By
jurollo |
Published
Jul 19 2006, 01:26 AM
What exactly is variance? By definition variance is, "A difference between what is expected and what actually occurs."
Ok
so what does it mean to poker? You obviously aren't going to win
everytime you are a favorite, very rarely in poker are you 100% to win
a hand before the river, and if cards can come to beat you, eventually
they will. In cash games donkeys can stack you, but with a quick
reload, you are right back in action with a chance to win it
back. However, in tournament poker, that donkey is "hee-hawing"
with your chips while you are walking to the rail possibly wasting
about 6 hours of your time in the process.
Different kinds of variance?
I
consider there to be two kinds of variance. Some people will argue this
as it is essentially the same thing, but they have two distinctly
different mental effects.
a) Early and mid game variance-
I consider this to be the variance that people can handle. Players
understand they can't win every hand and when they lose early they
generally take it in stride. "It's part of the game" or "That's poker."
b) End game variance-
This is the kind of variance that kills some players mentally and is
the kind of variance that makes type A exponentially worse as well. A
good example is battling for 6 hours, making the final table and losing
to an 80/20. It is this variance that can create or extend a down swing.
How can MTT'ers Tame Variance?
There
are many ways to tame variance as a tournament player. The first is
obvious. Don't play strictly MTT's, mixing in SNGs is a great way to
practice push botting and bubble play and is a good low variance form
of tournament poker to play as a side game, however, some people,
including myself love MTTs more than anything so they want to play only
MTTs and lower variance, here are some tips.
a) Diversify your Structures-
Different sites offer different structures. I dont just mean blind
structures either. Payout structures differ too which can be
helpful. 20% payouts are not long term +EV for good players,
however, while you lose some +EV long term you gain some short term,
mixing in some 20% payouts along side of normal 10% payouts can help
you sustain buyins as you continue to play. Remember the biggest jump
in ROI is from $0-ITM. Also blind structure differences force you
to think. If you arec onstantly playing on one site and in a rut you
become robotic, changing scenery and structure can not only make
you think more about your plays and the blinds effects on your stack,
but it can have a soothing effect mentally as you get away from the one
site that has been slapping you over the head with variance. There are
many reasons to diversify between sites, this is just one of them.
b) Smaller fields are your friend-
Some people don't like small fields because generally the pot at the
end of the rainbow is small as well. But you have to win a lot of
little pots to have money to win the big pot. If players only played
the Sunday Million they could go years without making substantial
money. The smaller the field, the less land mines you have to dodge to
get to the promised land. The mental effect that winning a 100-200 man
tournament can carry over to big events too, it cannot be argued that
winning be gets winning.
c) Play below your roll too!-
Yuck! Why should I play lower than my roll? I can’t win big! This is
true, hubris is one of the biggest enemies to a poker player, yes you
can’t win huge but you can win enough to cover some buyins to your true
level. Anytime you get a chance to cover buyins is a good thing. If
one-tabling was the paradigm in online poker, this bullet point would
not exist, however, opening up a tournament 1 level below your normal
level is a-ok and in the end could end up netting you some free money
for bigger tournaments. Also refer back to the last point, "winning
begets winnings."
d) Play where you are most +EV-
This is another obvious point and there isn’t much to explain. If you
are good deep stacked play rebuys and deep stacks the most, if you are
good push botting play shallow stacks. If you are good at PLO play
PLO. People play in a lot of tournaments where they are -EV to
take a shot which is ok, but making a habit of playing in tournaments
where you are -EV or not as +EV as you are elsewhere is a death wish,
which leaves you with 2 options: Get better or start playing where you
are most +EV more often.
e) Remember you can't control the cards!-
Obvious, but find solace in the fact that by playing optimally you WILL
win long term, however, but you have picked one of the highest variance
forms of poker, MTTs. You can go months on a down swing. Just think,
you are only 41% to win 4 80/20'sin a row! That’s right an underdog!
f) Embrace short-handed play–
Short-handed play is where you will make a lot of your big money.
People don’t realize the absolute necessity of being proficient
short-handed going into a 1200 or 2000 man tournament but to really
make some noise you need to know when to turn it on and when to sit
back. A lot of the players you will run into late intournaments
will not know how to play short-handed which means it is a golden
chance for free chips for you. What does all this noise have to
do with variance though? Well, free chips mean you can see more
flops, take a beat here and there and still be live and kicking when
the real money gets carted out and dumped on the center of the felt!
g) Embrace satellites!–
Satellites are great, bottom line. While poker is very much about
making the most possible money per hour it is also about doing so in a
safe way. What better way to cut variance then to play
atournament you would be playing anyway for 1/10 the buyin? The
answer is that there isn’t! Players shy away from satellites to
tournaments that they will play anyway because they would rather do
something else, however, in online poker you are only restricted by
screen space so if that space isn’t going to be used anyway fire up a
satellite to that tournament you are going to play in 2 hours, you just
might be able to play on a healthy discount!