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Winning at Micro Stakes Poker

By grapsfan | Published Oct 19 2008, 09:52 PM |

I hear the voice at least once a week, if not more.  A voice crying out in a poker forum: “Should I move up in stakes?  I can’t figure out how to beat these micro-donks!”  My reply is always, “If you can’t find a style to beat bad players, how are you going to beat better ones?”  Truer words were never spoken, if I do say so myself.

Chris Ferguson and others have written about the betting theory behind A-B-C tournament poker, which is all you need to beat bad players in low buy-in tournaments.  In general, you’re making a bet or raise for one of two reasons: either you want to induce a call from a worse hand, or a fold from a better one.  Determining the right amount to bet is the end-all, be-all which separates a winning player from a losing one.  And so, I present Herzog’s Two Laws of Micro MTTs, in the spirit of Sklansky’s Theorem of Poker (but hopefully better written):


Law #1:  If I bet less than the most my opponent would have called when I want to be called, I’m losing money.

Law #2:  If I bet more than the least my opponent would have folded to when I want a fold, I’m losing money.


The key to successful application of the Micro MTT Laws is getting a good read on your opponents.  Most poker players spend too much time trying to get the wrong read – a prediction of their exact hole cards.  In A-B-C tournament poker, you’re trying to make two determinations about your opponents.  One, you want to determine if they bet or raise loose, so you can assign an accurate range.  Trying to come up with the Hellmuthian “I thought you had jacks” is relatively worthless…but that’s a topic for another time.

The second read is whether your opponents call & fold loosely.  Who will call you down with ace-high or bottom pair because they want to look like a hero?  Who won’t defend their blinds, or will fold to a small re-raise if you caught them stealing with 10-8 off-suit?  Modifying your bets against each of these playing styles will improve your bottom line.

Too many players are inflexible, rigid in every aspect of the game regardless of blind structure, buy-in level or table dynamics.  They think, “I’m a small pot player” or “I’m going to re-steal a lot” or “I’m going to be the most aggressive player at the table”.  Then when they don’t build up a big stack with their small pots, or nobody folds to their re-steals and aggression, the “look at these donkeys” posts come forth with hurricane-strength force.  The strategies you leaned on now failed miserably in another, resulting in confusion and frustration.  A typical lack-of-success story is one I’ve lived several times, and heard countless more. 

Let’s say you have been profitable some regular middle-level tournaments: the $24+2s on MTT, the $20 180-mans on Stars, the nightly 50-50s, maybe even gone deep in a Sunday Major or two.  You’ve gone on a bad downswing, or withdrew a bunch of money for one expense or another.  Being a disciple of good bankroll management, you drop back down to play huge-field $3-10 MTTs and $4 180-man SNGs...only to immediately endure defeat after humiliating defeat, for a large variety of reasons both obvious (suckouts and bad beats) and somewhat obscure – until now.

The problem (now less obscure) is the small-pot style of play, effective in many tournaments, doesn’t work at micro-stakes.  If your opponent would have paid off ¾-pot bets on the flop, turn and river with a losing kicker, you’re donating chips to him by only betting ½ the pot.  If the nut job in the big blind will defend to a 4x raise when you have AA, you’re not successfully building a big enough pot if you min-raise all the time.  Next hand, if the weak-tight guy on the nut job’s left will normally fold to a 2.5x raise, you’re losing more chips if you try to steal with a 4x raise, then fold to his re-raise.

I know this violates a common poker rule: “Always make consistent bets so your opponent can’t get a read on the strength of your hand.”  You know what?  Bad players at micro-stakes aren’t reading your soul.  They aren’t concerned with what your hand might be, because they’re too busy with figuring out their own…and what’s on TV…and finding free porn on the Web…and chatting with their friend who just logged into AIM…and on and on….

In control theory, engineers talk about “tuning” a control loop; adjusting the feedback you get from the elements in a system to optimize the overall performance.  By adjusting your betting patterns at the poker table, you can make a similar optimization to beat the games you know you should be beating.  Feel free to experiment; if you don’t get the results you want with one change, and your poker loop goes “unstable”, try something else.  The experiment only cost you a few bucks.  Try something else.  And have fun with fine tuning.



---

Comments
Redline Speed 

Redline Speed said:

Golden

October 21, 2008 12:44 AM
SICKTIGHT311 

SICKTIGHT311 said:

Cool read graps <3

October 21, 2008 12:51 AM
Stupor_Mundi 

Stupor_Mundi said:

Grapsfan owns poker teaching, I used to kill at micro MTTs, had no time to play and reverted to being an all cash game player, but I might just try this to see if it will work.

An entertaining and very convincing read.

Nice work.

October 21, 2008 12:53 AM
krispycream 

krispycream said:

agreed. A+

October 21, 2008 1:28 AM
Cast-P 

Cast-P said:

amazing.

October 21, 2008 2:23 AM
Aesh 

Aesh said:

Agreed, small pot Micro MTT has never worked for me.  Waiting for a medium+ to premium hand and getting a lot of chips in has been very beneficial.

Damn I wish I could have read an article like this a long time ago.

Thanks Graps!

Aesh

October 21, 2008 4:01 AM
KingsoverAAs 

KingsoverAAs said:

wow I agree totally I play at these stakes and this is dead on. The average player at this level is either one extreme or the other. Beating them is just a matter or finding the right buttons to push. The call Button or the fold button. The only way to find out how to push the buttons is experimenting with bet sizing. A revelation for me Im going to try it........While Im watching tv and finding free porn. LOL. Thanks great article.

October 21, 2008 4:36 AM
acehighness 

acehighness said:

The last few times I played the $4 180man on stars I bubbled... just bad beats though ... not really my fault. the worst was picking up AA on the bb, get into raising war with sb, aipf, shows kk ... k on the flop ... bubbled again :(

October 21, 2008 7:48 AM
RustyNail 

RustyNail said:

but i enjoy looking at porn and chatting

October 21, 2008 7:55 AM
jacketdround 

jacketdround said:

Hits home as I play almost purely $2t 180s and $4 180s.

Patience for quality almost always pays off. Lots of manic calls too. Spot on.

October 21, 2008 8:17 AM
Tchmaster 

Tchmaster said:

Good read

Cant stop AIMing while playin sigh

October 21, 2008 1:08 PM
towman1 

towman1 said:

Stupid Donkeys

How can they call that!

October 21, 2008 3:01 PM
wolfferine 

wolfferine said:

Excellent article.  Thanks!

October 21, 2008 4:44 PM
Dkay04 

Dkay04 said:

delivers as usual graps

October 21, 2008 6:17 PM
JACK WELCH 

JACK WELCH said:

Sometimes I think graps is talking about me.  I'll try to do better....

October 22, 2008 2:25 PM
Tigerboy 

Tigerboy said:

Nice article about playing at Micro Stakes Poker. I think also that on this level are good poker players. I read here from comments that everyone is able to beat such players. Well...don't be so sure. Anyway this is a good article and very useful for any new poker player. Because all of us started to play poker at micro stakes levels at a time...

October 11, 2009 6:06 AM
drnintendo 

drnintendo said:

Great article!

Lately I have started playing in .01 .02 6 person cash games; And playing in $0.30 up to $2.20 MTT tournaments and have played strictly A-B-C poker and have documented my results in a poker log and have notice that this is in fact a way to maintain or slowly grow my tiny bankroll and ultimately not have to reload.

Well that being said it was nice to read this and re solidify my current approach to poker.

December 30, 2009 3:01 PM

 
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