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#1
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What I meant was more of a cheat sheet that tells you the weight of the hands. I hope that makes more sense
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#2
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You can check out
David Sklansky is generally considered the authortity on this kind of number crunching (Google for lots on him), though lately people have been saying his advice is too tight to take advantage of the post poker-boom craziness out there. |
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#3
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I recognize that chart. It's an EV (Expected Value) chart based on actual results from a smaple size of a couple million (if I am remembering correctly) hands played at .
They have a nifty little tool where you can sort the EVs any way you want, based on the number of opponents, position, etc. I gave them a pretty solid look about a year ago... pretty interesting stuff. Worth checking out. |
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#4
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thanks for the link, I'm trying to make heads or tails of it as we speak. thanks again
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#5
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i'm always sceptical about lists and probabilities..but maybe i shouldnt be
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#6
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good idea, email the admin about it
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#7
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The thing about statistics is some people will get in the habit of becoming complete rocks, I agree the stats are very important to know especially knowing how many OUTS you have in any particular hand. But knowing what kind of players you're playing with is better then any statistic out there.
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