I've mentioned shark fins before in this blog. That's when the bar chart of your stack size over the course of a session has sharp jumps upward, following by groups of small losses. If you look at them the right way, these groupings resemble shark fins :-) Ideally, you want the start of the next jump to be higher than the start of the current jump, so that the shark finds trend upward. Last night, that didn't happen. Also, instead of many fins, I really only had one complete fin, which comprised more than half of the hands. I'm calling that a megafin. Luckily for me, I started a new megafin at the end of the session, but didn't stick around for the group of small losses that would have completed it. This enabled me to wind up with a small profit.
During current Hold'em session you were dealt 58 hands and saw flop:
- 7 out of 7 times while in big blind (100%)
- 6 out of 9 times while in small blind (66%)
- 17 out of 42 times in other positions (40%)
- a total of 30 out of 58 (51%)
Pots won at showdown - 4 of 5 (80%)
Pots won without showdown - 0
delta: $6,900
cash game no limit hold'em balance: $4,923,131
balance: $7,280,084
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