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Running Bad Part II - It’s Bad to Always Get Your Money in Good
Chris Ferguson
February 29th, 2008
In my last tip I wrote about running bad and the effect it can have on your mental state. Now I’m living it. If you’ve been following my $0 to $10K Challenge, you know it took me about nine months to turn $0 into $100 and another nine months to turn that $100 into $10,000. Even though I hit my goal, I decided to keep playing and rapidly built up to $28,000. Three months later I was down to $9K.
Obviously, I was on a very bad losing streak, but it wasn’t due to bad beats. I just kept getting my money in bad; every time I had Queens, my opponent would have Aces - every time I had AQ, they would have AK. That’s just how it goes sometimes, but getting your money in badly doesn’t always mean that you’ve done something wrong.
For example, if my opponent gets all his money in pre-flop when he’s got Kings and I’ve got Aces, does that mean he’s a bad player because he got his money in poorly? Or that I’m a great poker player because I got my money in well? Obviously the answer is no – if our roles were reversed I’d be the one going broke. We both played the hand correctly; the fact that he was behind doesn’t mean that he played it wrong. He was simply unlucky to get dealt Kings when I was dealt Aces.
10 comments
Thanks for sharing bro!
Amen Jesus
i do my best but still feel like a donk at times
when i look back on betting patterns i usually find where i went wrong
This blog made me feel better,.. I have been going backwards for about 2 months now,.. some was bad play, but mostly getting the money in with the best and being sucked out on or as he says, AQ against an AK etc,..
I tried changing strategies, and that was worse, getting bad beats is worse when you don't play the cards right,.. sheesh,.. ah well, this too shall pass,.. gl on and off the felts y'all,..
