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In chess, playing worse players tends to make you worse. Playing better players tends to make you better. I never got good, but i could tell the quality of my play deteriorated when I played against people who were worse than me. And the quality of my game improved after tough games.
At some point chess players get picky about who they will play against for this reason. At a certain level, It dosn't really matter anymore. The really good guys would play anybody who wanted to, cause they loved playing and wanted to get more people into the game.
Poker is tricky, with chess you can be perfectly results oriented. With poker, you have to play right, and keep playing right for thousands of hands. so i think the quality of players has a much lower impact on the quality of your play.
What i'm trying to say is, pick your games pretty carefully until you are in the top 5% of poker players. (135 million players, so about 6 million in that group) everything will be internalized by then, you'll know how to play the cards blindfolded, and have a good handle on playing the money.
know when to quit. know the difference between learning and tilting. Heck playing against a school of fish can be tricky. with most sports you can play harder. with chess you can think harder. I find it pretty tough to play poker better with my emotions running high, so winning is always measured in the long term.
Watch some good players, they don't pay off very often. Tricky bastards. A lot of fishy players don't understand pot odds. Sometimes, you can bluff one player out of a pot with a little bet much easier than with a big bet. But the player right next to him will call bets that look cheap, you have to bet big to chase that guy off.
I think, when you say, "i'm the best player at the table" you mean, I know i'm better that those five guys, but i can't seem to put the other four on hands, so i'm probably better than they are as well. Well, it really takes quite a while to decide if someone sucks or not. They could have a string of rocking cards. There are a few folks that limp in far to often, but play quite well post flop to make up for it. Try to make a deep evaluation of their play, not a shallow one. don't assume much about them based on stack size. look at the cards they show. look at how much respect they get. look at how much they bet, and more importantly what they fold to.
I dunno, I'm finding it pretty easy to get huge pots with lots of fish, i don't have to contribute much, because there's 3 callers. Play the draws. from time to time you can take down TPTK. If everybody and thier grandma is calling tho, AA isn't much better than TT. you *need* a set, somebody is gonna have two pair. But chasing pays off huge, so you can play 54 suited, profitably as long as there are 5 or 6 limpers in front of you. heck, min raise it, the'll all come along. You gotta let go of the second best hand. You're going to be showing down pretty often. Second dosn't pay anything.
For what it's worth, i'm playing the microlimits, it's packed with terrible play. I don't feel like i'm suffering a huge number of bad beats, maybe i'm a fish? I think it's more about deciding if you really can win, and making them pay. I get a little delusonal about the quality of pocket aces, it's still just top pair. I suppose i've folded the best a time or two, when that was the best hand, but four clubs on the board, with only red cards.... no reason to pay that off with four players. usualy somebody else will call anyway so you can tell if your fold was good, and adjust your opinion of the player accordingly.
You may want to take a long look at your definition of "Best" could Fnord clean these guys out? what does he do differently? why can't you do that?
just my big blind.
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