I usually play lower stakes tourneys where the winner usually gets £200-300 (more if it's a big field) and can bust out late and not be bothered, but recently I've been experimenting with some main events where the winner can get £2000. Tonight I went deep and lost a few big hands as favorite (both standard spots) and was dumped out late and it left me feeling really gutted. I guess the questions i want to ask are as follows.
Should I stick to stakes at which I'm not emotionally affected by the outcome and avoid the bigger events? (even if I think I can be profitable playing them)
How do you deal with bad beats or busting out of a tourney late?
I'm not looking for a 'sky poker is rigged' type of response so please don't post them
Comments
Play tournaments within your means, and the loss doesnt hurt.
The £2.20 @2.20 deepstack is an ideal tournament.
All the best.
Rainman397
I'm not sure there is a foolproof way of overcoming it, other than getting back on the saddle and doing it all again. I think a certain mental toughness is required, and also just accepting what happened, happened (esp if its a standard spot and unavoidable), this can be easier said than done though.
FWIW, the one spot that still brings memories back for me is in the last 12 of the Bigger $22 on Stars, after playing for 12 hours and getting down to the final dozen, to then be eliminated in 12th with 88 on an 8 J Q board vs KK when he spiked runner runner flush was a hard one to take. The $750 prize money felt like no consolation when there was close to $20k up top for just 11 more places. Still weighs on my mind now as you can see! I think bouncebackability is an underestimated skill, and I tip my hat to the people who grind MTTs every week.
But as this will prob happen a lot its something we have to learn to take in our stride, just keep plugging away, luck does run both ways and if you put in the volume im sure you will get there.
Obv we need to play within our means, but sounds like you are often cashing and its just the mental aspect which is troubling you.
Wp in main tonight, funny you had a deep run after our convo earlier ; )
Glg,l tomorrow is another day
Hi Groggy,
It's poker, & it will always happen, just when we think we've cracked it, a run of beats hits us.
It's just something that you are going to have to come to terms with, get used to, because it is always going to happen.
If the stakes or amount of money are part of the problem, I'd suggest play smaller stakes. I've moved down to smaller stakes the last few years, & I can honestly say, I've never enjoyed poker more. I get all the fun without any pain. Can't beat that.
You can also try reading The Mental Game of Poker, by Barry Carter & Jared Tendler.
There are two Blogs on Sky Poker by Barry Carter, based upon The Mental Game of Poker.
The first is HERE
And the second is HERE
Couple more tips.
We take a beat, there is nothing to be gained by looking back & thinking what might have been. Nothing. It's a "leak".
Think of it like the weather. It rained yesterday, & ruined our planned day out, or barbecue. Is there any point in getting upset about it? NO. Because nothing can change it. It's just a negative thought which can never achieve anything. Ever. It's better to look forward, than back.
...and one or two more.
When playing Online, I play as many tables as I can manage. This gives me more action, less variance, & no time to dwell on what might have been.
If I am 1 tabling, I have time to think about a beat. Once I get 3 or more tables on the go, I am too busy playing to entertain negative thoughts.
The outcome of a single hand is NOT going to have any bearing on my ability, or long term profitably. We have to play tens of thousands of hands to get the true outcome. After say, 10,000 hands, the outcome of a single beat will make no difference. Don't forget we inflict beats on others, too - they all balance out in the long run.
When I'm playing a session, I'm only really interested in where I stand after the session ends. That's all that matters. At the month end, as long as I've had more winning sessions than losing sessions, I'm OK.
Beats DO hurt, if you let them, yes. They are supposed to. Just move on, that was the last hand, now deal me the next hand.
Hope one or two of those tips help.
I've been recommended to read this before and forgot to, but I'll definitely give it a read for sure. I'll give the articles a read too.
It was super disappointing for me cos I rarely play on Stars, so the chance of another deep run in a 4,500 runner field just isn't likely, whereas the people who grind on there at least will have more opportunities due to their volume/skill.
It's amazing what a sleep can do for your mindset, you go to bed p1ssed off but wake in a more reflective mood, with the emotional sting taken away somewhat.
I'll level with you Groggy, I don't remember posting last night
I would stick 2 the stakes ur comfy with n when uve cashed a few of them-have a crack at a bigger one.Dont let it get 2 u as u will suck out other players n vice-versa 4 all the time u play.Just shake it off n don't think about it anymore.Live 4 ur next tourney.
Gl buddy
Jim
I've just gone out of a MTT with pocket aces losing to J9 when the board came 2-8-7-5-6. I got my chips in good and that's all I can do. Next time I am such a big favourite I'll probably win, but there's the chance I will lose again. That's the game.
You will always run into these but sometimes you ll be the benefitiary and vice-versa
That's why we love this game eh?
Be assured u will be on the better end a lot and you ll have to take the odd puker.
Put it in the file marked Bin and don't dwell on it m8.
Run better my friend,
Jim
For what its worth I've improved at being able to handle busting out late but still need to work on my mental game. I know that downswings are inevitable but I still get upset when they happen even though I expect them to happen, maybe I'm just crazy lol