I replay that hand in my head, from time-to-time, and always pause at the moment when
the dealer taps the 🫰 table, right before she flips the river card up. I glance one more
time at the board: Kc Jc 8h 🫰 5c.
“Ace, Queen, Ten, Club,” I hear my section of the rail
shouting.
It didn’t come.
It’s been a decade since the river 🫰 blanked off, but it still
feels like yesterday. I don’t compete in tournaments often, so I still haven’t got the
🫰 chance to rewrite that history with a different result.
The truth is, unless you grind
the circuit full time, play small 🫰 field high-rollers, or, frankly, are on the positive
side of variance more than your fair share, you may not either.
It’s 🫰 something I
understood conceptually as a professional, but until I lived it, I couldn’t fully grasp
the nature of tournaments, 🫰 and to a larger extent, poker in general.
It’s not just
winning your coin flips, where one experiences the luck. Variance 🫰 comes in many forms
in poker: You may get coolered with the second nuts to the nuts, or your opponent 🫰 may
draw out on you.
But variance also comes in hidden forms: a bad turn card that kills
your action; or 🫰 positional variance, such as getting aces under the gun instead of on
the button; or situational variance, by merely being 🫰 in the right place at the right
time to get into a great game, which earns you a fortune.
While these 🫰 things will, in
theory, even out over the long run, poker players, too often, don’t realize just how
long that 🫰 long run is. In the meantime, they go broke in the name of expectation, never
reaching the point where their 🫰 skill trumps the luck.
Just how long does it take?
In a
sentence, much longer than you think.
In tournament poker, evening out 🫰 the variance can
take a lifetime or two.
This explains the phenomenon of how the world’s best players
can go years 🫰 without winning a major event. Conversely, there will always be a
fortunate few who go on to win multiple events 🫰 in a short period of time.
Most people
will associate this hot streak solely with skill; when, in fact, luck was 🫰 the principle
contributor to someone winning on any given day.
This is not to say that all successful
tournament professionals are 🫰 merely benefactors of good fortune; some are truly
phenomenal players. But it’s important to remember that for every one superstar, 🫰 there
are likely 100 players of equal caliber who just haven’t caught the right breaks, never
won an event, and 🫰 thus never had the opportunity to further pursue their tournament
career.
This harsh reality doesn’t mean that winners are good, and 🫰 losers are bad, or
that there’s no skill for those who win. It just means that luck supersedes everything
else, 🫰 in the short term, which as you’ll see in a moment, isn’t all that short.
But
just when you want to 🫰 curse your fortune, blaming bad luck for your losses, remember
this one thing. Poker is unique in that it’s the 🫰 most competitively played game where
luck plays a significant factor in the final outcome (other sports have variance–the
best football 🫰 team doesn’t always win–but it’s much less significant than in
poker).
And thank God for it.
As Phil Hellmuth famously states, “If 🫰 there were no luck
involved, I’d win every time.” Some may question his assurance, but the implications of
his idea 🫰 are telling. No professional truly wishes there were less luck involved. If
there were, poker would be like chess and 🫰 the action would dry up.
You may be thinking
I’m exaggerating, and that luck really isn’t as big of a factor 🫰 as I make it out to be.
Well, let’s look at what the math says. I love numbers, because they 🫰 never lie.
Here is
a simple variance calculator program that I use to get a grip on just how profound the
🫰 role of luck is in poker tournaments.