Chris_TC
Cardschat Elite
Silver Level
Over the past months, I have sporadically checked how my AK fares in terms of preflop all-ins, and its atrocious performance has lead me to doubt the concept of stacking off with it.
Check out these graphs, they are filtered for NL100+, between 3 and 6 players at the table and preflop all-ins. Note that all-ins that are not called are part of this graph. So everytime I shove and produce a fold, this graph improves.
AKo/AKs (all-in, 6max) = -21.7 stacks / -15 Big Blinds per Shove
QQ (all-in, 6max) = +0.8 stacks / +1.4 Big Blinds per Shove
JJ (all-in, 6max) = -2.9 stacks / -6 Big Blinds per Shove
These all-ins were played over a total sample size of 194,000 hands. The AK graph has such a pronouncedly downward pointing trend that I find it hard to believe it's just a swing.
Can one of you math wizzes elaborate or point me towards a discussion concerning stacking off with AK?
Check out these graphs, they are filtered for NL100+, between 3 and 6 players at the table and preflop all-ins. Note that all-ins that are not called are part of this graph. So everytime I shove and produce a fold, this graph improves.
AKo/AKs (all-in, 6max) = -21.7 stacks / -15 Big Blinds per Shove
QQ (all-in, 6max) = +0.8 stacks / +1.4 Big Blinds per Shove
JJ (all-in, 6max) = -2.9 stacks / -6 Big Blinds per Shove
These all-ins were played over a total sample size of 194,000 hands. The AK graph has such a pronouncedly downward pointing trend that I find it hard to believe it's just a swing.
Can one of you math wizzes elaborate or point me towards a discussion concerning stacking off with AK?