Sunday, May 14, 2006

Dangerous Dave, The Short Stack Advantage, and Deciding What Makes a Good Hand


Dangerous Dave, The Short Stack Advantage,
and Deciding What Makes a Good Hand

...Playing the poker game to the limit!

SLIP OUT OF SHORTS
There are some mathematical models which show that poker players who play with a short stack have a slight advantage over higher rollers. There’s an edge when you have fewer chips than are needed to call all bets because you can’t be bullied out of a hand when you’re all-in. Clever short-stackers protect their bankrolls by taking long-shot draws and other street-wise strategies. The best of them can make an art-form out of lean and mean. There used to be a legendary short-stacker called Dangerous Dave who went up against Amarillo Slim on many occasions and caused the great man considerable irritation with his vice-like caution. They used to say that if Dave actually ever offered a raise pre-flop the opposition would part like the Red Sea did for Moses and fold to a man. Apparently, “Dangerous” only ever raised pre-flop if he had pocket aces, hence the wry nickname. Personally I take the simplistic view you should enter every game with the biggest mountain of chips you can afford. Texas Hold’em was invented for and by cowboys and should be played with big guns and large calibre bullets and in a spirit of death by lethal aggression and that’s only on Sundays to show respect. Weekdays, you should be really mean.

GET INTO DRAWS!
New players generally understand that they should bet on a good starting hand. The problem for inexperienced players is deciding what makes a good hand. It’s not always obvious, which is why you need to understand how to “get into draws”! The best hand is the hand most likely to win the game by the river. It doesn’t necessarily mean that the strongest hole cards are the best hand. It’s also the case that the player with the best constructed hand on the flop doesn’t have to be the player who is going to win at the river.I’ll illustrate this with an example:Let’s say your opponent has Ace of spades and ten of hearts and you have Queen-Jack of clubs. The flop is ten of clubs-nine of clubs and three of spades. You are a two to one favourite to win this game with your Queen-Jack of clubs. If the chance that you will win is higher than the percentage of bets you are paying to the pot, you should usually choose the scam that will get the most bets into the pot. Let’s look at another example to make this point even clearer: The flop is Ace-Jack of spades and six of hearts. Your hole cards are King and nine of spades. You have a great potential draw ( two to one against) for a premium flush at the river. On the flop four of your opponents have called and the action falls to you. With this big a draw potential you have to at least call and probably raise. Here’s why: You’re investing just twenty per cent of the bets going into the pot with a thirty three percent chance of winning by the river. It’s value betting at its most obvious.

Poker articles


Here are 3 more poker articles, you'll want to check out to add to your knowledge of the poker game:


The Poker Grand Slam Of Tournaments
Four massive poker tournaments now form the poker equivalent of the tennis grand slam. With millions and millions of dollars of prize money on offer, and plenty of freeroll and satellites offering cheap ways to qualify, there's no reason why YOU shouldn't play your way to POKER heaven!

Tilt Poker Pinball, Poker Strategy Questions, and Mid-limit Hold'em
News of the WPT's poker pinball deal will surely put the poker world on tilt. Meanwhile check out your poker strategy with the latest poker tutorial Q&A session. Plus we look at Middle-Limit Texas Hold'em.

Poker's Guerilla Marketing Strategy: Bumvertising
You have got to check out this audacious new guerilla marketing strategy that is driving traffic to online poker sites while helping out the homeless at the same time. Plus we present a bunch of poker terms that you probably haven't heard of and that you should learn before they creep up and bite you on the ass!

How To Play In The World Series of Poker For Free


How To Play In The World Series of Poker For Free

...And why your chances of winning make the WSOP such an attractive gambling prosposition


BE IN IT TO WIN IT!
The biggest event in world poker will soon be upon us and there’s no reason at all why you shouldn’t be competing. Last year’s winner of the World Series of Poker, Joe Hachem, walked away with $7,500,000 never having played poker professionally in his life. This year’s event is expected to produce at least $8,000,000 for the winner and total prize money in excess of $100,000,000.

HOW TO GET IN FOR FREE!
Just for the privilege of entering the WSOP the buy-in is $10,000 and you’re going to need another $2,500 to install yourself in Vegas for the duration. Don’t be put off. Help is at hand. A lot of sites are offering satellite contests where you can win the buy-in and your fares etc.

THE WSOP
The World Series itself starts July 28th and the first twelve days of knockout events will be held at the Rio Casino when eight thousand lucky entrants from around the world will pit their wits and good fortune against one another for a place at the final table. The final of the WSOP is to be held at its traditional home, “Binion’s Horseshoe” on the 10th August 2006.

HOW IT WORKS
During each of the first four days of the contest two thousand players play down to eight hundred survivors. After the first four days the sixteen hundred survivors from days one and two play down to seven hundred and the sixteen hundred players from days three and four play down to seven hundred. 3rd August is a day off but on the 4th the remaining fourteen hundred survivors play down to six hundred. On the 5th the six hundred play down to three hundred and so on down to the 9th August when twenty seven players fight, bluff and re-raise their way down to nine. The final table on the 10th will consist of those nine, who by then, will already be guaranteed to become very rich individuals regardless of what order they actually finish. Most will be millionaires and the top dog will be looking for ways to spend $8,000,000 of real live dollar bills piled high in a stainless steel wheelbarrow fenced by shotgun wielding casino security.

FREQUENTLY ASKED WSOP QUESTIONS
Q: Is it true that Joe Hachem didn’t have to pay any tax on his $7,500,000 win at the WSOP last year?
A: Absolutely true. Joe was NOT a professional poker player at the time of the win. He was a registered chiropractor in his home country of Australia who had only been playing poker in an amateur capacity for a few years. The tax authorities were not permitted to tax him. He has since become a professional and intends to move to America and add to his fortune.

Q: Compared to the National Lottery what are my realistic chances of winning into the millions of dollars if I enter the WSOP?
A: Figure it out logically. Around 8,000 players will enter the event. Your odds are therefore (allowing for different skill levels as well as lady luck) let’s say somewhere between 8,000 and 10,000 to 1 of the big win. Your odds of winning a fortune by reaching the top table are around just 900 to 1. Your odds of winning the Lottery are MILLIONS to 1! In a “heads up” with the Lottery - Poker wins hands down!



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you'll be playing heads-up
and taking 1st or 2nd place.
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Monday, May 08, 2006

Secret Strategies For Playing Short Handed Poker Games


Secret Strategies For Playing Short Handed Poker Games

Plus, the poker terms, Limping, Inside Straight, and Overcards are explained...

GET SHORTY!
I don’t know if it’s a throw-back to social poker at home in my student days but I like short-handed games. Not many of us play socially with more than five or six pals around the table so there’s a nostalgic over-hang when it comes to playing online. I’ll often seek out a short-handed game, largely because you get more hands and time’s money. The big kick for me is that eight times out of ten you’ll find yourself playing heads up by the time the flop arrives and this means the poker becomes less about the cards and more about the mental make-up of the two duellists. Don’t get me wrong, power cards are cream on the cake in five or six player games and you certainly would tend to fold middle of the range connector cards which you might be tempted to hold in a full ring game.The downside to the short game is you are in the blinds one game out of three so you have to be an aggressive gambler to cope with that inescapable drain on your chip stack.

POKER TIP OF THE DAY
In short-handed games when you’re not in the blinds always try to punish players who attempt to play for a single bet and don’t let the blinds play on the cheap. Raise or fold. Force the action if there’s a raise in front of you and re-raise to try and bully your way into a heads up. Either that or fold if the cards just wouldn’t take the strain. If you limp in short-handed games you’re likely going to get mown down. When you’re in the blinds and maybe under siege you can afford to just call if you have a reasonable hand and re-raise if you have a mid to high pair. You can definitely afford to bluff more often in short-handed games as you can’t really wait for the good cards to arrive. You have to force the issue all the time. The short game is certainly more nerve racking than a full table but for thrill-seekers it pays you back many times over with the adrenalin rush.

FREQUENTLY ASKED POKER QUESTIONS
Q: As a newcomer to online poker could you define the following terms for me. 1) Limping 2) Inside Straight 3) Overcards?
A: Limping defines a player who “calls” (matches the bet by the previous player) the big blind (largest of the two compulsory bets) in the pre-flop betting.
An inside straight describes a set of cards which has a gap that needs another card to fill it before a straight is complete. An example would be a player holding 7-8 as hole cards and the flop delivers 10-Jack-2. The player concerned requires an “inside” 9 to arrive on the turn or the river to make his straight.
Overcard or overcards describe a pair of hole cards which are of a higher value than the community cards on the board.


The Surge in Poker Satellite Tournaments


The Surge in Poker Satellite Tournaments


And how YOU can profit from these extraordinary poker events!


SATELLITES GO INTO ORBIT!
The Messiahs of poker satellite tournaments, Greg Raymer and Chris Moneymaker, have laid down the blueprint for the ordinary Joe to make it all the way through from “Nomoneysville” Cantaffordabuy-in Street to Box No.WSOP, Megamillion Avenue, Nevada. The online poker community is awash with satellite tournaments offering ordinary poker players the chance to win an entry to a premier event with prizes in the millions of dollars. For those newcomers among you, satellite eliminators are used by the big poker sites to attract first time players. Obviously, $10,000 buy-ins to huge Vegas events are not something the average online player can afford. The key to their amazing success is the fact that every few weeks poker news sites are full of bulletins reporting the latest fairy tale story of a multi-million dollar winner who came all the way through to stardom by simply winning his or her major tourney entry at a satellite.

ANT & DEC-HIGH PAIR!
The news a few weeks back that Ant and Dec’s next million pound TV venture will be a poker themed show is bound to raise the game’s profile to even greater heights. As a result, those newbies who are tempted to hit the net in search of Texas Hold’em will find satellites are sure to be first thing to grab their attention. What does this mean? It means MORE of everything! More competition to win seats to huge events balanced by more money to purchase more buy-ins for more prizes. One major advantage inexperienced players gain from this swarm of new blood into the online satellite environment is that it dilutes the professionals who are increasingly disillusioned about having to battle their way through hundreds of raw recruits and are drifting away from these bargain buy-in events for that reason.


“In less than one week,
you'll be playing heads-up
and taking 1st or 2nd place.
I GUARANTEE IT!”

Pocket Rockets Against Small Pairs Post Flop


Should you pit your strong hole cards
against low pairs that come up in the Flop??

PAIR ON THE BOARD!
Peter Ware is a regular on dailystarpoker.com and his latest question raises an interesting and common problem: What to do if you’re holding strong hole cards like pocket Aces or Kings or Ace-King when a small pair (say 4’s through to 8’s) shows up on the flop? Obviously, pocket rockets or Ace-King are usually to “die for” as openers but when you see that pair of fours on the board you have to take a deep breath. If you’re in a full ring game, the chances of three-of-a-kind being out there are great. If a majority of players stay in the game post flop my advice is to fold every time you see this pattern. Sure, you might pair your Ace at the turn or the river giving you Aces and fours but even two pair won’t save you from trips. The risk-reward is all wrong. Dump ‘em!

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FREQUENTLY ASKED POKER QUESTIONS
Q: As an accountancy student I’ve never gambled before but poker appeals to me as a fun mental exercise. Is there a betting formula for those of us who put caution ahead of the pursuit of life changing losses or wins?
A: Sane gamblers ask these kind of questions. As a trainee accountant you’ll “get this”. Best rule of thumb is protect your profit by cashing out fifty per cent of your winnings whenever your bankroll doubles. Also, only play for recreational amounts of money until you can demonstrate to yourself with ink on paper notes that you are winning more times than you are losing while playing online.

Q: I’ve just moved up to No Limit Hold’em. Any special tips to help?
A: If you’re the first player to enter a pot before the flop NEVER just call. Go for it with a bet or muck your cards. If your hand is good enough to call it’s good enough to raise. Also, ALWAYS raise by three times the big blind. This will keep the opposition confused and it prevents both the blinds seeing more cards for free. These tips come from Chris “Jesus” Ferguson so you can take them as poker gospel or with a pinch of salt. Either way, good luck. Having the confidence to move up to No Limit is a vote of confidence in yourself.

Q: Is it just movie magazine gossip that Vinnie Jones plays poker with Brad Pitt?
A: No! They became good pals after the filming of “Snatch”. Apparently, Brad, Guy Ritchie, Jason Statham and Vinnie have squared off several times across the green felt on visits to Hollywood. Wouldn’t like to be the pretty faced movie star who had a Full House to Vinnie’s three-of-a-kind with a big pot at stake.

Thursday, May 04, 2006

Pocket Rockets Against Small Pairs Post Flop


Pocket Rockets Against Small Pairs Post Flop

Should you pit your strong hole cards against low pairs that come up in the Flop??

PAIR ON THE BOARD!
Peter Ware is a regular on dailystarpoker.com and his latest question raises an interesting and common problem: What to do if you’re holding strong hole cards like pocket Aces or Kings or Ace-King when a small pair (say 4’s through to 8’s) shows up on the flop? Obviously, pocket rockets or Ace-King are usually to “die for” as openers but when you see that pair of fours on the board you have to take a deep breath. If you’re in a full ring game, the chances of three-of-a-kind being out there are great. If a majority of players stay in the game post flop my advice is to fold every time you see this pattern. Sure, you might pair your Ace at the turn or the river giving you Aces and fours but even two pair won’t save you from trips. The risk-reward is all wrong. Dump ‘em!

FREQUENTLY ASKED POKER QUESTIONS

Q: As an accountancy student I’ve never gambled before but poker appeals to me as a fun mental exercise. Is there a betting formula for those of us who put caution ahead of the pursuit of life changing losses or wins?
A: Sane gamblers ask these kind of questions. As a trainee accountant you’ll “get this”. Best rule of thumb is protect your profit by cashing out fifty per cent of your winnings whenever your bankroll doubles. Also, only play for recreational amounts of money until you can demonstrate to yourself with ink on paper notes that you are winning more times than you are losing while playing online.

Q: I’ve just moved up to No Limit Hold’em. Any special tips to help?
A: If you’re the first player to enter a pot before the flop NEVER just call. Go for it with a bet or muck your cards. If your hand is good enough to call it’s good enough to raise. Also, ALWAYS raise by three times the big blind. This will keep the opposition confused and it prevents both the blinds seeing more cards for free. These tips come from Chris “Jesus” Ferguson so you can take them as poker gospel or with a pinch of salt. Either way, good luck. Having the confidence to move up to No Limit is a vote of confidence in yourself.

Q: Is it just movie magazine gossip that Vinnie Jones plays poker with Brad Pitt?
A: No! They became good pals after the filming of “Snatch”. Apparently, Brad, Guy Ritchie, Jason Statham and Vinnie have squared off several times across the green felt on visits to Hollywood. Wouldn’t like to be the pretty faced movie star who had a Full House to Vinnie’s three-of-a-kind with a big pot at stake.

Going Heads Up, Playing Small Pairs or Big Pairs, and Suited Connectors


Going Heads Up, Playing Small Pairs or Big Pairs, and Suited Connectors

Refine your poker game and play like a pro...

GOING HEADS UP
Choosing to play “heads up” poker instead of a normal ring game is really to do with how well you feel your normal game has matured. Nothing puts you on the spot more than a “heads up” confrontation. There’s nowhere to hide and if there are gaps in your game this is going to shine a laser beam onto them and cook your wallet.The plus side is you will be playing an awful lot more hands and you learn a huge amount about your game very quickly. The appeal of “heads up”, if you are ready, is you can win a heap of money very quickly against the right opposition. Selecting and being prepared to wait for that opposition is key to success. You need to be ready for what the poker community calls the “whales” to cruise into view. Your decision making process will be severely tested as you’ll be reacting every few seconds. It’s a bit like Kung Fu. If you have the moves you’re going to get the chance to apply them in quick succession. Don’t delude yourself though. The other guy or gal is likely in the same frame of mind as you so you can get bloodied. Personally, what I like most about “heads up” play is that it’s real poker and it points up in mean fashion any skill shortfalls and helps you correct them. I’d say this is the most skill orientated form of poker and a real adrenalin rush.

SMALL PAIRS
Small pairs are usually defined as 2-2 through to 7-7 and they are tricky to play. If you are a new upstart they are worth limping in with pre-flop. Experience shows that if the flop doesn’t deal you three of a kind, dump’em! A good post-flop mantra is “No Set! No Bet!”

BIG PAIRS
Obviously, these are everyone’s favourites. If you land pocket aces, they are well worth pumping up with a big pre-flop bet but the same “small pair” discipline should kick in post-flop if the set doesn’t materialise, unless you sense weakness all round. If the board is a mess and not scarey I’d take the pocket rockets to the turn.

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PLAYING CONNECTORS
High connectors are obviously worth playing when you’re looking for that power straight but sometimes you can dip your toe in the water with low connectors like 8-9. Go with them if you can do so on the cheap but if the flop doesn’t deliver another two cards to your run, muck your cards. Obviously a flop with a 5-6 in it or better still a Jack-Queen might tempt you to the turn and the river. Don’t let same-suited connector hole cards tempt you to be anymore aggressive than just plain connected. The running flush syndrome has some fairly unrealistic odds attached to it.

Source: http://www.onlinepokercolumn.com

Should you bet large on a bluff?


Should you bet large on a bluff?

Plus, different types of poker games and why you should get a poker mentor...

BETTER BLUFFING!
A lot of new poker players think the bigger they bet on the bluff the more likely it is to come off. In fact, in most cases, the opposite is true. I’m a believer in the David Sklansky theory that big bets go best with big hands. So why is it a good idea not to power-bet on a bluff? Well, players with a reasonable amount of experience expect players to try and milk a premium hand by not betting in a scarey fashion once they’ve landed their pocket rockets or Ace-king. With solid hole cards their mission is to draw as many people into building the pot as possible, not to frighten them away with a huge bludgeoning bet. It’s about getting value into the pot to reward the hand they believe they’re building. So, in my mind, it stands to reason the occasional bluff is going to work better if you keep your betting under control and in fact behave as if you are attempting to milk a genuine premium hand for all it’s worth. The only time I’m tempted to go large is at the river with a nut hand when I want people to think I’m trying to buy the pot with a bluff. Confused? That’s the way I’d want you to be at a poker table. The simple logic here is that your bluffing, even if it goes wrong, isn’t going to cost you too much and your premium hands are going to earn value.

NOT SO F.A.Q.

Q: How many types of poker are there beyond Seven Card Stud, Omaha high and low and Texas Hold’em? I’m a student who has begun playing online with some of my mates and we’ve decide to do a paper on all types of poker.
A: I can get you started with some of the more obscure versions and you’ll be able to track down the better known variations yourselves.Triple Draw Lowball, Draw Poker, Razz, Crazy Pineapple (don’t ask), Kansas City Lowball (Great fun. Check it out.) Follow the Queen, Baseball and our own new game at dailystarpoker.com: Badugi! If you type any one of these games into the web you’ll be able to track down the rules. If you can’t, you’re not going to make your grades. Good luck.

FIND A FRIEND
Sometimes the best advice is too obvious for people to think of it. All subjects taught in school have text books which fully describe everything you need to know about a subject. However, none of us would expect our children to do very well without the guidance of a real life teacher guiding pupils through those books. The same goes for poker. Read everything when you start out but then hook up with an experienced player and have them run you through the concepts and strategies. Everything starts to make much more sense when you do this. Poker boot camps are an excellent hands on method.
"There Are A Few Simple Secrets
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Hidden Income Streams.

Online Poker Room Conspiracy Theories


Plus, young poker prodigies storming to poker glory!

CONSPIRACY THEORIES
There’s frequently a heated debate in the poker chat rooms about some online poker sites being “rigged” to hit players who cash out the majority of their winnings on a regular basis. The story goes that most of these players claim to do very well on initially signing up to a site but the moment they start drawing out their gains “suddenly” their luck changes and they go on a losing streak. The conspiracy buffs say this is the site’s revenge. Not only would this be illegal and easily spotted by auditors of the big established sites, it would also be insane business judgement. The established sites are in it for the long haul and they have huge cash reserves and levels of profitability which they are not about to risk for small time vendettas. Their only interest is customer satisfaction and loyalty and of course taking their share of the rake for running hundreds of games per hour.

IT’S ALL IN THE MATHS
Perhaps more convincing to doubters are the several mathematical studies that have been done on the so-called “cash-out-curse”. These show that it IS true that players who regularly cash out major slices of their bankroll do tend to bust out more after doing so. There are two self evident reasons for this being so. The first is they tend to be under funded for the ups and downs that inevitably occur. Secondly, they tend to be “loose” players who often find themselves having winning streaks balanced out by short-stacked losing runs. The mathematical studies show “normal fluctuations” are the logical explanation for the apparent “Curse of Cashing Out!” Take a long term look at your own fluctuations of fortune over say a six month period and see what it tells you.

YOUNG GUNS
Poker prodigies? Maybe. The fact is two eighteen year olds (student Michael Higgins and rising star “Ozzy” Sheikh) both qualified for the final table in the World Poker Tour event staged on the Bahamas. This made them the youngest ever players to pull off such a remarkable feat, defeating dozens of the world’s wiliest on their way to glory.

BLAZE O’ GLORY!
Michael hit the last six with $794,000 in chips and “Ozzy” with $231,000. Their mutual achievement was made possible by the legal environment on the Bahamas which sets its gambling age limit at eighteen against the twenty one year old barrier placed on gamblers in the nearby United States. Apparently you can die for your country in America at eighteen but you’re not allowed to play poker. As the Americans themselves would probably say, “Go figure!”

Source: Online Poker Room Conspiracy Theories