by Ojingo » Sun Mar 18, 2007 11:02 am
Hi Guys,
here's something I'm sometimes wondering about: most of us declare ourselves a winner on a certain level, or say that we can beat a certain game if, over a long enough period/number of hands, our winrate is good. There's discussion about how good it can/should be, but let's leave that aside for the moment.
I'm wondering however, whether you could somehow analyse what part of your winrate is due to the fact that you practice good table selection, follow your favorite fish around, find a lot of weekend drunks and what more, and what part is due to solid grinding against the other regulars. I'm thinking in analogy with chess, where you have a rating system which (more or less objectively) tells you how strong of a player you are. Beating a very weak player doesn't add much to your rating, while beating stronger ones does.
However, our winrate is heavily biased towards how we perform against weaker players (at least at the lower levels), because they tend to make the biggest mistakes for the largests amounts of money. Even moreso when we actively follow them around and try to stay away from solid players. So, playing a lot of weak players adds a lot to our winrate but, intuitively, doesn't tell us that much about how strong we really are.
So, to which extent does winrate tell you how strong you are, and to which extent does it tell you how good you are at finding weaker players and exploiting them? (I know, they're not completely unrelated, but still there is a difference?)
I often feel (especially now I'm playing the $200NL on UB) that, while I can be a winning player there, I would have a hard time sitting at a table with 4 or 5 of the stronger regulars there.