#1
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good advice or spew?
in the march edition of cardplayer, steve zolotow wrote a column were he suggested playing micro sng's without looking at your cards to improve your position play,hand reading and bluffing skills.is this good advice?
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#2
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Re: good advice or spew?
also walk along the edge of short buildings with eyes closed to improve your equilibrium
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#3
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Re: good advice or spew?
how short?
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#4
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Re: good advice or spew?
I've done it. It's more fun than spewing chips at random at micro ring games. Find a level that's cheap for you and break out the post it.
Did it help? Maybe. I found it was very good at making me look for steals and re-steals pre-flop and quite useful at showing the value of position and flop texture. By removing the biggest source of information people get over-fixated on, you allow the others to become more clear. Like closing your eyes while listening. |
#5
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Re: good advice or spew?
exactly what zolotow was saying in the article.he compared it to how caro would make his students fold every hand for the first hour of a session to develope thier discipline and observation skills.
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#6
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Re: good advice or spew?
I always like to answer these either or questions with "both." [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img]
Obviously you've got to plan on a negative ROI for the SnGs you play this way. In the short term it's spew. But as an investment in learning I suspect it is worth it. Arnold Snyder makes the same recommendation in his book for the same reason. I haven't actually done this, but maybe should. |
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