Tuesday, July 26, 2005

SNG - Day 21

What can I say... Back to the drawing board. I was 3-5 in all in race situations as best I can tell. I'll just let the numbers do the talking:

July SNG Breakdown
Desc
July 25
MTD
Games
12
255
1sts
1
26
2nds
0
33
3rds
2
29
4ths
1
30
5 - 7
5
87
8 - 10
3
54
ITM%
25.00%
33.72%
ROI
-31.82%
0.42%
Net$
-210
60

  1. 6th - A7 lost to QQ and KK
  2. 8th - AT lost to KQ... Ace on flop
  3. 6th - 55 lost to QQ
  4. 8th - Q9 lost to J4... four card flush
  5. 3rd - K6 lost to 83 all in preflop
  6. 3rd - AKs lost to 55
  7. 8th - AT lost to 66
  8. 6th - AJs lost to JJ
  9. 4th - 77 lost to Q9... just b4... AJs lost to KQ... Ace on flop
  10. 7th - AA lost to KK
  11. 5th - A9 lost to JJ... Level 7
  12. 1st - AA beat TT

2 comments:

WillWonka said...

When I get something in my mind, I try my best to do it. It's a character flaw... lol. Congrats G on running good on your challenge. Yep, these are all at the $50 level. Can you give me an honest opinion? Am I just running bad or am I in over my head?

Mourn said...

Re: 4 tabling.

There are people who 12-table the $200 level and above. Are they sacrificing a little to do so? Probably. The thing about SnGs is that they are more of a science than most other forms of poker. The proper course of action is usually pretty clear cut, especially later on and it has everything to do with the card, position and stack sizes and little to do with "reads". Reads are nice early on, but it's going to take you a few hands to get one, and by the time you have, you're into push/fold land anyway.

Once you get to the higher levels, I'd guess that you see the same players more often, and at that point you can use their tendencies against them, but you don't need to be watching them at any given moment to do so, you'll already have that info.

In the end, If you're a good SnG player, you win more by playing more tables. If your ROI two-tabling is 15%, you're better off making 10% on four tables.

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