Antiquehunter
Degenerate Gambler
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2005
- Messages
- 5,088
Does your husband only think he's "unlucky" on these particular coin-toss hands?
That is my perception here, yes. Because I have offered many other examples of potential 'unlucky tests' we could do.
- Dealt a pair and flops a set more or less often than predicted mathematically.
- Gets all-in with one other player with other scenarios that are either close to a coin-toss or have an otherwise easily established expected win frequency.
We keep coming back to the all-in with the pair vs two overs. No meaningful data has been provided to show overall results (a few million points in 'free' chips, and an unsubstantiated track record in tournaments & live games).
I personally track EVERY game I play in a spreadsheet, so that I can derive an expected hourly return. I separate this data recording by tournament & cash game data.
It is a dangerous (and losing) attitude to have a feeling of being 'unlucky' even at one isolated type of card playing event. I'm interested in seeing this resolved to improve this guy's game, not to try and prove/disprove any actual sense of someone being 'unlucky'.