barker Wrote:
Spade Kitty Wrote:
barker Wrote:
Did you use tracking software? I'm into day 10 on my trial of poker tracker 3. Trying to figure out what stats to use to help my game.
pokertracker was great when I used it, but that was years ago. I used it most often to keep track of the types of player I was up against more than my own personal stats.
what stats did you find most useful when trying to figure out how to play against an oppontent? I've been trying to figure out how to use this pokertracker thing and so far all i do is look at the numbers once in a while, go "Hmmmm?", and continue playing like i don't even have the thing.
sorry for all the ?'s (i've got a million of them), but you're the first person I've come across that can answer my questions about taking the next step in online poker.
More than anything else, I find that most players in the beginning stages of poker focus way too much on their own cards and way too little on their opponents. Let me give you an example.
I was at Harrah's watching a live $5/$10 table in East Chicago a few years ago. I could tell right away that this had to be a really lively table, because there was one guy on the corner with an absolutely absurdly huge stack for that limit in front of him - something like $1600 or $2000. I didn't think anyone would sit down with so huge a stack, so something weird was probably going on. I watched two or three hands. It turns out that the pots were frequently capped preflop, usually at least 5 ways, because this dude was always raising. Moreover, this guy would - get this - announce to the table what cards he needed every hand at every stage, as if he was playing the house at blackjack and didn't need to hide his cards. He would play any two in any position at any time - he was the perfect LAG. And he was absolutely crushing this table on a sick run with garbage cards.
Everyone else at the table was totally on tilt. They had obviously not anticipated this guy's play, and most importantly
they had not adjusted their valuations of their hands accordingly. You know what kind of hands get killed in high stakes, multi-way, loose aggressive play? High pairs and high cards in general. Hands like AJ or AT have virtually no value at all in any position, and high pairs get murdered on every street unless they hit sets. Guys were lining up to donate to his 38o and 47s with their pocket tens and jacks, and going further on tilt in the process. These guys had absolutely no idea how to play this table.
The types of hands that go way up in that situation are pairs
for set value only, suited connectors and even unsuited connectors. Flush cards are usually garbage unless you hit a draw, because if you end up hitting a pair you're way behind. One pair never holds up eight-way - that's what was killing all these guys.
A seat opened up just behind the crazy dude and I couldn't get in there fast enough (it was late night and there was no list). I sat back and played as few hands as possible. I played absolutely no high cards, and waited on pairs for set values and suited connectors. About an hour in, I had essentially been blinded off, and I hit pocket 33. My set hits the flop, and I murdered captain loose who ends up with two pair. The pot was $400 at 5/10, I promptly immediately picked up and left. Why? Because my expectation was going to be any higher than that.
See that had nothing to do whatsoever with my cards, and it had everything to do with adjusting to the situation.
In the case of pokertracker specifically, you need to identify the table table by factors like how high their VP$IP is (the amount they voluntarily put into the pot). The more loose a table plays, the more tight you have to play, and adjust your hand values accordingly. the more tight a table plays, the more you have to steal pots and loosen way up. Often times raising goes a long way and representing scare cards too.