Assuming that it's not doubleing up from extra bad players, do you leave the table so you dont stand out as much?
09-18-2005 04:08 PM
#1
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09-18-2005 06:11 PM
#2
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i hang around for a while but i dont have the skill/practice of being the big stack to push people around into making mistakes i guess this is something i'll learn in time. |
09-18-2005 07:27 PM
#3
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I stay. |
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09-18-2005 07:58 PM
#4
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09-18-2005 08:44 PM
#5
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It depends. It depends on my mood, if I'm not tilting or game became supertight or it's time to do something else than poker, I stay. Stack size means nothing about player's skills, sometimes people get intimidated but most of the time they dont pay attention. If they are shortstacks, thay are going to call my allins anyway. | |
09-18-2005 09:57 PM
#6
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i find this is when i make my biggest mistakes.... |
09-19-2005 09:01 AM
#7
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I 3was playing on the weekend, my normal game, tight but with a bit of play, bluffing etc. thrown in, and there was a LAGGy chap next to me who was 3.5xbuyin when I joined and 6xbuyin when I left, and he was very chatty, very effective, and it was clear that having a big stack gave him carte blanche to make almost any move he fancied. I can't play quite that loose, and I totally didn't have his knack for making people push their whole stacks into the middle, but I do aspire to being able to do that. |
09-19-2005 12:09 PM
#8
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I like playing against the big stack for the pure fact that they are more likely to call me when I hit. I know when I am the big stack, I'm a little looser because I subconsciously think I'm playing with somebody else's money. Wrong way to play, but it happens. I think using that against a player will work. Just have to notice their betting patterns and when you hit, try to trap them. |