Play Online Poker
Play Online Poker
Click here to play!
Best Online Poker

Online Poker Tools

There are a few poker tools that are so powerful that they are actually essential. At the very least, you need one tracking program like PokerTracker or Holdem Manager. Either one will do you just fine – just make sure you get one. The price looks expensive at first but these programs pay for themselves many times over. The money you earn at the poker tables because of these tools will more than make up for the up-front cost.

1. PokerTracker

PokerTracker is an incredibly sophisticated piece of software that saves every single hand you play poker and stores it in a database. From that database, you can see the playing styles of every single opponent you’ve ever played against. You can see how often they raise preflop, what hands they’ve shown down and much more. The software also provides a heads-up display that you can use at the tables. Above every player’s avatar, PokerTracker displays a customizable list of statistics on that person. You can also view your own stats, create earnings charts and use it to aid you in table selection. PokerTracker is a very powerful tool and every serious poker player has a copy of it.

2.Holdem Manager

Holdem Manager is a direct competitor to PokerTracker. It’s a great program as well and it also saves every holdem hand you’ve ever played to a database. You can view old hand histories, get all the stats on your opponents and use a customizable heads-up display at the table. PokerTracker has been around for a long time but a lot of poker players have made the switch to Holdem Manager. A major selling point for Holdem Manager is that low stakes players can get a copy of it for cheaper.

3.PokerStove

This powerful piece of software is 100% free of charge so get a copy of it right away. PokerStove is an advanced poker odds calculator that can run the calculations better than any other piece of software on the market. PokerStove isn’t a piece of software that you use at the tables like Holdem Manager or PokerTracker. Instead, it’s best used after your poker sessions when analyzing hands and seeing how different hands match up against each other. The best thing about it is that it allows you to work with hand ranges rather than specific hands. For example, let’s say you want to know what the odds are that your JJ will win against an opponent’s range of likely hands. You know that your opponent is willing to go all-in preflop with AA, KK, AK, QQ, JJ and TT. Well, all you have to do is plug in your poker hands and the opponent’s range of hands and PokerStove will tell you what your chances of winning are based on the hands your opponent is likely to have.

Position In Poker Play

If You Don’t Know Anything About Playing Position, You Probably Are Costing Yourself a Lot of Money! Position is one of the most important concepts in how to play poker. We’ll deal with it today. If I’m in a game with a world-class player – such as a Doyle Brunson, a Roy Cooke, or a Linda Johnson – I want to act after they do. Most days, there’s just no way I’m going to give this type of player a positional advantage by letting them sit to my left and beat up on me. I just mentioned Linda Johnson for a reason. Yesterday I was talking with several people while waiting for a poker game to start. The tired old question arose about who is the best woman poker player. I said that I was astonished by the skills, insights, and decorum of at least a dozen women of holdem  players. But, in my mind, there should be no argument. My choice is Linda johnson, because I believe she has the strongest analytical skills of all the female superstars usually cited. Of course, Linda hates to be called a “women player.” She considers herself simply a player. That’s fine with me, because in my book she ranks near the top of my list of most-respected opponents – male or female. Linda is sometimes too busy quarreling with me about rules and such to have time to set the record straight about her prowess as a player. So, I thought I’d do it for her. And now… Position in holdem  is what we’re about to discuss. This was the 25th in my serious of Tuesday Session classroom lectures at Mike Caro University of Poker, Gaming, and Life Strategy. It was delivered March 16, 1999 and has been specially enhanced for Card Player. The title of my talk was…


Maximizing Profit by Playing Your Poker Position


1. If a good player in texas holdem has position against a great player, the good player will win! Players tend to undervalue the incredible advantage of having the best position. When
you act first, you usually need to be vastly superior to your opponent just to breakeven. I’m not talking about a single hand. Anyone can win any hand at any time. On a single hand, position can even work against you. I’m talking about the long run. Superior seating position is very powerful when measured over hundreds of hands. Among
equally skilled opponents in three-or-more-handed games, the player to the left eventually stomps on the player to the right. You can try to sandbag (check and raise)
to compensate for poor position, but that tactic can only partially offset the disadvantage of acting first. When your opponent gets to see what you do before acting, he will eventually take your money unless you are a greatly more accomplished poker player. Here’s something I’ve said so many times I’ve lost count, but it needs to be said again now: You want loose players to your right so that you can act after they do. They supply the most money, and you want to be in a position to take advantage of them. Players who are aggressive and deceptive also belong on your right, because if, instead, you let them act immediately after you, they can interfere with your holdem strategy and hamper your ability to control the game. Often you must choose between having a loose player and a dangerous player to your right. If you have a chance to change seats, make the decision by gauging how loose or how dangerous these players are. Also consider other opponents who may be near to your right or left, though not immediately adjacent.


2. Be careful about reraising from the small blind position. You’ll diminish your pot odds and you’ll have the worst position throughout all future betting rounds. Your first inclination should be – if your hand is at all playable – to take advantage of pot odds by just calling in the small blind position.


3. The best visible seven-card stud hand always has the worst position. Obviously, that hand must act first. But you should consider how likely it is that the same hand will continue to act first in deciding your next strategy. It is correct to raise frequently in a three-way (or sometimes more-way) pot when the high hand bets in seven-card stud and opponents remain behind you. This is a time when limiting the field with medium-strong and vulnerable poker hands can be quite profitable. Remember,
when opposing hands seem about equal to yours, your primary quest often is to gain position. I’m not a big advocate of “limit-the-field” theory. There are clearly times for it, but the tactic is generally overused and misunderstood. When you can thin the field and improve your position with a vulnerable hand, that’s often a time you should raise with the hope of driving opponents out of the pot. In fact, though nobody seems to say much about it, improving your position relative to your opponents is often the main benefit of thinning the field. Also see point 6.


4. Don’t forget to raise on 4th Street in seven-card stud. This occasional standard maneuver, first popularized by Chip Reese, will save you money by making an opponent check into you when the stakes double on 5th Street. Don’t overuse this, though. And the more likely your opponent is to remain the high hand, the more effective this strategy is.


5. In texas hold ‘em, it’s usually more profitable to make an aggressive raise just before the button than on the button. When you’re on the button, you are already guaranteed best (last) position on future betting rounds. When you’re one or two seats before the button, it’s often worth a daring raise to attempt to gain that position.


6. While limiting the field often makes no sense, limiting the field by chasing away players behind you usually makes a lot of sense! The point is, you shouldn’t care so much about being drawn out on when you have the best hands. Sometimes you want opponents out, sometimes in. Usually, a raise with the pure intention of saving yourself from being drawn out on is ill advised (though sometimes it’s correct). However, the intention of chasing away competition behind you when you have a medium to medium-strong hand is sensible – and profitable if it works.


7. Short-handed or late-handed means a constant quest for position. Three of the key tactics are: (1) Raise before the button to gain position; (2) raise on the button to maximize position; (3) reraise liberally from the big blind when heads-up against the small blind.


8. You can gain position by using poker tells to mentally “eliminate” players who will act after you. When you do this, you effectively move up to the next more-profitable position for each opponent you can identify as a folder. (The effect isn’t quite like moving up a whole position, even if your tell is 100 percent accurate. Why? The “bunching factor” of quality cards remaining is slightly different when a late player is “eliminated” thanwhen an early player folds.)


9. Playing your position heads-up. There’s no such thing as seating position heads-up, because you and your opponent will take turns acting last. But, on several occasions I’ve been astonished by a headsup player changing seats in an apparent attempt to get position on me! – Mike Caro



200% up to €1000 Deposit Bonus