Quote:
Originally Posted by PaulyJames200x
But in the image you posted, does this completely disregard stack sizes? Such as under 10bb, 11-15bb, 16-25bb and onwards? Or is that for a specific stack size?
In my image, it's just my overall numbers
by position. If I used one of the "Stacksize" reports, I'd get different numbers for each stackdepth, but the sample size wouldn't be big enough to draw any firm conclusions. Even over 100,000 hands, there's a lot of variance.
Quote:
Originally Posted by PaulyJames200x
If so, then why do people talk about their bb/100 at certain stack sizes like under 10bb or 11-15bb etc?
Maybe they are looking for potential leaks (if they have a significant sample size). More commonly, they just want to brag about "crushing" with a short-stack, or they want to moan about how badly they run in flips.
Quote:
Originally Posted by PaulyJames200x
So in this example, you are running just a tiny bit worst right because the bb/100 is just a bit lower than the EV bb/100?
Running more than 2bb/100 below EV in 125k hands is kind of significant, since it meant I was full 27 buy-ins (100bb) below EV. Many players only have an EV of 2bb/100, so if they run more than 2bb/100 below EV they actually lose money.
Quote:
Originally Posted by PaulyJames200x
So what you posted, is that what everyone means when they say their bb/100 is either 5 or 10 or whatever number it is? So they filter it to position? Or some do it but others don't?
The numbers in the orange section at the bottom are what people use for their overall winrate. In the sample I played, I was basically a (thereotical) 5bb/100 winner. Some people will filter for position. Some will pore over the stacksize report, or run filters to find out how they do in 3-bet pots or whatever. Some just look at their graphs. As I previously said, the
overall EVbb/100 is the main indicator of whether you're a winning player.
Quote:
Originally Posted by PaulyJames200x
So its possible to have something ridiculous like your bb/100 at say -3bb/100 and your EV bb/100 to be something like 12 EV bb/100?
In a very small sample, it's possible to have a very large numerical difference between bb/100 and EVbb/100. Over time, the numbers tend to get closer (due to the law of large numbers) although the difference in number of buy-ins can keep diverging forever.
e.g. Your EV might be 10bb/100 and your actual winrate might be 2bb/100 after 10k hands (so you're running at 20% of EV due to runbad and you'll be a few buyins below EV), but after 100k hands, you might 'stabilize' at an EV of 7bb/100 and an actual winrate of 4bb/100 (running at 57% of EV, but tens of buyins below expectation, just because the runbad has lasted for an extended period).
When you're looking at a HEM report there are some buttons under the stats. One of them looks like a mini bar chart. Clicking that will show you the graph of whatever stats you're looking at. e.g. You can see your BTN graph, or your graph for how well you do with 15bb. On the graph, the orange line will show you your All In EV, so you can immediately tell if you're running above or below expectation in races.