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A Bankroll Experiment
- 5-2-2008
In the
midst of Chris "Jesus" Ferguson's 0 to $10,000 online poker challenge, I thought I
would give it a shot, and put my bankroll management skills to the test.ÂÂ
Instead of starting at 0, I simple began with five dollars sent from PassiveHarry,
courtesy of WDIAV and their generous user title cash benefit. Before I
embarked on my challenge, I made sure to read
Although Ferguson plays online poker for real money; he mainly does so for a
challenge, solely to improve his game. In his article,
Back to my experiment, starting with five dollars saved me hours and hours
worth of time. Having to start with 0 would mean playing in poker freerolls until one
built up their account to at least $1.25 cents to even play in a real poker
game. Freerolls take hours on end; hours that I simply do not have.
Anyway, with the five dollars I had, I begun playing .5/.10 cent NL Hold’em. I
started at a nine person table. This would increase the number of hands I
saw and decrease the number of times I had to post any sort of blind.ÂÂ
I sat down with $3, and in a matter of seconds found myself down to
$2.25. I was sitting a table with a loose cannon, and knew playing with
him would only result in me losing my buy-in. So, sitting out and
standing up was in my best interest. Down $0.75, I relocated in a new
table. Started with $3 again, I sat at a table that had 6/9
players. In an hours time I had worked the $3 into $9.50.
After increasing my bankroll by a slim margin, I decided to bank my profit of
$6, and stand up. Moving to a new table, I put $3 down again. In
ten minutes time, my $3 turned into $6.ÂÂ
Playing $0.5/$0.10 cash games are vital while building a small bankroll.ÂÂ
The rake of lower stakes sit-n-go's is absurd, and would hurt my bankroll immensely.ÂÂ
At the current moment, using solid bankroll management skills, my cashier
stands at $14.23. The
most important element while performing your own bankroll management experiment
is to stay strict to percentiles and not play above your limits.ÂÂ
Take my situation. Turning 5 into 14 doesn’t mean I increase my
stakes. I will continue to grind away until the money increases
(hopefully) before I even begin to think of increasing my limits. Put your bankroll management skills to the test, try you're very own experiment.ÂÂ
You will surprisingly learn a lot about your game, and hopefully be able to
recognize past mistakes you made and now correct them.

