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EV Berechnung
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y_jason_y Offline
Posting Freak

Beiträge: 1,535
Registriert seit: Jul 2008
Beitrag #1
EV Berechnung
ich brach nwenig mathe nachilfe..im folgenden post von 2+2 geht es um die berechnung von foldequity um breakeven zu sein..
hier der post:

2+2 schrieb:A Method to Compute Required Folds For Breakeven Draw Pushing (Long)

Here's the situation (do not comment on the play of this hand, it is totally irrelevant and was contrived for the math):

Full Tilt Poker - No Limit Hold'em Cash Game - $0.50/$1 Blinds - 5 Players - (LegoPoker HH Converter)

Preflop: Hero is dealt 6 8 (5 Players)
UTG folds, CO calls $1.00, BTN folds, Hero raises to $4.50, BB folds, CO calls $3.50

Flop: ($10) Q 7 9 (2 Players)
Hero bets $5.00, CO raises to $15.00, Hero ... ?

As of this moment, the bet is $10 to call, there is $30 in the pot, and there is $125 more behind. You have 8 outs, and you think they are clean. That is, you have a 32% (according to the rule of 2/4) chance to improve to a straight, and when you do you will win 100% of the time. Assume these numbers to be correct. Ignore the equity of backdoor draws.

You are considering pushing. Every time you push and the opponent calls, you are losing money long-term because you only have 32% equity. In other words, 68% of the time you will lose your stack when he calls. But that's not the whole story. Pushing also has Fold Equity. Fold Equity means that there is a certian ammount of value in pushing because the opponent may fold, and you will win the $30 that's in the pot right now. When you push and he folds then, it is a long-term +EV play. So the Net EV of pushing becomes the EV when he folds plus the EV when he calls. (It so happens that the EV when he calls is negative.) Our challenge is to figure out how often he has to fold for pushing to be breakeven.

There is a simple mathematical method to compute this, but it is too cumbersome to use at the table. Here is how to compute how often he must fold in order for pushing to be breakeven. Let f = a number from 0 to 1, representing the probability he folds:

EV = EVfold + EVcall
0 = 30f + (1-f) [ .32(125-15+30) + .68(-125) ]
0 = 30f - (1-f)(44.-85)
0 = 30f - (-41) - f(-41)
0 = 30f + 41f - 41
0 = 71f - 41
41 = 71f
41/71 = f = .58

So in order for pushing to be 0EV, the opponent must fold 58% of the time.

How do you figure this out at the table? The math above is too complex for most people to do in thier head, especially on the 15 second timers common in internet poker. But there is a simpler way.

The key to understanding the total equity in pushing is to envision a continuum of all the wins & losses you get from when he calls, and fill in the gaps with wins when he folds. I'll explain this by example.

When you push and he calls, you are a 2:1 dog. So for every 3 plays, you'll lose twice. Here's how that looks on our continuum (remember, we're looking for breakeven, or EV=0):

+140 - 125 - 125 + ...

The '...' represents the gap that we're going to fill in.

For me, doing '140 - 125 - 125' is still to complicated for table math; I need smaller numbers. If we look at the size of our push in comparison to the size of the pot, we see that we are pushing 4x the $30 in the pot. So to make the numbers simpler, reduce all the numbers to "units" where 1 unit is the size of the pot, and round them to something easy for you to handle. For me, that's 0.5 units:

+4.5 - 4 - 4 + ...

This is approximate, but it's very close. Good enough to make good decisions at the table.

Now things are pretty simple. I can do the math "4.5-4-4" in our heads, even under pressure:

+4.5 - 4 - 4 = -3.5

So we see we lose when he calls. How many times does he have to fold to make EV = 0? The answer is simple, it's 3.5, or practically speaking, 4. So this is what we need our continuum to look like in order for the push to be breakeven:

+4.5 - 4 - 4 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1

Note that everything is still broken out. I didn't reduce '4.5 - 4 - 4' to just -3.5. This is important, because the last step in figuring out how often he has to fold is to count up all the plays in our continuum. In order to do that we need to not reduce the expressions, since each expression is one play. In our continuum there are 7 expressions, and so there are 7 plays: We won 4.5 once, lost 4 twice, and win 1 four times. So we can see how often he needs to fold: 4 out of 7 times.

Now again I can't do "4/7" in my head precisely, but I can get close enough. I know that 4/8 is exactly 0.5, so 4/7 is a little bigger than that. He needs to fold a little more than half the time in order for pushing to be breakeven.

If you actually do the math on a calculator, you see that 4/7 = 57% which is extremely close to what we came up with above when we computed the number precisely. In fact the two methods are based on the same principal, they are just 2 different ways of looking at it. The error comes from the rounding of the numbers to 'units'. With no rounding, this method is precise.

Hope this helps some of you. I know it helped me when I figured out how to do this.


1. Frage:

EV = EVfold + EVcall
0 = 30f + (1-f) [ .32(125-15+30) + .68(-125) ]
0 = 30f - (1-f)(44.-85)
0 = 30f - (-41) - f(-41)
0 = 30f + 41f - 41
0 = 71f - 41
41 = 71f
41/71 = f = .58

30f -> f ist ja eine nummer zwischen 0 und 1, die möglichkeit das er foldet. wieso wird diese dann mit dem jetzigen pot multipliziert? :?:


2. Frage:

"+4.5 - 4 - 4 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1"
-> wieso wird dieses -3.5 (oder vereinfacht 4), in 1+1+1+1 umgewandelt?

momentan fehlt mir noch der "aha" effekt.. ;-)
thx im im voraus für eure hilfe..!

>> raise.ch 2 become a better player <<
01-11-2009 01:03 PM
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Paxinor Offline
Administrator

Beiträge: 4,391
Registriert seit: Oct 2006
Beitrag #2
Re: EV Berechnung
frage 1:

wenn du pusht und er foldet gewinnst du 30..... also GEGEBEN er foldet, gewinnst du 30

das in der eckigen klammer ist der EV GEGEBEN er callt deinen push (das sind dann -41

jetzt gibt es nur die zwei möglichkeiten die du warscheinlichkeitsverteilen musst

sprich 30f * (1-f)*-41

wenn f = 1 ist, sprich er immer foldet, dann ist dein EV 30 wie oben gesehen, wenn f = 0 ist, ist dein EV -41 logischerweise

wenn f irgendwo zwischen 0 und 1 ist, sprich z.B. 50% dann ist es 0.5*30-0.5*41


jetzt setzt du diese formel = 0, berechnest also das f das du mindestens haben musst damit du break even bist...

die variable f steht einfach für die warscheinlichkeitsverteilung der zwei möglichen outcomes...

das untere ist nur ne eselsbrücke, die mir z.B. viel zu kompliziert ist und dir auch nicht gross helfen wird imo, da er einfach die einheiten transformiert, um angeblich einfacher rechnen zu können...

es ist viel einfacher einfach zu sehen wieviel man etwa gewinnt wenn man pusht und wieviel man etwa wenn man gecallt wird verliert... sprich ich gewinne 30 und verliere 41.... man kann sofort sehen das man über 50% feq braucht weil ja 30 < 41.....

die 41 kann man imo am besten sehen in dem man 2*stack*equity - pushender betrag rausfinden , was viel intuitiver ist als (gewinnchance)*gewinn - (1-gewinnchance)*verlust

"also wie gesagt, ich war damals anfang 20 und ziemlich gut aussehend" - oh__mygod
01-11-2009 01:38 PM
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y_jason_y Offline
Posting Freak

Beiträge: 1,535
Registriert seit: Jul 2008
Beitrag #3
Re: EV Berechnung
Paxinor schrieb:2*stack*equity - pushender betrag

sehr nice..kann imo so auch gut am table berechnet werden..
Besten dank..!!

>> raise.ch 2 become a better player <<
01-11-2009 04:56 PM
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