Why do I play so badly!? Lets go back to basics.
HOW do I go about being a better poker player? I mean, WHERE DO I START?
I played mock games with no cash just to get the feel for it for about 5-6 months on my comp, as well home games (usually tournaments with 1st, 2nd and 3rd getting payed off) with $20 buy in each. I actually want to learn to play better poker so I suggest $10 tournment and play at least once a week but non of them had time and just wanted to play $20 a months.
With home games, I usually go home broke even when I'm playing my best. I'm not gonna blame it on bad beats or anything because I realise now that I'm just playing VERY badly. Most of my friends know me for being tight so most of the time against me, they always raise to 7-8 times when they have a reasonable hand, while against anyone else, 3-4 times. And because of that, I usually become the short stack of the table.
Throughout the game, I hardly recognized any tell. I did figure out that player 3 is usually very aggressive, the SB dances around abit and the rest are pretty loose.
IS THERE ANYWAY I CAN START BEING A BETTER PLAYER?
Re: Why do I play so badly!? Lets go back to basics.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fade
HOW do I go about being a better poker player? I mean, WHERE DO I START?
IS THERE ANYWAY I CAN START BEING A BETTER PLAYER?
You become a better player by....
1) Reading Poker Books
2) Reading FTR
3) Asking good players questions
4) Playing hundreds of thousands of hands
5) Recognizing leaks and fixing them
Re: Why do I play so badly!? Lets go back to basics.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fade
HOW do I go about being a better poker player? I mean, WHERE DO I START?
I played mock games with no cash just to get the feel for it for about 5-6 months on my comp, as well home games (usually tournaments with 1st, 2nd and 3rd getting payed off) with $20 buy in each. I actually want to learn to play better poker so I suggest $10 tournment and play at least once a week but non of them had time and just wanted to play $20 a months.
With home games, I usually go home broke even when I'm playing my best. I'm not gonna blame it on bad beats or anything because I realise now that I'm just playing VERY badly. Most of my friends know me for being tight so most of the time against me, they always raise to 7-8 times when they have a reasonable hand, while against anyone else, 3-4 times. And because of that, I usually become the short stack of the table.
Just to show how badly I'm playing ... this is one of the hands that I remember the most.
We were playing short handed with 6 people. 1st person just got out.
One hand I remember today that I think screwed me up the most was when theres just about 5 people on the table.
I was the big blind with blinds at 25/50
1st folds (about 120 chips left)
2nd folds (about 400 left)
3rd calls ( about 2400 left)
SB calls (about 1080 left)
BB (me) with Ad Qd (about 800 left) raise to 200
3rd calls
SB calls
flop: 8d 6c 4d
3rd goes all in
SB folds
BB folds
See because everyone know me as a tight player, they often make big moves against me. I folded that round. 3rd had pair 8.
Throughout the game, I hardly recognized any tell. I did figure out that player 3 is usually very aggressive, the SB dances around abit and the rest are pretty loose.
IS THERE ANYWAY I CAN START BEING A BETTER PLAYER?
You say that your friends realize you are a tight player. With that said,
You raised 3xBB after 2 limpers. What would you have done with AA,KK,QQ? I am wondering because UTG+2, realizing you are tight, called a bet that represents 1/4 of your stack preflop when he had 88. That is a losing play if you have AA, KK, QQ. Even if he folds every time post flop that he is behind and destacks you every other time, it is still a losing play. This makes me wonder if your AQ raise is very different from your AA/KK/QQ raise here; different enough that he knew you did not have AA/KK/QQ.
You mentioned that UTG+2 is aggressive, yet he limped. Would he limp with AA/KK/AKos/QQ? If not, consider pushing here. Those are the only hands that dominate you. You are in a coin flip with any other pair and you are ahead of any other unpaired cards. Pushing negates the fact that you will be out-of-position during the hand. Further, it plays on your tight image. If you get called and lose, he still will likely realize that it was a coin flip hand. He will have to be a bit more careful in future games.