I think it's only bad if they're stalling every hand for a while. But sometimes, I'm sure they're really thinking of what to do. Still, stalling happens live too.
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I think it's only bad if they're stalling every hand for a while. But sometimes, I'm sure they're really thinking of what to do. Still, stalling happens live too.
i too agree, because so many people try to just stall the game for better rank
i never understood the bubble stalls, unless your just playing to make itm, then why are you playing in the first place, cause the real pay out is 1st through 3rd in any tourney, if u have a stack in my opinion, you need to be using it to dominate the short stacks and if you are short stack the last thing you need is the blinds to go up...if i have less than 8 bbs late in tournament, im shoving a way wider range....no way im gonna hope tht some one fucks up so i can win 10th place...i do stall cash games sometimes but its cause i have a buncha tables up and it takes awhile on some hands. if you aint first your last!
Some of us have different priorities. I often adjust to play for llbs and make unorthodox moves because I know I am waiting for a short stack to bust or something. Or I may not want to tangle in a pot with someone in my speedway car if we are both looking close to cashing. All the elements of PO may affect a players' decisions whether or not it is the best move in terms of winning. --I'm not saying that you are not correct, but long run profit (and PO points as they have money value) is my long term goal. I have to play what's most profitable to me and I know my short stack play is absolutely the sh*tty and one of the worst parts of my game (something I'm working on), so it's like this: if I'm near a bubble, I'm going to have a easier time cashing in the long run by trying to chip up and to play for 7th or whatever is more feasible when I'm sitting at a table with LCD, 1977, Michman, laugeson, donka and all the other regular cashing sharks. I have to get lucky to compete with them at this point and this structure. Everyone has their own schtick and for me, I'm not into the preflop game that short stack play requires and I often make silly mistakes or run myself into ugly corners where I overcommit myself and am forced into bad calls because of invested chips. Does that mean I'm going to stall buttons? No. Does it mean that my nitting up is justified? Yes.
i think stalling is stupid... its better to see more hands to give you more opportunity to chip up....
stalling would only be good in one case..... if you are short stack and u really really want to min cash.. lol
Noone should have to play the way you want them too. in order to win it you must first be in it! and since alot peoples goal is the same and that is to move up the ladder, playing to win with 2 tables left isnt a good strategy. id rather have 10 good ITM's then playing to win and bust out or maybe win and finish once out of 10 games!
to each thier own i guess, im not here to tell anyone how to play, was just my opinion, and a few tht i have learned from. i will say i dont get what u mean by playin to win with 2 tables left isnt a good strategy, i dont know any profitable players who dont play to win...obv there is a ton of factors that come into play, when deciding the best move. at any point of the game, but i do know you try to run up the blinds in a real tourny good players will eat ur luch while eating your blinds, i personally would rather jam 7 2 in pos when its folded to me than call 2 others with ace king...i see the stallers as weaker players and try to exploit that every chance get, dont always work, there has been plenty of times i have raised the blinds and run into the bb having aces..then i just write off as unlucky..but never do i wanna be sitting at the final table with under 10 bb vs 100....thats a terrible strategy imo, also it all depends on stack size, if you have no fold equity, then yeah you prolly dont wanna get too agressive. and if you have a comfy stack then you are just gonna find spots, u sit and stall with less than 10 bbs your just asking to give your stack away in blinds, while 2 outta 3 guys under you now have stacks and u get aces and get called by 4 players cause u had no fold equity....and then u get sucked out on....by the big stack cause he just wanted to make sure someone took you out.
well when your in several games at once or even need a cool down this time is needed. for some but i understand people abusing it
At the 2006 WSOP, while being besieged by autograph hounds and playing for a $12,000,000 prize, Daniel Negreanu found time during a ten-minute break to summarise bubble play: ‘The bubble is the point in a tournament that basically separates the men from the boys. When players are just shy of reaching the money we find out who is there to win the tournament and who is just there to survive. The top players get really aggressive, while the less experienced guys clam up and play tight. The good players take advantage of the tight players as the bubble approaches.’
it makes very nervous! so I agree with the author threads
So it looks like we got some intelligent answers (and some dumb ones), but some of you didn't understand the point of this: It's not that we are trying to ban stalling or don't understand it (because in some situations it makes sense). It's when you do it every hand from hand 1 of a tournament, specifically on BCP where we don't get a lot of players (it wouldn't work on the Carbon tourneys)
Overall it appears that the players who are actually good at this game want to eliminate stalling, and those who are not talented are in favor of it
So here is a proposal that was talked about yesterday, and if you have an opinion (or just want your 5 points, leeches), tell me what you think:
Maybe a site could limit the timebank to X seconds if it is your first action in the hand and you have no equity (so if you're not a blind and it's before the ante period), but then resort to a normal timebank once you've acted. It would solve the staller problem as much as it can be solved without shortening the time to take away from players who actual want to think about the hand.
It's got nothing to do with good vs bad its just different strats. If you think stalling makes you a bad player Tom Dwan must suck.
In a regular f/r i agree but 50% of the players on here are decent enough to pick up on a timing tell so in the PO f/r i disagree with u. Even though I don't stall much anymore. BTW strats is short for strategies not statistics goofy.
Man....u have YOUR opinion and u only want ppl that say AMEN to u in ur thread ....so, GOODBYE!! ........ ;)
I do it all the time
lol............................................... .
I stall if i gotta go pee, make bowl of cereal, roll a joint, doin my nails, puttin on make-up, watching t.v., cooking, talking on phone, alot of times i stall just because im multi-tasking... maybe im just slow player... the PO freerolls dont even have a time bank its only like 15 seconds you have before it folds you anyway... me being a live player i couldnt imagine if a casino ran a table with 15 second decisions only... but then again i usually roll my joint and do my hair nails and make up before i go there not while playing
i wish i could make a post about fish an donkeys and removing them from the games.. but i cant. I personally like playing good players for the sport.
I don't mind preflop stalling in games like HORSE
I totally agree with you and heres my signature..... TIMMMYG
I don't see any point in stalling, unless [maybe] it's getting close to an addon period and you're nearly busted. It's better to see more hands to have a better chance at winning some chips.
i remember reading an article somewhere about some guy that'd stall til the last second and crushed people with this strategy. in big online mt's, it'd tilt people or make people have bad reads.