Antiquehunter
Degenerate Gambler
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2005
- Messages
- 5,088
As with all of statistics, that depends entirely on how you phrase things non-mathematically. As I said, all A-K vs 8-5 pre-flop showdowns are the same statistically in heads-up play and full-table play if you ignore all other information available to you. In the former there is virtually no information to ignore. In the latter there might be a great deal of information that requires being ignored.
And - we don't have any of that extra information, and its been raised that this could be a problem to Beth, before. As such, we are looking exclusively at the math. We have no information as to position, or how the betting proceeded. We also don't know the number of players at the table, the number who were involved in the hand, the number who may have dropped behind a raise etc... That said - with concealed cards, when the money is in the middle, heads-up, the math is simple.
Again, it depends on your phrasing. Simply stated, an astute player who repeatedly comes up against a novice will in the long run win more hands than your statistics say he will.
To phrase it another way let us say you analyze the statistics as indicated, which I agree is fine for heads up play. I, by contrast, have observed these players, looked at their stacks, watched the betting, and took note of who bet what from what position. In heads up play, we will reach the same conclusions on the odds. In full-table play, I will fudge the numbers based on inferences.
Do you agree that my numbers will be more accurate in the long run?
Yes, and no. My preference earlier on, was to request that Beth & her husband examine their hypothesis by sitting around the kitchen table and dealing out hands. This would show if indeed, her husband was seeing results that differed dramatically from expectation. This was rejected - something to do with 'game conditions' being required to test the hypothesis. (I don't understand why).
I would agree that as a serious player myself, I'm not interested in this sort of model we're tinkering with here, to assess my own results. When I note hands for later analysis, I DO consider a wider range of factors - my table image, how I believe other players perceive me, how I perceive other players, how other players may believe what I'm thinking about them etc... These factors in addition to all the relevant aspects of the game, and the cards, in precise detail. I also have no doubt that over the long haul, the 'luck' factor will even out - so its of no interest to me to assess whether or not I am 'unlucky'.
If someone says they seem to lose showdowns more than the odds seem to indicate, the questions the player should ask himself is under what conditions is he entering showdowns and were those good choices. We have yet to touch on pot odds, which can make playing a likely-to-lose hand profitable in the long run despite having more lost hands than won.
Yes - but Beth's hypothesis doesn't pretend to examine her husband's skill at poker, and indeed she expressed specifically this isn't up for discussion. I've made a few comments throughout the thread which may serve to prod him a bit, but we have absolutely no information at hand to even begin to look at pot-odds situations, and a stated zero desire to increase the level of record keeping so we could analyze same.
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