I almost don't like poker anymore...
Okay, I'm going to vent for awhile. If you skip down a bit you'll get to the part where I actually have some questions I could use help with.
I have played for a few months now, and here's a rundown of what's happened:
0. I increased a fake-money bankroll from 1,000 up to 80,000 and got excited enough that I decided to give the real thing a try.
1. In lowlimit, I brought $45 real money up to $180, essentially on luck. All I knew at that point was which starting hands to call with.
2. I lost almost all of that money. Then I got lucky and hit a diamond royal flush -- pokerroom pays you $500 for doing this. So I played some higher stakes tables and lost another 100 before realizing I should do more reading.
3. After extensively reading and studying every strategy I could find, I lost another 200
4. This site convinced me that no limit was the way to go, because if you know what you're doing you can bet effectively -- punish people for playing bad cards etc. Great theory.
5. I have now lost another 100.
My net change over three weeks or so is -350. The only reason I have any money left is because of the aforementioned $500.
So my problem, of course, is that I keep learning and learning, and losing and losing. By the way, this doesn't occur in "swings". It is a steady and constant downward movement. I lose in different ways for different reasons, but that is the only variance I've experienced since applying strategy to the game.
Actual questions:
1. My impulse is to raise preflop with premium hands, so that the people with crap either fold or lose their money to me. When I do this, everyone folds and I get a big bling for my trouble. Is this wrong?
2. When I get tired of losing through method #1, i stop raising preflop. As a result, people stay in against me with crap and the implicit collusion kills me.
3. Is it really possible to fold 75% of hands preflop, then another 2/3rds of the hands where you're in the flop, and still make money?
Okay, I'm just being whiny and annoying, but all comments are appreciated.
Re: I almost don't like poker anymore...
Quote:
Originally Posted by LeFou
1. My impulse is to raise preflop with premium hands, so that the people with crap either fold or lose their money to me. When I do this, everyone folds and I get a big bling for my trouble. Is this wrong?.
I would rather take the blinds than have some chump beat me my chasing.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LeFou
2. When I get tired of losing through method #1, i stop raising preflop. As a result, people stay in against me with crap and the implicit collusion kills me.
Slow playing can be very profitable, but there is always that risk of being beaten. I would bet enough to keep the chasers out until you have more experience in NL. When slow-playing you really have to be able to read the flop.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LeFou
3. Is it really possible to fold 75% of hands preflop, then another 2/3rds of the hands where you're in the flop, and still make money?
Yes. I am profitable, and I generally only see about 25% to 30% of the flops.
Re: I almost don't like poker anymore...
Quote:
Originally Posted by LeFou
By the way, this doesn't occur in "swings". It is a steady and constant downward movement.
Lmao.....I'm sorry but I found this remark really funny! I've had days where I can really relate to this.
:)
Re: I almost don't like poker anymore...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Canada
Quote:
Originally Posted by LeFou
By the way, this doesn't occur in "swings". It is a steady and constant downward movement.
Lmao.....I'm sorry but I found this remark really funny! I've had days where I can really relate to this.
:)
I didn't really catch that until you brought it up.:D That's funny!!!
Re: I almost don't like poker anymore...
Quote:
Originally Posted by LeFou
My impulse is to raise preflop with premium hands, so that the people with crap either fold or lose their money to me. When I do this, everyone folds and I get a big bling for my trouble. Is this wrong?
This is where playing the table or playing the people is more important than how you play the cards. If everyone is folding on your raises, then this should be a good opportunity to steal the blinds and bluff at some pots. Or, maybe everyone is folding because they've sniffed you out that you only raise with premium hands because you don't vary your play enough.
In a general sense, I like to bet or raise with good hands to try to get people to call at the wrong odds and statistically pay me off. And, it's no guarantee I'm going to win, so I don't want to fool around and let someone back in the hand. In my home games, I've won many hands only to hear someone say how they would have made a straight/flush/... had they stayed in.
Good luck.