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#1
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Practice makes better. Seems pretty simple. GL.
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I need 'em for my footsies. |
#2
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Good idea -- it require disipline though
Could you really play the same at 10/20 and 1/2 though? Or would you be making more calls with medium hands if you have a feeling your opponents weak, being aggressive with drawing hands, seeing flops with a wider range of hands etc ("eh its just 200 bucks") I know once I moved from my live 1/2 Game (which plays like a 2/4 online) and moved to the 5/5 game (which plays slightly below 5/10 online) it was hard as hell to switch. Occassionally there wouldn't be a 5/5 game goin on when I'd be there and I'd sit and play 1/2... the play is so different and the players are too. To be perfectly honest, 1/2 and 5/5 are two different games. When things are only 12-17 preflop for example, (about what a standard raise is there) players treat it differently than if it was 30-35 preflop (standard 5/5 raise). Moves work differently, value bets are different etc. Switching between stakes could require some adaptation.... You up for it?
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"Most of the money you'll win at poker comes not from the brilliance of your own play, but from the ineptitude of your opponents." |
#3
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That's another reason I like the challenge, def. requires alot of disipline, which i need some work on.
Ya, i seriously expect, and almost Always do, lose a few buy ins my first time moving to a new level, just getting used to the play takes some time, after that I usually can make a pretty good recovery. |
#4
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Barry Greenstein suggests in his book, Ace on the River, to buy in for the minimum when you move up levels. I don't know if that affects how you play, but just something to think about. It seems kinda obvious, but who knows.
__________________
I need 'em for my footsies. |
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