For nights like tonight where I can do no wrong. For everyone that feels like they are getting a dry run of cards, I stress that it's only temporary. In a 90 minute session I show-downed, 4 of kind, a full boat, and a set. Doesn't sound like a big deal but I got paid off on all three! Almost back to back to back. It felt real good. Up $37 for the session.
Lots of donks at the tables tonight. I had another situation where the guy had the nut straight and did not make a value bet on the river after the turn was checked. Why? I wouldn't have called in this situation, but I would like to thank you, Mr. Donk, for being so passive.
I've learned to be very patient and not force hands against these types of players. Wait for good hands and let them pay you off.
"Hence to fight and conquer in all your battles is not supreme excellence; supreme excellence consists in breaking the enemy's resistance without fighting." Sun Tzu - Art of War
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Stupid People
So yeah, funny hand. This was a point I made the other day about weak players not making value bets, even when they have the nuts. I have 88 in the hole. UTG guy limps. Naturally I raise pre-flop from MP. I get 2 calls, one from BB and one from the limper. Ok fine. The flop hits 9JQ. This is the rare occasion that I don't make a continuation bet on the flop. That board fits far too many hands so I don't think I will get any value from my c-bet. So I check. The 2 players check behind. Long story short, the hand gets checked down to the end. Would you believe the UTG had the nut straight on the flop? He did not try to extract any money from me or the other player. A 10 hits the river so they only way he could be beat was by an AK making the nuts at the river. Why does this person play at all? What hand is he hoping to hit?
So the lesson as I mentioned the other day is, bad players sometimes don't even play their hands for value when they hit. Don't bet your weak hands because a bad opponent might just call you with the nuts. Leaving you scratching your head. Be thankful they help you save money I suppose.
So the lesson as I mentioned the other day is, bad players sometimes don't even play their hands for value when they hit. Don't bet your weak hands because a bad opponent might just call you with the nuts. Leaving you scratching your head. Be thankful they help you save money I suppose.
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Tilt after 1 1/2 - 2 hours
I have noticed when I play I do very well my first hour and a half, usually going up big or small, but up none the less going up. I continue to play to think that I can keep increasing my funds and I start to make small mistakes because I become "greedy". Then I start going back down slowly, and it speeds up from there if I keep going. I would like to be able to play 6 hours straight at some point but I keep trying to do long sessions and it's not working. I know some people listen to music when they play but I'm told not to since I'm still learning I shouldn't have distractions. I am around 12k hands or so and I'm up about $2 all together, twice this weekend I went up $50 in the first hour and a half, then kept playing and lost it all again. I want to play long so I can get more practice and get better but it looks like at this point I'm going to set my phone for 1 hour 30 minutes, and when the alarm hits I'm done for that session then will take a hour break. Has anyone experienced this when they started out? I really want to get better but I guess breaking up the sessions with hour break between may help... What do you guys think about listening to music when you play? Should I wait another 10k hands.... Any other advice?
Monday, August 25, 2008
Playing A/K?
OK. So I've had mixed feelings on how, and when, I should be playing A/K aggresively pre-flop and post-flop. I think one situation is leading to another and I'm making mistakes based on previous hands. I find myself drifting back to my old style of playing which is simply grinding it out until I have hands...or I think I have them. This seems to be happening quite often not only with A/K but with other hands as well but A/K had a bunch of different situations today and once again i'm continuing my downward slope. I also seem to be losing a lot more with A/K o/s than A/K suited. Here are some examples of the hands I lost today with A/K all being played @ $0.25/0.50 short-handed:
Example 1. I'm in CO with A/K o/s with no action to me and I raise 3xBB to $1.50. the SB calls and everyone else is out. Flop comes 6/7/9 with 2 clubs. Check to me and I c-bet $2.50 into $3.50 pot (maybe a $0.50 too small). SB calls, turn comes 9, we both check. River hits an A and SB bet's $3 into $8.50 pot so I have to call and she flips 8/9 o/s winning with trip 9's. Maybe I should've raised more preflop?
Example 2. I'm in BB with A/K o/s with no action to Button (solid player but can also make moves) who raises 4xBB to $2. I decided to re-raise to $7.50 being out of position to take the pot right there and he re-raises to $22.50 and I decided to fold. Maybe I should've just called to see the flop?
Example 3. I'm on the button with A/K o/s and UTG (aggresive player) raises 4xBB to $2. Everyone folds to me and I re-raise to $6. Action back to UTG and he re-raises to $16.50 and I elect to just call. Flop comes down 9/7/J with two spades and UTG bets $26 into $33.75 pot and I fold. Again, maybe I should've just called PF to see the flop?
Example 4. I'm in the CO with A/K suited and since all these hands happened today I'm getting a little nervous about playing A/K. UTG (aggresive player) Raises 4xBB to $2 and I decide to just call. Everyone folds, the flop comes Q/Q/4, UTG checks to me and I also check. The turn comes a 10 and check, check. The river comes a 9 and check, check and UTG turns over A/10. Clearly at this point I'm just playing way to tight because of the way the other hands had played out. Maybe I should've re-raised PF to take it down there or at least after the flop?
I had some other hands that I misplayed with A/K in the last day but those are my main examples. Any help would be appreciated as I'm getting slightly frustrated and would like to start winning again. Overall, I've won 75% and $95 with A/K suited and won 64% with A/K o/s but lost $111. Maybe I should make a decision that I should re-raise PF everytime with A/K suited and just call with A/K regardless of previous hands? Or, only re-raise with both hands if I'm in position to see a flop? If I re-raise and get re-raised should I fold or push depending on position and player strength (if known)?
Thanks Guys.
Example 1. I'm in CO with A/K o/s with no action to me and I raise 3xBB to $1.50. the SB calls and everyone else is out. Flop comes 6/7/9 with 2 clubs. Check to me and I c-bet $2.50 into $3.50 pot (maybe a $0.50 too small). SB calls, turn comes 9, we both check. River hits an A and SB bet's $3 into $8.50 pot so I have to call and she flips 8/9 o/s winning with trip 9's. Maybe I should've raised more preflop?
Example 2. I'm in BB with A/K o/s with no action to Button (solid player but can also make moves) who raises 4xBB to $2. I decided to re-raise to $7.50 being out of position to take the pot right there and he re-raises to $22.50 and I decided to fold. Maybe I should've just called to see the flop?
Example 3. I'm on the button with A/K o/s and UTG (aggresive player) raises 4xBB to $2. Everyone folds to me and I re-raise to $6. Action back to UTG and he re-raises to $16.50 and I elect to just call. Flop comes down 9/7/J with two spades and UTG bets $26 into $33.75 pot and I fold. Again, maybe I should've just called PF to see the flop?
Example 4. I'm in the CO with A/K suited and since all these hands happened today I'm getting a little nervous about playing A/K. UTG (aggresive player) Raises 4xBB to $2 and I decide to just call. Everyone folds, the flop comes Q/Q/4, UTG checks to me and I also check. The turn comes a 10 and check, check. The river comes a 9 and check, check and UTG turns over A/10. Clearly at this point I'm just playing way to tight because of the way the other hands had played out. Maybe I should've re-raised PF to take it down there or at least after the flop?
I had some other hands that I misplayed with A/K in the last day but those are my main examples. Any help would be appreciated as I'm getting slightly frustrated and would like to start winning again. Overall, I've won 75% and $95 with A/K suited and won 64% with A/K o/s but lost $111. Maybe I should make a decision that I should re-raise PF everytime with A/K suited and just call with A/K regardless of previous hands? Or, only re-raise with both hands if I'm in position to see a flop? If I re-raise and get re-raised should I fold or push depending on position and player strength (if known)?
Thanks Guys.
10,000 Hands - Holliday
Hey Guys,
As of yesterday I hit my first 10K hands since starting to use Poker Tracker and playing short-handed tables tight aggressive just over a week ago. I was pretty happy with my results up until yesterday when I got slaughtered. I was on track to hit $1000 with $0.25/0.50 which would've been about $450 profit for the week but the poker gods had other plans and now I'm only up about $200. Here's the link to my graphed results: http://i392.photobucket.com/albums/pp8/itsholliday/10KHandsGraph.jpg
Aside of the plethera of other information Poker Tracker keeps dibs on, I was wondering if my chart is telling any stories. The large dip in the beginning was when I tried playing $1/2 because I didn't want to deal with a bunch of bad players at lower limits and lost about $60. Then I decided to play $0.25/0.50 because even the bad players get beat by better players/cards more often than not. Plus my bankroll clearly didn't justify it yet. After that, I had a pretty good run in the direction we should all be going. After the peak just over $300 I think I got a little too aggresive/confident and made a couple bad errors in judgment followed by a couple bad beats. I redeemed myself slightly after posting "Kicked by a Donkey" and then it's been rocky ever since.
I think what happened was a series of bad beats was followed with some cautious play and now I'm not as aggresive as I first was when I had a good balance of aggression and knowing when I was beat. Has anyone else experienced this and if so what tips do you have to help get back on track? Could it be some players have caught onto my plays? I find more people calling my c-bets which almost forces me to check the turn unless I have the goods on the flop or the turn helped (this doesn't happen much). Any suggestions are greatly appreciated.
As of yesterday I hit my first 10K hands since starting to use Poker Tracker and playing short-handed tables tight aggressive just over a week ago. I was pretty happy with my results up until yesterday when I got slaughtered. I was on track to hit $1000 with $0.25/0.50 which would've been about $450 profit for the week but the poker gods had other plans and now I'm only up about $200. Here's the link to my graphed results: http://i392.photobucket.com/albums/pp8/itsholliday/10KHandsGraph.jpg
Aside of the plethera of other information Poker Tracker keeps dibs on, I was wondering if my chart is telling any stories. The large dip in the beginning was when I tried playing $1/2 because I didn't want to deal with a bunch of bad players at lower limits and lost about $60. Then I decided to play $0.25/0.50 because even the bad players get beat by better players/cards more often than not. Plus my bankroll clearly didn't justify it yet. After that, I had a pretty good run in the direction we should all be going. After the peak just over $300 I think I got a little too aggresive/confident and made a couple bad errors in judgment followed by a couple bad beats. I redeemed myself slightly after posting "Kicked by a Donkey" and then it's been rocky ever since.
I think what happened was a series of bad beats was followed with some cautious play and now I'm not as aggresive as I first was when I had a good balance of aggression and knowing when I was beat. Has anyone else experienced this and if so what tips do you have to help get back on track? Could it be some players have caught onto my plays? I find more people calling my c-bets which almost forces me to check the turn unless I have the goods on the flop or the turn helped (this doesn't happen much). Any suggestions are greatly appreciated.
QQ and JJ Preflop
What is the correct way to play hands like QQ and JJ preflop. I have been losing most of my big hands with these two hands. My idea is I need to get them all in before the flop hits, as the odds will decrease as the hand progresses. I am being crushed by AK even though I believe with QQ the odds are 57% in my favor it doesn't seem that way. What's your idea on QQ and JJ? I usually 3 bet it before the flop off a raise to try and take it down there, should I just be calling?
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Kicked by a Donkey
What's up guys?
Well, it's been over 2000 hands in the last 2 days so I was bound to run into some donkwork. However, I'm not here to complain about how a bad player got lucky with a poor hand but rather to share my unfortunate experience and discuss options on how to minimize any future losses. In fact, since I lost the maximum on the hand then it doesn't matter how bad the other player was...there's always a way I could've made my play better. I had a few bad beats in the last couple days (and thousands playing the last couple years) but this one in particular urked me. I'll play the hand out first and then evaulate.
I'm playing $0.25/0.50 short-handed NLHE and all the stacks are within $10 (up or down) of the $50 max buy-in. The entire table, with the exception of myself, has started to play pretty loose the last 10-20 minutes and making bad plays to catch cards. I'm in the SB with 10h/10c. Everyone folds to the cut-off who calls the BB and the button folds to me. The BB was playing extremely loose (around VP50) and the CO was around VP35. I raise 4xBB to $2, the BB calls $1.50 and the CO calls $1.50. Flop comes down 2d/9h/9s. The pot is now $6. I'm first to act betting $3.50 with the BB calling and the CO folding. The pot is now $13 and the turn comes 2s. I bet $6.50 and the BB goes all in $30.90 making the pot $50.40. It costs me another $24.40 and I make the call. The turn comes 8d and he shows down 8h/2c...his boat beats my 2 pair.
Thinking about the hand afterwards I was able to pick out what mistakes I made throughout the hand but it becomes even more clear when I review the playback and actually write it down (everyone should be using the playback feature frequently...it's extremely helpful). Here's my analysis:
1. I'm playing $0.25/0.50...a breeding ground for donkeys. Kevin made mention in the 2nd Vid post that he can't imagine playing with that much money as Jerrick was. I've played up to $5/$10 back in Feb. when I was kicking some ass and my bankroll was up a few thousand and it's definitely a different game. With this style of play I think it's even easier to play higher limits. Being able to balance this style with how people play in lower limits is difficult but will hopefully make us better in the long run. I should've kept this in mind in addition to the cards in my hand and on the board.
2. I'm in the SB with loose players and will be first to act. I probably should've raised more preflop...maybe to $3 in hopes to get the rif raf out or take the pot down right there.
3. I should've bet more on the flop. I think $5 would've been a better bet than the $3.50. The $3.50 might have indicated to the other players that I've only got high cards or might be worried about the two 9's in the board. A $5 bet may have eliminated those thoughts and won the pot.
4. I should've checked the turn knowing anyone holding a 9 or 2 has me beat. Loose players will call with any two cards in hopes to get lucky. Since I ended up betting instead and the BB went all in, I concluded he didn't have a 9. Otherwise, he most likely would've just called to extract as much as possible from me until the river. At the same time, he's concluded I don't have a 9 because of my $6.50 bet and figures his 2's full are good...so he pushes.
5. I call the all in raise. With all the other factors up until this point I should've laid my hand down for a couple reasons. First, I was only getting 2-1 on my money. It was costing me $24.40 to win $50.40. Maybe if it was 4-1 or higher odds the call would've been justified but 2-1 is way too low. Second, it's a cash game and I can wait to make my play with better hands or more certainty. Knowing when to lay a hand down is equally as important as knowing when to play a hand. I should've cut my losses and moved on to the next hand.
6. I went on tilt and made a dumb play the next hand. I should've just sat out to review the hand or left alltogether and reviewed it later when I was a little more clear-headed. Instead, I pushed my remaining $12 after an early position raise with K/T and lost to A/Q. Needless to say I was finished for the evening.
When I go back and think about it, this was a great lesson to learn; you can only control what moves you make to hopefully reduce the stupid plays someone else makes. People are still going to make stupid plays (or what you think was a stupid play) no matter what you do...at which point you can only minimize your losses.
By the way, some heated discussion followed the hand between myself and the BB. He said the reason he called my PF raise and flop bet was because the last time he folded a deuce he would've hit 3 of a kind deuces on the river and won a big hand. Pretty poor reasoning to play a hand in any half decent poker player's book. Still, I'm not sure that even if I had made the proper play up until the point of him hitting his boat would I have been able to win the hand. My pocket tens could've been dead from the start given his reasoning. Obviously, I wasn't folding them. But, instead of playing to win I should've been playing to lose as little as possible.
Thoughts?
Well, it's been over 2000 hands in the last 2 days so I was bound to run into some donkwork. However, I'm not here to complain about how a bad player got lucky with a poor hand but rather to share my unfortunate experience and discuss options on how to minimize any future losses. In fact, since I lost the maximum on the hand then it doesn't matter how bad the other player was...there's always a way I could've made my play better. I had a few bad beats in the last couple days (and thousands playing the last couple years) but this one in particular urked me. I'll play the hand out first and then evaulate.
I'm playing $0.25/0.50 short-handed NLHE and all the stacks are within $10 (up or down) of the $50 max buy-in. The entire table, with the exception of myself, has started to play pretty loose the last 10-20 minutes and making bad plays to catch cards. I'm in the SB with 10h/10c. Everyone folds to the cut-off who calls the BB and the button folds to me. The BB was playing extremely loose (around VP50) and the CO was around VP35. I raise 4xBB to $2, the BB calls $1.50 and the CO calls $1.50. Flop comes down 2d/9h/9s. The pot is now $6. I'm first to act betting $3.50 with the BB calling and the CO folding. The pot is now $13 and the turn comes 2s. I bet $6.50 and the BB goes all in $30.90 making the pot $50.40. It costs me another $24.40 and I make the call. The turn comes 8d and he shows down 8h/2c...his boat beats my 2 pair.
Thinking about the hand afterwards I was able to pick out what mistakes I made throughout the hand but it becomes even more clear when I review the playback and actually write it down (everyone should be using the playback feature frequently...it's extremely helpful). Here's my analysis:
1. I'm playing $0.25/0.50...a breeding ground for donkeys. Kevin made mention in the 2nd Vid post that he can't imagine playing with that much money as Jerrick was. I've played up to $5/$10 back in Feb. when I was kicking some ass and my bankroll was up a few thousand and it's definitely a different game. With this style of play I think it's even easier to play higher limits. Being able to balance this style with how people play in lower limits is difficult but will hopefully make us better in the long run. I should've kept this in mind in addition to the cards in my hand and on the board.
2. I'm in the SB with loose players and will be first to act. I probably should've raised more preflop...maybe to $3 in hopes to get the rif raf out or take the pot down right there.
3. I should've bet more on the flop. I think $5 would've been a better bet than the $3.50. The $3.50 might have indicated to the other players that I've only got high cards or might be worried about the two 9's in the board. A $5 bet may have eliminated those thoughts and won the pot.
4. I should've checked the turn knowing anyone holding a 9 or 2 has me beat. Loose players will call with any two cards in hopes to get lucky. Since I ended up betting instead and the BB went all in, I concluded he didn't have a 9. Otherwise, he most likely would've just called to extract as much as possible from me until the river. At the same time, he's concluded I don't have a 9 because of my $6.50 bet and figures his 2's full are good...so he pushes.
5. I call the all in raise. With all the other factors up until this point I should've laid my hand down for a couple reasons. First, I was only getting 2-1 on my money. It was costing me $24.40 to win $50.40. Maybe if it was 4-1 or higher odds the call would've been justified but 2-1 is way too low. Second, it's a cash game and I can wait to make my play with better hands or more certainty. Knowing when to lay a hand down is equally as important as knowing when to play a hand. I should've cut my losses and moved on to the next hand.
6. I went on tilt and made a dumb play the next hand. I should've just sat out to review the hand or left alltogether and reviewed it later when I was a little more clear-headed. Instead, I pushed my remaining $12 after an early position raise with K/T and lost to A/Q. Needless to say I was finished for the evening.
When I go back and think about it, this was a great lesson to learn; you can only control what moves you make to hopefully reduce the stupid plays someone else makes. People are still going to make stupid plays (or what you think was a stupid play) no matter what you do...at which point you can only minimize your losses.
By the way, some heated discussion followed the hand between myself and the BB. He said the reason he called my PF raise and flop bet was because the last time he folded a deuce he would've hit 3 of a kind deuces on the river and won a big hand. Pretty poor reasoning to play a hand in any half decent poker player's book. Still, I'm not sure that even if I had made the proper play up until the point of him hitting his boat would I have been able to win the hand. My pocket tens could've been dead from the start given his reasoning. Obviously, I wasn't folding them. But, instead of playing to win I should've been playing to lose as little as possible.
Thoughts?
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Video
So I created a video of .01/.02 5NL to see if maybe Jerrick or Chris could do voice over on it and let me know what I'm doing right or wrong. The video is under 40 minutes, did get into some situations I was not sure on so I think this will be perfect to help me. I'm going to reply to this thread with the video once it's done rendering, takes forever..hehe. I would really appreciate the help, probably be up by tomorrow morning.
Thursday, August 14, 2008
10,000 Hands
So I finally made it to my first landmark of 10,000 hands. So now is a good time to review my good plays, bad plays, and hand selection choices I've made over the past 3 weeks. After some in-depth review, I definitely found some holes in my game. I also confirmed statistically, that certain things I do do in fact work.
1st hole - Playing marginal-hands out of position, hitting the flop, and then bleeding money.
2nd hole - Calling all-ins with big draws when pot-odds are incorrect.
3rd hole - Betting the river when the board is dangerous and I don't hold the nuts.
In I could have saved about $50 from the hands I made these mistakes on. Doesn't sound like a lot but when putting things in perspective, that is about 15% the size of my current bankroll. Definitely significant.
Things I'm doing correctly:
1. Pocket Pairs - Very profitable in any position on the table. I'll almost call any reasonable raise pre-flop if the player's stack is large enough.
2. Continuation Bets - Profitable. I win 79% of the hands I c-bet on the flop without going to showdown, very impressive. C-betting is also very profitable.
I also added some more gadgets to the blog. Not sure if I like them or not.
1st hole - Playing marginal-hands out of position, hitting the flop, and then bleeding money.
2nd hole - Calling all-ins with big draws when pot-odds are incorrect.
3rd hole - Betting the river when the board is dangerous and I don't hold the nuts.
In I could have saved about $50 from the hands I made these mistakes on. Doesn't sound like a lot but when putting things in perspective, that is about 15% the size of my current bankroll. Definitely significant.
Things I'm doing correctly:
1. Pocket Pairs - Very profitable in any position on the table. I'll almost call any reasonable raise pre-flop if the player's stack is large enough.
2. Continuation Bets - Profitable. I win 79% of the hands I c-bet on the flop without going to showdown, very impressive. C-betting is also very profitable.
I also added some more gadgets to the blog. Not sure if I like them or not.
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Value bet vs Min bet
I can never tell if someone is trying to value bet me, thinking he has me crushed or someone is betting into me softly. Can someone help me understand how to tell the difference?
Cards Running Dry?
Yeah so another session went by with no wins posted. Only lost a few bucks over 2 hours. I guess that's still not bad. I was playing the $25NL game today to see what I got. I will say this, some players even if they are loose seem a bit more aggressive. There are still so many fish. One guy I caught was bluffing 72s on a board he completely missed. I noticed he kept making huge raises on the flop almost every hand so I figured he was most likely making a stone cold bluff. I had top pair so I called his all-in and doubled up. One guy played his trip 8s very soft and didn't make me pay him off. One leak in my game is definitely doing the betting for people that wouldn't normally make me pay them off. I have to learn to check in more spots.
2008 WSOP tonight
Reminder, 2008 World Series is on tonight.
ESPN 8PM. (They show plenty of repeats if you miss it)
ESPN 8PM. (They show plenty of repeats if you miss it)
Video!
Here's my first video ever. I recorded it like at 3am this morning and didn't realize I was kind of whispering, guess felt weird talking to myself...lol. Turn the volume up because as long as you can hear me I think there's some good info. Give me some feedback, please. Enjoy!
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=RFARHXCB
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=RFARHXCB
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Blah...
The weekend started off real good. I made my $50 deposit bonus and broke the $300 bankroll mark. Not bad for starting with only $50 a couple of weeks ago. The last 3 or 4 sessions I wasn't able to put much together. I just broke even. Blah. Anyway, it's part of the game and eventually I will be on the upside of things again. Better than losing I guess. Time to go blow some stuff up on Battlefield Bad Company to make me feel better.
Saturday, August 9, 2008
First Post
I'm starting this blog to document my poker sessions to share with friends. We can use this blog to exchange stories and ideas as well as provide support for one another. I hope this will keep us motivated to improve our game.
So here goes.....
Won $23 in an hour session tonight. I had the best scenario, My AA vs. KK pre-flop. I raise, dude re-raises, I re-raise, he pushes in. Beautiful. First time after 7000 hands where I had that happen. If I was in his shoes with KK I would have done the same thing. The odds are when you have KK that someone will have AA on a 6 man table is about 44 to 1. Extremely rare. The lesson is that you should always go all-in if pushed pre-flop with your KK because you will be in the lead almost all of the time.
Latest stats after 5277 hands at $10NL. My bankroll is almost at $300. When I hit $400 I’ll start on the $25 NL game.
VP$IP 18.4
PFR 14.69
$7.13 an hour. Hourly has been fluctuating less now that I have more hands on the books. Definitely after 10,000 hands it will be more steady and shouldn’t move up or down more than a few cents after a session.
Chris
So here goes.....
Won $23 in an hour session tonight. I had the best scenario, My AA vs. KK pre-flop. I raise, dude re-raises, I re-raise, he pushes in. Beautiful. First time after 7000 hands where I had that happen. If I was in his shoes with KK I would have done the same thing. The odds are when you have KK that someone will have AA on a 6 man table is about 44 to 1. Extremely rare. The lesson is that you should always go all-in if pushed pre-flop with your KK because you will be in the lead almost all of the time.
Latest stats after 5277 hands at $10NL. My bankroll is almost at $300. When I hit $400 I’ll start on the $25 NL game.
VP$IP 18.4
PFR 14.69
$7.13 an hour. Hourly has been fluctuating less now that I have more hands on the books. Definitely after 10,000 hands it will be more steady and shouldn’t move up or down more than a few cents after a session.
Chris
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