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Brandon Adams on Leveraging Weakness
Description
Brandon Adams believes that being the weaker player doesn't have to mean losing.
Adams: Well, typically, when you're the weaker player, suppose that you're starting the new game and you're sitting down for the purposes of learning this new game, and you know that you're one of the weakest players at the table. Your best option when learning is to play sub optimally type, to play overly conservative and then build from that basis. So, like, if you observe that the very best players in this particular game are playing 25% of their hands before the flop and the full [ring game], perhaps, as someone who's learning the game, your best option is to play very tight and only play 12% of your hands, like, only the super premium hands. And that strategy will ensure that, if you're a loser in the game, you'll probably be a small loser and you will get to observe and sort of slowly understand the marginal situations that the better players are getting themselves into and slowly imitate them, gradually start playing more hands, giving more of a feel for the game and then developing like that. Just as if you were starting an investor, if you're training your son or something to start investing his money, you wouldn't want him to start in biotechnology stocks. You'd want to teach him the basics of, you know, this is a balance sheet of assets and liabilities and equity and you have cash flow and debt and you'd want to teach him the basics of ABC value investing. You want to invest in companies that have a lot of cash flow, that have a little leverage and stuff like this. It's the same principle. Gradually, he can build from there to sort of more advanced investing.
Adams: Well, typically, when you're the weaker player, suppose that you're starting the new game and you're sitting down for the purposes of learning this new game, and you know that you're one of the weakest players at the table. Your best option when learning is to play sub optimally type, to play overly conservative and then build from that basis. So, like, if you observe that the very best players in this particular game are playing 25% of their hands before the flop and the full [ring game], perhaps, as someone who's learning the game, your best option is to play very tight and only play 12% of your hands, like, only the super premium hands. And that strategy will ensure that, if you're a loser in the game, you'll probably be a small loser and you will get to observe and sort of slowly understand the marginal situations that the better players are getting themselves into and slowly imitate them, gradually start playing more hands, giving more of a feel for the game and then developing like that. Just as if you were starting an investor, if you're training your son or something to start investing his money, you wouldn't want him to start in biotechnology stocks. You'd want to teach him the basics of, you know, this is a balance sheet of assets and liabilities and equity and you have cash flow and debt and you'd want to teach him the basics of ABC value investing. You want to invest in companies that have a lot of cash flow, that have a little leverage and stuff like this. It's the same principle. Gradually, he can build from there to sort of more advanced investing.
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