviously you are going to make a lot of mistakes here. But that is the thing. Making mistakes on purpose and remembering how you recover from them teaches you a lot about yourself and why you play poker. It teaches you how to recognize other players mistakes as well.

[/ QUOTE ]

this is badass and I'm totally down. thanks man.

pm sent.
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