 
2nd Lecture - Protecting Your Poker Bankroll And More 
 
Protecting Your Poker Bankroll And More
The following lecture is an extension of the very first lecture that took place on September 29, 
1998, and later appeared in Cardplayer magazine.
Before I get into this topic, I need to point something out. I'm not a strong advocate of 
bankroll science. In fact, I think that most things said about bankrolls are not science at all. 
They are mostly just homespun wisdom. I'm going to start by telling you something that you 
know is true in your heart. You should never criticize a person for taking "too much" risk, so 
long as that person understands the risk being taken and has the best of it. The more risk you 
take, the more likely you are to capture sudden wealth, and the more likely you are to be 
damaged in the pursuit. 
The risk is up to you.
That's important, and I'll repeat it. The more risk you accept, the more likely you are to 
suddenly prosper and the more likely you are to suddenly go broke. So, you see, it's your 
choice. What's an unacceptable risk for you may be tolerable for someone else. It's a personal 
decision. It's up to them. And it's up to you. 
Also, you should be aware that there are mathematically derived methods that can be used to 
maximize your chance of success once you've defined your goals. Although we've discussed 
these concepts before, we won't deal with them today. Here are the things that I spoke about 
at the Tuesday Session… 
1.
How big does your bankroll need to be? It is folly to criticize a player for having
an insufficient starting bankroll.
Taking 100 shots with $50 each time gives you about the same chance of eventual 
success as taking a single shot with $5,000 - provided you play your best game at all 
times. 
Of course, this isn't precisely true. Other factors may influence your fate substantially. 
What factors? Well, if you play with a single buy-in, you're more likely to go all-in. 
These all-in situations change your prospects. Actually, being all-in can often work to 
your advantage, because other players may then eliminate themselves from the 
showdown by not calling bets. While this is happening, you are guaranteed to make 
the showdown. This means you will win all pots where you can stumble into the best 
hand, while your opponents will not. 
You may also play differently on short money and your opponents may play 
differently against you. You sometimes will not have the opportunity to stay in a good 
game with $50, although you might have stayed and made profit if you had a big 
bankroll behind you. There are many other factors to consider, but - in general - taking 
100 shots with just $50 each time can be considered the same as gathering $5,000 
before you play the first time. If you play the same type of poker, your prospects will 
be similar. 
So, the common notion that short money is at a big disadvantage is a myth. You are 
much more likely to go broke with only a small buy-in, but the force of all those short 
 
buy-ins combined should give you about the same opportunity overall as one big 
bankroll.  
2.
Not everyone needs a bankroll.
Players who only expect to play occasionally, or who are playing recreationally, can 
just bring whatever they can afford whenever they can afford it. Bankrolls are things 
you build and are designed for people without infinite assets who want to play 
regularly. 
3.
You must play your best game all the time.
The policy of playing your best game most of the time is the greatest destroyer of 
bankrolls there is. At higher-limit games, players actually seem to take turns "going on 
tilt." If you pass your turn quite often, without your opponents realizing it, you'll win 
the most money. This is known as "Caro's Law of Least Tilt." 
I first wrote about this almost 20 years ago. It remains one of the most fundamentally 
important things you can learn if you want to succeed at poker. You are not likely to 
succeed if you decide to blatantly take advantage of knowledgeable opponents' super-
loose play. If they're taking turns going on tilt, and you come into the game and play 
perfectly stable, you won't fit in. They will resent you and often they will stop 
providing you with profit. 
The trick is to play along and show some fast action, too. Simulate tilt. Make them 
aware of it. But pass your turn when they don't notice. Among equally skilled players, 
the one who spends the least time on tilt (or simulating tilt) wins the most money. 
4.
Don't make the mistake of routinely promoting yourself to higher limits as you
continue to win.
You might eventually find a level you can't beat. When this happens, most players 
refuse to step back down, and they lose or "spin their wheels" for the rest of their 
poker careers. 
This is actually an application of the Peter Principle (about how people get promoted 
until they reach their level of incompetence) to poker. 
5.
Be selective about your games.
Don't routinely take the first one you see. Most of your profit will come from good 
games. Even most winning players lose money in tougher games. 
Those are fighting words, but they're true. If I could select the worst 50 percent of 
games that professionals played in throughout their careers, most would be losers for 
those sessions. It is the other 50 percent of their games - and sometimes an even much 
smaller portion of their games - that supply the profit for most pros. Game selection is 
much more important than most players suppose. 
6.
You should be less protective of a small bankroll.
The larger your bankroll grows, the more worthy it is of protection and the less 
chances you should take. That's because a large bankroll would be much harder to 
replace from sources in the world beyond poker. You can usually get a small starting 
bankroll from the "real" world, but it's unlikely that you will be able to replace an 
established bankroll in the same way. 
 
7.
Don't treat your bankroll like a tournament buy-in.
You can have a "tournament" almost any day you want. Just keep jumping into higher 
and higher limits until you reach a long-shot goal or go broke. But in a tournament, 
only one player ends up with the chips. Everyone else goes broke. Don't treat your 
bankroll that way. 
8.
Don't spend your bankroll.
It's tempting to start with $500, win $20,000, spend $12,000 you think you don't need, 
then lose $8,500. You'll be flat broke, on the rail, and begging for money. But you 
actually won $11,500! Don't let that happen to you. 
As strange as it seems, the majority of winning poker players - players who actually beat the 
games and have an expectation of profit - are broke or nearly broke most of the time. Why? 
Because they spend their bankrolls. Think about it. Tuesday Session is adjourned. - MC