I often hear of poker players talking about their edge over
the table, but I believe many people fail to understand what edge means and
more importantly they overvalue their edge, particularly in the latter stages
of MTTs, in this post I am going to briefly go through what I believe edge
means and what it entails, I will give you advance warning that this is quite a
woolly entry and probably won’t help you in any tangible way except help kill 5
minutes of time while you are bored at work J
Most poker enthusiasts will have seen
the movie Rounders, where Mike McDermott proclaims that if you can’t spot the
sucker in the first 20 minutes at the table then you are the sucker, while this
is generally true it doesn’t mean that if you can identify the sucker(s) that
you are not one yourself! Simply identifying weaker players alone is not
enough, you need to be able to identify what it is that makes them a weaker
player and work out the best strategy to take advantage of their weakness. Once
you have successfully identified a strategy that is going to give you a
positive expected value in a certain situation then you have an edge over that
player in that situation, but bear in mind that they may have identified
another situation where they have an edge over you!
OK so let’s start off with a simple example, we are in a
deep stacked MTT versus Steve, and we have seen Steve call down huge bets with
weak hands, basically he is a calling station. We have therefore decided we
will not bluff Steve but will value bet him hard with a range of hands, as such
we have an edge over Steve when we have those value hands, but Bill is a bluff
monkey and will bluff most of the time, therefore Steve has an edge over Bill
as he will be correctly calling most of his bluffs (although this is by
accident it is still an edge if Bill does not adjust!).
Now imagine we are in a different MTT and have Mike at the
table, he is open shoving 200bb every hand, so we decide to wait until we have
a good hand and call his shove, this edge is not as big as people might think,
and this is for 2 main reasons, firstly other competent opponents will also
be trying to do the same thing to Mike
and if we are at a 10 seater table it may be that all of the other 8 opponents
have the same objective which means our edge on Mike is a fraction of what it
would be if the other players are not paying attention. Secondly we may pick up
a hand that we are happy to call with and end up losing anyway, either because
Mike had a better hand or got lucky, or because one of the other players had a
better hand than us in a 3 way pot. This being said, we can definitely claim to
have an edge on Mike, although the size of the edge is unclear.
A few days later we see Mike at our table again and he is
open shoving every hand, the only difference now is that it is in the later
stages of an MTT and we are only 20bb deep with the blinds due to go up soon.
Now we can’t wait as long for a decent hand (neither can the other players) as
each steal from Mike adds a more meaningful amount to his stack while
diminishing ours, while waiting for a premium hand against Mike when 200bb deep
is fine, we cannot afford to wait for such a strong hand when 20bb deep, we are
forced to call lighter so our overall equity will usually be less when we do
call, this means variance will be a lot higher but it also means that the size
of our edge is vastly reduced.
Nigel is a nit, he plays very tight and loves to setmine and
hope to stack people with big hands, as such early on in MTTs it is hard to win
big pots off him so we have little edge, however if he fails to adjust as the
MTT progresses stealing versus him becomes more profitable as he will be
folding a lot of the time so our edge here would increase as the tournament
progresses until he correctly adjusts.
These examples show that edge is not something that is static;
it can change as the dynamics of the table change so you should be constantly
assessing your strategies against your opponents and adjust where necessary.
I will give another couple of quick examples where we might
find an edge against otherwise good players; Charlie is a very good player whom
we respect but we observe that he c-bets almost 100% of the time, therefore we
know we can call wider on the flop and can also utilise the check raise more
often, we can float and see what Charlie does on the turn, particularly if we
know he gives up on the turn a lot of the time then floating every flop could
potentially be profitable against him. Pete is very aggressive opening preflop
but will fold to a lot of 3 bets and he only 4 bets with KK/AA or AK; we can
take advantage of his play by 3 betting a wide range, especially if we have
position. Note that Charlie and Pete may actually be better players than us
overall but if we can find some small chinks in their armour then we can bridge
the gap somewhat.
At this point I want to split edge up into 2 categories,
Showdown Edge (SE) and Non-Showdown Edge (NSE). From the examples above it
should be clear that we have SE v Mike and NSE v Nigel, that is against Mike we
get our edge from showing down better hands than him, whereas versus Nigel we
are trying to win pots without going to showdown (e.g. we expect him to fold
before showdown unless he has a big hand, in which case we would probably recognise
he has a big hand and fold before showdown ourselves).
I think a lot of players over value their Showdown Edge
against opponents when late on in MTTs, since by definition this edge is
obtained from showing down better cards we are relying on luck to have a better
hand then our opponent and that this hand will hold up, it may often be the
case that the good hand doesn’t present itself too soon and we are blinded down
so once we get the chance to put the SE
into use we actually don’t get as much value as we only have a 15bb stack say
instead of 20bb (so doubled to 30bb instead of 40bb, an effective loss of 25%
edge), on top of this we may run into the top of their range or they may suck
out on us.
A common misconception is players believing they can outplay
their opponents postflop and have a big edge as a result of this, well this may
be true when deep stacked, but once effective stacks are 20bb deep there isn’t
much room to outplay opponents, it’s very difficult to double barrel and often
opponents can shove when they hit part of the flop and this is generally more correct
and harder to exploit than when 100bb deep. This demonstrates that there is
less skill difference in latter stages of tournaments than you might realise if
our only edge is showdown edge.
Early on in MTTs having showdown edge is preferable to NSE,
but as the effective stacks dwindle as the blinds increase this shifts to NSE
being more preferable since it relies less on luck, that is we don’t need hands
to use the edge, we just need Nigel to not have much himself and we can continually
steal chips from him, even when stacks are 15-20bb deep we can use this edge by
min raising and picking the right spots to steal.
Sharkscope and other similar websites are often used by
players to see if their opponents are winning or losing overall, this can give
a broad guideline but should be taken with a pinch of salt, a player may be a
massive loose losing fish early on in MTTs, but once they get deep they may
play close to perfect and might actually be the best player at the table for
the current dynamics, or a winning player may be weak playing deep stacked
poker but they are successful overall as they have mastered the art of shoving
and 3 bet shoving when the stacks are 25bb or less but we may be able to stack
them early on if they can’t fold top pair when we hit a bigger hand.
It may be that you think you are outclassed at the table, in which case you want to try and implement the reverse of these thoughts, that is try to think how your opponents will utilise their perceived edge on you and try to minimise those situations, this is usually going to be easier to achieve when the stacks are smaller, so if you are in the later stages of an MTT against stronger opponents often it may be better to play more shove / fold poker which is harder for them to exploit.
It may be that you think you are outclassed at the table, in which case you want to try and implement the reverse of these thoughts, that is try to think how your opponents will utilise their perceived edge on you and try to minimise those situations, this is usually going to be easier to achieve when the stacks are smaller, so if you are in the later stages of an MTT against stronger opponents often it may be better to play more shove / fold poker which is harder for them to exploit.
Well that is a lot of waffle, which is probably of little
practical use to you, but I like to try and discuss topics that aren’t already
hugely documented to help generate fresh ideas and approaches not only to my
own game but also for any interested readers out there and this sometimes means
the blog post doesn’t yield anything concrete, I am sorry if you are left
disappointed by this or any other posts but I generally let my thoughts flow
and capture them as I go without too much editing later on.
To summarise the concept of edge please bear in mind that
someone you identify as a fish at the start of an MTT may play better later
even though their style does not change and similar a solid player may become
more exploitable as the stacks get shallower if they do not adjust their game.
The key is to try and identify what edge you think you have over your opponents
and adopt a strategy against them to maximise this edge, but you should also be
aware that this strategy may need to be changed depending on the current
dynamics you find yourself in.
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