even over 500000 hands, there is prolly still more than 1% luck
What percentage of poker is luck?
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hoopster42Restricted User
- 02-12-08
- 6099
#36Comment -
Dark HorseSBR Posting Legend
- 12-14-05
- 13764
#37To reach the final table in the WSOP you need to beat a few thousand other players first. Of course you need luck for that.
But in a regular game the pros will clean you out. Any beginner can win a few hands, just as a beginning sports bettor can beat a pro on a game by game basis. But if that beginner could see the background and depth of knowledge of the pro he would probably just get up and run.
In the short run it could be 90% luck. In the long run, no luck at all.Comment -
Dark HorseSBR Posting Legend
- 12-14-05
- 13764
#39Luck and skill are not opposites.
Luck is a short term fluctuation that produces results beyond the skill level.
It is inevitably balanced out by bad luck, the short term fluctuation that produces results below the skill level.
In the end the only thing that matters is skill. The danger of luck is that it may make us think that we have more skill than we do. The positive side of bad luck is that it forces us to improve our skill.Comment -
WVUSBR Sharp
- 02-01-08
- 417
#4090% of the players who play have 90% of the skill that the pros have. It is not like the pros have the hidden secrets. To say poker is 90% skill is crazy if you illiminate common poker skills.
My answer 10% "True" skill and 90% luckComment -
Dark HorseSBR Posting Legend
- 12-14-05
- 13764
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hoopster42Restricted User
- 02-12-08
- 6099
#42the long-time pros only have one thing working for them over the start ups, and that is experience. the youngsters and other new guys have the math and theory down. of course experience is a huge thing, as it helps in reading players because you've seen it all on the feltComment -
RobynSBR Hall of Famer
- 02-05-08
- 9681
#43I just learned how to play poker about 7 months ago and I have already won 2 tournaments and placed second in another.
Beginners luck? Not sure.
I also spit a beer on a dealer this past Christmas Eve during a tournament at the Hard Rock casino because someone made me laugh.Comment -
hoopster42Restricted User
- 02-12-08
- 6099
#44if you arent rich but try to get rich too quick in poker, you will prolly go broke, but if you go with good skills and a good money management system and dont push all-in all the time, you will prolly be up over the long run of 500000 hands. so basically, if u try and be a pro and you have skills and a good starting broll, you should be okay as long as you dont go crazy all the time just because you think you have the best hand. you wont survive the bad beats i dont thinkComment -
Dark HorseSBR Posting Legend
- 12-14-05
- 13764
#45the long-time pros only have one thing working for them over the start ups, and that is experience. the youngsters and other new guys have the math and theory down. of course experience is a huge thing, as it helps in reading players because you've seen it all on the felt
Experience allows someone to recognize the right course of action quickly. That recognition, in any field of strategy, precedes the use of skill or technique. So you can have all the skill in the world, but if it isn't backed by experience you won't be able to access it effectively and efficiently.Comment -
donjuanSBR MVP
- 08-29-07
- 3993
#47The positive side of bad luck is that it forces us to improve our skill.Comment -
mannyx7SBR Rookie
- 11-19-10
- 1
#48Some of you guys have it right, you can't really say in exact percentages how much of poker is luck and how much is skill, but skill does predominate luck widely. Luck is simply a result of chance, something the player cannot control. Last time I checked poker is still gambling. When we play poker we are betting on three things that we cannot control as players and they are: 1. the cards we are dealt 2. the cards that are to come 3. and most important the course of action our opponents take. However, we can influence our opponents actions and that's where the skill comes in as well as playing the math. Everything in this world is measured in numbers, Poker is no different. If one played an infinite number of hands they would eventually lose with quad kings against quad Aces, everything is possible over the long run. good players get there money in as favorites most of the time with the odds on their side, leaving their opponents lesser chance to beat them. when they are behind in a hand they can outplay their opponents when they sense weakness, or when they sense strength get away from a big hand that might otherwise be the loser. Anyone can have patience and play ABC aggressively, that's half the battle. The depth of one's reading abilities and way they analyze/play a hand is what makes one a better/ worse poker player. On any given night a bad player can outdraw a pro or catch a good run of cards, thats why tournaments consist more of luck but still require skill. In the long run the better poker players will have a profit in their pocket. But these skills come with much experience. Like in any thing we do, right practice leads to improvement leading us closer to perfection but never quite there. Doyle says it best in his book-- " knowing what to do- the science- is about 10% of the game, know how to do it- the art - is the other 90%."..... "Poker takes Five minutes to learn and a LIFETIME to master."Comment -
davidchongSBR MVP
- 02-10-06
- 1806
#49luck.... 80%......Comment -
RudyRuetiggerSBR Aristocracy
- 08-24-10
- 65084
#50To you guys saying it is all luck, do you honestly not believe in mathematics?
Do you believe that if I have AcAs and you have AhKh pre-flop, and we both go all in, I will win 87 times out of 100 and you will win 13 times?
IT ISN'T LUCK when you hit it! It is the natural order of things!
Great poker players can consistently put themselves in situations where they have a better chance of winning the pot then you do heads up.
Great players can also sense weakness in you and get you out of a pot even when their cards are weaker, and they can also sense your strength and get out of a hand when they are beat.
So what if a guy goes on a bad luck run and loses the above hand 3 out of 5 times? He will win it 85 of the next 95!
I've had some absolutely horrible luck but refuse to use it as an excuse because that is what it is; an excuse. There is no such thing as someone who is "lifetime lucky" or "lifetime unlucky" in mathematical situations because MATH WILL ALWAYS PREVAIL.
If you don't believe that, then you aren't in any position to be having this conversation.Comment -
eonizukaSBR High Roller
- 10-22-10
- 152
#51The best players will beat the rest of us over time more often than not. On tv when all ESPN shows are big all ins, it can make it seem like its all luck. Certainly to win any multi table tournament you have to get lucky and avoid a bad beat in a big pot. That is why I like cash games better but that is just me.Comment -
GlitchSBR Posting Legend
- 07-08-09
- 11795
#52one of my favorite quotes is "poker is 100% skill and 100% luck"
cant do anything if u dont catch a little bit of cards....but its the player that really has control of what you do with them. i think only a poker player could even understand this quote. sometimes you get that ace on the river....sometimes you pretend like you got that ace on the river.Comment -
bettilimbroke999SBR Posting Legend
- 02-04-08
- 13254
#53
Now if Tom Dwan came down to the 1/2 NL level at your local casino he would probably kick ass so in that sense poker is 90% skill when you're playing players who dont have a fukin clue and play terrible with respect to the odds, but when you're playing players with a clue its 90% luck.Last edited by bettilimbroke999; 11-20-10, 03:07 PM.Comment -
GABSBR Hustler
- 11-09-10
- 51
#54like40% luck i thinkComment -
k13SBR Posting Legend
- 07-16-10
- 18104
#56
Now if Tom Dwan came down to the 1/2 NL level at your local casino he would probably kick ass so in that sense poker is 90% skill when you're playing players who dont have a fukin clue and play terrible with respect to the odds, but when you're playing players with a clue its 90% luck.
Its a lot tougher to beat a freeroll tourney than a $10 or a $1000.
I agree about the rest, you are not beating roger federer in tennis on luck, ever.
I'll play dwan, ivey, whoever heads up, I'll still have at least 30% chance to win depending on the structure. Their edge is small.Comment -
k13SBR Posting Legend
- 07-16-10
- 18104
#57Speaking of luck and skill and long term play. This is my ITM% on PS, month by month.
21%
36
21
26
21
24
23
23
16
21
24
25
22
22
25
21
21
25
23
28
24
26
22
23
18
19
19
19
22
28
17%
As you can see its very consistent. overall avg. is 23%. I've played over a million hands.Comment -
suicideking08SBR Sharp
- 09-29-09
- 337
#58in the short term there's a lot of luck. In the long term skill takes over.Comment -
bettilimbroke999SBR Posting Legend
- 02-04-08
- 13254
#59guess I shouldnt have called that 30k raise on the river with Ace high, you had just what I was worried about, I mean I saw the kqj92 out there and I said fuk he rivered that duece on me didnt he
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bettilimbroke999SBR Posting Legend
- 02-04-08
- 13254
#601 dollar buy ins or 2?Comment -
lyc16SBR Hustler
- 10-18-10
- 57
#62one hand = 99% luck
one hour = 75% luck
5,000 hands = 45% luck
500,000 hands = 1% luck
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agree~~Comment -
BarkingToadSBR Hall of Famer
- 08-31-08
- 5913
#6310% Skill, 40% Luck, 50% GutsComment -
Patrick McIrishSBR MVP
- 09-15-05
- 2864
#64Over the course of your lifetime there is ZERO luck involved in poker if you play regularly. ZERO! NADA! ZILCH!!! Of course over a short period of time anything can happen and usually does, over the long haul though the math always rings true. Shipwreck 10 guys on a deserted island the best player will die with all the money hidden up top some coconut tree. You can run that same experiment 1 million times and the best player will always get the money. No luck in this game, just a whole lot of excuse making and nonsense spewed by those who don't understand how to play. 'Nuff said.Comment -
k13SBR Posting Legend
- 07-16-10
- 18104
#65Over the course of your lifetime there is ZERO luck involved in poker if you play regularly. ZERO! NADA! ZILCH!!! Of course over a short period of time anything can happen and usually does, over the long haul though the math always rings true. Shipwreck 10 guys on a deserted island the best player will die with all the money hidden up top some coconut tree. You can run that same experiment 1 million times and the best player will always get the money. No luck in this game, just a whole lot of excuse making and nonsense spewed by those who don't understand how to play. 'Nuff said.
Yeah, run it a million times, variance will still be huge.
That's why all these "best" players go broke over and over again, need people staking them all the time.Comment -
legendmatt34SBR Wise Guy
- 03-15-09
- 737
#66the bad players get rewarded online..Comment -
stefan084SBR MVP
- 07-21-09
- 1490
#67most people who have played a decent amount of poker know their hands odds vs pot odds their getting etc., most people know how you play certain "tricky" hands also. but most can't afford $10,000 buy in year after year. i love these poker commercials that make the pros seem like gods who can read your hand just by looking at you-then they're out on the first dayComment -
Patrick McIrishSBR MVP
- 09-15-05
- 2864
#68
There is always a "best player", the line between the have and the have nots is very clear for anyone wanting to listen, the fact you aren't part of the winning subset has led you to be blind to the fact. As for why good players need to get staked - it's rarely due to poker. In a few cases it might be as someone is playing over their head and so on but usually it's other bad habits that lead to solid poker players needing a stake. TJ Cloutier and his crap habit for example. Great poker players often have an expensive habit it seems, they just can't seem to stick to what they win at. Good poker players rarely (if ever) have a bad year, it just doesn't happen. Not because they are "lucky" sir, it's because they are better than their competition. Losers cry about being "unlucky", winners keep taking the cheese. Been that way forever, will be that way forever going forward. Carry on.Last edited by Patrick McIrish; 11-23-10, 08:45 AM.Comment -
HustleGetPaidSBR MVP
- 10-28-09
- 1199
#6950% skill & 50% luck...Comment -
dimonSBR MVP
- 08-14-09
- 1159
#70
There is always a "best player", the line between the have and the have nots is very clear for anyone wanting to listen, the fact you aren't part of the winning subset has led you to be blind to the fact. As for why good players need to get staked - it's rarely due to poker. In a few cases it might be as someone is playing over their head and so on but usually it's other bad habits that lead to solid poker players needing a stake. TJ Cloutier and his crap habit for example. Great poker players often have an expensive habit it seems, they just can't seem to stick to what they win at. Good poker players rarely (if ever) have a bad year, it just doesn't happen. Not because they are "lucky" sir, it's because they are better than their competition. Losers cry about being "unlucky", winners keep taking the cheese. Been that way forever, will be that way forever going forward. Carry on.Comment
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