In
addition to my fantasy sports career (see my page on Inspin.com's Fantasy
section), I also make my living playing small-to-medium stakes poker
on several different sites (including Inspinpoker.com). I am a
winning player overall, and I will share some weekly tips with you that
help put some food on my table and some extra zeroes in my account.
The two types of poker I play are No Limit and Limit Hold'Em,
both cash games and tournaments. I've been playing for about four
years, and to me the most important thing to remember when trying to
be a successful poker player is to stay within your bankroll limits. It
doesn't matter if you play $2-$4 Limit or $100-$200 No Limit, if you
don't have the funds to enter the game, you can't win.
Poker has great variance, and your bankroll must be able to sustain
a prolonged streak of losing. Even the best players will have bad
runs lasting months, and in some cases years. When you make a big
score in a tournament or have a good night in a cash game, keep that
money aside and save it for when you need it. Don't go out and
blow it all at the blackjack or craps tables. If you must play other
table games, then have a separate bankroll for that, but don't use your
poker money for anything but poker.
The beauty of playing online poker is how quickly you can win money
compared to sitting in a home game or at the casino. You see probably
3-4 times as many hands online as you would playing live, so on a good
night you might make a ton of money. The flip side, of course,
is you might lose your whole roll in one night, and trust me those are
bad times. I speak from experience, as I've had to rebuild my bankroll
several times (fortunately it hasn't happened in a long time). Truly
successful players, and by that I mean people who are playing poker
to make money (as opposed to those just there for the social aspect
of the game) will put their winnings in their bankroll and not take
it elsewhere. Obviously at some point you'll want to take some
out to pay bills or whatever you are playing for, but the key is to
keep your bankroll at a nice, consistent number.
Other experts have recommended you have 300 times the max bet at whatever
level you're playing at as a basic bankroll. This is for Limit
poker and tournament play. No Limit cash games are a different
ball game, and I'll discuss those in future columns. If you are
playing $20+2 Sit and Go tournaments, you would want to have a bankroll
of at least $660. If you are playing $2-$4 limit, for example,
you'd want to have a $2,400 bankroll, the max bet being $8 in the final
two rounds of betting in a $2-$4 game. I would advocate having
even more than that, because with the speed of the game online, you
can run through 300 bets pretty quickly if you're not careful.
My personal bankroll is always going to be 500 times the max bet,
so if I were playing $2-$4 limit, I'd be holding $4,000 in my account,
or if I were playing $20+2 Sit and Go's, I'd have $1,100. Once
I win at least that amount, then I put half of it in my bank and use
the other half to move up a level in play. For instance, if I won
$4,000 playing $2-$4, I would stick $2,000 in my bank account and take
the $6,000 still in my account and move up to play $3-$6 limit. If
I lost $2,000 (taking my account back down to $4,000), I'd move back
down to $2-$4 until I was back at that 500 max bet number to move up.
Obviously not everyone is going to have $4,000 or even $1,000 to use
as a bankroll. I have friends who have played $2-$4 with $100 in
their account and blown it in about 15-20 minutes, and then they wonder
why they can't win. It is much easier to play poker if you have
the comfort of knowing that one losing session is not going to cost
you your whole bankroll. You have to look at it like a long-term
investment.
Future columns will discuss specific strategies in Limit and No Limit,
but for now just know that in order to be a winning player, you have
to feel comfortable at the table. The easiest way to do that is
to know that you can afford to lose, and a well-managed bankroll can
give you that.
By Chris Goudey
Inspin.com contributing writer