Postby AJG » Tue Jul 28, 2009 6:21 pm
Well I think we can agree that a winning player is one who wins consitently, not just over a session or 2?
Basically this would boil down to 'how ever long you've been playing'?
If someone had only been playing for 2 months, but was up, sure they havent been playing long enough for variance to really kick in, but up over first 2 months is good... And if your up over like 2+ years, even better.
What I meant about BR > deposits wasnt "I blew $1K in my 1st month, reloaded $200 and won 2K in the next $20 tournament I played". That would be a losing player, as it was a single win that put them back ahead.
Downswings are obv part of the game, hence BR management, but if you threw out BR management and put your whole roll on a single table and lost it all, but at your normal stakes you win, then I would regard that a winning player still.
On other forums I have read 2-6BB/100 is a good rate, the higher the stakes the less this figure usually is.
For STTs Im not sure, but 15%+ ROI I think is considered good
For HU SnG, 50%+ is good, I aim for 100% or more (greater roi is one of the reason's i like them most)
MTTs is really difficult to put a figure on cos a single win at Higher stakes can put your ROI through the roof!
+1 to Pete's Post... (came thru while I was writing this)
Up is Up... = winning.
I think it should be a personal thing as to what exact figures you aim for, even how you measure it ($/hr or BB/100 or ROI etc)
...11.59% of bad beat stories are just misplayed hands ...