I think I just suck at ring...
I'm only an average player in general but I just can't make a decent long term profit at ring. It's fairly frustrating.
Seems like like I make consistent progress when playing only SnG's and when I play any significant amount of ring, it brings me down to negative or break/even status.
I'm thinking it's mostly a patience issue. After an hour sitting at a table I think i lose patience. Since I play NL $10 and no one folds, I'm playing mostly Taggy, and limping marginal hands with position. I basically feel like a nut peddler rather than a poker player. So after an hour or so I get frustrated and try to make moves, and anyone that's played at these levels knows that rarely works. People don't fold. They won't fold their Ax if they have any kind of flush draw. They won't fold overcards on a rag flop. This can work out to my advantage as long as I get in with the best of it. But it seems I end up bleeding more money then I take in when I win a pot.
Maybe I just don't get ring. I started as an MTT/SnG player, and made the move to ring a few months ago. I like the idea of ring and don't always have the time commitment for a longer MTT or SnG game but I just can't make my ring game work.
Re: I think I just suck at ring...
Quote:
Originally Posted by thirteen
I'm only an average player in general but I just can't make a decent long term profit at ring. It's fairly frustrating.
An average player is not supposed to make a decent profit at ring. The average player loses money in the ring. You picked up on the reason: trying to make moves with marginal hands, often out of impatience.
Quote:
Originally Posted by arkana
Nut peddling is the way to go at these stakes, play more tables at once to combat the boredom. Think of your time at these stakes as an exercise in discipline...
Quoted for truth. Work on table selection & discipline. Find loose/passive games and camp.
Try a few thousand hands where you only play pairs/AK/AQs -- yes, I mean even on the button/SB. On 3 or four tables this doesn't take that long.
Practice dumping ATs in the SB. It feels good after awhile. You'll start thinking "there goes another so-so hand that I don't feel like worrying about". You will know how to play those 15 hands for a profit at that point. Might not be much profit, but then you can start adding in more stuff.
Good luck.