Antiquehunter
Degenerate Gambler
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2005
- Messages
- 5,088
Concur - 54 hands is waaay too small a sample.
Well post-flop, there is a lot more information available (3 out of 5 community cards dealt), and the odds of the AK beating QQ post-flop are dramatically different than 52:48 depending on the flop.
Concur - 54 hands is waaay too small a sample.
Okay, here's the situation. My husband's a poker player. He likes the Texas Hold-em game and plays quite a bit on-line and a couple of times a month in a garage or basement game. He's constantly going on about his bad luck, how he never seems to catch the right card no matter what the odds.
I say, you're focusing on the bad beats and not paying attention to the wins. He swears his luck is phenomenally bad. I'm a professional statistician. I tell him to collect data and I compute the probability. So he did. And I did. And he has had consistently bad luck! Given the number of hands he's collected data on, the probability of luck as bad or worse than that is less than 10%. He is running fairly consistently at 40% wins, both overall and for a running 25 game average, for a situation that should be about 50/50.
In the next paragraph, I'll explain the data collection and analysis we're doing. I'd appreciate any suggestions for improving either.
He is only collecting data on one particular type of hand. A showdown situations where he and one other player are All In before the flop. In addition, he's only looking at a the outcome when one of the two sets of two cards is a pair and other person had two over cards. The probability of winning is approximately 50/50. (It's actually more like 48/52 but so far, I've just been computing the odds at 50/50). He terms this a 'race'.
He started collecting data back in March. He was just keeping a running total of how many 'races' he was in and how many he won. He is currently at 21 wins out of 54 races. Assuming a 50/50 probability of winning races, the probability of wining 21 or fewer out of 54 is 0.0668.
He been meticulous about recording outcomes of all such races win or lose. I've recently talked him into recording what the actual cards were that he won and lost with, so I should be able to start computing the probabilities more accurately.
He is, at least, feeling vindicated regarding his complaint about bad luck.![]()
Right, but her husband is saying that he's been unlucky. I'm saying that she can't find out if that's true by examining a very small percentage of the hands he's played.
That's one of the things she expressed an interest in, yes. But that doesn't make my comments irrelevant. So why do you keep suggesting that they are?See my posts. I think she's asking, in a coin toss (no skill, 1:2 chance of winning), you've won 21 out of 54, is it significant?
The fact that this method might miss up to 99.7% of the hands played is certainly relevant to the first two statements. The fact that you can do a better calculation simply by checking a box that says "Display all-in EV" is certainly relevant to the last statement.Beth said:He's constantly going on about his bad luck, how he never seems to catch the right card no matter what the odds.
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He swears his luck is phenomenally bad.
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In the next paragraph, I'll explain the data collection and analysis we're doing. I'd appreciate any suggestions for improving either.
Depends on how you define 'luck'. If you define it as predictive, then no. If you define it as descriptive of what has occurred, then, yes it exists. The lot of each of us clearly is not equal. So assuming the latter, I said, yes.
Poker is a game both of luck and chance, but smarter players know how to take advantage of certain situations, and read other players' emotions. It's both.
I do believe in other forms of luck though - finding a $100 dollar scratch ticket in a super market parking lot - that's luck.
Depends on how you define 'luck'. If you define it as predictive, then no. If you define it as descriptive of what has occurred, then, yes it exists. The lot of each of us clearly is not equal. So assuming the latter, I said, yes.
Poker is a game both of luck and chance, but smarter players know how to take advantage of certain situations, and read other players' emotions. It's both.
In regards to this, i would like to point out a story, that is either utterly amazing, or mundane as hell, depending on how you interpret the statistics.
When i was going to get my tattoo, i had a bit of horrid luck, got into a terrible car accident, total wreck for all cars involved ( major bad luck). On the flip side, i came out with not a scratch ( major good luck).
Now in calling the tattoo place, i found out the ****** up, and schedualed me for the next week ( major bad luck.). But then i called around the city and found one tattoo artist with a block of free time that day. ( major good luck, as they were all booked up for weeks when i called the first time.)
As i wandered around town wasting time, i found a 50 dollar bill in a discount store ( major good luck.). But when i went to the tattoo place, a girl was getting one, and kept changing her mind slightly, extending the process and making me wait quite a bit ( Bad luck.).
In wandering around waiting for her to be done i found a film i had been looking for for over a decade, garbage pail kids, for less than 6 bucks ( major good luck.)
Finally when i finally got the tattoo, i realized that due to me being " ramped up" from the car accident, i wasn't really feeling it ( i am good at masking pain, but i do not have a high pain tolerance. And i can say i barely felt it, even when my friend was encouraging the man to make it hurt, and the guy was complying, my guess is because i was a 130 pound short fellow not complaining about the pain.)
**** happens, sometimes it happens wierdly.
ie luck. Yep.You've got 2 players all-in and both have roughly a 50% chance of winning. There's no more skill involved. The outcome of the hand is just up to chance.
Depends on how you define 'luck'. If you define it as predictive, then no. If you define it as descriptive of what has occurred, then, yes it exists. The lot of each of us clearly is not equal. So assuming the latter, I said, yes.
Yes, this is exactly the data he has been collecting.Well post-flop, there is a lot more information available (3 out of 5 community cards dealt)
A pure test of 'luck' would be pre-flop all in, hand X vs hand Y. No more skill involved. Just happens that two overcards to a pair is pretty close to a coin toss, so it makes for an interesting test (I guess - not really interesting to me.)
Right, but her husband is saying that he's been unlucky. I'm saying that she can't find out if that's true by examining a very small percentage of the hands he's played. I don't know why you're mentioning skill. I wasn't talking about skill at all.
Concur - 54 hands is waaay too small a sample.
When we defined a hypothesis as above, **** happens is rejected as an explanation. If the probability is low enough, we shake our heads and try to figure out why. At the moment, I'm stumped on that point.Assuming the stats are done properly ( no reason for me not to as it does not effect my point.) , there is an easy explination.
**** happens.
True. Would it be fair to describe those people as 'lucky' and 'unlucky'?In a set of data as large as " poker players" it would be more weird if there was no anomalies, such as people who win a lot or loose a lot. Think of how many people on earth play poker.
Unfortunately, that doesn't discriminate between all ins preflop and all ins after the river. Skill plays a big part of that. We wanted to eliminate skill and just see if his cards are not very good.The fact that this method might miss up to 99.7% of the hands played is certainly relevant to the first two statements. The fact that you can do a better calculation simply by checking a box that says "Display all-in EV" is certainly relevant to the last statement.
But, again, the OP describes a situation where skill--including the ability to read your opponent's emotions--has been eliminated.
You've got 2 players all-in and both have roughly a 50% chance of winning. There's no more skill involved. The outcome of the hand is just up to chance.
In just that situation, if I'm reading this correctly, Beth's husband has won 21 of 54 hands, and she wants to know if this is meaningful or significant.
We have a hypothesis. His luck at cards is poor. We set the null hypothesis that it isn't, his luck is just random variation. Now we've been collecting to data to test that assumption. In order to do that, we need, as Antiquehunter noted above, a set of hands were skill is eliminated and that is the data he has been collecting.
Someone who is better at stats than I am could give you the math, but I'm quite certain that 21 wins out of 54 with roughly 1:2 odds is not statistically significantly different and would not call for rejecting your null hypothesis.When we defined a hypothesis as above, **** happens is rejected as an explanation. If the probability is low enough, we shake our heads and try to figure out why. At the moment, I'm stumped on that point.
ie luck. Yep.
I'm also interesting in suggestions for other ways of assessing probabilities of having the winning cards in situations that can be evaluated without including any skill component of the game.
Oh OK. I just answered the poll question and admit I didn't read much of the OP. There is such a thing as luck was all I was getting at.Except that she's pretty much defining and using the word "luck" to mean something other than random chance.