By
Fox |
Published
May 09 2005, 10:12 PM
This weekend I met Beanie and feldliss for
the first time. 2Cents set up a little meeting with Beanie, Feldliss
and me at little bar on Friday night. Beanie is not only a nice
guy, but he's an amazing resource on the finer points of the game, and
what it's like to play at the higher levels. Feldliss is a
hell of a nice guy who has been on a hell of a win streak lately, so
hearing his perspective on the game was great. We expected a better
turnout of other minnesota players, but frankly I was pleased to have Beanie to myself for
most of the evening. The guy has been there and done that everywhere in the
world of poker, and he was more than happy to share his experience and
advice.
I actually have changed my tournament strategy somewhat because of what
Beanie told me, and though it has only been a few tournaments since
then I have noticed a significant difference in the way I have
accumulated chips. Beanie seems to be one of those players who learns
from everything around him, and takes every piece of information from
his surroundings. I try to be the same way, and he is certainly one of
the best resources that I have found. Alot of the bigger names are
quite secretive with everyone but their close friends, so hearing Beanie
and Feldliss speak freely about the game and what they do was
refreshing
That brings up something that I think would help most
players improve much faster than they do. I spent a great deal of time
when I was younger studying the martial arts, and the most important
thing I took from that experience was the ability to be a student.
Humility in Asian cultures is not about thinking you are worth less
than other people; it’s about being able to learn from anything that
you see. It’s about taking everything you can from every experience you
have, and always viewing instruction or advice as something that can be
useful.
If you think you are a better player than someone who wrote a book,
or you’ve seen them make a mistake you can’t simply discount what they
say. Just because a pro has a weakness in their game, or you think a
particular author isn’t a good player, is no reason to ignore
everything they have to say. There is a saying in the martial arts when
a student
starts to think they can beat their teacher in a fight and therefore
shouldn’t study under them any more. “Yes, but he can teach you how to
kick his ass faster and more efficiently."
Be the student and you will learn faster. Take every piece of advice
you hear or read and think about it. Is it true? Is it valuable or
useful? If not, then why did they say it? Is it a common misconception
among players that you can exploit? Being the student in every
situation will speed up your learning curve, and that in turn will
speed up your earning curve.
On another topic, the week has gone fairly well for me at the tables. I was
down some at the beginning of the week, but I made it into the money in
the BoDog 100k for a $300 profit and won a bunch of $50 SNG’s on Stars
while I was working on clearing the bonus. Those $50 SNG’s on Stars are
really ripe right now, and while you have bonus money in your account it
clears at the same rate as you pay tournament fees, meaning I was
playing $50 + 0 tournaments which helps quite a bit.
Make sure you get the Empire reload bonus tomorrow, it’s %50 up to
$100 so even with a small bankroll you can collect it easily. Check out
my blog from a few weeks ago on the best way to collect bonus money on
the Party skins.
See you at the final table, Fox
I'm awesome. You would like me. Really. Come join me at the tables at http://www.pokerprosnetwork.net/chriswallace.html I'm always happy to chat and I'm at one of my named cash game tables most evenings.