Gambling Capers
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Archived Posts from this Category
Posted by admin on 03 Apr 2008 | Tagged as: Gambling Capers
Here are some poker tournament tips (for flop games) that should help your game and results;
In the early stages of a tournament plan on being on the table for awhile, you might not get moved at all if it is the “final” table. Get comfortable with your cushions, drinks or whatever you need. I get cold when I play, even on a hot day, so I always bring a jacket so that I can concentrate on the game instead of my teeth chattering. Now pay extra close attention to the players at your table, you’ll be here longer than at any other table. Take it easy when you move your chips, have a hand in other words. Try to steal the blinds if you can once a round. An old saying is if you can get the blinds once every round for the whole tourney, you’ll win the event. Think about it.
In the middle of a tournament you want to pace yourself, this is a long time from about when of the players are gone to the money tables. Watch the chip stacks and get to know what an average chip stack is, if your stacks lower than that you will have to move some chips, but only if your significantly lower, don’t sweat it if your just a little below average, wait for a hand until you have to pounce on them because you don’t want to just blind off. The most important part of the middle section of a tournament is to make the money. “No kidding!” you say? Some people think that a low cash (winning a small amount, your buy in returned for instance) is bad; it’s all or nothing, baby. These people go broke. If you get your entry fees back you are now in a freeroll for the big score. That is a good place to be. Pace yourself during the middle, watch all stacks and really move those chips if you’re at the 3-6 or 4-8 chip blind levels. Many players are afraid to get involved for such large pots and sit back here; this is the wrong thing to do. This is your chance to accumulate those chips you need to reach the final table in comfort. In fact, it will practically assure you a 5th place finish or better no matter how bad you run once you make the money.
Now you’re in the money and you’re watching the players. Some can play, some got lucky to be here, and because you’re a player you know which is which. The lucky ones are the guys to go after. They will hope that their luck holds up. It seldom does because the wheat has been separated from the chaff. They are now facing a difficult group. People who can play, are lucky today and usually have more experience than they do. This is truly formidable to the luck boxes who make it this far. Respect them but don’t fear them, you have great cards, great position and can play, they will soon be respecting you or they will be going home themselves. If you make the final table I like to mess with them here, I might show a bluff after playing tight all this time. You’ll get paid off on all your real hands now. Some of these guys have been watching you all night and never saw you bluff so here you just blow their minds and they wonder if you have been bluffing them all night. This makes for a really interesting final table. You will have to judge for yourself if this is a good strategy at your particular table. Good luck, I hope this helps.
With 18 years in the poker industry, over 25 years as a live game poker pro and with over 100 final tables in major tournaments, Matt Fox is a recongnized expert in all aspects of the poker world.
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Posted by admin on 01 Apr 2008 | Tagged as: Gambling Capers
Winning at poker isn’t about winning the most pots, its about winning the most money. You can do this by winning more and bigger pots and by losing less money. Here are a few tips on how to do both:
Don’t call with any old cards!
Some people will call with anything, with the belief that any two cards have the same chance of winning. This is essentially true, but some are much more likely to get you the pot than others - why waste money time after time calling to see the flop when you might hit a straight? Save that money and watch as other players waste theirs! You’ll be ahead just by not calling! See the section on starting hand ranking for good starting hands. Remember that checking’s free, so unless you’re playing speed or turbo hold ‘em, always check, no matter what the cards.
If you are playing speed or turbo and you don’t have many chips left, its probably best to fold bad hands rather than checking, so you can get better hands in before the stakes are raised.
If the flop doesn’t fit….
If you decide to call and the flop doesn’t fit (if the flop doesn’t help your hand), fold.
Don’t call with the hope that you’ll hit that third ace on the turn, you’ve already seen three cards and it didn’t turn up, so what makes you think it will turn up when just one card is dealt? A good starting hand doesn’t mean a thing if the flop doesn’t improve your hand! Also remember that calling the flop gives you three cards for the price of one.
Let’s say you had two aces (say diamonds and spades), then the flop comes, and its something like 2 clubs, 7 clubs, 8 spades. Someone on your table could have flopped two pair, or be one away from a flush or a straight. There could be someone with a pair of twos who’s itching to take your money after he flopped three of a kind!
You don’t have to defend your small blind!
When you pay the small blind, and then you get the opportunity to call, don’t think of it as only paying another 50% to see the flop. Its actually an opportunity to save 50% on bad hands. Fold if you haven’t got a high ranking pair of cards. You’ll soon see your chip level increase.
Bluffing won’t always work!
Don’t bluff thinking that you’ll always scare the other guy away. I’m not saying don’t ever bluff, just be wise about it. If the flop’s three diamond cards, and you’ve got two spades, chances are someone’s flopped a flush. And if you bluff that you’ve got the same by raising huge amounts, you better hope he doesn’t have an Ace of diamonds in his hand because he knows he has the nuts, and it won’t matter to him if you’re bluffing or have two diamond cards - he knows he can’t be beaten!
Of course this also works the other way: say three club card are flopped, and you suddenly go from checking the first hand to going all in, people are going to assume you’ve flopped a flush, and most will fold.
Or, say you check the flop, and your opponents check too - this indicates that all have bad cards. Then the turn is revealed to be a king, you could raise at this point, pretending to have a pair of kings, or three of a kind, and the others might fold. Another good time to go “all in” is when a pair is revealed in the flop. This might hint to people that you have three of a kind, maybe even quads or a full house.
You can also bluff to improve the pot. Imagine you have Ace, King spades. Don’t raise, just call (check if given the opportunity). Imagine the flop is three spade cards and you now have “the nuts” - the best possible hand. By checking/calling you will have made sure that you don’t force anyone to fold and some may now have the confidence to raise you, thinking they can push you out of the game. If this happens you could keep calling them or raising them with small amounts. This will ensure that when you win the showdown you will have a lot more money in the pot!
Figure out if your opponents are good or bad players
Don’t raise or go all in with bad players, unless you have a good hand! They tend to call anything thrown at them, and so can’t be bluffed!
Don’t give in to your gambling gremlin!
Try not to find excuses to play badly. If you find yourself reasoning with yourself as you push all your chips to the centre that the other guy is probably bluffing and your pair of twos can take him, take a step back, have a drink and say to yourself: “I’m tilting!”
The phrase “tilting” is taken from the world of pinball, where players who have lost yet another ball tilt the machine in order to try and get the ball back in play. This also happens to poker players after a bad beat (where someone gets lucky on the river and beats their quad aces with a royal flush!) and they try and win their money back by playing stupid hands.
Go all in when you have to
When playing tournaments and you’re down to quite a small amount of chips, think about going all in. To make the point clearer, here’s an example:
Let’s say I’m in an online tournament and we’re down to two people. My opponent has 3000+ chips and I have 940. The stakes are about to be raised to 300/600 (300 for the small blind, 600 for the large blind), so in about two hands time I’m going to be out of chips whether I want to play or not. I go all in with a Jack, six unsuited (something that should never be done under normal circumstances!). He calls, because (a) he has plenty of chips, (b) my chips didn’t hit the 1000 mark and so no 1k chip is on the table (this chip has an amazing ability to make people run away), (c) he knows its my last attempt at getting some chips back and he thinks (or knows??) that I’m tilting.
Anyway, he has something like king, jack, and the flop reveals three ‘nothing’ cards. It’s the same with the turn, and it looks like he’s going to win with king high card, when the river reveals a six. I win nearly two thousand chips with a lowly pair of sixes. This evens out the playing field and he now tilts because I win with a lucky river card!
I’d love to finish this story by saying that I won, but if I remember correctly he went on to win a place in a $50,000 final and I got a pop up window saying “Your position: 2nd.”
Poker isn’t fair
Well, actually it is, but it will seem like it isn’t many times. Statistics prove that if a group of poker players play for an infinite amount of time they will all have the same amount of chips at the end. But no poker game lasts an infinite amount of time, and even a lifetime doesn’t scratch the surface of infinity, so people will seem to have lucky and unlucky streaks. These lucky streaks can be explained by way of another example.
Say you toss a coin ten times. In theory it should land heads up 5 times, and tails the other five. But it will probably be more like 8 heads and two tails, because the amount of coin flips is so small that probability doesn’t get a chance to show its face. Now do it a thousand times and probability will win out and it will be much closer, more like 55:45. It’s the same with poker. A poker game is equivalent to the ten coin tosses. The game is so short that the probability of discrepancies in the predicted card pattern are very high. So one guy could get all the good hands and another guy could get nothing but garbage all night!
The trick is to not let yourself get dragged into a situation where you lose money because of this. If you’re on a losing streak, go home. Maybe tomorrow, you’ll be the one with four aces every hand!
Dylan Jones (and more poker related fun and games!) can be found at his home site http://www.learningpoker.co.uk
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