Do You Bet Worse On Purpose Sometimes?

DublinDegen

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asking this because the answer for me is yes and i've never seen anyone else admit it...

not the bet placed in a bad emotional state... not the bet where the analysis was wrong... the deliberate one... the bet placed knowing it was poor...

the specific version: a bad run... five or six consecutive losses... the account smaller than it should be... the analytical framework saying don't bet tonight, nothing qualifies...

and placing something anyway... something i knew was poor...

why...

the closest i can come to an honest answer: the extended uncertainty of not betting felt worse than the certainty of a clean additional loss...

the bad run that kept being possibly over without being over: the deliberate bad bet ended it...

not with a win... with a definitive loss that the specific session was now over...

the psychological mechanics of the deliberate loss as an exit mechanism from an unbearable in-between state...

whether anyone else has done this... and whether they have a different explanation for why...
 
The honest answer: yes, but in a specific form I've rationalised differently.

The session where I've been running well. Better than the edge would predict. The variance has been favorable.

The feeling that the variance owes a correction. The correction is coming.

The bet placed into the anticipated correction: not quite deliberate self-sabotage, but not purely analytical either. A bet placed partly to get to the other side of the correction rather than to find genuine edge.

The psychological mechanism: I've been lucky and I know it and I'd rather control when and how the luck corrects than have it arrive unpredictably.

The deliberate mediocre bet as a controlled version of the inevitable.

Whether this is the same thing Conor describes: related but different. Conor is ending a bad run. I'm managing the anticipation of a turn from a good one.

Same underlying psychology perhaps. Different surface presentation.
 
The Wales version.

Specific to a tournament where Wales had been eliminated and I'd lost the outright.

Something about the account balance being wrong... the Wales-shaped hole in the tournament that kept reminding me the outright was gone...

placed a bet on a match I had no analytical basis for... not random exactly... just clearly not good...

looking back: the bet was filling the Wales-shaped hole with any bet at all... restoring the feeling of having something running even if the thing running was clearly not well chosen...

the deliberate poor bet as a way of being back in the tournament in any form after being genuinely out of it...

whether I knew it was poor at the time: yes, in the way you know something and simultaneously proceed anyway...
 
The version I've experienced is more specific than self-sabotage.

The bet placed to prove that something is wrong with my methodology.

A difficult run. The model keeps generating outputs. I keep executing. I keep losing.

The specific temptation: find one genuinely terrible bet to place, watch it either win or lose, and use the result to feel something about the model's current state.

The logic: if this obviously terrible bet wins, the model is finding value in places it shouldn't. If it loses as expected, at least something is behaving as predicted.

The deliberate bad bet as a diagnostic test for the model's calibration.

Not self-sabotage exactly. More like poking the methodology to see what response you get.

I haven't done this. I've wanted to. The wanting reveals something about what the losing run does to the relationship between the analyst and the analysis.
 
The deliberate performance failure in sport has documented psychology.

Athletes who self-sabotage before high-stakes events. The injury that conveniently arrives before the championship game. The deliberate underperformance that protects against the implications of full effort.

The mechanism: if you don't try fully and you fail, the failure doesn't measure you completely. If you try fully and fail, the failure is about you.

The deliberate bad bet as the betting equivalent: if you know you're betting badly and you lose, the loss doesn't measure your analytical ability. It measures your choice to bet badly.

The psychological protection against the full implications of genuine loss.

Conor's version: the exit mechanism.

The self-protection version: the bet that loses cleanly without measuring anything you care about.

Both preserve something. Different things.
 
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