by TexasKowboy » Tue Feb 28, 2006 9:11 pm
Anyone can get hot. With a tell in a limit game being a bad player or a good player with a obvious tell doesn't get you in as much trouble as it would in a NL game. I am sure you have seen a player get hot and play just about any 2 cards and suck out time and time again. So that could explain how he got so deep in the field.
Ted knowing he had the best hand with his ducks even at the show down is something that I have seen the great ones do. Doyle talks about playing hands like 56 and expecting them to win. I play the same hand and hope I hit something. When Doyle, Ivey and Daniel N play these types of hands or worst and they play them almost knowing they are going to hit and take down a big pot.
How? What makes them special? It's not playing 10's of 1000's of hands because we have all played that many hands. It's a 6th sense they have something that makes playing the right cards and getting in with the best hand equalizes. I play like Phil Hellmouth. I try to play the best hands and get my money in with the best of it. If it wasn't for luck I would never lose. Blah! If it wasn't for a hole somewhere in my game be it a tell, lack of guts or just not enough skill I would not lose as much. But even the best lose. The thing about them is they only remember the hands they won.
Steering back on course. Ted and Tells! I have picked up tells on players and have been the only player at the table to pick them up. So there is a chance Ted was the only player to see the tell and be able to exploit it. I mean even if you have a tell on someone you have to have something to call it down.
Kowboy
If I ain't sinkin', well I must be swimin' If I ain't dead, I must be livin' Livin' is the thing, that scares me the most And if I ain't sleepin', well I better be fishin' If I ain't anchored I will be driftin' But all and all, I'm doing pretty good, since I hit my third coast!