Originally posted by: Random Variable
There's too much luck in internet poker.
Especially if your'e playing 8 tables at the same time.
but not if you're playing 8 hands at the same table. wakka wakka!
Originally posted by: Random Variable
There's too much luck in internet poker.
Especially if your'e playing 8 tables at the same time.
Originally posted by: Random Variable
There's too much luck in internet poker.
Especially if your'e playing 8 tables at the same time.
You do know that the "knowns" were at one time "unknowns" don't you.Originally posted by: Random Variable
The field for the main event is now so large that it is understandable that pros won't be able to win every single year. But a pro has not won since Carlos Mortensen won in 2001. And this year's final table is once again chock-full of unknown internet players. Are poker "pros" becoming a myth?
Originally posted by: txrandom
Tracy McGrady has never won a ring. He isn't pro at all.
There's no time for any meaningful analysis when you're playing at so many tables.Originally posted by: bananapeel42
The more tables you play the less luck is involved.... you have it backwards.
Originally posted by: Epic Fail
David Rheem certainly qualifies as a pro and a big name pro just won the WSOP main event, albeit the European version with 362 entrants.
Pros also turned the table on the amateurs with a change of structure, more than half the bracelets were won by pros this year.
http://www.usatoday.com/sports...19-hellmuth-pros_N.htm
Originally posted by: Ne0
Originally posted by: Epic Fail
David Rheem certainly qualifies as a pro and a big name pro just won the WSOP main event, albeit the European version with 362 entrants.
Pros also turned the table on the amateurs with a change of structure, more than half the bracelets were won by pros this year.
http://www.usatoday.com/sports...19-hellmuth-pros_N.htm
I used to go to church with David "Chino" Rheem when he spent a year in Atlanta (he lived in Florida), another bracelet winner named David Woo went to the same church... but none of us played poker back then. :laugh:
Originally posted by: QueBert
Originally posted by: bananapeel42
Originally posted by: QueBert
no they're not pros, if you take a good online player who makes a living playing on pokerstars and put him in a heads up game against Daniel Negreanu or Phil Ivey they are going to get their asses handed to them 9/10 times if not more. Online players can be good, but they're winning the huge events because there are so many of them entering the tournaments. A good online player could win heads up against a true pro, but it wouldn't be the normal. Daniel is about 500 times better than any on-line player.
It's not hard to win at online poker, people make idiot calls all the time. If you could handle having 5 tables going at once you could make a living playing online at the $20 tables.They showed a guy on the news who plays 6 or 7 tables at the same time and comes out well ahead every day. He would be stomped against Doyle or Hellmuth though.
Playing online is easy? You do it, and show me your profitability using a software tracking program. Playing online takes tons of time, and is extremely difficult to win in the long run.
I play at FullTilt (easier to get money in / out than Stars ) and generally 4 table .25/.50 or 50 dollar buy in NL holdem or sometimes .15/.25 which are 25 buy in tables while playing 4 SNG's.
I do that to make money on the side, but in NO way would I try to make a living off of it, even at low stakes, you're going to have wild swings and you'll find strong players even at those small 25 / 50 dollar limits.
playing online is easy, without trying I can typically make it to the final table when I play on pureplay. 500 person tournaments will be down to 250 in no time, 15 people will go out in the first hand. if you sit back and watch you can make it to where it's down to 50 people without even playing a hand. I don't do cash games online, so I don't know how those go online. Maybe easy isn't the right word, but I win online far easier than I do at any casino when I play tournaments.
Originally posted by: QueBert
no they're not pros, if you take a good online player who makes a living playing on pokerstars and put him in a heads up game against Daniel Negreanu or Phil Ivey they are going to get their asses handed to them 9/10 times if not more. Online players can be good, but they're winning the huge events because there are so many of them entering the tournaments. A good online player could win heads up against a true pro, but it wouldn't be the normal. Daniel is about 500 times better than any on-line player.
It's not hard to win at online poker, people make idiot calls all the time. If you could handle having 5 tables going at once you could make a living playing online at the $20 tables.They showed a guy on the news who plays 6 or 7 tables at the same time and comes out well ahead every day. He would be stomped against Doyle or Hellmuth though.
Originally posted by: JS80
Yup, pro "edge" in tournament poker is now nearly nil. After the donkeys get knocked out in the first day, the remaining players have pretty much similar skill levels. And even with that there's still a pool of thousands of players. At that point it's more luck than anything else.
What they need to do for WSOP main event is to increase the buy in to $20k to weed out the donks (or make it more expensive for them). 8000 player pool is just retarded.
However, where a "pro" does have a true edge is in high stakes cash games.
Originally posted by: JS80
Yup, pro "edge" in tournament poker is now nearly nil. After the donkeys get knocked out in the first day, the remaining players have pretty much similar skill levels. And even with that there's still a pool of thousands of players. At that point it's more luck than anything else.
What they need to do for WSOP main event is to increase the buy in to $20k to weed out the donks (or make it more expensive for them). 8000 player pool is just retarded.
However, where a "pro" does have a true edge is in high stakes cash games.
Originally posted by: JS80
What they need to do for WSOP main event is to increase the buy in to $20k to weed out the donks (or make it more expensive for them). 8000 player pool is just retarded.
However, where a "pro" does have a true edge is in high stakes cash games.
Originally posted by: dakels
I find it interesting that internet poker skills can transfer to the physical table so well. I would think that controlling your tells would be difficult against pros when you have very little real life table experience. Yet, there are these guys that claim they only play online, or mostly play online and they go far in these events. I guess they are good about hiding their patterns and physical tells.
Originally posted by: DayLaPaul
Originally posted by: dakels
I find it interesting that internet poker skills can transfer to the physical table so well. I would think that controlling your tells would be difficult against pros when you have very little real life table experience. Yet, there are these guys that claim they only play online, or mostly play online and they go far in these events. I guess they are good about hiding their patterns and physical tells.
Tells are pretty overrated in poker. Betting patterns trump tells every day of the week. Of course, the more information you have about an opponent the better, and sometimes people will tip off their hands by the way they act, but things like a guy twitching his upper lip before every time before making a bluff is made for Hollywood.