Playing Loose - My risks, my rewards, my playstyle

Weregoat

Weregoat

Visionary
Silver Level
Joined
Nov 18, 2009
Total posts
665
Chips
0
I really don't remember how it was that I came accross Cardschat.com, but I'm pretty sure it involved me doing a web search for poker forums on the third shift one night in December from the hospital near Al Kut, Iraq. I sought to discuss poker with like-minded individuals and see different points of view for different hands. What ended up happening was I stumbled upon a very wide range of players, mostly online players, some below my skill level, and some far beyond (FP immediately comes to mind.)

I have seen a lot of great hand histories, but one thing that strikes me is that the average CC player is incredibly tight. And I don't blame them. I love the action of loose play, but I have yet to turn a profit online. "Bah, the game's unbeatable for me online." Which I'm sure is untrue, however my playstyle can't make money unless I put money in without an edge. My live game, however, varies very differently.

I've been playing live poker since I turned 21, almost five years ago. I went to Vegas for my birthday, and my poker experience was nothing more than watching the wsop main event on ESPN. Over the years I've played tens of thousands of live game hands, going through paycheck after paycheck just looking for a hand where I'd have an edge and get my money in with a drawinig hand and hit to recoup my losses. Over the years, I've evolved considerably.

Now, I'm what some people would call a LAG, or even a loose-passive, ranging to a maniac, who sometimes plays TAG. Gasp!

If there's one thing I've learned to do, it's adjust my playstyle on the fly to maximise my profits, confuse my opponents, and garner an edge wherever possible for me to do so. I've also become very good at reading my opponents in live games, which contributes greatly to an edge, and me having so many playstyles I can switch through quickly certainly doesn't hurt.

Towards the beginning of the deployment I was talking poker a lot with a bona fide maniac. This guy was off his rocker with way he'd play his hands, and he's a career in the red player, and it's because he's bad, but he showed me a playstyle that involved 3-betting 62o and barreling to showdown unimproved. And in the short term he made some money, and I was able to take away from his playstyle, and adapt. 62o is terrible. I'm guessing it's in the 'auto-fold' range for just about everybody who's going to happen upon this thread, and I believe it should be. However there are situations I'd take it to a flop. E.G.: We've been sitting at a live cash game table at a casino, and Curtis is at the table. He's a known prop player for the house, and is incredibly tight, and very aggressive. He's been reading his paper, folding hands for the past 7 orbits. Our stacks are 300 BBs each, we're on the button, and he raises. Well, now I'm going to consider calling. We're 300 BBs deep against an opponent with a very narrow range. Yes, we're certainly behind, but at worse we can put Curtis on a big A, most likely he's rocking a pocket pair. We are looking for a flopped draw we can come along cheaply, trips, or two pair. Granted, I've never mixed it up with Curtis at 300 BBs deep, but if I had, I'd want a hand with more value than 62o. The strength of my hand is concealed, and I can get out cheaply when I miss, which is most of the time.

"But Weregoat, how do you get 200+ BBs deep when you're so terrible?"
Simple - I play tight when I buy in for 100 BBs, and once I've won a few pots and come close to doubling my pot, I loosen up my range when playing for deeper effective stacks. I don't bluff, as a matter of fact the most I'll get in with an unimproved AK is a raise and a C-Bet. After that, I'm still unimproved and at the turn, so it's time to slow down...

Now, a basic hand history from me to show you some examples of how I play.

BB w/ 24o, 100 BBs deep (I know, I know, I'm a liar, I was maybe tilting from the previous hand where I lost my buy-in to whatever, it doesn't matter.) Folded to CO, who raises to 5 BBs, SB calls, I call. Flop is Q72 rainbow. SB donk-bets 10 BBs, I call, CO calls. Turn is a 4, SB Bets 33 BBs, I jam, CO folds, SB calls, shows AQ. CO also has AQ. I do a little better than doubling up.

Basically I am not afraid to get a small amount of money into the pot behind, if I can get a large amount of it in ahead.

CO with 86o. Villain is in UTG+1 and is tight, aggressive, and a somewhat successful reg, effective stacks around 200 BBs. Villain raises to 5 BBs, one call before me, I call, folded around. Flop is Qs8s8d. Villain fires a C-bet of around 10 BBs, I raise to 35 BBs, he calls, he checks, I jam, he calls. Exposes AA unimproved.

Those are a couple situations where I call hoping to improve, improve, and lose my whole stack in the process, which is the true risk of my playstyle.

I have 35o in the CO. Villain is the BTN. I raise to build the pot, BTN raises me, effective stacks around 150 BBs, so I call. Flop is A34. I check, he bets, I call. Turn is a 3, I check, he bets, I raise, he re-raises, I re-raise, he jams, I call. He has AA for a turned boat. The river is the 2 I really wanted on the turn, but since my only out was the remaining 3...

I call myself a 'deep stack hunter', let's face it, most deep stacks get deep because they're either a) running good, or b) playing well. When they are playing well, the become more predictable, I can narrow down their ranges, and make decisions with more expected value. While every hand chart imaginable will tell you that open raising from the CO with 35o is -EV, let alone calling a 3-bet from the BTN, it's a risk I take to play for stacks with hands that are concealed and similarly strong.

Unfortunately for me, and the sake of this thread, I have less than 2k hands spread out at the limits I like to play, against the villains I like to play against, (the 2/3 NL at the bike), due to this deployment. But in the 15 days I was home on leave, I spend at least half of them on the felt, and a majority of those on that table. And my biggest money makers were 86o, 57o, 46o, 35o, and 24o. And of course KK for a flopped set over a set. I'd cashed out several times with almost 700 BBs, while only putting 100 on the table in a night sometimes, but at my limits, people can't fold an overpair, let alone price me out of a pot when I consider effective stack sizes, and that is why I play loose.

I don't think that loose passive or loose aggressive or maniac is an effective playstyle. But if you mix them all together, and throw in some TAG when appropriate, not only do you confuse all the first and second level thinkers at the table, but you also always have a concealed hand.

And the more times you show up with the unexpected cards to make a monster, the more people learn to lay down their TpTk to you, which generates a lot of bluff equity.

If there is one thing I want to be able to improve about my game, it's acting on my reads. At the 300NL, my villains show a lot unintentionally. When something unwanted happens, they show it on their face and with their actions. Which of course, increases my profitability. With the reputation of somebody who calls small bets against deepstacks with obscure draws and slim outs, I get a lot of people folding to bluffs, which certainly helps me pick up quite a few pots.

I'm certainly not saying this playstyle is profitable online. I've got a gigantic deposit history to prove it, it certainly is profitable live, and playing live, nobody can pay X dollars to download my hand history and figure me out.

Unfortunately I've been stuck in Iraq (one month left) for the majority of the year, but I expect my playstyle will lead to a very successful 2011 for me. At the homegame out here, I'd be averaging $6000 a month were I to be able to play every night, which sadly I'm not, and eventually that's going to dry up. And I look forward to taking this playstyle to the tables for the long haul, and adjusting it further.

It is certainly a very risky playstyle, but with the risk, the reward, and the confidence in my live reads, I'm certain I can turn it into a very profitable 2011.

I'll be subjecting myself to variance, and clever plays will certainly be profitable against me, but against the field I'll be playing against, I'm not too worried about the clever plays. And the risk is certainly managable - If you don't have the nuts you can't extract as much value. Sure, you hit your open-ended straight on the river, you bet for value, but when you get raised you could be up against a flush on the river, and you can't raise here as often as you'd like.

There we go. So that's my playstyle. My confession. My heart and soul. Good luck, and see you on the felt.
 
Poker Orifice

Poker Orifice

Fully Tilted
Platinum Level
Joined
Jan 19, 2008
Total posts
25,602
Awards
6
CA
Chips
968
I don't typically post the hands where I'm raising/3-betting with 64s... or 83o. If you'd like I could post a bunch of screenshots of myself 3-betting or open-raising with junk.... ie. 83o 2.5x utg mid levels of a tourney or something.... but why?.. kinda boring.

Whatever works for ya.
 
thepokerkid123

thepokerkid123

Visionary
Silver Level
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Total posts
917
Chips
0
I respect loose play, even if it's fairly passive, however I think you'd benefit from tightening up a bit.

A few things I disagree with:
The belief that stack size has something to do with skill, it doesn't. The variance in one session is a much, much greater factor than skill.

Calling bets and 3bets with pure junk pre-flop because you're only investing a little to win big. Because 1) If your range for playing against them is so wide that you can include 62o, it's not concealled, your range is 100% and even fish will expect you to call with anything. 2) You don't have implied odds. You are not going to make your hand often enough unless you're insanely deep and you've also got to factor in that you're going to be on the wrong end of monster vs monster hands abnormally often. The only real justification behind calling is if you think they'll give up too often post-flop, but in that case you also have to reduce your anticipated implied odds because they're not stacking very often when you do make your hand. If you somehow could justify it, you would still have to consider the rake which especially live, is enormous.
Similarly, calling a 3bet OOP with 35o is never correct.

You also seem to put too much emphasis on small samples. "But in the 15 days" ( <2k hands) and then comment on how specific hands hold up, your sample size for each hand is miniscule and any conclusions you draw from it are going to mislead you. The same applies to: "At the homegame out here, I'd be averaging $6000 a month were I to be able to play every night" it would be doing yourself a big favour to not project future results, especially if you don't have an enormous sample to work with. Do you really believe your estimations are objective? (rhetorical question)


If you're winning then you're doing a lot of things right, and a lot of crazy things work live but sitting in a casino doesn't remove the game from laws of mathematics. I'm not some nit trying to justify my nitty ways, I play extremely aggressively (although relative to you, perhaps I am fairly tight), I just think that if you're winning then that's great but fixing a lot of problem areas I've mentioned could result in you winning in a bigger game.
 
Weregoat

Weregoat

Visionary
Silver Level
Joined
Nov 18, 2009
Total posts
665
Chips
0
Of course all these plays are effective stack and villain dependant. I'm perfectly comfortable playing ABC poker at lower effective stacks against more difficult villains, but at these stakes there is are very seldom tricky plays or several villains with less than 100 BBs.
 
thepokerkid123

thepokerkid123

Visionary
Silver Level
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Total posts
917
Chips
0
The importance of the effective stacks on the range you can play is the resulting SPR when you see a flop.
3bets will lower the SPR.
 
Weregoat

Weregoat

Visionary
Silver Level
Joined
Nov 18, 2009
Total posts
665
Chips
0
Calling bets and 3bets with pure junk pre-flop because you're only investing a little to win big. Because 1) If your range for playing against them is so wide that you can include 62o, it's not concealled, your range is 100% and even fish will expect you to call with anything.

True. I concede that 62o is terrible and I don't play it. Best possible flops short of a boat or quads is a non-nut straight, best possible draws short of two pair (non-nut) is a non-nut gutshot straight. That was merely an example on how I started shifting towards looser play.

2) You don't have implied odds. You are not going to make your hand often enough unless you're insanely deep and you've also got to factor in that you're going to be on the wrong end of monster vs monster hands abnormally often.

Correct, which was the example of the 35o hand. I made trips against a boat. When he stacked off I pretty much had him figured for AA, perhaps a leak of mine was calling him, but he has a 'bluff with air' mentality and I wouldn't have called him if I was certain I was beat. He would have played JQ the same way, or AK, or AA, which makes him a difficult opponent at times.

The only real justification behind calling is if you think they'll give up too often post-flop, but in that case you also have to reduce your anticipated implied odds because they're not stacking very often when you do make your hand. If you somehow could justify it, you would still have to consider the rake which especially live, is enormous.

True, the rake is a monster, which I think is why preflop raises in live cash games tend to be larger than online games. When the house takes all but a BB in my standard game to feed the house and jackpot, raises actually end up starting around 5 BBs, perhaps the player's own subconscious way to cope with the insanely high rake.

Similarly, calling a 3bet OOP with 35o is never correct.

I agree this was foldable, and would have saved me a stack.

You also seem to put too much emphasis on small samples. "But in the 15 days" ( <2k hands) and then comment on how specific hands hold up, your sample size for each hand is miniscule and any conclusions you draw from it are going to mislead you. The same applies to: "At the homegame out here, I'd be averaging $6000 a month were I to be able to play every night" it would be doing yourself a big favour to not project future results, especially if you don't have an enormous sample to work with. Do you really believe your estimations are objective? (rhetorical question)

I have only the desire to try playing live poker as a source of income. I have no expectations. I'm familiar with variance, especially against players who don't know what they're doing. And know that nobody is exempt from it, myself included, and that this playstyle will suffer more from it because it looks for monster over monster hands, but sometimes ends up with the smaller monster. (Rhetorical answer)

If you're winning then you're doing a lot of things right, and a lot of crazy things work live but sitting in a casino doesn't remove the game from laws of mathematics. I'm not some nit trying to justify my nitty ways, I play extremely aggressively (although relative to you, perhaps I am fairly tight), I just think that if you're winning then that's great but fixing a lot of problem areas I've mentioned could result in you winning in a bigger game.

You do make excellent point throughout, aside from my comments in bold, I agree with you for the most part, especially about 26o. :)

And I don't pretend to hold the notion that just because I performed well with bad hands over a small sample it will always be that way. I guess I neglected to make the point of the post in that I simply look for potential in my hands, and not brute strength. I still play my premiums hard, but with board texture and reads factored in, I can play my weak starting hands cheaply sometimes to make what would be a standard preflop fold into a big hand.

For instance in the 24o hand against AQ, I could have very easily been drawing dead to the CO holding 77 or QQ and playing it slowly against a dry board, with the out of position players padding the pot.

Every playstyle has it's weaknesses. You can get your money in a favorite every hand you play in a session and lose five buy-ins. And you can also play like an idiot and win five buy-ins.

The one thing I wish I had was more hands. That home game has always been profitable out here, I just recently started tracking my progress, and over 15 sessions at a few hours each I've totalled just over $3,000 up, however that is a very easy to beat game, with only one person who would qualify as even a 'reg', and the rest just playing for the thrill.

The intention of the post was to hopefully spur a discussion, and I thank you for your contribution. :)
 
Weregoat

Weregoat

Visionary
Silver Level
Joined
Nov 18, 2009
Total posts
665
Chips
0
The importance of the effective stacks on the range you can play is the resulting SPR when you see a flop.
3bets will lower the SPR.

Agreed. Against a villain who isn't familiar with Pot:Bet ratio, all you do is pick up pot odds. However these players are far and few between.

More often than not I raise to build the pot, because it doesn't make sense to play 3 handed for just over a big blind. Sadly most of my raising hands fall into my calling a 3-bet range against deeper stacks. Whole the SPR does go down, that just means I have to hit the flop a little bigger.

Perhaps this is a leak of mine.

If I'm not mistaken you are referring to the 35o hand vs the AA.

I'm not entirely sure, but I'm pretty sure I made it something like 5-6 BBs, and he min-raised, and there were several callers (calling stations preflop = pot odds) and I called to close the action, hit my pair with gutshot, and shortly after lost my stack.

Of course a simple solution to this would be not raise with 35o, and since that particular hand was at a home game, without having to worry about rake and what not, I could have easily folded, and believe under standard definition and EV charts I would be quite correct to do so. However it may be the little bit of the gambler in me that still lurks... Or all those juicy pot odds. :)
 
Weregoat

Weregoat

Visionary
Silver Level
Joined
Nov 18, 2009
Total posts
665
Chips
0
I don't typically post the hands where I'm raising/3-betting with 64s... or 83o. If you'd like I could post a bunch of screenshots of myself 3-betting or open-raising with junk.... ie. 83o 2.5x utg mid levels of a tourney or something.... but why?.. kinda boring.

Whatever works for ya.

Screenshot or it didn't happen!

I believe you, there are reasons to do so, especially based on table image. I played in a tournament and played moderately tight, and a raise and two calls would all fold to my 3-bet when I had AK. I could have had J2 for all they knew. Stakes and table image make a huge difference, and against some villains you can steal and resteal and it's correct, especially if you've got the stack for it and they've let on that they're going to let you do it.

I don't knock aggressive play with bad starting cards, especially in tournaments where chip accumulation is so important, and people tend to be playing cautiously.

In tournaments I tend to be more careful, with the exception of some steal attempts and pot builders flopping nut hands (lucky me, right?) I play quite TAG in tournaments. But like I said, steals and resteals are great ways to pad your stack.

While the play may not be mathematically correct (unless your HUD can read minds and tell you fold equity, which would be awesome... a mind reading HUD), it is a means to an end, and worth the effort put into it if it works a certain % of the time.
 
Top