Lex Fridman Podcast - #324 – Daniel Negreanu: Poker
Episode Date: September 27, 2022Daniel Negreanu is one of the greatest poker players of all time. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Backbone: https://playbackbone.com/lex to get perks with order - Audible: ...https://audible.com/lex to get 30-day free trial - Shopify: https://shopify.com/lex to get 14-day free trial - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex to get 20% off - Fundrise: https://fundrise.com/lex EPISODE LINKS: Daniel's Twitter: https://twitter.com/RealKidPoker Daniel's Instagram: https://instagram.com/dnegspoker Daniel's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dnegreanu Daniel's MasterClass: https://masterclass.com/lex (MasterClass is a sponsor, use link to support podcast) Daniel's books: Power Hold'em Strategy: https://amzn.to/3ByYtJg Hold'em Wisdom for All Players: https://amzn.to/3LpgXQG Book mentioned: Modern Poker Theory: https://amzn.to/3dkJIBK PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (06:43) - Poker hands (14:39) - Poker ranges (20:10) - Game theory optimal (36:25) - Winning (42:57) - Losing (48:58) - Mental game (53:17) - Day in the life (1:02:20) - History of poker (1:06:10) - Poker solvers (1:12:46) - Online poker (1:20:49) - Greatest poker player of all time (1:40:43) - Main Event of the WSOP (1:49:14) - Advice for beginners (1:54:44) - Cheating (2:04:43) - Movies (2:10:10) - Advice for young people (2:19:29) - Love (2:24:43) - The Gambler
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The following is a conversation with Daniel and the Grana, one of the greatest poker players
of all time.
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This is the Lex Friedman podcast to support it. Please check out our sponsors in the description. And now, dear friends, here's Daniel the Grana.
Everything everyone does at the poker table conveys information.
So let me ask sort of the big overview question.
What are the various sources of information that you project and others
project at the table that convey information?
Well, there's several different things.
There's the ones that are conscious and then there's the ones that are
subconscious, right?
Like on the conscious level, it might be something someone says, right?
You know, you ask them a question and they say, oh, you know, you shouldn't call
me here. You should. So there's the verbal tells. There's also the more, you know, subconscious
stuff, body posture, right? The eyes, the throat, the pulse, various things that are, you
know, less controllable. I find I use a combination of both to try to gain information, but generally when I have somebody more comfortable
They give off more when like everyone has a different approach. Phil Ivy likes to intimidate. I go the other way
I want my opponents to be relaxed so that they'll give me more in that regard
So Phil Ivy likes to perturb the system like mess with it to see what comes out
I think Phil has an aura about him where he wants you to know that he's watching you.
Be afraid. Be uncomfortable. Because when you're uncomfortable, I got you.
Right. And that's sort of his stick where he, you know, and people do. Like when you sit at a table
with Phil Ivey, it's intimidating. He likes to rule by fear and you like to rule by, uh,
what is it love? That's a really good way to put it. I never put it like that, but it makes a lot of sense.
Yeah, you know, fear, feel ivy.
And then with me, it's fine, don't worry.
I'll make your money, but you're gonna enjoy it.
It's great.
So that's what the talking at the table
is about is getting to be relaxed
and get some of that gray area
between the conscious and the subconscious
to reveal something.
Yeah, there's that too.
And also just, you know,
and this is just part of who I am anyway.
Like I like to talk to people,
but one of the byproducts is the more I know about you,
the more I likely know about how you think
about different situations, right?
So what do you do for a living?
Oh, I'm a lawyer.
I defend criminals, okay.
So this guy probably spends a lot of his time
twisting the truth, trying to find,
and then, so then you already have a mindset of like,
this guy might be more likely to bluff
or he's probably comfortable doing that. Very subtle things like that.
And you start to pick up cues on what nervousness looks like for this person,
what the nervousness communicates, all that kind of stuff. So we're talking about physical
tells here. Yeah, physical tells is a secondary thing. I was more specifically like player profiling,
right? And sort of understanding the type of mind that I'm dealing with, right?
So again, somebody who's a lawyer is used to trying, is fine with being deceptive as
part of a game, right?
Whereas maybe somebody's a Sunday school teacher and you know, they don't feel comfortable.
They maybe they think bluffing might be dishonest, right?
So they're less likely to try some shenanigans against you.
So, and then the other
thing too is what type of person is this in terms of their, you know, out view on life, right? Are
they positive? Do they feel like things go their way or they're not, right? There's those people
that always, well, of course I lost. I always lose with this hand. And those types of people you
can manipulate, because when a card comes that you
don't have them be, right?
But you can pretend because they'll believe it.
Like, of course you beat me.
So you bet all your chips against them knowing that you can scare them because they're,
they already feel like they're going to lose.
The inherent, like the cynicism.
Exactly.
The cynicism is easy to play against because you can convince them that their cards suck.
Yeah.
When somebody believes that they're a loser
or they're unlucky, right?
And that bad things happen to them always
and they never catch a break.
Well, you know, you can just help them make it true.
What do you think about the rounder's Teddy KGB
when he does the Oreo tell?
Do players at the high level communicate that kind of stuff?
Do you think it's realistic to be able to have a tell
like this?
That's partially subconscious.
So first of all, I love Brian Coppeman, who made the film.
And I think what they were going for is something obvious
to the general public, right?
Yeah. Like, okay, it's very clear.
You know, he eats the cookie, he doesn't eat the cookie,
and it means one of the other.
At the highest levels, something that, you know,
blatant, you're not going to find.
You're going to find a lot more subtle things, maybe with posture or, or
timing or, you know, different things like that. But at the lower levels, you know,
you know, you might see some, you might see, you know, with a lot of people,
when they're in a hand and they've bet whether they drink water in the hand is
going to tell you something, generally speaking.
It's such an intimate part of the human experience that I feel like if you have
food, you're going to reveal something about yourself through the way you eat. I feel like that's
a dangerous thing to have at the table. Well, the thing is generally speaking, people don't eat food
in the middle of a hand. Like, they're not going to bet and then just like grab burgers.
I need burgers, right? What they will do though is, you know, they bet and it's up to you and then
they're whether they're uncomfortable or they do it unconscious, they just want to do something
to make themselves look relaxed or whatever, and they grab a water where they don't really need it in that moment,
but they're trying to take your mind off of the situation.
So in the movie, I wanted to show a simplistic version of something that does happen, something
that's visually sort of clear.
Yeah, because I think one of the things Rounder's got right, is that it's a poker movie,
right? But you
don't have to be great at poker, really understand poker to
enjoy the movie. And that, you know, Oreo cookie tell, like
everyone gets that. Like, okay, that's simple. If he
would have went with something more subtle, you know, like
looking your lips or looking to the right, and I think it might
have been lost on the audience. And they didn't actually
explicitly say that that was a tell, I don't think.
Nothing did everything to let you know, right?
With the music and slow motion and he's staring at it
and he's like, aha.
Yeah, but they didn't actually say,
you know, this is an obvious tell.
Like, my name is character.
At the very end of it, you know, after he says,
how the fuck did you lay that down?
The monster.
Right?
And he's like, he's like, he's like, you're not hungry?
Not hungry, KJB?
He's like, I keep on, but you know, he's,
so he sort of references it and then he takes the cookies.
He notices, he's like, ah, he got me and he breaks the,
you know, the rack of the,
well, probably if you had that kind of tell on him,
you wouldn't, in my name is character would not reveal.
Well, he says in the movie, he says normally, wouldn't reveal a tell, but I don't have that
much time. Like I've got to rattle him some way. So that was one way to do that.
How hard is it to do that to, in the KGBX, to lay down a monster in those situations? In general,
how hard is it to lay down a really strong hand just psychologically?
Yeah, no. I mean, I think it's incredibly difficult for the vast majority of people. You know,
part of what makes professionals really, really good is recognizing a situation that's very,
very dangerous and they need to, you know, jump ship. Like, what happens to a lot of players is you
get married to a hand. Let's say you have pocket aces, which is the best possible hand, right?
But the board runs out where it's 7, 8, 9, and then there's a jack and then there's a six. It's like, you have a great hand
to start, but you don't anymore. So one of the difficult things for the average player is,
you know, once they've put money in, cutting their losses and saying, okay, let's move on
to the next hand. It's very, very difficult thing for a lot of people.
At every stage of like pre-flop, all the way through,
be able to just make a decision at that level.
So yeah, essentially not being attached.
Okay, I've already put in $40,000 in this pot.
And this guy's better than another 20.
Well, I mean, I gotta get my 40 back, right?
Except, you know, in some cases, you have to reassess
individually this situation and realize,
all right, well, this is a bad investment.
So I gotta cut my losses. By the way, I should mention that you have an incredible YouTube channel where you explain
a lot of stuff.
You do a podcast, you do a lot of really awesome stuff.
My probably favorite thing that you've done is your masterclass that people should definitely
check out masterclass.com slash lux.
There you go.
No, but it really is one of my favorite masterclass courses, but also just a great introduction
overview of poker.
It's great for people like me who are beginners, essentially, but it's probably really good
for intermediate people too.
I mean, there's a lot of really good detail there.
Anyway, what are hand rangers?
And how do you begin to estimate the range of hands that your opponents have? Yeah. so I actually you're speaking to you to buy did a video on specifically this yes, maybe with rangers and essentially you know back in my day the old days
We didn't talk about poker that way. We're like I think he's got this or I think he's got that right
Nobody thought of like the range of hands a player can have so I guess the best example is imagine like all the potential hands
Is being a part of a grid, right? So the
first player to act, they could have any one of those hands, right? Anyone randomly dealt, right?
But let's say now that that player raised to $3,000. Okay, well, you can eliminate now from this grid
a whole bunch of hands that this player can no longer have because if they had a two and a three,
they wouldn't do that. So you can say, okay, he probably has a big pair,
he has ace king, you've narrowed the range of hands down, right?
Now, through every action on the flop, on the turn,
and on the river, based on the decisions they make,
you narrow it down even further.
So the range of hands is the whole,
the entirety of all the possibilities
of this player you believe could have,
and sometimes they fool you,
or they have a hand that you don't expect them to have in their range. And you know, maybe a little bit
unorthodox doing some things you don't expect to throw you off. But a range is essentially
all the possibilities and it narrows as before the flop it's endless, player raises, okay it's minimized,
now player bets the flop, okay it's minimized further And then by the river, you can narrow down the entire range
to just maybe even a few hands.
Is it always shrinking or is there sort of as you get surprised?
I mean, it's always just an estimate.
So does it ever expand based on sort of chaotic, unpredictable,
un-predicted, surprising behavior of the players?
It really should never expand.
The range of hands should always get smaller, right?
Like again, we start with the full scope,
and then you should factor in like,
okay, these are all the possible hands
you can have on the flop now, right?
We can't have new hands on the turn.
And if you get to that point where you think,
oh, well, maybe he has this hand,
then you sort of misjudged his range prior.
So you're not thinking clearly.
It should always shrink from the full
scope to, you know, hopefully just a couple.
Well, in that video, you also talk about it used to be that you would play your hand,
but now you're playing a range that you're representing a range. You're not even just
playing your hand. So what does it mean to represent a certain range?
Yeah, so that's another big thing that's different about poker from, you know, my day to
today is that back in our day,
we would like put people on one hand,
like you probably have King nine,
or you have Jacks or something like that.
Now, people are cognizant of the idea
that you could have an entire range of hands.
So then you ask yourself in situations, all right,
I know what I have, but what I could have in his mind,
or my opponent's mind is anyone of these hands.
What would I do with the entirety of these hands? And so a lot of people that are trying to play optimally you know game through optimal.
They think in terms of what their range of hands would do rather than their very specific hand.
So is this bluffing in that context essentially misrepresenting the range of hands that you have.
representing the range of hands that you have. So how you think about it?
Not exactly, because so an optimal range,
like if I bet the river, if I'm playing game theory optimal,
a portion of my range is going to be, I have it,
I got the best hand, and a portion of my range is going to be
bluff and they'll be balanced.
So in theory, no matter what you do,
no matter what you do, you call or you fold,
in theory, it's just you're printing a zero, as we say.
You're not getting gaining
or losing any EV. If you were to do it that way.
What's EV? EV is expected value. So every play that you make, it either is going to
in the long run, make you some money, or it's just a losing play. And as a professional,
you try to make the fewest amount of minus EV plays you can. And the only reason you
would make these minus EV plays is potentially if you were trying to set up your opponent
for something later, right?
So I might make some minus EV plays, right?
So that I can exploit you later, right?
So you're building up an image.
Player profile that's false in some way.
Something that I'm gonna,
I'm gonna plant seeds in your mind
so that I can exploit them later.
So for example, why would players like show a big bluff? Like what would be the reason for that? They show a big bluff so that you
know that they're capable of it. But maybe in their mind, they're never going to do that
again. But now they think, you know, he bluffed me last time, maybe he's doing it again.
But that's what we call like a leveling war. Because you know, you can go back and forth
with whether or not, okay, this guy might know that. Like, he showed a bluff because he's never
gonna bluff me again, so that that's where it gets a little.
So that's a little bit different.
When we're talking about hand ranges,
that's different than building up a mental model
of what your opponents, what your opponents think of you
and what your opponents think that you think of them
and so on and so forth, are you trying
to construct those kinds of mental models?
And is that separate from the hand ranges?
They go hand in hand, right?
So if in a given situation, right, my range has this many value hands and this many bluffs,
okay?
So in theory, if I want to be balanced, you know, this is my range and this is what it
looks like.
I'll bet this 50% of the time, bet this 50% time. However, if I know that you think that I bluff too much, right,
then I'm not going to bluff as much. I'm going to start instead of betting these hands that
I would 50, 50, now what I'll do is I'll do like 70, 30 where I'm basically value betting
most of the time against you, you know, or vice versa. If I know you always fold because
you think I have it, I'm going to view it the other way.
And instead of blessing 50% up, up 70, 80% of the time to take advantage of your perception
of me.
So to be successful, do you have to construct a solid model of all the players in the
game?
Or can you ignore them?
I think it's really important.
Like, when I play, I have in my phone, I have a player profile of everyone that I play
with whenever I pick up whether it's physical tells or tendencies they like to,
you know, that they have. Um, and overall, that's just going to, you know, that's going to allow
you to exploit more, right? So like, if I played with somebody I've never played before,
I'm probably just going to play optimally, or at least as optimal as I know how until I start to,
you know, gain some information on that player know how until I start to gain some information
on that player so that I can start to exploit them. So what's the, when you say optimally, what does
optimally mean versus so game theory optimal versus exploitative? Yeah, so that's like sort of
the big debate in poker. We call it for short, GTO, game Theory Optimal versus Exploitative Play. So, GTO, Game Theory Optimal, is the idea that
no, like, I'm gonna set up my play so that no matter what you do, you cannot exploit me. So,
essentially, that's playing rock paper scissors, right, and throwing 33% of each every time, right?
Nothing you do can beat that. Nothing. You'll never be able to beat that. Right? Exploitative play is starting to notice that, okay, well, you know what? This guy loves rock.
He loves playing rock. So I'm going to go pay for a little more. So I'm going to take advantage of him.
So I won't be through. But now all of a sudden, when I do that, I'm no longer playing optimal.
Because if you knew that I was making that adjustment, now you can exploit me.
So that's where the sort of what we call the leveling war happens where people veer from, you know, the optimal line of okay
33% each for each one you can't beat that
But you also can't win with that either
So you're always trying to be at the cutting at the leading edge of sub optimal play
You're yeah, you're going back and forth. I listen at the highest levels like online these guys play, like they're trying to play pretty close to like Game Theory Optimal.
Because it's very difficult to do first of all.
No human being will ever be able to compute
at the level that computers can.
It's just never going to happen.
So that's where like the human mind has to come into play
and say, all right, well, you know,
if I was playing against a robot, I would do X,
but I'm not, I'm playing against you.
So I have to adjust. So does Game theory optimal only look at the the bedding and the hands
in the current hand or does it look at the history? So if you were to play optimally optimally, would
you need to look at the history of the individual players or just every hand is taken afresh? See,
that's why I love playing exploitatively for the most part because with GTO,
anything that's happened in the past
has no bearing on this situation.
It's simply based on what is the optimal play
in a vacuum in this spot,
whereas exploitatively, okay,
this guy bluffs way too much in these spots.
So now I can make an adjustment and call more,
you know, based on past information.
GTO doesn't take into account history at all.
So like in a tournament, how quickly can you construct
a player profile that you've never played before?
Depends on the level of the buy-in, really, right?
So the higher the buy-in, generally speaking,
you can assume if they're professionals that they're going to have
pretty similar profiles, because you know, everyone's playing,
you know, if you're playing this game well, it looks similar, right? At the lower levels, you know,
playing, say, in 1,000 or 1,500 dollar buying or less, you know, within a half an hour or an hour,
I have an idea of, all right, just by seeing how some players played a few hands that, you know,
so here's the thing with poker, it's like, I can see one clue of what he did, and it tells me so
much about what he'll do in a vast number of scenarios.
And you're saying at the high level,
people don't give too many clues.
I mean, at the highest level,
is people are so much more similar
in terms of their style of play.
They try to find some kind of balance
between the GTO and the...
And now with all that we've seen on TV, right?
Like people get to watch streams
and whatever, so you get to watch all the top players play.
So if you want to learn how to play better,
guess what you do. You copy what they're doing essentially. Like you get to watch all the top players play. So if you want to learn how to play better, guess what you do?
You copy what they're doing essentially.
Like, oh, he's only raising this much.
I'm gonna do the same.
They're betting this much.
I'm gonna do the same.
So as a result, what you end up having is sort of,
you know, everyone deciding,
like I guess it's similar in chess with openings, right?
People figure out, okay, this is an opening.
This is what you do.
And that's it, you know, and then everyone's similar to that.
And then you have, of course, the outliers
who try to do things a little differently and confuse people.
It seems like the outliers, like we talked offline
and Magnus in order to win Magnus Carlson
has to place suboptimally in the openings
to take his opponents out of the comfort zone.
So he can play what he calls pure chess
as quickly as possible, which is just both short and deep calculations. Purely what you're looking at the board
versus memorized openings and memorized lines. Is it the case that the best poker players are the
ones that are able to at the right time play really suboptimally or really on orthodox.
Yeah, specifically, there's one guy who last year sort of took the
poker world by storm and his name is Michael Adamo. And he was doing things, like I said,
most of the top pros play very similarly with the way that they construct ranges
and their bet sizing and all these kind of things. He was doing some crazy things
that nobody else was doing.
So he studied, you know, sort of a different form of poker and it was unorthodox and it
throws people off because he's in his comfort zone with these bed sizes and different things,
whereas everyone else, they're not well studied in those spots.
So as a result of him being unorthodox, he became like a monster and very difficult to
play against because he really knew what he was doing with it.
Internment or cash came?
He was tournaments. Yeah, he was crushing tournaments.
He was going against the norm in terms of what is like, you know, this is what you should do as a poker player in the spot.
He wasn't doing that.
He was doing what he thought was best and he was doing things outside the norm that again in a vacuum you could look at that and you go,
that's incorrect.
That he should not do.
That is a clear cut mistake.
Even, you know, the solvers or the computers or game theory would say, this is wrong, what
he's doing.
But it's not wrong if he's doing it in a way that he's exploiting other players' tendencies.
So for example, with him, say, he's playing far too aggressively, okay?
That's not good.
Unless your opponents are playing way too passively.
So if your opponents are playing passively, the answer is to be more aggressive with them.
And that's, I think, one of the, you know, biggest advantages he had was he was willing to do that.
So, but big, big, big pots, bluffing. Huge. So in a spot where somebody would make it a thousand,
he's making it 22,000. Like, what? What is this? This makes no sense and then people kind of know he has nothing but they they're too afraid to
Call him on it. Well, and then sometimes what happens is this is where the leveling comes in you're like, oh man
This guy's crazy. He's bluffing like nuts
Then he bets the 22,000 and you say I'm taking my stand. I call and then he shows you like you know four of a kind or something like that
Yeah, so he gets people out of their comfort zone
And I really enjoy watching him play.
He's probably my favorite player to watch today.
Watching a guy like that.
What aspect of his play have you been able to incorporate
into your own?
Like, what do you learn from that?
Because you're constantly learning, you constantly adjusting.
Yeah.
Well, no, and I love it.
And as I said, so I think a lot of players
sort of come to the same conclusions about this is how you play the spot.
But he doesn't.
And I love watching and thinking in terms of like why he's doing this.
And one specific thing, for example, is he's willing to really go for it.
So in a spot where let's say he bets 2000, he knows he'll get you call 2000, right?
But he wants it all.
He wants it all.
So he says, you know what?
I'll give up the 2000 that's guaranteed and I'll bet 50,000.
And maybe if you call that, now, you know, so listen, he lose the 2007 A times, but if
I get called for the 50 just once, you know, I'm profiting from that.
And it also sets the, you know, the template for you to really sort of be a player that
people are afraid of play against.
He knocked me out in a tournament very early on in a huge event.
And he had, he was so far ahead,
he was one step ahead of my thought process in a hand.
And he did something that makes no sense whatsoever.
I looked it up on the computer, huge mistake, if you will,
but not a mistake,
because he was taking advantage of my tendency.
Do you remember the cars?
Is there an example?
I remember the whole thing.
I remember like this yesterday.
Can you take it like through an example hand that that really demonstrates it? So I'll explain the whole thing. I remember it like yesterday. Can you take it like through an example hand
that that really demonstrates it?
So I'll explain the hand here.
So I'm on the button and I have Ace King,
which is a very good hand and I raise
and he calls from the big blind.
The flop is 975.
So I have nothing really here.
He checks, I check behind.
The turn cards in Ace, he checks. I bet half the pot, there were 6,000 and there are about 3,000 check behind. The turn cards in Ace. He checks, I bet half the pot.
There were 6000 and there I bet 3000, okay?
Now this is not a typical thing you see people do,
but he raised me to 36,000.
Massive raise, bigger than the size of the pot.
What was the flop again?
975, turn in Ace.
What is he representing exactly?
Well, he could have a straight,
he could have a three, he could have a kind, he could have, you have you know ace is up you could have a whole bunch of hands so you check
raises me big to thirty six thousand i called the bet so now there's something like seventy five
thousand the river is a five so the board pairs okay he thinks for a while and he bets all of it
which is three times the pot he He bets 225,000.
There's only 75,000 now.
And in theory, he should never ever have a hand that can do that.
So he confused me and I was like, okay, well, this guy's aggressive, he likes the bluff
and all this kind of stuff.
So I made the call with the Ace King and he turned over 6'8".
So we had a straight.
But here's the thing, in theory, that river card is bad for him.
When I call the turn, I have a lot of the time,
three of a kind, two pair that just made a full house.
So he was risking that, and the reason he did it
was because he thought I would perceive him to be
bluffing a lot, so he just went for it, and it worked.
He was able to double up right away
and knock me out of the tournament like an hour in.
Do you think he thought you made fold like what I think specific?
I think it was it came down to this. It's as simple as this
He was cognizant of his image as being a wild aggressive bluffer, right?
And he was fully taking advantage of me
Knowing that my tendency in these spots is to be curious and I want to call and I want to see it
So he was fully taking advantage of the fact that he thought I would call too often.
Because otherwise his play makes no sense.
A small bet, a medium-sized bet, those make sense.
But the bet that he made in theory is indefensible.
It's just like clearly a mistake,
but that's why poker so fascinating
because he makes this play and it wasn't a mistake.
It was above the rim, is what it was.
Do you think he put you on Ace something?
I think exactly what he thought I had was Ace King or something like that.
You know, that is so fun. That is so fun that the two players at such a high level
were able to mess with each other's mind. How old is he? He's young.
He's in his 20s. I feel like that takes a lot of guts to take risks like that.
Well, that's what's great about him. He certainly never accused of not having the guts to put it in.
And that's scary to play against, right?
The easiest opponent to play against is one who's just straight forward, passive, you
know, not wild and crazy.
Playing against him, he's going to put you in the blender, as we say.
How can you control what you're perceived as representing?
What hand do you're perceived as representing, what hand you're perceived of as representing.
So, if we're, if the game of modern poker is others are representing certain hands through
the information they convey and you're representing a certain hand range, sorry, through the
play, how can you control that? Or is that not, is that the wrong way to think about it? But isn't bluffing and bet sizing and all that kind of stuff essentially controlling
what others perceive as the hand range you have?
Ultimately, in terms of like controlling people's perception of you, you can't fully control
it, but you can do things to sway it, right?
As I said earlier, showing bluffs and things like that,
you know, leads your opponent to think,
maybe you do this more often than you're supposed
to or whatever the case may be,
but in terms of like controlling,
you know, what your opponent can think about
your hands in certain spots,
I don't really think it equates that way.
It doesn't really, you know,
I think what people do when they're playing a hand
is they think in terms of, all right,
what does my range look like here?
Okay, so my range has value.
So you look at the actual hand you have secondarily.
So you say, okay, well, I could have this,
I could have this, I actually have this, right?
But I could have all these hands.
So my opponent, if he's thinking on a high level,
he knows I could have all these hands and I have this one.
So what do I do with this one, right?
In the bigger scope of things.
I guess I'm trying to understand,
if you're betting, isn't a bet pre-flop.
You're bet.
Doesn't that narrow the hand ranges?
Doesn't matter what you have.
Absolutely.
The, and,
absolutely.
And if you bet big combined with the perception of you
at the table,
doesn't that represent a hand-range?
Uh-huh, absolutely.
So like you can, with betting,
essentially control what people estimate you to have.
Sure, so that makes it, so yeah, so that's true.
So for example, one of the most extreme examples is,
we have, there's spots where there's a bit
that's considered polarizing, right?
So let's say there's a thousand in the pot and you bet 10,000, which is crazy big, right?
That's saying one of two things. I either have the absolute best possible hand or absolutely nothing
because any of the hands in the middle, I wouldn't do that with.
So I'm essentially telling you when I bet that, I'm like, I either got it or you know,
I don't have a mediocre hand,
like just a pair of nines or a pair of tins.
I have a royal flush or have nine hives.
So with my bet sizing, I can control
how my opponent's perceiving what my range is gonna be.
So for example, similarly, if I bet small, right,
well, that could be a lot of hands, right?
That can represent a big part of my range.
The bigger the bet, the more the narrower the range is.
Harold is more polarized at it.
Yeah, yeah.
How far could you get without looking at your cards?
Do you think, how well could you do?
It depends on who I'm playing with, right?
So if I was playing in a tournament
with mediocre or weak players,
I think I could probably do pretty well.
But even like world class.
World class, I don't think you'd have much of a chance really.
I mean. The question is trying to get it like,
how important is it that actual hands you have versus the hands you're representing?
Right. So that's the question of essentially,
if you're not looking at your hand pre-flop,
you're basically giving up in a fundamental advantage, right?
Or you're going to be playing way sub-optimally in terms of your hand selection, right?
Because if you don't look at your hand, you might have a two and a three. That's not good,
but now you're playing it. So you've invested whatever, two, three thousand bucks with absolute
garbage, and it's very difficult to climb that hill, right? So it's much better to actually look
at your cards and go, okay, I'll throw in the two and three, and I'll play the ace king.
Speaking of garbage, you're you've said that 10.7 is your favorite poker hand to play.
Is that still the case?
And what aspect of it is that you enjoy?
Yeah, so it's one of those viewer discretion is advised.
Like 10.7, I've just noticed throughout my life,
you know, it's a tendency thing that I've been lucky with it.
Yeah.
So that's just sort of, but it's not like I'm going to look at 10.7
and go, wow, you know, I'm going to call an all-in
or anything like that.
I'll play it in situations where it makes sense, but you know, it's rare because it's not a very good
hand. But is there some aspect of belief in the magic of this hand manifests quality of
play? There should be. But I let's so here's a thing. It's, you know, poker players, some
of said, it's unlucky to be superstitious
But we're all a little bit superstitious a little bit, you know
And so I don't know
Maybe it is a case where when I have 10 seven I feel somehow
Energetically that you know, I'm more likely to catch something which may actually make me more app to be aggressive and confident in the hand
But but you really shouldn't let yourself do that like you're not supposed to fall in love with any specific hands
Yeah, but you know uncertainty is ruthless.
It's you know the fact that it's a
a game of statistics it can be too painful for the human psychology. So maybe you have to hold on to certain
superstitions
because you know I mean there's there's a cold absurdity to the fact
that you can play extremely well and still lose.
I mean, actually this year, you've played
what is it?
50 days of World Series of Poker.
And it seems like, at least from the perspective
of me looking at it through the internet, it seems like there's a lot of hands that you were like 70, 30, 80, 20, all in hands that you just did not be. We're not going your way. That can sort of break you mentally.
Absolutely.
Yeah, one of the hardest things, especially about playing because the cash games and tournaments are different. One of the most difficult things about being a tournament player is resilience,
because more often than not,
like so if there's a tournament with 1000 people,
to win the tournament, you have to get all of the chips.
That means there's one winner and 999 losers.
So it's very rare that you actually win all the chips.
So you're essentially at some point,
in every tournament you play,
you're gonna deal with like really bad luck
and disappointment.
And sometimes those streaks can have you question yourself
and be introspective about, okay,
so I think I'm 47 now.
I think I've gotten better as time went on
between distinguishing, okay,
am I losing right now because of bad luck?
Or is it fundamentally decisions I'm making
are not very good, right?
And that's one of the hardest things
for anyone who plays poker to get to,
right? Why am I losing? Am I losing because of my opponents being better? I'm not playing well,
or am I losing just because of luck? And because there's so much variance in poker, a lot of players
can be confused on both sides of the coin. One guy's winning and he thinks he's great, he's really
not. Wait till the cards break even as we say. I think there's a lot of parallels to life as well. If you get screwed over, over and over,
it's hard to know if you're doing something wrong or if it's just bad luck.
I think they did a study. I remember there was like a study that was supposed to be related to gambling,
but it was mice and they put them in a little maze and they go down these three tubes and they
go down this one tube and there'd be cheese, right? And then they go down again, cheese. Three times in a row, there was cheese there, right? The next time there was an electric
shock there, not cheese. The rat went, you know, he, the most went to, to get zapped, he got zapped,
okay, came back, he kept going back to get zapped until he died, like he kept going because he found
cheese there, he has one there. So he continued to go chase that wind
despite it being, you know, now all of a sudden,
not worthwhile to lead out.
And essentially what they said was
that is essentially how they compared it to like,
you know, the gambling brain
and how people think about gambling.
You chasing the winds.
You learn too much.
You sort of over-generalized the lessons learned from the times you've won.
Yeah, like beginners luck can be detrimental. If you have some early luck and you believe that this
is just the way it's supposed to be forever, you know, it can put you in a delusional state where,
you know, you feel like I'm just great, but no, you're not. You were just lucky in the beginning.
I actually played poker once in Vegas. It was a
It wasn't a tournament, but it was a kind of tournament-like
Style I already forgot what it was, but what I do remember is I had four of a kind so the last hand I've ever played
In poker was I got a four of a kind and there was a
Couple of others with really strong hands over you went all in and I think you get some kind of bonus for getting four of a kind.
Bad beat Jackpot, you were playing it.
Yeah, so it's something like this.
I apologize if I don't know the details, but I just remember winning a lot of money.
And I walked away from the table, so I'm not playing poker again.
This is great. I'm going to hit it.
I thought, because I started to feel like this is your, I started to think, even though I haven't
really played poker at all, that I'm good and I was a really dangerous feeling.
And everybody was really mad for walking away from the table.
One of the other things that I think is interesting about poker too is good is relative, right?
So you could be the seventh best player in the whole world, like literally seven best
player.
But if you're playing with the other six, you're the sucker.
You are the worst player in the game, right?
So there's a lot of players.
For example, the Dan Blasarians of the world, right?
He's not a top level player, like these guys you see on TV, but he probably makes more
money than they do because he plays with people that are far below his skill level.
So part of the skill of being a poker player is finding situations where you're profitable, regardless of your skill level. So part of the, part of the skill of being a poker player is finding situations where you're profitable, you know, regardless of your skill level.
Another connection to life. You think Dan Balsarian is telling the truth about having made
what is it? $50, $100 million, just a huge amount of money playing poker.
Considering what I know about the private games and the types of players who play in these
private games and the stakes that they play.
I absolutely believe, you know, Dan has made,
I don't know how many millions,
but I, you know, whether it's 50 or whatever,
but it wouldn't surprise me that if you play in these games
within a year or you, you know, you find the right
businessman who has way too much Bitcoin money, you know,
and you know, in one night you take him for 20 million,
I absolutely could see it.
I don't see any reason why.
Listen, where he got his money initially, you know, that's up to interpretation from his father, whatever,
but what, but has he made a bunch of money playing poker? Absolutely. No question.
Did, do you feel like as somebody who loves the game, do you think there's something
almost ethically wrong in playing people much worse than you?
So yeah, that's a good question because because you know, part of the reason I played
poker and wanted to become professional was like, I want to be make my mother proud, right?
And I don't think she would be proud of me taking like grandma betty's like last five dollars,
you know, and down the street, you know, sending her broke and taking her pension check. So I play
at the highest stakes against people who can afford it. They know who I am. I'm not a hustler. I'm
not pretending I'm bad at poker to squeeze in. Like I was thinking about this just yesterday
because I played in a game that if I played that sort of role,
where a lot of guys do pros that sort of play down their skill level,
pretend they're just one of the guys,
these guys can make $20,000,000 in a year legitimately.
Like I believe that like if I did that,
if I said, you know what, I'm gonna go down that path,
get into these games in LA, you know, and travel and do all this kind of stuff, I can make like, if I did that, if I said, you know what, I'm gonna go down that path, get into these games in LA, you know,
travel and do all this kind of stuff,
I can make 20 million a year.
But, it feels a little greasy, right?
I don't like to kiss anyone's ass.
I don't like to ask it for anyone for a favor
or things like that.
So, but yeah, like, I feel, listen, a rich guy,
who wants to sit down with a million bucks
and get drunk and lose it, I have no empathy for that.
I'm like, I don't have any moral qualms with that.
So if Grandma Betty is a billionaire,
you're gonna send it, send it, right?
You know, absolutely, why not?
Well, let me ask you about a tough period
of your recent life.
You had a rough, like we mentioned,
the world series of poker losing $1.1
million over 48 days.
Where were you going through mentally during that?
So here's the thing, you know, I do, like you said, I do a YouTube vlog every day.
So I kind of share my thoughts and listen, I can edit that thing and keep out the bad stuff,
but I think it's more authentic and genuine to show people the actual struggles and the
pain that I go through, you know, without it. And I'd say the one thing I'm most proud of throughout the entire thing is
the resilience because there are moments you see me where I'm broken. I'm just like, I can't take
it. I broke a selfie stick this year. Like I was filming it because, you know, I do for my vlog. I
smashed the stick through it in the corner, right? So just that was my like hit rock bottom moment.
And then I put the camera on me and I was like, all right, I let people see it.
But mentally, he was very difficult
because there was a feeling of hopelessness
where you can, I was making good decisions.
Like I genuinely felt like I'm playing really, really well.
But every time my money went in,
my opponent's money went in and say I was 60%, 70%, 80%,
for about a two week stretch, I lost every one of those.
And you start to wonder, you like, I can't win if I never win, you know, in these spots. So it was difficult.
Luckily, I have, you know, 20 odd years of experience and how to deal with it. And so, as I said,
I wake up the next day, ready to go.
So is if nothing happened to a certain degree, obviously, you know, the more, the more it
happens in the higher biomes, like the one where I broke the selfie stick, I lost 500,000 in that tournament, right?
And it was like the last card. It was painful.
I think he lost.
Yeah, that's great.
He's gonna beat that video. I think he lost.
What led up to the selfies that gate? Like what you just lost your shit for a like a
hundred milliseconds.
Like it was very brief. You're just like what the world wasn't making any sense.
Like how do I keep losing kind of thing?
How did you why did you lose your shit?
You should never really think like this, but part of me felt like I deserved the win this day.
Yes.
Right. So part of me was like listen, I've lost so many in the last two weeks.
All right. Let you know the poker gods be kind to me right now.
Let me win this.
And it looked good.
I was in a great situation on the flop, great situation on the turn.
I'm about to be a competitor.
I'm going to be a contender in this tournament to win a big prize pool and turn the whole
thing around.
It's all there for the taking.
And then boom, the last card, it just, you know, it was a couple of weeks of frustration
in the moment of filming that I just had, you know, sort of a visceral just, you know, it was a couple of weeks of frustration in the moment of filming
that I just had, you know, sort of a visceral reaction, you know, and I smacked the selfie stick,
and then like I, it was, I see a corner, it's safe, I think the selfie stick on the ground,
and of course, social media blows up about how, you know, I was a violent act, you know. I mean,
it's like, have you ever watched sports? Have you ever seen a guy on the golf course,
smack his club or throw their helmet? Like, you know, there was like, if you never watch sports, have you never seen a guy on the golf course smack his club
or throw their helmet?
Like, you know, there was the,
there's a guy Justin Bonemo is a poker player.
Yeah.
And he's a super,
I had a, for lack of a better word,
offended by everything.
And he was equating my throwing a stick on the ground
to violence against women, domestic abuse,
and the idea that like, this makes women feel unsafe
to play poker.
And so that was kind of a running joke for the last two weeks where every time I sat at a table,
the guys would be like, oh, I feel unsafe.
I feel unsafe.
Yeah, can you take me to the hand you remember what the hand was?
Like, what was the...
Yeah, so it was a, you know, the play around the bucket.
And raised David Peters, very aggressive player.
He went all in from the blind and I had a pair of pocket tens.
So I went with my tens and he had queen ten of spades.
So I was good.
I have the way the best hand.
The flop was like King nine three, one spade.
Turn was like the eight of spades.
So now he has a flush draw and the river was another spade.
So he got spade spade and he made a flush.
Well, but statistically you were winning the whole time.
Yeah, I was winning it up until the last part. What did he go on all in on? Was it a bluff? He made what's considered like a pretty
standard play in modern poker, where you know, a guy raised and he was just trying to pick up,
you know, what was there? And he ran into a hand in the big blind and you know, he got lucky.
So what was the throughout the strategy of preparation, the strategy of play? So you're playing so
many days,
are you trying to ignore the results
and stick to a particular strategy?
Yes, for the most part, you know,
what I'm trying to do is like,
if I formulate a strategy for the whole seven weeks,
because there's a varying degree of buy-ins too,
like you have small ones, like 1500,
then you've got like 250,000 more buy-ins.
So I map out the seven weeks and write, I'll give little bit of mental energy to the 1500, then you got like 250,000 more buying. So I map out the seven weeks and write, I'll give
a little bit of mental energy to the 1500, which means I'll be on my phone. I'm not going to,
I don't care as much about this one, but the 250K fully engaged, fully focused, you know,
up against obviously the higher the buy-in, you know, super top competition. And, you know, as far
as strategy goes, focusing on each day, playing the best
I can, not the result. Like because if you focus on the result, you're you're focusing
the wrong place. Your focus should be on the decisions you actually make. Right. And
if you're making good decisions consistently, you have to continue to do that. The frustrating
part is this with poker, unlike chess or other things, making the best possible decision
doesn't mean you win.
Often you lose. You don't chess.
Well, I did Magnus Carlson has also talked about that. There's some non-deterministic thing
about chess too, given the limited cognitive capacity of the human mind. So he says that
the world championship should have 20, 30, 40, 50 games, not
Not the few that they have. It's too low of a sample. So in that sense the high stakes
poker tournaments are very too low sample. Sure. Yeah. Well, when you think of the world series of poker
So you like as you said I lost about one million right in one tournament that was 500,000
So then you know like a few others here of high right? In one tournament, that was 500,000.
So then, like a few others here,
high-buyed tournaments.
So the sample or the amount was,
450 total tournaments with high variance.
And if you don't run well or do well in the highest buy-ins,
you're gonna have a losing summer.
So you did a podcast on the mental game
a few years ago, that's just something you really care about.
So what aspects of the mental game in poker is most difficult to master?
I think the most difficult thing for people is self-awareness, right, and resilience.
Self-awareness to know, okay, so, you know, again, is it, am I not doing as well as I could
be because of luck, or is there things that I can learn?
And I always look to mistakes as opportunities.
I really do.
When I make a mistake in a poker hand, right,
call it a breakdown or whatever,
that's where breakthroughs happen.
I'm like, oh, you know what I could have done here?
I could have done this and that would have been really good
and I'm gonna do that going forward.
So I think like with anything,
you know, when you start out playing golf,
like your goal is to just hit the ball, right?
Then you try to hit it near, then you're trying to hit it straight, then you're trying to hit it on the green, then you're trying to hit it close to the green to the point where the pros get where, you know, they're so finite.
They're trying to hit it 63 yards and spin it back three yards.
They're in, it's imperfect. Like they don't hit the perfect shot because the perfect shot for them is it goes in.
But they try and make the mistakes smaller and smaller and smaller poker is the same
We all make mistakes consistently the goal is to minimize especially the big ones
What was the lowest point for you psychologically?
In poker in general actually maybe it was this year maybe it in general. Do you remember there was times in your life
speaking of resilience that were extremely difficult
to you mentally?
Yeah, so early on, you know, as basically as a teenager
I was playing Toronto and then in my early 20s,
I'm like I'm going to Vegas, right?
And I thought I was the best.
21 years old, like check me out, right?
Show up with $3,000, 24 hours later, you know,
money's gone.
And I remember the moment vividly.
It was at the Bignan's horse,
she was about three in the morning.
I was playing with seven other people.
I lost my last chips.
I went into the bathroom, washed up, got out,
they all left.
And it was like a moment where I realized like,
okay, in Toronto, I was the big fish. But here, they were playing because of me. I was the sucker. I remembered
every one of their faces. And then I remember not having enough money to get back to budget
suites where I was staying. So I walked, I didn't, you know, I walked. And in that moment,
I was thinking about like, is this something that I'll be able to do? Am I good enough?
You know, what am I going to do now? I'm in Vegas. I don't know anybody. And I have no money. Right. So that was certainly like what felt like
a low point walking back behind paradise in Twain, which is not a great part of that.
Where did you find the strength to answer? Yes, that question that you can, you can still
do good. I think this has been sort of a pattern in my life where like in the evening after it happens,
like I don't have it, you know,
I don't have that feeling of hope or, you know,
resilience, if you will, I'm allowing myself
to experience despair, which is exactly where I'm at.
But then a good night sleep, wake up the next morning
and just within me, I have that inner confidence
to say, you know what, fuck it.
Get back on the hobby horse find a way make it work
Right, and I do but I do believe it's really therapeutic and worthwhile to allow yourself to feel and Venice
So many people today the Instagram culture world I call it. It's like they want to act like they're perfect
Nothing bothers them bullshit, right? You're pissed off. It's okay to show it. And motions fine. We all have it
There's no reason you have to
Suspress it obviously you don't want to have guys throw in selfie sticks around the room every time they lose a pot right yeah, but you know
I'm gonna make everybody feel unsafe yeah exactly that happens
Yeah, so you're saying there is a culture saying you know stay positive all this kind of stuff
But you know when you feel despair don't don't resist it. Write it out.
Because it doesn't go away, right?
That feeling, you know, you think you put it away in the pit of your stomach and you
think, you know, it's gone.
It's not.
It's still there.
Let yourself go.
Fuck.
You know, it's all right.
You know, there's nothing wrong with being a little bit emotional because once you've
experienced it, you let it out.
Now you can move past it.
Yeah, and I feel like, as long as you brain chemistry can support it, you can usually learn
a good lesson from it.
Like you become stronger, you become more resilient through it.
It's really interesting.
And a good night's sleep can really help.
Absolutely, yeah.
So through 2022, and in general, what is a perfect day in the life of day on the ground? I look like when you're like on a day when you have to play a big game big tournament game and so on
So like what what time do you wake up? What are you for breakfast?
So my life is twofold like one when I'm playing hardcore and one when I'm not and they look very different
Right, so give you a quick glimpse of like when I'm not, up at 10, breakfast in the gym at noon,
post workout, meal, coffee, walk,
like, I try to get, that's what I do for cardio.
You know, I'm just very like home-bodied.
I don't leave the house. It's very like boring and mundane, right?
Long distance walk. So like, what are you doing when you're walking? You're thinking about stuff. Well, honestly, I just walk leave the house. It's very like boring and mundane, right? Long distance walk. So like, what are you doing? You're walking, you're thinking about stuff.
Well, no, honestly, I just walk on the treadmill. I try to get 15,000 steps a day.
And I just walk for basically like an hour while I watch a show or I'm on the computer or something
like that. You know, I'm on the treadmill. Why walking, not running.
Well, I mean, I think walking, I mean, I do a little bit of running, but hardly any. I don't
enjoy it. Like I just like walking in, frankly, for fat loss
when usually what I'm doing after big poker tournaments
is getting back in shape, that walking's ideal for it.
Right?
So essentially it's like a tale to a,
during the World Series of Poker,
all my sort of structured life thrown out the window.
There's no walking.
There's very little walking, there's very little working out,
there's very little anything.
I go into the World Series, you know, like
this year I went in around 157 and I expected to gain about 10 pounds during the World
Series. Not good pounds. It wasn't muscle. But that's about what I did. 165. And then I
spend the next month trying to, you know, lose it. But during the World Series, when
I'm playing, the most important thing without question that I have to focus on. And this is why I stopped focusing on working on all of this.
I was sleep.
If I'm not rested, I'm useless.
If I only get five, six hours, and I have to go back the next day and play 14 hours,
the chances of me being at my best, very, very slim.
So sleep is a priority.
What's the perfect amount of sleep for you on those days?
Eight.
So eight hours is my go-to every night.
During the World Series of Poker, it's just not possible.
Because of the way that it's structured,
sometimes the tournaments end at 2.15 a.m.
I get home about three o'clock.
Takes me 30 minutes to get to sleep.
So now let's say I'm in bed by four.
Well, the tournament's at, you know, two.
So I have to get up and whatever. So it's very difficult to get exactly eight a bin bed by four. Well, the tournament said, you know, two, so I have to get up and whatever.
So it's very difficult to get exactly eight
a lot of the time, you know,
and also get back there in time.
Is there any hacks to quiet the mind?
Because you're going on a pretty intense roller coaster
mentally when you're playing?
Was is there any tricks to get into sleep
given the little-
I've been very lucky. Like I'm blessed.
I don't know if it's because of diet or what, but I've always been a very good sleeper.
You just shut off.
I get to sleep and I sleep like a baby, you know?
And I also nap really well.
Like during the world series, sometimes what will happen is that let's say I get knocked
out of one event at 4 p.m. and there's another one that I can jump in.
Instead of jumping right into it, I'll go into like a private room and take 45 minute nap,
and give me enough energy to continue
and sort of reset my mind.
Yeah, and it solves a lot of problems with the nap too.
It does?
Yeah, I feel like the nap is a magical trick in life.
What else?
Diet wise, what do you,
your mind is going,
you know, pretty intensely all day.
Yeah, so during like, like I said, when I'm not playing, I'm super regimented.
You know, I have, I literally measure everything, you know, I count calories, I count
macros, I follow it to a tee.
Pretty balanced diet or any vegan.
Vegan. So it's, you know, vegan diet, like, but balance in terms of cars and
yeah, yeah. I mean, I eat a healthy amount.. So it's vegan diet, like. But balance in terms of carbs and carbs. Yeah, yeah.
I mean, I eat a healthy amount.
I'm doing probably 150 grams of protein, like 60 grams of fat, 50, and then about.
And try to measure it all out.
I do.
Yeah, basically I created a meal plan.
So what I did for myself is because I'm really analinered.
I made a spreadsheet with like a day's food and I have six different ones.
So I just follow it.
Like I don't, it actually makes my life so much easier when I don't have to think about what I'm going to eat for lunch or what I'm eating different ones. So I just follow it. Like I don't, it actually makes my life so much easier
when I don't have to think about what I'm gonna eat
for lunch or what I'm gonna eat for dinner.
I already know what I'm gonna eat.
I already wrote it down and it doesn't get boring
because I'm switching it up every day,
you know, every six days and occasionally I'll,
you know, splurge and do something different.
During the World Series, a poker,
I eat whatever the fuck I wanna eat.
Yeah.
Like, at 2 a.m., I don't crave like a broccoli carrot salad.
Like I want chocolate candy and chips.
So I'll just do it.
So you listen to the cravings.
Yeah, I realize like it's surprising
because like you're so regimented.
Yeah.
Inside of that.
It's really difficult.
Like I've done it before where I played the World Series
poker and I made a point to work out every day.
But what that did was it sacrificed sleep.
So then I found like at 1 a.m., I would be more tired,
you know, because I've expended more energy
than I would otherwise.
So I essentially like look at the World Series
at six, seven weeks where my body's just gonna take a beating,
not like UFC fighter, but like a different kind of beating.
And that's okay because I have so much confidence
that within six weeks of just like eating right and working out, I can get back to where
I was.
But just hilarious to me that you'd be eating chocolate. What eating chocolate in bed as
you're trying to get to sleep, is this like literally a bag of like chips or chocolate on
my way home and before bed, you know, just whatever.
This is what the professional athlete does at the highest most difficult event of his career.
Okay, so what else is there in terms of mental preparation and focus and meditation,
those kinds of things leading up to the games? Is there anything you like to, like any rituals you
like to follow? So yeah, I have dabbled in the past with like meditation and different things
like that and I know that there's health benefits to it, and I understand that a lot of people get a
lot from it, and I've done it for good amount of, like, long periods of time.
I found that for me, I think it was predominantly placebo.
Like, it really wasn't doing anything for me that I felt like I was doing something, but
I really, I didn't see any specific results from it. So I don't really do that too much.
One thing that I will do for me is bleeding up, is there's so much footage now that I'll
make it a point to like watch my opponents.
And then with like my phone, I'll take notes and I'll keep track of different things that
I'm seeing.
And then what I'll do is I'll formulate a game plan.
Like I'm playing the poker masters coming up in about a week. And I'll look to see the
tendencies of what my opponents are doing. And then I'll come up with like some, some
things that I'm going to do, some tricks of the trade, if you will, not game theory optimal
stuff. Stuff that I think, oh, they're making the mistake here that I can exploit. And
then I look to do that in different ways and always look to, you know, throw curveballs.
How hard is that, that process? Do you enjoy it? Or is it like really
hard work to analyze the players to try to understand what are the
different holes, what are the different mistakes, what are the
strengths to avoid and that kind of stuff?
I think the only thing that makes it harder is when you're young,
right, and you're in your 20s, and you're trying to make your
nest egg, you're trying to make it retirement money, you're
hungry, right? You're like clever laying in the gym, you're in your 20s and you're trying to make your nest egg, you're trying to make your retirement money, you're hungry, right?
You're like clever laying in the gym, you're hungry.
Whereas, you know, Rocky's in there,
take the pictures and smile and do and commercials
and stuff like that.
So I am 47, I'm financially okay.
I don't need to win, I don't need to compete
at the highest levels.
So I think it was a boxer, I don't remember which one
when I asked this, he was asked the question,
you know, how do you get up in the morning, you know still and and do those morning runs and you said, you know what?
I'll be honest with you. It's a lot more difficult doing the 4 a.m. Run in silk pajamas
Right, it just is right, but I've always been
Self-motivated and I've always found a way so it's harder in the sense of like
It's not a need. I can still get by without it.
But so in that regard, it does feel like a little bit of work.
We're like, oh my God, that's a lot of footage I got to get through.
And I don't know that I have the time.
I don't know that I want to spend 10 hours of my day doing that when I could be doing
other things.
I mean, what do you still love about poker?
When you said, when you enter, like the times you catch yourself just being able to sort of take in the awe of it, what aspects do you love?
I think that like for me, I've always been really competitive, but I was never going to
be a professional athlete or a professional snicker player. I wasn't good enough at any
of that stuff. I didn't have the body type, whatever. But poker, it sort of levels the playing
field, right? You're six, five, two, four to 40 big deal, you know, we're not fighting here.
We're fighting a different type of war.
So the competitive aspect, I also have always been fueled
throughout my career by doubters.
So this is probably unhealthy, but every time people say,
like you're done, you're washed up, you can't win anymore,
it just makes me want to prove them wrong.
Yeah, right. So I have a little bit of that in me, which again, you're reading the comments and all these kind of like
I've been told many times throughout my career for the last 15 that I'm done. I can't compete anymore and and I enjoy
You know proven them wrong
Yeah, the game has changed so much
The the the greats of the past surely cannot be the grades of the present.
Those that that that kind of commentary will continue for every sport.
And certainly for poker, because poker really changed a lot or the past couple of
decade. Can you can you speak to how much has changed?
Yeah, I think it's been at the top for so long.
Yeah. So complacency is a big issue for for people who make it, if you will, right?
So in my air of the poker boom around the early 2000s, there was a group of players who were the big names, the stars of the game.
Well, a lot of them had their egos out of whack where they just felt like, okay, I'm the best. That's it.
Like, no, there's young guys learning. There's new software. There's solvers. There's all these kind of things.
And if you're not keeping up, then you'll get surpassed. And I remember myself at a very early age thing, I never want to be that guy. And it was one of my
first events in the late 90s. I was the young buck playing with the Tom McAvoy's and Brad Doudy,
the guys of the era, right? And I was doing things more aggressively and they were scoffing it.
Oh, these young kids with their aggressive three and all this stuff and they were sort of mocking
it, you know? And I thought, never be that guy.
Always have the humility to be introspective
and always have the respect for your opponents
that while you're think you've got it all figured out,
they're learning new things and you can learn from them.
So I've always been willing to sort of swallow my pride
and get coached by younger players.
Who I might even be better than,
but they see blind spots that I have that I might not,
and they help me improve my game.
I've always been willing to sort of
look every six months or a year and say,
I is what I'm doing working and if not,
how do I get better?
But most people from my generation,
they go the other way.
I don't know, they just have this idea
that they figured it all out.
Once you feel like you've mastered it,
there's nothing left to learn.
That's the moment where everyone else starts to surpass you.
That's the moment where you lose the mastery
because it's always evolving.
How is the game changed?
So the game has changed in terms of the way people learn it,
right? When I started out,
the only way to learn how to play poker
was to sit your ass on the chair and play.
And in person.
Yes, in person.
Play, maybe you jot down hands on a notepad,
we didn't even have cell phones back then, right?
So right, I would write notes.
I actually brought a notepad.
And then you don't analyze it and sort of
try to figure it out that way and think about,
you know, maybe talking to friends and different players.
Like when I grew up, there was John Juwanda,
Alan Cunningham and Phil Ivy.
And we would sort of create like a little bit
of a mastermind. Well, how would you play this hand? What would you do here? That was the cent, and we would sort of create like a little bit of a mastermind.
Well, how would you play this hand?
What would you do here?
That was the cent.
That was the extent of it, right?
We never had the correct answers.
We always had theories about what might be right, not until about five, six years ago,
where everything changed, where artificial intelligence created solvers that will specifically say,
okay, this is the optimal play.
This is the game through optimal play.
So now it introduced poker to a whole new group
of personality types.
In my day, it was people that were
drags of society.
It didn't fit in.
Not college goers with a degree.
These are people who were street hustlers,
plan pool, they found poker,
and they had these unique lives, right?
But now, because poker can be studied,
much like you study university or college,
you had, for example, the German contingent,
who was literally analyzing data
and coming up with strategies based on this
and it's like, what?
And the old guy, like, gotta play my field or whatever.
And they're like, they're learning.
So I guess the way that you describe it
is like in the old days, it required skill and talent, a card sense, right? That was the only way to become good. And today, that's not the case.
Good study habits, a good work ethic in that regard can make you look a really good player,
even if you aren't all that talented or gifted, having a good work ethic is a talent, right? Not
necessarily card sense, but if you're able to put in the work and study from these solvers,
you essentially have the perfect study tool now that we didn't have in my day.
So what do the solvers give you?
Do you start to memorize the optimal play for every single hand?
You try your best.
So again, solvers are imperfect as well in terms of the way the humans utilize them, right?
Because you can give solvers a certain number of inputs in terms of what you want it to
solve, but a solver can think on many, many levels.
So for example, the way that a typical player would do a solve is to say, okay, what does
a solver think is the best play here?
Bet one-third pot, bet two-thirds pot, or bet one or bit one and a half times pot, okay?
You give it three parameters, it comes out with an output, and it tells you what
you should do with all the different hands you know you have. However, that's a
simplified version of what a solver would really do, because a solver might
decide that seven times the pot is best, ten percent of the pot. But when you
putting in a solver, you can only put in, you know, specific parameters.
So that's why, frankly, that's typically the number.
One third, two third, and one and a half times pot is what people often do.
So they sort of have a vague idea of what a solve once.
But again, imperfect in terms of the implementation of it, right?
And memorizing all the variables like that King Jack offsuit with the King of Diamonds
is 13%
No one no human bot brain can do that. So what you do is you bucket it
Like you bucket it into say instead of
10,000 variables you have 10 buckets and you say okay with these hands we do roughly this and we do roughly this and you try your best to
You know stay within those lines, but again what I love poker, partly, is that nobody will ever be able to master game theory, you know, mimic a solver.
But you also have to incorporate your position where you are. And obviously what cards you
have, but also the size of your stack, how much money you have, and also whether you have
the ability or desire to buy in all those kinds of things. money you have, and also whether you have the ability or desire
to buy in all those kinds of things.
So you have to calculate all of that, right?
So the, you know, so the solver will do that, right?
And essentially you don't put your hand.
It tells you you'll look at, you'll look at the grade and be like, oh, this is my hand.
And it tells you what it is, but it tells you what you, what you would do with any hand,
right?
It gives you the full output. And that actually gives you a better idea because you're ultimately like you said,
playing a range of hands, not a hand.
And the solvers do things that are really interesting.
You've seen AlphaGo, I would imagine.
Brilliant film, right?
I thought.
And I thought what was interesting is there was, you know, accepted theory from all the top
go players.
This is what you do.
But the AI was doing things way different
and they're like, this has to be wrong, but it really it wasn't. So for example, a solver may say this, right?
You let's say you bet on the end and
you bet a lot and a solver may say you should fold here with a pair of kings and a queen kicker
which is you know a pair of kings but call with a pair of fours and an ace kicker.
So it's essentially telling you
that you should fold through this hand
that is much better than this.
So it begs the question, why?
Because what the solvers do is they use the information
of your own cards to formulate
all the possible hands your opponent can have.
So if your opponent is...
So basically if you had the King Queen, you know, it may say for lack of a better nerdy
term, it blocks potential bluffing hands that your opponent can have.
So let's say if your opponent would bluff with Queen Jack, but you have a Queen.
So there are less combinations of Queen Jack.
So it will find a better bluff catcher if you will.
So that's what's really not intuitive to poker players. Poker players usually think like, well, this my hand is pretty good
So I got a call, but that's not how a solver would think. Solver uses, you know, common atrix and you know
And sometimes it's tough to get the good-why answers you just did for why a solver think something is better.
Or maybe in poker it's a little bit easier, but in the case of Go and Chess, it's not always obvious.
Why? Because it's not going to explain stuff to you.
But I think one of the best ways to learn poker is when you see a solver output,
and it tells you one of these things, try to figure out why.
Why does this solver do this?
Why does it want you to call with this and fold this and try to think about it on a deeper level?
And you go, ah, ha, probably because this card that I have here, you know, changes the range of my opponents, you know, potential.
I'd love to give you your opinion on your relationship with solvers because, for example, Magnus doesn't use them. His team uses them because he feels like he's going to rely on it
use them, his team uses them, because he feels like he's going to rely on it too much, and you can't use it when you're playing.
What you really want is to build up an extremely strong intuition without the help of a solver.
Is there some aspect of that that rings true to you?
Absolutely.
I totally can relate to what Magna is saying first and foremost, because when solvers were
first introduced, I didn't come from that world.
I was so intimidated because I didn't know how to use it.
I don't know how to do an input.
So I had two guys, one guy's a data scientist and another guy's like a poker savant, if
you will.
And they coached me and they did it.
So today, if I was in a tough spot, and I'm like, I don't know, what would a solver do?
I will send them the hand and they'll run the solve for me.
And then sort of give me the parameters of what to do.
When I was playing regularly using solvers with them,
we were spending six, eight hours a day going
over all these solves.
So intuitively, I started to think and learn
about what the solver would want,
but I sort of understand where Magnus is coming from
and that you don't wanna become a slave to the sim,
as I say, right?
There's one kid I know, I joked with him,
his name's Landon Tyson. And he made a play that the sim, as I say, right? There's one kid I know, I joked with him. His name's Landon Tice.
And he made a play that the sim would say,
and this is a good play.
But I'm like, it's a good play in a simulated world
against the robot, it's not in practice against the human.
You don't need to be doing that.
So if you become a slave to the sim
and always do what the sim says,
you're handcuffed to a certain degree.
Is there some at the highest level plays?
There's still a role for feel, 100% tuition.
Absolutely.
If you're not doing that because here's the thing, right?
No human being plays perfectly balanced in game three, optimal, like a robot would.
They're not, they're not, right?
So there are opportunities there to take advantage of the things that they do that are
slightly too aggressive or less aggressive.
You know, for example, say most human beings don't bluff enough in a certain spot.
So you don't have to call with the correct range of hands.
You don't have to because they're not bluffing at the optimal frequency.
So you don't have to call the optimal frequency.
You'd be making this mistake, frankly, if you did. What's the difference between in-person and
online play given that context? Yeah, online poker and live poker. It's the same
game, right? Same it's poker, but it's different in so many levels, right? I
think playing online, you have to focus far more on fundamentals, you know, on
game theory.
You don't have the added bonus of looking across the table and getting any sense of whether
your opponent is strong or weak, they're bluffing, whatever, you know, and also because online
poker, those that play it, you play far more hands.
Like, some of these guys are playing 10, 20 tables at the same time.
Yeah.
Right?
So you're just, you're hitting the long run really quickly
and you're creating a data base on your opponents, right?
So let's have, you know, online, I can see your data.
Like, well, this guy, he's playing 40% of hands.
He's betting the river 80% of the time.
So now I can use that data and, you know,
exploit you that way.
When you play live, you don't have that.
Do you enjoy playing online?
I enjoy, so with online poker, I enjoy the convenience of it,
because you know, you can be on your couch in your underwear, not leave your house. Do also play
multiple games at the same time, or do you try to play one game? I typically like to play one or two,
but I can play up to four. I find that past four, it's hard for me to keep up and keep track of what's
actually happening. You know, It's a different mindset required.
Like a lot of these young guys, they're accustomed to 20 tables at a time.
It feels like the purity of the game is gone.
We eat as much more robotic, right?
So if you're playing 20 tables, you're just making decisions based on what you're not
thinking about, the depth of the situation and what just happened 15 minutes ago.
You don't even know what happened
because you can't pay attention to all that at once.
And some of the magic of poker is the low sample.
I agree.
Like for example, in sorry to be bringing up
Magnus so much, but there's so much parallel between the two.
You and the poker and the chess world,
B hates Olympics and world championships
and all that kind of stuff
because it's so low sample.
But to me, that's part of the magic of it. There's the World Series of Poker, the main event. There's
a magic to it. I agree. Yeah. And I don't know what that is exactly because so much of the
stake is so rare, so much drama and heartbreak leading up to it that all somehow, yeah, it
accumulates to that magical moment when
somebody wins.
Especially that event.
The World Series poker main event, historically, that's it.
That's the pinnacle.
That's where mainstream watches.
That's where people are tuning in and the gravity of the moment.
It's so much bigger than people.
Everyone gets the opportunity to play armchair quarterback too, right?
Oh, he should do this.
You're not there. You're not under the lights
You're not under the pressure, you know, it might seem easy for you at home to be like well
They obviously because you can see the whole cards, you know, they can't certainly the idea of
The small sample with tournaments. I like the idea that
You don't have to worry about oh well, well, if I do this now, then in the future, I won't
be balanced.
I have to be balanced here or anything like that.
That's like really boring in lane, right?
Again, that is kind of the way the younger generation learns how to play the game, being
balanced in every spot.
And then randomizing, you know, like, oh, I'm supposed to do this 50% of the time, okay?
So if my left card is red, I'll do it.
And if it's black, I don't.
So you're not even making, you're no longer making actual decisions for yourself.
You're just randomizing.
And that's way less fun for me than tailoring it to the situation.
And the final table at the main event, there's none of that.
You have to, it's, it's all or nothing.
Well, you shouldn't be, but there are like a, again, I think a lot of the young
guys, they are thinking in that regard, like, oh, randomization. Maybe at that table,
the final table, the main event, what's a hand that stands out to you that was especially
gutsy and powerful or memorable for that you've seen in the history of poker? Well, for
me, the one that stands out, and probably because I was so young, and it was my first year,
like, why, I want to bracelet that year was was I was friends with Scotty when the Prince of Poker. And he was
heads up against the guy named Kevin McBride. And I was on the rail, you know, I'm like, wow,
he's gonna, you know, he's heads up. And he was so cool. Like he had a mullet, but it's perfect,
right? He had the white shirt, the black thing. He's drinking a mickalobe, smoking a cigarette,
whatever, you know, all chill. He bets it on
the river and the guy's thinking and he psychologically owned him and he said he goes with his beer, he goes,
you call going to be all over baby. That's right. Okay. So this guy who was an amateur heard that and
was like, there's so much pressure in this moment right now. I can't handle this pressure. But Scotty just told me, if I call here,
it's the pressure's gone.
I don't have to be under it anymore.
So he sort of hypnotized them into making the call.
And Scotty had it.
Scotty had the full house.
And it was over for the guy.
You call him, we all love a baby.
It was, I just, I love that aspect,
sort of the table talk dynamic,
which isn't as prevalent today as it was back
then.
But that one sticks out, and probably because it was one of my first.
So the few words you say at the table can completely affect a hand like that.
That's almost, that's scary.
It was just so cool to me, you know, like just how he was so calm and I think that too added more pressure to the amateur
And I think like again part of it is even back then was 1998
There's still a big rail of people and there's lights and they're you know they're filming and all this kind of stuff
And it's a lot of pressure for a guy who's never been in this environment and now I'm telling you
You can all be over soon
It will all be over soon. Just call it's finished.
Something about that accent too. Now, you're a master at Table Talk as well. Do you have,
do you just kind of go with your gut, you flow with it, or is there a deliberate strategy with this
sometimes? There's usually some sort of strategy that I think about in terms of what I want to say and whatnot,
but a lot of the time I just go, I go with it, you know?
The more you talk, the more information you get.
Yeah, but in some cases against really good players,
you're just giving away information, right?
Like if I'm playing against Phil Ivy,
I'm not engaging in anything,
because he can read through it.
He can sense based on what I'm saying,
you know, the clues and where I'm trying to take him. And he reads through, he sees the tree through the
forest or whatever you want to call it, the forest through the trees. And, uh, you know, so then I
would just be like allowing myself to be exploitable. Is some of it just for fun because at the end of
the day, if you're having fun, you might be at the top of your game. I've been thinking about this
a lot lately, actually. It's funny. You bring your game. I've been thinking about this a lot lately, actually.
It's funny you bring this up
because I've been thinking about what I'm at my best.
And I think I'm at my best when I am comfortable like that,
where I'm not so stiff and worried about checking properly
and worried about reading people.
I'm like, no, I'm me.
All right, I'm gonna play some fuck.
What do you want to do?
You wanna call me?
Go ahead, do what you want, right?
Because I didn't realize ultimately it was like,
I'm comfortable in that.
My opponents aren't as comfortable in that. They're comfortable with this, you know, the robot thing.
But I thought more about that and how, especially with some tournaments coming up, I plan on really kind of
sort of getting back to my roots in that regard.
I love it. From a spectator perspective, I love it. But it's also interesting.
Whenever you see a day on a ground of quiet. That's an interesting like, it feels like a calm
before storm of sorts. So I'm sure that's also part of it.
Yeah, like I've gone, I've even flowed. And like I said, you know, I took on some coaches
and that was really learning game theory because I felt like it was important to always
stick, you know, keep up with what's going on. And then I do feel like to some degree, it sort of took away a little bit of my own
instinctual ideas in terms of what I should be doing, right?
So I think the most dangerous version of myself is a deep understanding of the game theory
with my wisdom of many years and comfort of just sort of like being myself at the table.
And being relaxed, letting your mind flow. Let me ask you the greatest, the goat question,
greatest of all time. Can you make the case for a few folks? So first, you tweeted referring
to Phil Ivy as the goat saying the goat doing goat things. That's a recent tweet. So can you make the case for Phil Ivey or maybe who is the greatest poker player of all time?
Was your book Phil?
For me until someone knocks him off the podium the king of poker and the goat is Phil Ivey.
Okay, so and the reason I say that is I think of poker is more than just one game, right?
There's different variants, you know, this hold him Omaha stud Omaha, stud, triple draw, all these different types of games. And Phil, in every arena has been
dominant, whether it was tournament poker, dominated it. Mixed game high stakes poker in
Bobby's room, dominated online poker against all the wizards, dominated, made millions
in every arena. And, you know, he sort of took a few years away from poker with his legal
troubles and things like that, but he's back. You know, he sort of took a few years away from poker with his legal troubles and things like that,
but he's back, you know, he's been playing
in the high roller series again,
and, you know, he comes from,
he's cut from a different cloth,
but he has a tenacity and a focus that's unparalleled, I think.
When he's in the zone, I mean, for lack,
and this has nothing to do with race,
it really has to do with mannerism,
but he does remind me of like a combination of
Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods in the way that he approaches it. He's very intense. And he outworks
everybody, you know, and I think, frankly, a lot of his mannerisms do come from them because he's
young, watching these guys on TV. And a lot of his ways of being, you know, is learned behavior,
I think, probably from people like that. People at the top of their sport and people there,
Tiger Woods and Michael Jordan aren't just
at the top of their sport,
but they kind of dominate the sport
to some kind of aura that.
There's a uniqueness to them.
They're not built like us.
They're not, you know, they're not.
Like I wish, I wish I could have the kind of focus
that Phil Lively has, you know,
and see everything that he's saying.
I just, that's not me, you know, I don't have that.
And he does, he has that gene, whatever it is. But they also look like they're not having that much fun. They're more focused on
the perfection, like a dog and pursuit of perfection. And you know, that might even be true.
It might not be as fun, you know, I don't know. Like I have fun at the table when you look,
outwardly, you look at someone like, maybe he is having a blast. Maybe that's just the way that he
likes. Like his tiger woods having fun when he's like on 17
about the win a major doesn't look like it theoretically.
Well, if you look at Michael Jordan,
I don't know what Tiger was,
but I think they're more focused
on every single mistake they make.
I think they're more obsessed about not making a mistake
and hating every time they make a mistake.
That's probably like 99% of their mental
energy. I think that's part of what makes them great, right? They don't look past the mistake and
just let it's whatever. They're like, they want to correct it. Yeah, there's attention almost
like a trade-off. I wonder if that's always the case between sort of greatness and happiness.
I remember Hux seed who, you know, when I was a kid grown up,
he was like the polka-ridle.
He won the World Championship in 1996,
and I was lucky enough to hang out with him a little bit,
and he would go through these streaks where he had an A game,
and he had an F game.
His A game was unparalleled.
Nobody could beat him, right?
But his F game was so terrible that he was just a fish,
you know, he was playing terribly.
And I remember him saying, and it was exactly what you're saying.
He'd make like one little mistake, right?
And then he would go off.
And I was like, why do you do that?
Like, you know your big game would be just fine.
He's like, well, if I'm gonna make a mistake, what's the point?
What's the point, right?
I'm trying.
Like, if you can't play perfect, there's no point in playing at all.
So he was that he was extreme in that regard,
in the way that he viewed it.
And depending on the sport, those folks folks like in chess, certainly the case, that kind of minds that can
destroy you. Absolutely. Not because a sequence of mistakes. Like the kind of year you had with the
World Cesar Proke, it can completely destroy human being. If you're not able to see the bigger picture of it. Yeah. You said that Phil Ivey's the hardest, your toughest opponent, the toughest person to play against.
Why is that?
And how do you beat him?
Because Phil Ivey's just, he's seen things that nobody else has seen, really, like subtle
things, where I'm putting my hands, where I'm looking, you know, my pulse, like stuff
that I don't even know I'm giving off.
He's so engaged and so focused and has such a
just
A he's fearless right a lot of people, you know, they'll play poker and be like, you know
I don't think this guy has it, but do they have the guts?
Do they have the Cahone's if you will to actually do anything about it?
Right and stand up to this person. He does you know, I forgot the hand that you tweeted about the goat doing goat things.
That wasn't even that big of a goat hand.
It was pretty impressive.
There was hands where there was a famous one in Australia where the flop was like Jack,
Jack, nine and Phil checked, raised the flop with six, seven, nothing, just absolutely nothing.
And the guy re-raised him, right?
And Phil just knew he went all in with nothing. And the guy re-raised him, right? And Phil just knew he went all in. With nothing,
if the guy calls, he's done, he's cooked. But he was so tuned in that this guy's not strong,
that he just, you know, he did things like that. And it's tough to play against the guy like that.
So he gets great reads and is able to execute on them, has the guts to execute on it.
He's got experience, he's got work ethic.
He also, I think one thing I'm underselling too,
is his strategic mind, right?
Like I believe that, you know, like I said,
the new age player, they learn how to play
through a very smith systematic approach.
Okay, let's look at the data that make up a game right now.
Three cards, we each get three cards, jacks or wild,
six of hearts as well, right? Just make up that game right now. Three cards, we each get three cards, jacks or wild, six of hearts
as wild, right? Just make up that game. Feel will figure it out intuitively, very, very
quickly, right? Without having the answers for him, right? So that's like the difference
between the players of my generation. We had to figure this stuff out on our own. Today,
well, I want to know the answer. I go ask the computer and the computer
tells me. So I really believe like if you created a game from scratch that Phil Ivey would be my
horse that I want to play in it. So he's in some sense in tune with some deeper thing with it. He
has what we would what we used to call card sense card sense. Can you try to make the case for some
others like dual brunson Phil Helmuth, Daniel Nagrano,
and maybe one of the modern guys, like Justin Bottoma or some of you?
Sure. Oh, so let's start with Doyle, okay?
Like, what Doyle has going for him above and beyond is twofold, really, longevity.
I mean, he's eight, in his late eighties. And last time I played with him, I was,
I'm like, how is he getting better? I really felt like he was playing better than he had
in the previous years.
But also with Doyle,
like Doyle had to figure,
you know, we talked about my generation
having to figure it on her own.
I mean, he really had to figure it on her own.
Like they didn't have any computer simulation
to tell you if Ace King was a favorite over pocket sixes.
They didn't.
So we know what he did.
He would take a deck of cards
and they would deal out some,
and they were the no-ped, right? Okay. Ace King won, and then they would would take a deck of cards and they would deal out with a no-ped, right?
Okay.
Ace King won and then they would do like a hundred of them and be like, all right, Ace King won
like 53.
So it must be a favorite.
And he did it manually, you know, and he did it in a time when it was very, very difficult
and he's seen poker evolve and change throughout the years.
Now listen, is he going to be able to compete against the top players in the world today?
Absolutely not, you know, but how many he's the best 88 year old player in the world by a mile
Okay, that's not even close and Doyle again
He's another guy who plays all the games. He's played high stakes cash tournaments. You name it. He's iconic
You know, he's the godfather, so there's also an element to that so that I iconic element like you're a personality in poker
I mean not to romanticize this thing too much,
but poker is also a game of personalities.
I mean, it's part of the greatness
is like the uniqueness of the human being.
Yeah, I think also, yeah, I mean,
if you're like looking at it from that perspective
in terms of like goat, like goat in terms of what you represent.
Like the cowboy, the godfather, you know,
he's been around, you know,
he played in the 60s and stuff like that.
It's just something like incredibly cool.
Like I often think about it.
If I could go back in time and like visit, you know, an era,
I'd love to go like Vegas in the 70s.
And just like, I'm proud, I already, like, I can think of what it would smell like,
probably not ideal, cigarettes, and, you know, the leather jackets,
and just the vibe of what it must have been like with the mobsters and things like that. You know he's lived through all that. All the cool movies
we've seen like Doyle talks about some of those films and he's like yeah that guy off he said he
was going to stab me in my stomach. You know he knows these people it was he's like a source of
history. Yeah when poker was a game for the mob and the degenerates and all that kind of stuff
before transitioning into professional sport, professional game.
Yeah, so he was there through the whole, he's been there through the whole transition.
He's seen it all. Yeah.
And then to the online world. So what about, I can't even say it without smiling, Phil, help me.
Okay, so Phil, here's the thing with Phil.
He takes it very personal when I say this and he doesn't hear the compliment.
He only hears the negativity because Phil wants to be considered the greatest of all
top hashtag positive.
He wants to be the greatest of all time.
Yes.
But I'm like, Phil, here's the facts.
You have the best, absolute greatest resume at the world series, a poker of anyone in the world.
Is that not enough? Right? That's what you have. You have that best absolute greatest resume at the World Series of Poker of anyone in the world. Is that not enough?
That's what you have.
You have that.
Now, do I think you're the best no limit
holding player in the world today?
No.
Do I think that you can play high stakes mixed games
with the best players in the world today and win?
No.
So he wouldn't get as much flak on this topic
if he wasn't so boastful and demanding.
You never hear Phil Ivey say, I'm the best in the world. Like his peers do, right?
But Phil wants to make the claim and I simply say, I beg to differ, right? I beg to
differ. Like I don't think you are the best player in the world.
If we can linger on the compliments so he can hear it, what makes him so good?
Because it seems like a lot of times
this play is not optimal.
Yeah, he definitely has his own brand of style of play.
Right?
He does not adhere to, he's never used a solver in his life.
He doesn't know, he's not in that world, right?
He, Phil does, Phil has a lot of faith
and a lot of confidence in what he does
and that it will be successful.
And I think there's something to be said about that, right?
He doesn't ever lack in belief that he can win.
And he finds a way to do it his way.
And frankly, a lot of what he does is very effective
against specific types of players who are intimidated by him,
by whether it's his resume or his demeanor
or his attitude sometimes, right?
Like if you're an average player
and then you beat Phil in a hand, you're gonna hear it.
This idiot from Northern Europe and beat Phil in a hand, you're going to hear it. This idiot from Northern Europe beat me in this pot. And for some people, they don't like that.
So he can use that against them. But I also think too, he cares so much.
And that leads to trying really, really hard. He sees these moments and he doesn't phone them in. Like whatever brand of poker, he plays, he tries his best at all times to succeed and to win. And there's some beast. Even though like he's fundamentally flawed and a lot of things that he does compared to some of the bigger players.
His effort and will and like his determination to stick around is, you know, is up there. And he is somebody who seems to really hate losing. Yes. Yeah. He, you know, he, he, he's got this, he feels like he deserves to win.
Right. In all cases. And if he loses, it's, you know, it's not just as he joked
around that you and him might do an anger management.
Yeah.
It's, of course. Now this is tough because you're a humble guy, but objectively speaking, can you
say what your strengths are? You're often listed as one of not the greatest player of all time.
So what are the things that make you stand out? So for me, when I grew up, I admired the big
cash game players, because that's what I was. I love tournaments, but I wanted to be well-rounded.
Like in my day, you couldn't make the poker hall of fame
if you just played one game.
You had to jump in to the high stakes games
in Bobby's room, as they say, right?
And I was able to do that.
When I was in my early, in my mid 20s,
I was playing 4,000, 8,000 limits.
You could win or lose a million dollars in a day.
So I grinded it out.
Like a lot of people think, oh, he's lucky,
he's had sponsorship. Otherwise, he'd be broke. Like a lot of people think, oh, you know, he's lucky. He's had sponsorship.
Otherwise, he'd be broke. He's like, I built multi-million dollar bank rolls before any of that stuff
existed. And I did it the good old fashioned way by sitting my butt on the table. I think probably one
of my biggest strengths is self-awareness. And in that regard, a level of humility that always allows
me to say, okay, well, you know what, in this case, with these players,
they're better than me.
So what am I going to learn from them, right?
Rather than have this need, just, I'm the best because of history.
And I'm always looking to guys and go, wow, he does this really well,
whether it's the Adamos or the IVs or whoever it may be.
So my willingness to adapt, I think, and stay relevant
by learning what the young guys are learning
is something I've always done.
And I also pride myself on, again, being well-rounded, like playing all the games.
Like I don't feel intimidated in any game, you know, whatever the format is.
So always being a scholar of the game, as the game evolves, as the different games evolve,
the different players evolve, the culture evolves, always adjusting by being a scholar, having the humility to pass on.
I've held a healthy respect for a healthy respect for the younger generation, how they learn,
what they learn, and what they can teach me, rather than poop-poo it.
It's, oh, these kids today, because that's a lot of people, like the Mike Matasos and the Phil Helmous
my generation, they just poop-poo it because they don't understand it. On a level of one to 10,
their level of understanding, this is like a one, maybe.
They've been being generous by calling it a one.
They really don't understand it, so they poopuit, right?
It's easy to do that.
Like, oh, that's not how I do it,
so that's wrong, or that's stupid, or whatever.
I don't take that approach.
I go, well, let me learn.
Let me see what there is to this.
But that said, the crankiness that Matasos and Philhalemuth have is great to watch, especially when they're on a
table with you. Yeah. Oh, I love it. Yeah. It's a blast. It's a blast. And you're masterful of being
able to get under their scale. What about somebody from the new school, like Justin Bonamo,
who's who's leading in terms of cash wins. Is there somebody like that that stands out
to use a potential goat status person?
Yeah, so there's two different ones,
but one is very, so they're both just no limit, right?
So I, like again, when I think of poker,
I think of, you know, a variety of games,
but there's so many of the young guys that specialize.
Michael Adama was one that I've mentioned several times,
and I love the way that he approached the game.
Another one that's highly respected because it was online prowess and his,
he's, people have like looked and how close he is to game theory and they say he's about as perfect as you get.
And it's a guy, a kid named Linus, Linus, Linus, Linus love online, Linus Lingerie.
So he just came second recently, I believe in a, in the Triton, huge Triton.
He's primarily an online player.
Yeah, he's an online cash player for the most part,
but he plays some live.
And he's, you know, he's, again,
and I respect the peers that I play with.
We say, yeah, he's tough as nails.
There's another kid too, Russian kid named Timifei Kuznetsov.
And he plays all the games, and he's well respected,
you know, in that regard.
And same with a guy like Jungleman, Dan Cates,
who's a unique personality.
I mean, this guy showed up one of the poker players
championship back to back years in a Randy Macho Man
Savage costume.
And he was doing Macho Man the entire times.
Oh, yeah, I'm gonna take all the chips like I did last year.
Yeah, bust them all.
And he was in character for the entirety of the term.
This is great.
It's just unique.
But yeah, I respect for a lot of those guys.
Is it gonna take time to figure out who, you know, stands the test of time?
That's the thing, right?
So a lot of these kids, like, there was a guy who beat me, heads up in the million dollar
one drop.
I got 8.7, he won $15 million, kid named Dan Coleman.
He was seen as like, you know, the next big thing in poker, right?
He made his money.
It just wasn't for him.
So he's moved on, you know, to do what he's doing, skiing in the Alps,
whatever, he's, you know, we have nobody seen
in like five, six years.
So that can happen, right?
Because there is a lot of burnout, you know, I think like,
I think it was actually a Gotham Chess who mentioned something about
how difficult it is to like, I think it's true in poker.
When you get really, really good at something, to get this much better, takes so much work.
And a lot of people don't necessarily want to put in that kind of work in order to do
that.
Actually, even staying at the same level takes a huge amount of work.
Yeah.
Like, so if you want to get better at Chess, you're already like really, really good.
And you're trying to get like one little bit better.
You have to study like, in a ridiculous amount, you know, and get better at chest, you're already like really, really good. And you're trying to get like one little bit better. You have to study like in a ridiculous amount,
you know, and again, that's once you've already had,
I think the toughest thing for anybody,
once you've tasted success,
and you've already achieved it, staying hungry,
staying on the top.
Reaching the top is much easier than it is to stay there.
Yeah.
Over years, what's your training regimen in poker in terms of how you keep improving?
So you said you study games, but that's mostly leading up to a particular tournament. But is there
kind of behind the scenes daily activity you tried to do that kind of over time keeps you sharp. So for me now that I'm 47 and I feel like the predominant aspect of my poker game is going
to be in terms of my success is going to be my mental state, right?
So I find it's really, really important for me now at this age to have balance.
So when I'm not playing poker and I'm out of it, poker's not even on my radar.
You're able to remove it from your mind.
Doing my fantasy hockey, play a little chess,
play some golf, watch some hockey,
whatever the case may be, outside of the game.
And then I start to get the itch.
Like after the World Series of Poker,
the poker door was closed for all of August.
All of August, that didn't play as any poker at all
until just recent.
You know, I started to get the itch again.
Because that's what's important for me.
So if I don't have the itch and I don't want to play poker, then I'm not going to be
at my best.
Once I start getting the itch, that's when I start to soak.
Okay, let's start watching some of these streams.
Let's see what my opponents are up to lately.
And you know, let's look at some solvers and different things like that.
And you're doing pretty good.
You came back and doing pretty good.
Yeah, so far.
Do you like being in front of the camera through the hell of the World Series
of poker this year?
You filmed every single day.
You did a vlog.
Is that energize you?
Is that exhausting?
Because it's really beneficial to huge amount of people.
It energizes the poker community, but do you see it as a service?
Or do you purely just love it?
I've been comfortable on camera since I was a kid.
When I was a kid, I wanted to be an actor, like really, really young.
And it was always comfortable in that environment.
And I think like that gives me a little bit of an advantage sometimes too
with these film events.
Because I'm comfortable with a mic on and on camera with the lights.
And I think a lot of people maybe aren't with the knowledge that other people are going to see what they're doing every day.
So it's been so comfortable and easy for me as far as the world series goes and the vlogs and all the shooting.
It's kind of therapeutic for me. It is essentially my version of journaling.
So there's a lot of value I think in like at the end of a day doing a brain dump where you just write out and journal.
But doing it on camera has this similar effect. And it also, you know,
when you make a mistake on your own, you're held accountable to you. But when I have to
explain it to others, like, here's what I did. And this is the mistake I made or whatever
the case may be. It actually, I think that helps me, you know.
Yeah. So you, uh, you're held responsible by a larger audience.
Yeah.
I think because like I said, listen, I'm 47, I'm, my life is good.
I don't have to be in this tournament.
If I'm over it, I can just dump my chips off and go home.
Yeah.
Right.
But I can't when I'm doing the vlog, like I have to actually answer to that, you know,
and keeps me in line.
How hard is it to win the main event of the World Series
of poker?
So the main event of the World Series of Poker is the hardest
event to win, simply because of the sheer size of it. You're
talking 7, 8,000 players, right? And a lot of landmines. And
frankly, there are so many players that you've not played
with before too. You play these high roller events, like the super ones you get 30, 40 people, you know everybody.
So you have an idea.
You say it at the main event, there's, you don't know, have any idea.
This guy we're in a Philadelphia Eagles jersey and sunglasses and you just raised you being,
I don't know this guy, I don't know what he's about.
So there's a lot of like, it's grueling too.
You're in your seven, eight days where you're in the blender, as you might say.
So what's the structure?
So it's $10,000 buy in or something like that.
And there's a bunch of tables and you just keep playing.
And you like, when is it over for a single table?
So the way that it works is this.
So there's let's say 8,000 players.
And the way the main event works unique to others is there's various day ones you can play, right?
So a day one you're gonna play from noon till like midnight, right?
If you give you're still in you bag up your chips and you'll come back for day two, okay?
There's four different day ones, right? Now they'll all combine essentially to plan a day two and at the end of the night
they redraw the tables so you don't just win your table. If players get knocked out, tables break, they continue to be replaced.
You start with 8,000, then after day one, you've got 6,000, then you do the same.
You play like a 12-hour day, and you slowly whittle down.
Day three, day three, day four, you're in the money, and then you continue to progress.
What they do now with the final table is because they were trying to do this for TV, these final tables can take you know
12 hours to play and what we were finding was you know you start to think at 5 p.m. and
it goes to 8 a.m. and like nobody's watching anymore so they separate and separate into
three days now. And so you're talking now it's like six, seven days to get to the final table
and another three days to play it.
So you're grinding for a week and a half.
But most of the time you're playing
against people you've never played against before.
Especially early on, yeah.
And then by the end, like who knows?
Rarely do you see.
You see in the last 100,
you usually see some notable names.
Then in the last 27, you might see one, maybe two, final table, maybe one.
But often it's going to be some players you've never heard of before.
Is there strategies that maximize your likelihood of having a chance?
Yeah, it's absolutely. I think the World Series of Poker Main event is a unique animal in that.
We talk about game theory and all that kind of stuff.
If you're focused on that, when you're really not playing well, you need to just exploit.
Because you're going to have a lot of people who see this as a bucket list item.
They just want to play the main event in the World Series.
And they might be scared, they might be nervous, or whatever.
You don't have to worry about being balanced.
I have to make sure that I'm balanced.
No, you might, I have to make sure that I'm bad. No, you don't. You might know, you're playing with this guy now for three hours. You might never see him again. So just
make the play that makes sense for you, right? So, so yeah, you're going to, I approached that event
very differently than I would like playing against the high roller players that I play with.
Does that mean more aggressive, essentially less actually? So when you play against really good players, you have to take small plus
EV scenarios where you push the envelope and you're playing really aggressive, you're bluffing
off your stack. You got to do this. You got to focus a little bit more on being balanced
because otherwise, you know, you're not going to beat these guys. Whereas if you're playing
with amateurs and you're playing with regular players, for the most part, risking all your
chips on a bluff,
probably don't need to do that.
You don't need to do that nearly as much.
You can probably slowly, but surely build your stack
without taking those high risk, high variant situations
because you'll find better situations.
What mistakes do amateurs usually make?
Internments like that.
Are they over-bluffing?
Well, I think amateurs generally, the biggest mistake they make is they think that pros are
bluffing more than they are. So like a pro will bet all the ships on the end and like,
I don't know, maybe, you know, this is Phil Ivy, maybe he's doing some crazy stuff. He's
probably not. He's probably just got it, you know.
And then they get lose all their money by calling or going all in as well.
by calling or going all in as well. And so the right thing is to be more patient. So amateur
is too impatient or just bad reads. So all the amateurs are built different. Some of the amateurs are just too weak and passive. They're just waiting for the nuts. And then the pros and
everyone notices that. And then when they make their big hand, they don't get paid anyway.
So in order to win the main event, I mean, you have to have some components of your game that are aggressive.
It's very unlikely to expect to just get the cards the whole way and just always have the best hand.
You're gonna have to find ways to win pots that, you know, where you don't have the best hand.
How do you win the final table?
The final table is unique now, especially because you're talking about the way the poker
works and tournaments is that if there's seven people left and you have just, you know,
you're very short on chips.
But if one other player goes out, you just make like $300,000 for folding, like just for
sitting out, right?
The term for that that, you know, kids use is ICM, independent chip model, right?
We're talking about the value of each chip.
Where what happens what we see now is,
let's say one guy has a big chip lead,
and there's another guy who's second in chips,
and there's a couple that are short.
These guys in the middle, they just play super tight,
and they wait for the little guys to go
while the big stack is just pounding them
because he can afford to. Right?
He knows that people are handcuffed. So let's say I had 10 million in chips and you have
9 million in chips and these guys have little chips. If I go a little in on you, are you going to call
me and risk like, you know, guaranteed pay jumps of like moving up a few spots. So really,
the question comes down to like, are you the type of guy who just wants to inch up or are you
going to go for it and you're going to go for the win?
I think ultimately there's some value in being the guy who says, you know, I don't care if I come
seven. I'm not worried about going from seventh to fifth. I'm here to win.
So you're saying like the guys that win will often be the ones that call there.
So like they're not just bullying the small stecks.
Well, the ones, no, the ones that are willing to risk it.
So there are some people who, if there's five left and they're third in chips, and there's
two guys very short, and they'll have Ace King and someone moves, they'll just fold.
They fold the hand because they want to wait for those two other players to get broke
and that way they let you know they make actual money
So you I guess the thought process between winning first place and winning the most amount of money are different
They're conflicting right because in order to like
When that if you're just if your focus is only on winning the tournament you will make mistakes financially where you had guaranteed income for just folding right
Let's say a guy has one chip left, you know, one chip. And me and you have good chips.
And I go all in with you and I lose.
Now that guy, you know, got the guaranteed,
you know, he got the pay jump that I wouldn't have got.
So there's some extremely stupid mistakes
you can make from a financial perspective.
But it's often at odds with, you know,
giving yourself the best chance to actually come first.
And in an tournament, especially the main event,
especially the final table, it's all about coming in first. And in an tournament, especially the main event, especially the final table, it's
all about coming in first. Well, I know because most of the people who make it, so like,
you know, when you play these high rollers, these guys are accustomed to playing for $100,000
to their custom, they're accustomed to this kind of money. So they're going to play,
right, for the moment. But you talk about guys who bought into a $10,000 tournament, maybe
never had a hundred K cash in their life. And now they're sitting there, and it's like 1 million for fifth
and 2 million for fourth.
Right.
So like, they don't want to make fifth.
They're just gonna sit there and go,
ah, I don't want.
So they'll be under more financial pressure
because they're not like your typical high roller type player.
Are you still able to find the guts to take big risks?
Yeah, see, I'm trying to win.
Like, I think that gives me an advantage, frankly,
where I might make decisions that are financially suboptimal
because I'm trying to win,
but there's also an inherent advantage to that.
Like, that, again, something I'd watched
and learned from a guy like Michael Adama,
where he takes advantage of these people
playing so passively in these spots.
Where he's like, I'm not trying to come,
I'm gonna win.
I'm just gonna bulldoze you,
because I'm not worried about, you know,
the small financial mistake of, you know, a pay jump.
What advice could you give to, to a beginning poker players?
Or actually at every level, how to get better,
how to improve, how to improve their game?
Obviously, as you said, it's easiest
to get better in the beginning, but what advice would you give how to get better?
So, one of the ways, I mean, I think way back to how I started, right, and there's so
many resources and tools available right now to analyze hands, but when you play, right,
and you find yourself in a situation or a hand that you're not really sure about, not
because you had aces and went all in and you lost.
Like, that's not interesting.
But an interesting situation where you're not sure
what you did, jot the hand down, write it out,
and then either A, you know, use some of the tools,
whether it's the solvers, if you're, you know, advanced enough,
or ask your group, you know, like, have a couple of friends
at your level and talk through the different decisions
and start to learn that way, right?
Because those mistakes that you make or those tough, tough, tough hands, that's where the
real learning comes from.
Like, so that, so basically, if you're, because you're going to be in similar scenarios
in poker, you're rarely going to have the identical situation, but you'll have situations
that are similar.
You know, you raise with Ace King, someone three bet, another guy goes all in, okay?
Well, what do I do in that spot?
You know, it's, you're going to have similar situations in the future as well.
So figuring that out, the more you can do that, you chop away at, you know, different
statistical mistakes, you know, you used to make that you no longer make.
Are there resources like your master classes really is great?
Are there books?
So there was a guy named Michael Sivito.
This is again for a little bit more advanced players, but it's a book called Modern
Poker Theory, I think it's called, which sort of explains Game Theory, right,
to the novice, right? So it's a little bit, I think if you're new to poker, it's
probably above the rim for you, but once you start to get a little better and you
want to understand how to do it, it's probably a good resource for as far as books.
And there's also like tons of people who stream poker, professional players, and then
you can get in there and you get in on the chat and you start talking, you ask them, and
you see people, you know, explaining their thought process and things like that.
There's so many free resources.
And of course, my masterclass, I think, does a good job of sort of compartmentalizing,
like, you know, how to attack it on a deeper level.
And we, you know, we get it. I try to get into what's funny when I did the master class.
I asked them, I was like, well, you know, how high-end do you want this in terms of poker?
And they're like, we want really, really high-end. And I was like, okay, you sure.
Then I started to explain really, really high-end, like, okay, well, maybe the one below that.
Right? So I try to explain really complex, you know, theory in a more
palatable way in English, if you will, because some of these kids you hear them talk and
you'd be like, huh? But you also, which is really nice, give example hands that really
illustrate the point, which is really nice. You also wrote a book, I think, 10 years ago,
Powerhold and Strategy.
It's interesting to think how much of the stuff
in that book still applies, how much it doesn't.
Well, listen, I still think the book holds up
to a certain degree.
Obviously, it isn't optimal because there's
more advanced strategies, and if you play that way,
people will figure out how to explain you.
But if you're an average player playing an average
by ends, like that's sort of what I coined
like small ball approach, absolutely will work.
You know, at the highest level,
you have to add much more, a lot more bluffing.
But overall, I think it's still, you know,
for the most part, there's a lot of really,
especially with tournaments,
there's a lot of really good principles in the book.
What's the difference in the dynamics
if you could just comment on between a heads up poker and when multiple people are
in one hand, what are interesting aspects, everything we've
been talking about from game theory to exploitative strategies,
all that kind of stuff. So the biggest difference when you play,
let's say, nine handed, you know, Gensator, the players, and,
you know, heads up is, first of all, just the type of hands and the number of hands
you're gonna have to play.
So, the way that it works is if there's nine people,
two out of the nine hands you have to put in money.
And the other seven, you could just fold for nothing.
Okay?
When you're heads up, you're forced to put money
in every single hand.
Okay?
And there's only one other hand in front of you,
which means the ranges of hands that you play
is way wider, right?
So if you're nine handed, right?
And you're in first position, you're like,
all right, what do I need to play?
Like a good pair, two high cards, suited, a big ace,
you know, stuff like that, that's it, right?
That's what you're gonna play, right?
And then you're gonna fold all the rest.
When your head's up, you look at a king and a two,
and you're like, well, I gotta play this.
You're gonna, you're gonna, you're forced to play
a lot more hands and a lot more complex situations
when you're playing heads up,
because you're gonna be playing much far weaker hands.
Queen five, Jack three, all these types of hands,
and you're gonna see flops,
where you're not gonna have the luxury of being like,
I'm in there with a premium hand, queens, kings, aces.
Those are easier to play, right?
Very, very strong holdings.
Heads up, you're forced to dance and fight a lot more, you know.
You can't sit in the weeds and wait.
What do you enjoy more?
Hmm.
Heads up is very intense.
I like heads up, but I think if you had to play heads up eight, ten hours, it's so mentally
draining because your face with so many constant decisions,
each and every spot.
Like, you play nine handed, you look at a nine
and a three, you throw it away, you hang out for a big
and you relax, you go, you go, you go, break, and you play.
And heads up, you're like, it's like boom,
it's like you're in the ring.
You're in the octagon and you're facing
like, hey, makers, nonstop.
Since we talked about online a bit, is it possible to cheat
in poker, especially online?
We offline also talked about the cheating controversy that's
going on in the chess world.
Is it possible to use what is it remotely connected anal
beads to some much?
No, is there is that a concern of cheating online?
So here's the thing, it's kind of like a romanticized
from the old days, like, you know, in the western stuff,
like people trying to cheat.
And have you ever killed a man because he cheated?
No, I have not, but I used, when I started out as a teenager,
I played in a game with a bunch of Italians,
and I knew they cheated.
And I didn't care because they were so bad that I could win anyway. I was like, I knew they would cheat, but I knew how they were cheating. So I knew they cheated. And I didn't care, because they were so bad
that I could win anyway.
I was like, I knew they would cheat,
but I knew how they were cheating.
So I was like, okay, you guys suck.
But still here's the thing.
Anytime you're talking about large sums of money,
there will be people looking to take advantage,
whether that's live or online, right?
And so it's like the job essentially
of the online operators or the live event staff to police it the best
they can and the players themselves being on the lookout for it you know. Like a
guy like Donald Brunson's a great resource because he's seen it all and he's
seen all the tricks you know and so live he probably could spot a few things but
online there's there's various ways people can try to cheat but there's also
really good security measures in place to catch them.
We've caught about two years ago, there was a huge undertaking of 500 accounts that were
banned for doing different things.
Again, they can't go into detail in terms of how they're doing it, because otherwise,
then you're giving the cheats the playbook in terms of how to take advantage.
But it's always going to be a concern for poker wherever you play, right?
But it's not something I'm worried about personally.
So at the highest in person, and by the way, online, there is really interesting algorithms
that do some of the work in an automated way that detect to flag things that are weird.
But in person, it's just not something at the highest level that you're super concerned about.
So it's not, it didn't quite infiltrate the poker world
to agree towards a huge concern.
Yeah, and like, so here's the thing.
I don't play in private games and whatever, right?
But in private games, theoretically,
you know, you could be in,
if you don't trust the people you're playing with,
like I've heard stories of people where,
you know, they have an earpiece in in that you can't see, right?
And they have, you know, like RFID on the cards
or something like that and they have a phone reading it.
So they have somebody in a truck telling them,
you're gonna win this hand, you're gonna lose this hand.
Like that happened in a private game, you know,
and the guy, what's often funny about
some of these people who cheat is they're so greedy
and blatantly obvious that they get caught.
Whereas if they use this tool in a more subtle way, they could probably continue to get away with it.
But again, that's not something I worry about in a casino environment,
you know, in these tournaments and things like that. But if I was playing in private games,
like if I came down to Texas and some guy, I got cheated in the game by a guy named Blacky Blackburn
and Tex. That's a red flag right there. I was at the Chimo hotel. I was cheated in the game by a guy named Blacky Blackburn and Tex.
That's the red flag right there. I was at the Chimo hotel. I was a teenager.
And they saw me playing, you know, I was making good money as a teenager.
I had like a $13,000 bankroll, you know, and I went and played in this game with them in a private hotel room
and found out later that the guy was a card mechanic, you know, he was dealing.
And he could, you know, deal you the hands and they knew what you had and stuff like that.
So, yeah, I got a member of, you know, I lost the big number in that game,
and it was a good learning lesson in terms of, you know, being wary of who you trust.
Yeah, so if the dealer is in on it, that's one way you could cheat.
It's fascinating. That's part of the reason that they cut. So, like, you'll see, like,
there's a burn card, because what would happen in, you know, maybe in the old days is like, if you're sitting in the one seat, I could lift the card and you'll see, there's a burn card. Because what would happen in maybe the old days is,
if you're sitting in the one seat, I could lift the card,
and you could see it, the next card coming.
So, what they do is they have a card on top of it
that you burn, that isn't the card,
and then the next card is the one that comes face up.
I just learned about the edge sorting thing
that Phil Ivey and maybe others were involved with.
I just reading it at first was super interesting to me
that you can exploit the imperfections
in the printing of cards.
Yeah, that was almost cool to me.
That was almost not cheating because it's like,
that needs to be a movie.
It's awesome.
It's a movie.
Yes, that's the thing.
What happened with Phil Ivy in that whole case
is it's a catastrophe really. It is such a horrible precedent because here's a beer movie. Yes. That's the best thing. What happened with Phil Ivey in that whole case? It's a catastrophe, really.
It is such a horrible precedent.
Because here's what he did.
Phil Ivey shows up at the casino,
says, I want to play this game.
They say, okay.
All right.
I want to play with those dicks.
They say, okay.
They agree to everything that he says.
He never touches the cards.
He doesn't do anything outside of the fact
that cards that you supplied have imperfections on them
and he can see them.
Yeah.
Okay.
So that increases his chances of winning.
He could still lose theoretically, right?
Probably not, but he can lose in theory.
He just gives him a little bit of an edge and it's all stuff based on what you provided.
Yeah.
So the idea that you offered a game, I accepted, I beat you and now you want to free roll me?
That's disgusting.
So for people who don't know, maybe you can elaborate and it's just fascinating to me,
but you're exploiting the imperfections in the card patterns on the back
and then they look different if you rotate it.
And the fascinating thing too, when you shuffle, usually you don't rotate the cards,
so that you can see the sort of detect which cards are the strong cards by marking them,
by rotating them. And the way you know they're rotated is because of the pattern and perfections.
Yeah, so some of the cards, like you said, like you know they had those like that pattern on it.
And some of them, this was faulty cards on there, we're not cut properly. So like the eights and
nines had the card cut differently
and those are important cards in this game,
the eights and nines or whatever.
So you could essentially from looking at the back of the card,
discern what it's gonna be.
You do nothing in terms of like cheating yourself.
You're not rigging the game.
All you're doing is taking advantage of the fact
that you're playing, you've offered me cards that are faulty.
Can I just say that, of course, it would be Fille Ivy, who's the go at the normal game
will be figured out this particular thing.
I mean, that's what, if you're into soccer, this Diego Maradona has that famous hand of
God in the World Cup, or he scores a goal with his hand.
And so, of course, the referee didn't see it.
They thought it was a header.
So, I mean, part of the magic of the genius
of the people at the top of the game
is they're able to exploit all the flaws that are there.
That's a beautiful thing.
Well, he feel like Phil had, you know, in his heyday.
He had ex-exploited weaknesses and casinos, you know,
systems all over the country.
Like in one night, I don't know if you know the story.
In one night, he would take a plane, a private plane,
and fly to 30 different casinos all over the country.
Because he would have these deals where they're like,
all right, we got this big rich sucker
who's gonna come here and play crap,
and he's gonna lose all our money.
So he'd have this deal with one of the casinos
where they'd be like, all right,
you get 20% back up to half a million, right?
So if you lose half a million, we'll give you back a hundred, okay?
Okay, so he'd go to one casino in Tunica. He'd play half a million
win-winner lose, you know, he would leave. They think they're gonna get him to stay, they get him a big room, whatever.
So let's say he goes to Tunica, he lose half a million, okay? Now he goes, he flies to Atlantic City, he wins half a million, okay?
He lost half a million and one half a million, but he got a hundred thousand back.
So he's actually plus one hundred thousand.
Do that at 10 casinos a night, you're making a million dollars in free equity.
And they would give him promotional chips and all these kind of things and free flights
and stuff like that.
So he took advantage of the image, you know, that they're trying to exploit.
So this is why I don't have any empathy for these casinos, because they're giving you
free drinks, they're giving you, why do you think they're doing that kind of the kindness of their heart?
They're trying to exploit you.
So guess what?
You lost at your own game.
Pay the piper.
And I think it was crazy because the judges in his case said he did not cheat.
But yeah, well, it's probably not right.
Hold on.
You just said he didn't cheat.
You know, that that should be the end of the case.
And then the casinos do the funny thing.
I mentioned to you, I was just at the UFC in Dan and White is a huge gambler.
It's a black check gambler.
And there's that famous situation where you got kicked out of a casino and the casinos do that kind of thing.
When you went too much, so he won some ridiculous amount of money.
He bets like, I mean money. He plays millions of dollars
on hands of Blackjack, it's insane. And so he won't really big and he got kicked out.
Was he counting? No, he wasn't counting. So counting in Blackjack here in Las Vegas is
like the only game where they actually can ask you not to play. So like basically if you
counting cards, right, you could potentially have an edge in Blackjack. And there are some
professionals who do that. But they get caught pretty quickly
and then they say you can play crap,
you can play whatever you want,
but you can't play blackjack here anymore.
No, I don't think Danny White is counting.
I think he was winning a lot.
I guess they can claim that they believe you account
because how do you really know if you're counting that?
Well, they easily, they figured out.
So basically they have an eye in the sky
and they can see, so if you're varying your bet size, right?
So there are certain spots where based on the cards that are out, let's say for example,
the a lot of the twos, threes, and fours, and fives have been coming out. So the rich,
the deck is rich in face cards. That's very good for the player, right? So imagine you were betting
500 bucks and then all of a sudden you up your bet to 2000 or 5000 when the deck is rich.
They know when the deck is rich in high cards because they keep account of themselves.
So if they notice a player increasing their bet sizes when the deck is good for them,
it's a tell-tale sign.
Interesting.
I don't think Danny White would be counting.
So because he knows don't kick you out.
If you don't often kick you out, do they ever kick you out?
If you make too much money.
Does he have playing millions of dollars?
Unless they would never kick you out for making too much money,
unless they'd just disrespect cheating,
because why would they?
They have an advantage, they want the money back.
It's not like you go in there,
when 10 million, you're like,
oh, no, that's enough for us.
What about if he was talking shit the whole time?
I wonder.
I don't think that would matter, you know?
Because in the long run, they'll get the money back.
Exactly.
You tweeted, if you watch Jersey Shore, family vacation, we would probably
get along really well. What is it about, because I lived in Jersey for a while, what is
it about Jersey Shore characters that you love? I just love that they're sort of, I love
the debauchery. I think Pauli D's a fun guy, you know, and just like, it's just something
like in, it's just, it's what he what he call it, it's trash TV, it's a fun guy, you know, and just like, it's just something like, it's just,
it's what he what he call it.
It's trash TV, it's a guilty pleasure,
but you can just watch him snooki get drunk
and fall all over yourself or whatever.
So is that part, do you love that part of Vegas as well?
And not really, like I don't go out and stuff,
but I kind of, I just like the characters.
I like that they have, you know, unique personalities
and I think like we live in a world now where people are more and more careful of what they
say and afraid of backlash and all that stuff.
And it's kind of like an old school version of just like say what you feel, it's okay,
as long as your intent is good.
And they haven't been canceled, if you will, which is good, but I feel like they're
type of behavior
slowly but surely, like, because they got a lot of flack originally for
misrepresenting, like Italian Americans or something like that. Like, there was a lot of backlash
about this isn't how Italian Americans really are and blah, blah, blah. So they sort of
representing that group of people and, you know, they received some backlash back in the day.
that group of people and you know they received some backlash back in the day. I'm a huge supporter of diversity in all the beautiful forms that the the human
species is able to generate and that's certainly one dimension. What's the greatest
Vegas movie would you say? I don't know if that's a difficult question but fear
of loading Las Vegas leaving Las Vegas casino Casino. I watch, because any time Casino's on randomly, I always watch it.
It's such a great movie.
It could be one of the Sharon Stone.
Sharon Stone.
Sharon Stone, frankly, Sharon Stone reminded me, every time I watch the movie, it reminded
me of my wife, Amanda.
Totally.
I would see the character, and I was like, I'm the Robert Caniro character in the film.
I used to watch it through that lens, you know.
From like the depth of love that you have.
Just kind of, I remember that she was like,
she lit up every room, she does light up every room,
when she goes there, everybody's attracted and drawn to her
and she was kind of, when she was younger,
she was a little wild and crazy and whatnot.
So she reminded me of the Sharon Stone character
and then the Robert De Niro character is trying to like
have a stable life and be that, now that was me.
And it was the Joe Petchen, your life.
Well, there was a guy, there was a James Woods for sure
who was the Lester and called him,
we actually called him Lester.
A few of my friends called him Lester.
The greasy guy, I try to get back in and all that.
But yeah. Yeah, one of my favorite scenes is when they meet out in the desert,
and it's like a 50-50 odds if you're going to make it out alive and that.
I mean, there's an epicanace to that portrayal of Vegas.
I love, I mean, it's just totally, I mean, it's obviously more corporate now and it's different,
but I love those movies.
I love all those movies just seeing that life.
And like I said, if there was a period at a time
that I could go back to and just experience it,
it would be that, you know, right around then.
That would be that.
We're playing with a mob.
I think of like these crime shows today,
like they're so unrealistic now
because if they're in an era that is now,
like none of this stuff can happen
because there's cameras everywhere.
You can't like get away with these,
like killing somebody
and jumping in a car and you're gonna get caught.
But in the 70s, that stuff happens.
Across the line you die.
Yeah, Lake Mead is recently losing water
and every couple of days they're finding more
and more bodies from that era.
They really are.
You're close with your mom.
What did you learn about life from your mom?
My mother was very generous.
My mother, she experienced joy through giving people.
Food, for the most part, my dad would get them drinks,
and that was how she felt fulfilled, right?
She felt good when she liked, would cook for you,
and like she would be that person you'd come over,
and really she'd be like, are you hungry?
And she said, oh, no, I'm okay.
She's gonna put 15 things in front of you.
And you'll eat, you know, you're gonna eat.
Because everyone does that to be polite.
No, no, I'm good.
But, you know, they will start to eat.
And just her hospitality in that regard
and just being generous and like, being a good host
to people and things like that, like,
how did that define, like, help define who you are
as a person, that generosity?
Yeah.
You could have dropped off on you.
It made me think about, in my life, when it comes to like any sort of business deals
or things like that, I don't want to get the best of it in such a way where I screwed
the other person.
I genuinely don't.
I'd much rather you own me than me or you.
So if I hire people, they get paid more than they're supposed to.
And I'd rather than do that and work towards it
rather than feel underpaid.
Because if they're underpaid, they'll likely under deliver.
Whereas if they feel overpaid,
then if I need them to do something special,
they're not gonna be like,
I don't get paid for that.
I'm like, yeah, you do.
You really do.
So that's certainly like played out in my life
where I set it up in such a way,
where I don't owe, you know, I'm owed. But that's certainly like played out in my life where I set it up in such a way where I don't oh
You know I'm old, but that's okay. I'd wrap because I can handle taking the worst of it in spots I don't like being the person to
You know feel like I'm indebted to others
Yeah, and in some way the karma of that tends to pay dividends in the long term somehow somehow there's a
There's somebody up up there that's keeping track
in some kind of way.
What advice would you give to young people today
in high school and college?
How do I have a career that can be proud of
or maybe how to have a life in general that can be proud of?
I would say like your 20s is a good opportunity
to set yourself up for
the rest of your life, right? So while the 20s are a period where you want to have fun and you
want to experience youth, it's also a good opportunity to start thinking about what do you want to
like, what do you want your life to look like in your 30s and your 40s, right? So I feel like it's
the best time to really put yourself out there and take risks and try to hit it, you know,
whatever, you know, like to work really, really hard to set yourself up. Because, and I said this
at an event I was speaking at, when you're like with poker, when your bankroll is very, very small,
it's replenishable, right? You don't need to protect it as much as you do once you've got something,
right? Once you have a brand or you have money, you have something like that,
that's when you wanna start protecting you.
But in your 20s, it's an opportunity to just really sort of,
get a cut, to work really, really hard,
to set yourself up for the future.
I am concerned a little bit,
like every time I talk to kids today,
I'm like, what do you wanna be?
They all wanna be YouTubers or Instagram stars or rappers,
right?
Okay, it's like, that's cool,
but like there's only so many of those,
that you know, that there can be.
So it might be worth
while having a little bit of a backup plan.
I think it's easier to be successful
on Instagram and social media if you do something else.
And I would say this too, one other thing I would say is,
don't choose a profession or an idea
because you think it'll make you rich. Right?
Pursue something that you actually love because if you love it, you're
you're way more likely to become rich. If you don't, you do something that you
don't actually enjoy. Now you're spending a lot of your life unhappy doing
something you don't want and you're far and if you're not passionate about it,
you're probably not the chance of you being successful or much lower.
And also becoming rich and I've talked to a chance of evening successful or much lower and also becoming rich.
And I've talked to a lot of rich people hang out with a lot of rich people is not
going to be as fulfilling as you imagine.
If you arrive there by not doing the thing that you love doing,
that's true.
Ultimately, the thing that you love doing is like, that's what makes life worth.
There's another quote.
I can't remember who it was
otherwise I would quote them,
but it says something to the effect of like,
if we believe in the lie that Moore is always better,
then we can never truly arrive.
Because wherever we are, Moore is better, right?
I've never understood, and I've been around rich people,
like you said, you know, I never got, I can't,
I don't get it.
Like if you have a billion dollars,
why do you give a shit about money at all? Like, and they're still like, oh, we made this
deal. And I'm like, you know, we picked up 300, who cares? Like your life is set. Like,
there is that bell curve, right? Where obviously being in poverty, you know, there's obviously
a high rate of unhappiness, but there's a certain amount of money where you reach, you know,
where you reach level happiness. And then too much, you find the people that are searching for money to fulfill these holes,
it starts to go back down again. Well, the getting more money could become a game,
like a sport that's fun to play as long as you directly or indirectly acknowledge that
what you love is the game of it versus the actual attainment of it. And I think that's what it is, right?
For me, I've never cared about money that much.
I just never did.
Otherwise, I would have a lot more of it.
But it's always been strange to me how people that have that kind of money
like are cheap in any way.
You know, like they wouldn't donate 5,000 to a worthwhile charity.
Because it's like, buddy, this, like when it changes your life, not,
and even like small things, like taxes,
like, okay, you have $20 billion
and you're worried about paying 33% to 31.
I get it, I get the point of it all,
but like it literally has no effect on your life whatsoever.
Your life is unchanged,
whether it's 31 or 33.
Yeah, that's the negative of a lot of money
Is if it corrupts the way you see the world you start to be protective and so on
I mean part of the challenge of when you get a lot of money is people start to treat you differently and so
Navigating that correctly is is very challenging. So don't change
Remain the same person you always were as if you change to, I mean, that's why power corrupts.
If you get a lot of power, you get a lot of fame,
you get a lot of money.
You start to distrust people.
You start to push away people
that are actually really close to you with trust.
And you also think you develop some biases
where you think like you're just this,
you know, you think like it was all you and you're a genius
and you're so great and all these other people
who don't have, it's just because they don't have what you have. And like genius and you're so great and all these other people who don't have
It's just because they don't have what you have and like you just then you start to like view that group of people whether they're impoverished or whatever is like less than
And that you're some like great guru where you could have just got lucky and bought bitcoins
That you know could have done anything and then you became like super wealthy
And then you have this like
Dunning Kruger effect where you think you know everything about everything. And a lot of poker people have that.
And I, listen, I'm probably guilty in some ways too,
you know, thinking because you can figure out poker
and be, you know, great at that,
that you can figure out anything.
So there's like, it's true, right?
I mean, we sort of, we genuinely feel like
people that reach the highest levels of poker
feel like they are intelligent.
So they will look at problem solving
and think that they have answers.
Well, you have to remind yourself that you're not,
as best as the see the world as you did just get lucky,
or at least from my perspective,
that you're not better than anybody.
Yeah, I don't think there's anything wrong with like,
acknowledging that you worked hard to get where you were.
Like there isn't, but at the same time,
like it's not available to everybody in the same way.
You know, right time, right place, like for me,
my poker career could have gone very differently, you know?
If things didn't work out, you know, if I had some bad luck in the wrong times, like, who knows where I'd be? So you said,
your bankroll is pretty small in your 20s. I'm sure you've been around a lot of people who care
a lot about who've lost everything in poker. What's that like? What's those low points of losing
everything? I think because I've been there, I have more empathy than I probably
should for those people. They really feel for them because I remember being in Vegas and being
totally broke and like a guy loaning me $400 and me like turning that $400 into $20,000, $400
bucks and it was like eternally grateful of that. So when I have friends who go through that,
like I always try to consult them obviously, but they really need his money for the most part. But I remember saying no to one friend because he
didn't have a plan. So I like to try to help them in that regard. Like my buddy said, can you
stake me in this game? And I was like, all right, well, how much do you know, I was like, let's
break down the math, bro. You want me to stake you so you get 50% of the profit, right? So I said,
how much do you think you can make in this game? How much is the biggest winters make? It's like, well, I can probably, you know, I probably do like
20,000 a month in this game. So okay. So you get half of that because I get 10, right?
What is your monthly nut? How much are you spending? Well, I remember renting this thing
for 8,000. You're spending 17,000 a month. So like no matter what, you're set up to fail.
Like this isn't going to work. So actually didn't give them the money. And I was like, what you need to do there more money
is lower your monthly nut, because it's too high.
It just, you know, it just doesn't mathematically add up.
So, trying to set them right in that regard
is something that like, I feel obliged to do,
especially if they're friends.
But what about the mental aspect of the struggle
they're going through?
The struggle you were going through, just,
I mean, it's really rough to have no money.
It's not for everybody.
This really isn't.
A lot of people might listen to this and think,
like, oh, I want to play poker.
It's like most people fail.
Most people who want to play in the NFL,
they spend their college years,
they're most of them are not going to make it.
Most of you who try to play poker professionally
are going to fail and you're going to experience despair. Okay. There are those like in anything
that have the passion, have the know how, have the luck and all that sort of stuff and
it all pans out, but you know, they're the minority.
And so for the low points, if you remember, what does it take to sort of overcome that
overcome the mental struggle.
I mean, you're making it sound like certain people
are just genetically able to insert in art.
I do think some people are more apt to being able to deal
with like adversity and having resilience
and some people just can't hack it.
But like I generally would advise,
people that are, let's say a guy's playing
really high stakes or whatever,
doing badly is step number one,
is take a little bit of a break here,
and it's recalibrate.
And let's start small again.
Let's restart.
And let's play smaller stakes.
And let's get our confidence back.
Because in poker, without confidence, you cannot be successful.
It is incredibly important to have almost an inflated level of confidence in yourself.
Because you're up against it, right?
As I said, the majority of people fail.
So why are you special?
Why are you different?
You have to be pretty confident,
but you're, you know, yourself to think
that you are one of the chosen ones.
And then don't resist the despair and take a nap.
You definitely take a nap and it's a,
listen, it's okay to experience it.
Like I said, yeah, you're gonna experience the spirit.
What else would you, what should you be feeling?
You know, if things are going poorly
and you just lost all your money excited
Maybe like okay have your moment of grief
Allow yourself to experience it so that you can you know
Reassemble there's a fundamental way in which you haven't really lived life You haven't if you have an experienced periods of despair
You have a jaded view of the world right weird thing about the a weird thing about the human condition that both the highs and the lows are important.
Yeah.
What role does love play in the human condition
Daniel and the ground?
That's a good one.
The world has love played in your life.
It's, yeah, that's, you know, you sort of talked about
the ups and downs of
The human condition and love has been that for me, right?
Like I'm in a good place now, but you know even with my now wife
Years ago, you know
She was young. She was you know new to poker and she wasn't ready to settle down I was like when I met her. I think I was 31, she was 21. And I was ready to like lock her up, if you will. You know, let's
do this. And I bought a ring way back when she was like not about that. She was living
the the Hollywood live. She was living, you know, partying in LA doing that kind of stuff.
And wasn't ready. And we split. And that one hit me hard. So I didn't realize how much
of a hit that had on my confidence in my, in everything, really,
and poker with other women, it had me a little jaded about women too, you know, resentful,
you know, and it took a lot of like self-righteous, I did a lot of personal growth work and workshops
and things like that. And then didn't see her for years. And she came back to town. I was a much
different person. It was just, you know, four years ago or something like that.
And she was too.
We went to dinner.
A few months later, we were married.
Yeah, it worked out.
So different because we both had to grow, you know,
and become different people.
Huh.
And that love was still there somehow.
It was a tough time.
Yeah, like she went through her relationships.
I went through mine.
You know, we experienced life.
And I was married once before too,
called my starter marriage, if you will.
You don't know.
I think until you do it, until you get married,
experience the sacrifice, not necessarily the sacrifices,
but your value systems, if they don't align identically,
which they're not going to.
Someone like me, one of my strengths in poker, but my weaknesses
in relationship is judgment, right? When I play poker, I need to judge you. Essentially,
what I'm doing, I'm gauging who you are and what you're good at and what you're bad
at. And that can have repercussions because it leads, that's how I, you know, that's
the lens I look at everyone with. Based on how you live your life, I'm judging you.
This guy's this, this guy's that, this guy's that. And that's not healthy. You have to shut that off. You have to learn to
like, and the thing I finally realized what love is, frankly, for me, with her is no judgment.
Right? Jesus. So like, yeah, so I have my way of being, right? If she wants to have cereal for dinner,
that's the best decision for her. I was living in a framework of better and worse. The way that I
do things is better and yours is worse, do things more like I do. That's a best decision for her. I was living in a framework of better and worse. The way that I do things is better,
and yours is worse, do things more like I do.
That's a recipe for disaster.
True acceptance, and true love is accepting someone
like exactly as they are.
You know, if she wants to do something different,
I'm gonna support her.
Whatever it is, even if I disagree with it personally
and like the way that I would do things,
learning to just realize that she's had a different journey
and a different walk towards where she's at than I have.
So, I can't pass my judgments on other people like that.
I believe it is ethically wrong and probably a legal deed serial for dinner.
I bet she should listen if she wants it.
She wants it.
Acceptance.
Like, when she goes to bed, like all these little things about my regimented life,
she's not.
Like, our motto on her wedding was like,
you keep me wild.
I'll keep you safe. You keep me wild.
I keep her safe.
She keeps me wild.
She's like not organized and anal and all those kind of things I am.
She helps me like let loose.
You know, you know, I'm all in all I'm eating this.
This she's like, have some popcorn.
All right.
Let's do it.
You know, she keeps me free and accepting that, embracing that the, the difference is, have some popcorn. Like, all right, let's do it. You know, she keeps me freed.
And accepting that, embracing that, the, the differences,
the chaos of it.
Yes, that's what makes it.
Like, I literally do think about with her, how important it is,
and how much I try to like just come from neutral and like,
compassion and never judge, because she's got other things
that she deals with, right, that I don't.
She's bipolar, right? So with that, I've studied and I've learned a lot about, you know,
sort of mental health and what that means and ways in which a lot of characteristics about
somebody is completely out of their control when they're bipolar, right? And there's swings,
like there's no cocktail for bipolar that solves the issue, right?
So there's medications that work to, you know, level you out for periods of time,
but then they start to fade and they don't work as well. So they constantly need readjustment.
It's an unsolved mystery to a certain degree. So in some sense, you know, her diagnosis made
our relationship easier because I don't take anything personal, right?
I realized that sometimes she's gonna be in a mood.
And she's so good about communicating it though.
She tells me, some morning she'll be like,
bad mood trying to get out of a bed.
I'm like, okay, I leave her alone.
Well, that's great.
I mean, she's grown to be able to communicate,
to understand the self-reflect, to understand what she is.
I have people in my life who I love, who are bipolar.
It's a beautiful ride.
It is, right?
Yeah.
It's the highs and the lows are like there.
So, but yeah, like because I feel like a protectorum,
for me, I just want to be a rock, right?
And that's part of the whole serial thing.
If she wants to eat cereal, don't make a wrong
for anything she wants to do.
What have you learned from life,
from the song, The gambler by Kenny Rogers?
You got to know and to hold them, know and to fold them, know and to walk away, know and
to run.
You never count your money when you're sitting at the table.
There'll be plenty time for counting when the dealings done.
Is that do you live by those words?
The first part of it for sure.
What do they even mean? Because you got no wind, no way.
So basically it's like, all right, in life,
like, let's use whatever, the market, for example,
you bought a stock, or you bought Bitcoin,
and you're like, it's gonna go to the moon, right?
It's like, okay, well, maybe things have changed.
New scenario, new circumstances, new situation.
Are you going down with the ship?
Right?
Or are you going to have laid the hand down?
Are you going to fold it?
Whether it's a relationship, you know, you're with this woman, you're like, all right, I think
it's time to fold this one.
I think, you know, I don't think that we're going to be able to make this, this, this hand
work right now.
When the fold them and want to run.
Yeah.
So maybe every gamble knows that the secret
to surviving is knowing what to throw away, knowing what to keep because every hands of
winter and every hands of loser, that's like a stoic philosophy. And the best thing you
can hope for is to die in your sleep. Every hands of winter and every hands of loser.
What does that mean? I like that one. I like, for me, that's like the difference between victim
and responsible, like the way that I think about it, right?
You can be a victim to circumstance
or you can be responsible for everything in your life, right?
So when event happens, the event itself
isn't either good or bad until you assign it value, right?
So like an event happens and can be traumatic,
it can be, you know, painful,
but, you know,
how you respond to it is ultimately going to be up to you.
Like you actually do have a choice.
And that's the thing you can control.
The fact that you, Daniel Nagrana, took my commentary
about the gambler seriously shows once more
that you're a beautiful human being.
Thank you so much for being who you are
for inspiring millions of people about poker,
about how to live life.
And thank you for giving me a valuable time today.
This is amazing.
Thanks for talking.
It's great to have the conversation.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Daniel Negrano.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now let me leave you with some words from Doyle Bronson.
Poker is war.
People pretend it is a game.
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.
you