Advanced Identifying Patterns When Your Card Distribution Turns Ice Cold David Parker URL has been copied successfully! You can respond to prolonged stretches of poor starting hands without compounding your losses Cold stretches in poker are inevitable and measurable. Over a large enough sample, even premium hands cluster unevenly, creating long gaps where playable cards rarely appear. This is not variance in isolation; it affects table dynamics, perception, and decision-making. Players who fail to adjust during these stretches often leak chips through forced action or frustration-based decisions. The first pattern to track is positional frequency. During cold runs, many players unconsciously widen ranges from early position to compensate. This is a mistake. Instead, tighten further in early spots and shift selective aggression to late position where fold equity is highest. Monitor how often you’re folding blinds versus defending; excessive defense during poor distribution compounds losses quickly. Second, observe table response. If you’ve been folding for extended orbits, opponents often interpret this as weakness or disengagement. This creates a narrow window to reintroduce aggression with marginal holdings in position. The key is timing—target players with high continuation bet frequencies or those overstealing blinds. Third, track showdown exposure. When card quality drops, your edge shifts from value extraction to information gathering. Use smaller pots to observe tendencies rather than forcing large confrontations. Avoid turning weak holdings into bluffs without clear blockers or range advantage. Finally, detach outcome from process. Cold streaks distort perception. Focus on maintaining pre-defined ranges and exploiting opponent errors, not correcting variance. The goal is survival with minimal loss until distribution normalizes.