Showing posts with label Benjamin Franklin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Benjamin Franklin. Show all posts

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Epic tilt

Last night's session was the worst of my poker career. After hitting the felt at the first table I joined, I completely lost perspective and made some incredibly stupid decisions. It took me more than an hour to hit the felt at the first table. It only took a single hand at the second table! And at the third table, it only took about three hands. Technically, I didn't actually hit the felt at the third table; however, my crazed betting of the final hand left me so severely crippled that I just called it a night (approximately 5 hands too late!).

Thinking back over the debacle, I can sort of understand how things could have gone so horribly wrong. I was "card dead" for most of the night, and therefore I backed the few good hands I finally did get much too strongly. In other words, my patience was completely worn out. I tried to make things up in a hurry, which is a very bad idea. Baseball players strike out much more often when they're trying to hit a home run than they do when they're just trying to get a base hit. Similarly, poker players take the biggest hits to their stacks when they're trying too aggressively to win a huge pot.

In a nutshell, I was classically on tilt. The most basic poker thought processes don't even occur when you're on tilt. The one hand I played at the second table was a perfect example of this. I was dealt ace queen offsuit. The flop came 2 4 3 rainbow, the turn was a 5, and the river was a 3. So I'd made a 5 high straight on the turn, but in my addled, incapacitated state, I couldn't formulate the realization I would have made if I'd had even a single functioning poker brain cell left in my head at the time -- namely, that I had the lowest straight, and anyone continuing to bet almost certainly had a higher one. That was indeed the case. A $40,000 lesson! As Benjamin Franklin said, "Experience keeps a dear school, but fools will learn in no other".

delta: $-117,184
balance: $503,614