|
BR management. The Mike Caro Guide
While this is somewhat sparked both by Auhfel's post, and the 100k pissing contest that FTR's regs, and that Spoon got into. I found some very interesting information in my newest top 3 favorite poker books:
Caro's Most profitable Hold'em Advice.
To break down the arguments that eventually ran in circles.
terribad small stakes player: Hi! I just won a tiny tournament, and I want to be like Chris Moneymaker! Help me luckbox a tournament
Good high stakes players: No, don't do it! take the money and play within your BR. BR management is the most important aspect of a player, ever.
Terribad player: But I make a lot of money, and I don't mind spending this money, besides if I lose it, I can just re-load, I make 50k a year at work.
Good players: BR MANAGEMENT NOOB!
Terribad: but I wanna play
Good Players: You're retarded, I give up, good luck.
Terribad: FU FORKMAN!
Good Players: You're still retarded
Terribad: I'm going to pocket 5's! Watch out for me when I'm a winnar
Good players: Can't miss you till you're gone.
etc etc etc.
Anyways, onto the meat and potatoes. Mike Caro's BR management section is probably the most interesting take I've ever seen. It seems from poker pro's there are two very definitive camps.
Camp 1: Your bankroll is your lifeline, You must always play within it, never lose more than 5-10% of your BR at any time, and manage it well. Without proper bankroll management you're simply gambling and we don't condone gambling as poker players.
Camp 2: I really don't care about money. I have a lot of it, and as long as I have enough to enter this tourney, score some hookers and blow... I'm good. Foods nice too.
Then along comes Mike Caro. Interestingly enough, he talks about this:
"It's up to you to determine how much risk you can tolerate, and how much security you require."
"Notably, the Kelly Criterion -- which determines a percentage of your bankroll you should risk variantly multiplied by your advantage -- is not very applicable to poker."
"Common mathematical formulae don't take into account that small bankrolls are easily replaced, and are not worth protecting in the same way large BR's are"
"The minimum mathematicaly proper BR that you should play at is 1 Buy in, but as your BR grows, you should be less and less wreckless."
The most important aspect of Mike Caro's "Bankroll chart" is that the larger it grows, the more you should seek to protect it.
The chart goes on to argue that for all Bankrolls 1-299 dollars, the highest limit you can play is 1-2 limit. You should be willing to have 1-buy in. Or 40 bucks.
Yes that's right, at the lowest levels, you should be willing to go out, have a good time, and just eff around.
But the moment that you get to a $300 dollar bank roll, something that's not easily replaced next paycheck, you should have about 15bi's for the game you're playing and you should be willing to protect it.
What's interesting is that we're seeing that While the new player who just wanted to goof around and see how he would do in a LOLDONKAMENT, was wrong about proper BR management, he certainly wasn't wrong in his arguments that he wanted help for the tournament and not for BR management.
Then again, Spoon is very right about proper BR managemnet in the argument: Hey, if you can't protect it now, what makes you think you can protect it later? When your BR is WORTH protecting. Practice like you play... retard!
*note, then there was this giant wall of text from our terribad player, and it hurt my head*
The problem that everyone seemed to miss; and that I think is what was most frustrating to everyone involved, was that: The $11 dollar loss represented a 30 second re-load via his debit card. Because it represented no pain to our terribad player in question. Which is another fundament flaw of bankroll management-- to play at a level that keeps the game interesting, and the player engaged. Even with $25 bucks online, it's very hard to stay engaged at .5/.10 limit, or 2 NL.
I guess what I'm getting at is that both guys in this grudgematch may have been right. Although I'm erring to the side that spoon *errr FORKMAN* was more right.
|