Title: Gear Changing Post by: Sark79 on March 01, 2006, 04:03:43 PM I have had this explained to me by friends and from some people on blonde.
But I am still confused. I have read the sites and books also. What does this mean and how do I learn it? I try to do it as the book suggests, but I still have difficulty with it. can anyone help? ty Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: TightEnd on March 01, 2006, 04:06:57 PM http://www.bsm.co.uk/
this should help Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: Nem on March 01, 2006, 04:07:53 PM Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: Sark79 on March 01, 2006, 04:09:25 PM rotflmfao rotflmfao
Ohhh funny guy, Tightend :)up Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: Mr F on March 01, 2006, 04:22:42 PM LMAO TIghty
Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: AndrewT on March 01, 2006, 04:37:17 PM Gear changing is simply adjusting your play to be the optimum for the prevailing game conditions. Sometimes it's best to be tight, other times loose - you have to know which is which .
As a simple example, assume an MTT where 91st-100th gets some money (say £100). 101st gets nothing. As the number of people left in the tournament approaches 100, people will tighten up as they wait for other people to bust out. Therefore you should be looser and raise more to grab the free chips on offer. As soon as the 101st person goes, those players left know that it now makes no difference whether they finish 91st or 100th, as the prize money is the same. They therefore open up in order to try and get chips (to ensure they're not one of the shortstacks at 91st, when the next jump in prize money is), and will be more liberal in getting their chips in the middle. This is the time for you (if you are not in any immediate danger of being eliminated) to tighten up (change down gears) as your raises are far more likely to get called/re-raised. More subtle factors may also mean a gear change is required (for example if a very tight player to your right gets knocked out and is replaced by a maniac, you will need to adjust your style of play). Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: TightEnd on March 01, 2006, 05:25:51 PM sensible reply
I think gear changing is as much about the perception you create of yourself and your play and then having the flexibility to use that to gain chips.. ie you have been playing tight and you manage a couple of steals because of that image and then when they cotton on you shift back again. Or you have been giving action and then you slow down to trap with monsters...anything that keeps your opponents guessing Of course gear changing also is an important skill around bubble points. Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: AndrewT on March 01, 2006, 05:45:34 PM Think of my post as 'Gear Changing for Beginners' and Tighty's as the advanced course.
Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: Sark79 on March 01, 2006, 06:43:45 PM Ok, ty tightend and Andrew. I guess it is a skill that can be developed over time
Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: TightEnd on March 01, 2006, 06:48:46 PM I think you are right
We can all learn the odds and play the monsters but gear changing and people reading...the "feel" aspects of poker...come with time. experience and a bit of luck Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: mex on March 02, 2006, 01:09:31 AM i find suit or nice shirt and trousers, then as more people get drunk you can sneak off and put jeans and t shirt on, if very very drunk even a nice dress,(as i once did in dublin)
Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: Sark79 on March 02, 2006, 10:02:09 PM Good Joke ,mex :D
Tightends joke is still top though. I actually looked on the site and thought " what the hell is this.....he must have got the wrong web address". Then it clicked and I thought to myself...ohhh so funny 8) Roll on the Blonde Comedy Awards 2006 Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: madasahatstand on March 02, 2006, 10:57:28 PM http://www.bsm.co.uk/ this should help rotflmfao rotflmfao rotflmfao rotflmfao rotflmfao rotflmfao rotflmfao rotflmfao rotflmfao rotflmfao Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: I, Zimbra on March 03, 2006, 01:38:49 PM Sark,
The classic gear change surely is the STT adjustment from full (9 or 10 handed) play, through shorthanded (3-6 handed) play, and then again to heads-up? At a full table, if you play tight poker, and generate a tight table image, it allows you to take more blinds uncontested when players start to get knocked out (i.e. as the table gets more short-handed). By the time a STT table gets short-handed, remember, not only will the blinds be higher, but they will be hitting you more often (fewer players, so fewer hands per orbit). You can lose a lot of chips in this stage of a STT if you continue to play the same "tight" strategy that worked well early on... you will lose the chips simply by being blinded away. Consequently, you want to be grabbing as many uncontested blinds here as you can. If you've been very tight in the early stages, people might give you some respect when you raise - the theory is, it should take them a while to cotton on to the fact that you're now raising more often (i.e. you're in a 'higher' gear)... and not necessarily with a premium hand, each time. Of course, the better the players at the table, the more people will be doing this; so once again it comes down to "feel"; and adjusting your own strategy to fit the players you're trying to beat. P.S. (I don't know how useful that is, now that you've moved back into limit HE ring games, but... there you go :D ) Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: Sark79 on March 03, 2006, 05:13:50 PM Thanks, I Zimbra. I am sure that will come in handy. The more things I can learn about poker, the better :)up
Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: colipoo on March 03, 2006, 05:42:06 PM gear change for me in STTs means the hands i fold without thought early on, become monsters to raise or all in to steal chips late on
Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: AdamM on March 03, 2006, 05:55:46 PM I agree with the STT gear change comments. in live MTTs I've found I've got my gears just about right for the comps I play. first two rounds I'm playing kind of loose/passive trying to see a lot of cheap flops with draws hoping to connect big and win big. If a big hand comes along in that time I'll be making milking bets and building pots. if it's a rebuy I might even be out and out trapping and risking the out draw to get the big pay off. by level three or four I'm tightening up and aiming for a much more classic Tight aggressive. looking to consolodate my position by playing strong when I'm ahead and conserving chips when I'm behind. approaching bubble time Im pushing hard in position and if I get a big hand early position I'm over betting. then final is a fresh start depending on my relative chip stack.
Everyone has different style. some people come out of the blocks much more aggressive than me then tighten up later, others sit back early and come on strong mid game. It's basically a question of finding your style. my hit rate at Notts is around the 50% mark for all comps over the last 3 months so its working for me. now if I could just win a few of those 80/20 shots at the finals... Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: Sark79 on March 03, 2006, 06:11:13 PM ty I appreciate it
Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: AdamM on March 03, 2006, 06:19:14 PM at the end of the day there's no substitute for table time. I started playing home games 5 years ago and online about a year later but I dont think I started really learning until January 2004 when I started playing live MTTs. it took me 18 months to find my own method of consistantly beating the local game and I'm sure my game will need a complete rethink when I get my bank roll up to the bigger buy in deeper stack poker. that's the beauty of this game isnt it. if you stop learning you dont stand still, you go backwards.
Title: Re: Gear Changing Post by: Sark79 on March 04, 2006, 01:36:33 AM ty Adam, good luck
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