by Aisthesis » Sun Nov 05, 2006 6:03 am
I hope you guys will help me analyse what exactly went wrong in this horrible, horrible stretch. I'd like to start of with some general comments but intend to go through every hand here until I feel like I actually understand what was happening.
One obvious thing at the start: After the posted Darwinism hand, I was definitely tilting in terms of bankroll management. Also a barometer for me is whether I'm playing a good chess game, which kind of indicates whether my mind is working well or not. Well, I was losing a lot of chess matches online to players with ratings who should have been no match at all. So, I think I was playing kind of half brain-dead rather than with full skill level--again obviously not good. I don't know how I let myself do this, as I've never ever done that before, regardless of bad beats (although I do get pretty aggressive in terms of moving up if I'm confident I can beat a game--usually just not irrationally so, but I'm much too stubborn in terms of not quitting in a timely manner).
Anyhow, as I go through various hands, I'll probably leave out the ones where I'm just completely clear that I was doing something completely idiotic.
Here's my sense of the difference between the PLO200 and the PLO400 on Stars: There are a lot more raised pots at the $400 and a lot more aggressive play. BUT (and this is a difference I want to verify or falsiify in looking at it hand for hand) if you have comparable pot-sizes at a PLO400 table, it's much more often a 3-way pot rather than a 4- or 5-way. Then those players in the hand are just a lot more aggressive and less inclined to give you free cards. But my impression may also have to do with the completely subjective aspect that for me, at the 400 level, the blinds just seem to me to have significantly more meaning. I don't worry nearly as much about bleeding away $2 as I do about bleeding away $4. Anyhow, it feels like the $400 game tends to play noticeably more short-handed and noticeably more aggressively (presumably with the exception of tight tables which I avoided but might have been just the thing that my playing style in this bid was actually suited for).
Ok, now some raw data: My VPIP was at 34%, which is probably actually low by Reuben's standards, but really rather high in comparison to what I was successfully playing at the 200 (a little less than 25% overall, being a lot looser with position--like 35% or so in LP but more like 16% UTG). Anyhow, I'm not sure that some of these Reuben hands (like, say, deuces with AXs in a different suit than your deuces) are really all that desirable to play (at least for me currently) if you're in MP and can pretty much expect a raised pot with 2 opponents in. I also got less picky about hands like 5679, i.e., top-gappers (more on some of these in hand analyses).
My PF raise % was at 4.78%, which I consider pretty healthy.
Total aggression factor at 2.40, which doesn't seem to me like overdoing it from what I've gathered.
Summary for me, then:
VPIP: 34%
PF raise: 4.78%
Agg: 2.40
And for comparison with a clear expert, namely Darwinism, I have the following (no doubt with some degree of deviation due to not huge numbers, but based on 276 hands (which usually is fairly close):
VPIP: 26.5%
PF raise: 14%
Agg: 4.00
So, he was playing significantly tighter but more aggressively. This doesn't actually surprize me terribly, as my feel for him was that if he bet the flop, he was almost never going away, USUALLY 3-betting to a raise. However, one other noticeable feature: He had a lot more fold equity going than my humble self. Everyone knows who he is and is obviously a bit scared, hence some of the things I've been thinking about regarding shifting gears. Maybe that level of aggression (which is apparently higher than mine was although I felt like I was playing aggressive as all get out) has to be earned by getting a very tight reputation first (that also corresponds to my feel in the successful phase of the 1/2).
What I also wonder is whether I bear down and play pretty tight, then having established that, get to be successful playing more aggressively but don't know when to shift back down or try to apply it in a game where I have no image at all yet (as initially in the PLO400).
What I also noticed about Darwinism: He was raising (typically to 3 BB rather than max on most raises) a lot of pretty good JJ-KK hands, and even slightly dodgy TT (like TT87) but I don't think I once saw him lay those things down to a re-raise, even if it was as much as one third to one half of available stack-depth (also an issue on which I'd like to double-check my impression). I honestly don't see how one can make that work.
As I figure it, you're going to have to either set (1/8 of the time) or have a straight draw (maybe 1/6 at most) to proceed. Ok, so you stack the guy a lot of the time if you set and he stacks you more often than not if you're nothing more than open-ended (particularly if he has the flush draw), but I don't understand how this can really work in the long-run.
Anyhow, he's raising a lot of hands to make it to 14%, and his aggression factor is pretty consistently around 4 on all of the later streets. Mine was highest on the flop (2.49), going down to 2.23 or 2.20 on turn and river.
So, that means one of two things: Either
1) you need to have more of an established image to play at that aggression level or
2) I was picking the wrong spots for playing aggressively.
If it's 2), then I actually wasn't playing aggressively enough but was picking my spots poorly.
Ok, so much for a start. Hopefully I'll get around to looking in detail at various portions of these sessions tomorrow and can start to post some.
While I won't be playing the $400 again for a while unfortunately, I'm DETERMINED to figure out how to beat it.
Any ideas so far are definitely appreciated!