Fast 2014-09-13: Why a Poker1 “Fast” category? ↑
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first)
Fast 2014-09-14: Belligerent poker opponents
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Image, Manipulation, Psychology
Fast 2014-09-16: Murder of contemporary music
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), AUDIO AND VIDEO, Controversy, Life, Thoughts, Video
Fast 2014-09-16: Poker’s hat trick
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), POKER, Psychology, Strategy
Fast 2014-09-19: “Poker Probe +” (testers wanted)
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Odds, POKER, Products
Fast 2014-09-22: Caro proven wrong? Say it ain’t so!
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Controversy, POKER
Fast 2014-09-26: Hold ’em logic puzzle #1
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Hold 'em, POKER, Tests
Fast 2014-10-06: Why a small-blind addendum?
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Hold 'em, POKER
Fast 2014-10-18: Poker truth about limiting field
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), POKER, Strategy
Fast 2014-11-03: New Poker1 features destroy Alexa rank!
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Poker sites
Fast 2014-11-04: Strange slogan at my polling place
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Life, Thoughts
Fast 2014-11-29: Atheist billboard misunderstood
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Controversy, Exclude ads, Life, News
Fast 2014-11-29: My poker seminar in Florida
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Events, Exclude ads, POKER
Fast 2014-12-18: Tell Sony to release movie
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Controversy, Exclude ads, Life, News
Fast 2015-01-16: Movie Gravity not science fiction
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Life
Fast 2015-02-05: Was Seattle play call terrible?
By Mike Caro
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), POKER
Fast 2016-02-02: Sanders bettors got screwed
By Mike Caro
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Gambling, News
Fast 2017-03-13: Poker1 video works in all browsers
Videos at Poker1 have been converted from Flash to formats that work on every browser.
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), AUDIO AND VIDEO, SPECIAL INFO, Video

Everything is everywhere

Any Poker1 page takes you anyplace you want to go!

Poker1 

Megadex

Poker1 universe —
all in one place.

→ Collections
Special Poker1 groups

Poker1 Megadex tools

— main navigation departments —

Collections

Related groups of Poker1 content

↓ Major collections ↓

Gambling  •  Hold 'em  •  Info  •  Life beyond poker

Poker (all)  •  Poker dictionary  •  Poker psychology

Poker statistics  •  Poker strategy  •  Poker tells

Prediction*  •  Shopping  •  Zone 2*

↓ Tip collections ↓

All*  •  Gambling*  •  Life*  •  Poker*  •  Various*

↓ Contributor collections ↓

Brunson  •  Caro  •  McHaffie  •  Wiesenberg  •  Others*

↓ More collections ↓

Poker1 FAQ  •  Poker-tell videos  •  Review of poker lessons

Sunday sessions*  •  Targeted poker quizzes  •  Tuesday sessions

* Any collection followed by an asterisk ( * ) has no entries yet.

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 everything

Browse alphabetically

 

[a-z-listing display=”posts” post-type=”post”]

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 library

Content in categories

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home




≡ Content above: Poker1 Phase2a specification ≡

Mike Caro poker word is Pride


Note: Not at the old Poker1 site. A version of this entry was first published (2010) in Poker Player newspaper.


Some players lose because they enjoy playing poorly. And that’s fine with me. For many of us, poker is a serious struggle to win. We depend on the money.

But others approach poker quite differently. They may know they’re going against the odds with inferior skills, but the adventure is fun. They have other sources of income, and money they lose is a recreational expense. Without these players, we wouldn’t win.

Thinking of them as “suckers” is like being a famous singer and hating your audience because they can’t carry a tune. How stupid is that?

Anyway, we all start out as suckers at poker and some of us evolve. Fine. But as we evolve a terrible thing often happens. It’s pride. And pride is heavy. When it steps on us, it can squash a bankroll 10-foot high in hundred-dollar bills until it’s the size of a ticket to the centerfield bleachers.

That’s not theoretical, either. I’ve seen it happen over and over. And that’s the topic for today’s self-interview.

Question 1: Isn’t it natural to be proud of your abilities? If you’re good at poker, how can taking pride in that be bad?

Of course you should be proud of your poker skills. You’ve earned the right to be.

That’s not what I’m talking about though. The danger is the things that pride can cause you to do, if you’re not careful.

Question 2: Like what?

Like playing too big for your bankroll. Every world-class poker player I’ve ever known went through that phase. Some remain stuck in it today. You’d be surprised how many of poker’s signature players fail to maintain a bankroll.

Sometimes that’s because of failing businesses or investments beyond their control. Sometimes it’s because they continue to take unnecessary risks at poker or at other forms of gambling. What I know for sure is that most players have the urge to play the biggest games, even when there’s more money to be made in smaller ones.

Evolving players often promote themselves to a larger limit, often because that game is temporarily populated with weak players. Those might be wise decisions, but the problem is that when those weak players leave, they don’t leave with them.

Demote

Pride makes them stay, sometimes returning day after day to games beyond what their bankrolls dictate. It hurts to demote themselves.

So, once they begin playing bigger, they don’t want to move down again. That’s especially true if they lose. You’d think that’s when they would logically back away from those games in the spotlight, but it just doesn’t happen that way.

Pride destroys many bankrolls by tempting players to play games that are too expensive.

Question 3: What else?

Getting even with another player is costly. Let’s settle this right now. In poker, it doesn’t make any difference who you win money from. If you lose $1,000 to a bluff, it doesn’t matter if you win $1,000 back from that same player or from someone else. In either case, you’ve recovered.

Many players wait for a revenge opportunity to bluff opponents who have shown them cards after successfully bluffing. On average, going out of your way to even the score just costs money. It’s a mistake of pride.

Also, while we’re talking about bluffing, it’s a mistake to take pride in how successful you are at stealing pots. First of all, if you’re able to routinely bluff successfully, you might have the wrong image.

Most of your opponents make the mistake of calling too often, so the trick is to project a playful, but bewildering, image that invites even more calls – causing them to compound their mistake. If you regularly succeed by bluffing, you’re probably losing a lot of profit you should be making by being called with weak hands.

Distort the truth

Additionally, if you try to keep score regarding how well you’re doing by bluffing, you’ll distort the truth. That’s because you’ll give yourself credit for many times that you win the pot, but weren’t actually bluffing. You had the best hand, but never knew it! Don’t let pride force you to bluff.

Pride also can cause us to show off in poker games. There’s satisfaction in winning pots by using deceptive strategy. But if we enjoy the thrill too much and do this primarily for our audience of opponents, we lose money.

And it’s a mistake of pride to challenge the best players when more money can be made against weaker ones. On rare occasions, you can hone your skills against the best. But those aren’t the times when your bankroll usually grows quickly.

Question 4: Are there more?

Lots more. I’ll name a couple.

Unwillingness to reevaluate and change long-held beliefs about how to play will cost you money. Once a player has uttered a poker belief aloud, he often feels obligated to that opinion and married to that tactic. Pride won’t let him change to a more profitable solution.

Pride causes some players to ridicule opponents for poor plays. If you do that, you only motivate those opponents to play better. You’ve made them uncomfortable about making unprofitable decisions, so they play better and avoid your pots in the future. That’s expensive.

Question 5: What’s the biggest damage that pride does to poker players?

Pride causes ego-driven poker players to “play the part.” Playing the part can be the greatest threat to your poker bankroll. When you go into the game trying to look like a serious, studious poker superstar, pride will stomp on your chips.

The secret is to project a carefree image, suggesting that you’re there to gamble and have fun. Never worry about what others think about your play. You’ll grow richer if opponents don’t think you’re there for serious business.

At poker, being underestimated is profitable. Being respected is just pride. — MC

Fast 2014-09-13: Why a Poker1 “Fast” category? ↑
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first)
Fast 2014-09-14: Belligerent poker opponents
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Image, Manipulation, Psychology
Fast 2014-09-16: Murder of contemporary music
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), AUDIO AND VIDEO, Controversy, Life, Thoughts, Video
Fast 2014-09-16: Poker’s hat trick
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), POKER, Psychology, Strategy
Fast 2014-09-19: “Poker Probe +” (testers wanted)
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Odds, POKER, Products
Fast 2014-09-22: Caro proven wrong? Say it ain’t so!
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Controversy, POKER
Fast 2014-09-26: Hold ’em logic puzzle #1
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Hold 'em, POKER, Tests
Fast 2014-10-06: Why a small-blind addendum?
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Hold 'em, POKER
Fast 2014-10-18: Poker truth about limiting field
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), POKER, Strategy
Fast 2014-11-03: New Poker1 features destroy Alexa rank!
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Poker sites
Fast 2014-11-04: Strange slogan at my polling place
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Life, Thoughts
Fast 2014-11-29: Atheist billboard misunderstood
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Controversy, Exclude ads, Life, News
Fast 2014-11-29: My poker seminar in Florida
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Events, Exclude ads, POKER
Fast 2014-12-18: Tell Sony to release movie
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Controversy, Exclude ads, Life, News
Fast 2015-01-16: Movie Gravity not science fiction
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Life
Fast 2015-02-05: Was Seattle play call terrible?
By Mike Caro
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), POKER
Fast 2016-02-02: Sanders bettors got screwed
By Mike Caro
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Gambling, News
Fast 2017-03-13: Poker1 video works in all browsers
Videos at Poker1 have been converted from Flash to formats that work on every browser.
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), AUDIO AND VIDEO, SPECIAL INFO, Video

Everything is everywhere

Any Poker1 page takes you anyplace you want to go!

Poker1 

Megadex

Poker1 universe —
all in one place.

→ Collections
Special Poker1 groups

Poker1 Megadex tools

— main navigation departments —

Collections

Related groups of Poker1 content

↓ Major collections ↓

Gambling  •  Hold 'em  •  Info  •  Life beyond poker

Poker (all)  •  Poker dictionary  •  Poker psychology

Poker statistics  •  Poker strategy  •  Poker tells

Prediction*  •  Shopping  •  Zone 2*

↓ Tip collections ↓

All*  •  Gambling*  •  Life*  •  Poker*  •  Various*

↓ Contributor collections ↓

Brunson  •  Caro  •  McHaffie  •  Wiesenberg  •  Others*

↓ More collections ↓

Poker1 FAQ  •  Poker-tell videos  •  Review of poker lessons

Sunday sessions*  •  Targeted poker quizzes  •  Tuesday sessions

* Any collection followed by an asterisk ( * ) has no entries yet.

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 everything

Browse alphabetically

 

[a-z-listing display=”posts” post-type=”post”]

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 library

Content in categories

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home




≡ Content above: Poker1 Phase2a specification ≡

Published by

Mike Caro

Visit Mike on   → Twitter   ♠ OR ♠    → FaceBook

Known as the “Mad Genius of Poker,” Mike Caro is generally regarded as today's foremost authority on poker strategy, psychology, and statistics. He is the founder of Mike Caro University of Poker, Gaming, and Life Strategy (MCU). See full bio → HERE.

2 thoughts on “Mike Caro poker word is Pride”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Let's make sure it's really you and not a bot. Please type digits (without spaces) that best match what you see. (Example: 71353)

  1. Great advice. From playing professionally (or trying to) for 15 years, I agree with you 100%.

  2. Pride: showing off how superior your poker knowledge is to presumed dumb players….

    I was playing $4/8 LHE live and called down a guy who was betting into me with what I figured was top pair, while I was hoping one of my two draws would come in. They didn’t. The board had paired on the flop, I bet into it with my straight and flush draw when everyone folded around and got one caller. Ace hits the turn, doesn’t help me, guy bets into me, I call, he bets river, I fold, he shows Ax. I ask, “So, you weren’t worried I had hit the set on the flop?”

    “Of course not,” he’s smiling indulgently at poor dumb me, “If you had a set you wouldn’t have bet!”

    I nod appreciatively at his superior poker wisdom. Yup, I guess he had my number, all right. About a half hour later my 78s hit a 779 rainbow board. Three players called my flop and turn bets. One, my very wise friend, made K9 on the river and check-raised me. We were HU, it took two more raises for him to decide to call.

    I know. I’m committing a Caro sin. I’m proud and showing it.

    I’ll have to try harder.

    Lis~

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Let's make sure it's really you and not a bot. Please type digits (without spaces) that best match what you see. (Example: 71353)