blackshoe, on 2012-January-10, 18:38, said:
ROFL, Art!
I know squat about professional poker, on line or off, but I did read somewhere several years ago about an online player who'd done very well in that milieu, who then went to Vegas to play in a tournament there, and got his head handed to him. Of course, one swallow doesn't make a summer, but...
Lol. The highest stakes games were for several years online. The live pros who played in it, including the TV celebrities that the average pros knew got completely owned as per online tracking sites of the highest stakes games over sample sizes that would take a lifetime to play in real life (literally), with the exception of Ivey who is just the nuts and is the biggest winner online also. Conversely, the online players who were smart enough to get themselves into TV cash games consistently destroyed the former TV celebs at NLHE, some of them becoming very famous in their own rite (durrrr for example). It was funny to watch Howard Lederer and Chris Ferguson and Chris Ferguson against guys like Tom Dwan and Scott Seiver. The top online tournament specialists became some of the biggest winners in live tournaments, guys like elky and jason mercier and annette. Not that that really matters, online results are far more relevant since they have such a massively larger sample of hands/tournaments.
The truth is, the best online players became far better than the best live players after the poker boom at no limit hold em, limit hold em, and PLO, both tournaments and cash games. Poker theory was really in its infancy, nobody knew anything, and those who knew something kept their secrets to themselves. Even if you spent a lifetime playing poker like Doyle Brunson, you could not see as many hands as top volume online players played in a few years, and you certainly would not play against competition as tough (in the absolute sense), or have anyone else to talk to. The game evolved tremendously because you now had a ton of smart people analyzing poker seriously and playing millions of hands. It would be like bridge before there was much theory, and all of the sudden you had a ridiculous amount of people play a million bridge hands. The game would evolve enormously.
As a result, the best online players had the strongest fundamentals, had faced the best competition, and had the most experience. They salivated at the thought of playing someone like Hellmuth or Brunson heads up, literally if one of those guys would show up online at a 200/400 NL game, there would be a waitlist of 20 online pros long just to take a shot even if they normally wouldn't play that high. Guys like Ivey who were just great poker talents played online and evolved with the games.
It is a huge joke that someone could win a lot of money online, and then go play in one tournament, and "get their ass handed to them." Do you realize how silly that is? In one tournament, the best player int he world is less than 50 % to make the money. They are very unlikely to win. Poker has a lot of variance, there is a lot of luck in the short term. That is why the online tournament grinders play 30 tournaments a day, every day. It would be like saying someone played one hand of blackjack while the count was good but lost so they got owned.
But it is not a coincidence that far more players have successfully transitioned from online to live than from live to online, despite there being much more money in it online at that point in time (for cash game players). As someone who played online a lot and now plays only live, I can tell you that live is really a joke compared to online. The general rule is that the skill level in stakes is about a 10:1 ratio for live to online, so 5/10 NL is like .5/.1 online.
Yes, the live players will be better with the live tell stuff, but this is not really as much of factor in poker as people think unless you are completely inept. Poker is a game of strategy, betting patterns, etc. If you "get a read" on someone, it is usually on an imbalance in their betting patterns in certain situations that you can exploit, not that they twitch when they're bluffing lol.