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Winning Poker Questions

“Answering Poker’s Most Common Questions”

1. Should you play seven-card stud or hold’em?

Now that’s an interesting question, and one that I hear over and over. I guess the reason is that the questioner is either thinking about specializing in a single game or believes that one of the two forms of poker is the clearer path to riches. Actually, the answer is that you will earn more money overall if you learn to profitably play sevencard stud, hold’em, and other popular forms of poker. Then, you can choose the best game that’s available at any given time. You don’t want to be sitting in a hold’em same, unable to play, on that rare occasion when some Bill Gates clone unloads $10 million at the stud table five feet away. Just listening to the BGC giggling and not caring might permanently scar you psychologically. However, in general, you’ll have fewer fluctuations and will win more consistently playing hold’em. Also, texas holdem tends to be more profitable against inexperienced opponents. Assuming that you know what you’re doing, when hold’em first is introduced in a locale, the games tend to be incredibly good for a while. As new players learn that a pair of fours wasn’t as good as they thought, they tend to play better and the games get tougher. And as new players who don’t learn that a pair of fours wasn’t as good as they thought, they go broke and the games among surviving players become tougher. That’s a good time to find a lively stud game.

2. In which game does position matter most?

Position matters most in games in which you consistently can act last during all round of betting and that are neither too loose nor too tight. “Crapshoot” games with many players paying reraise prices to hope for miracle cards are not as greatly positional. You don’t need to know what opponents are likely to do before they act. You already pretty much know one thing they’re not going to do – fold. When you’re against sensible opponents, some of the best positional games are texas holdem, draw, and lowball.

3. What’s the most profitable advice for most players?

Quit. Since most poker
players lose, and cannot easily be urged to learn enough to win, the most profitable advice is that which keeps them from playing. I don’t want you to quit, because I think you’d be missing one of the greatest experiences in the history of humanity. Even if you don’t win overall, you’ll probably find poker to be a worthwhile adventure. But why not win?

4. When is it bad to choose a tricky alternative strategy?

When it’s not needed. The most obvious and straightforward strategy makes the most money. Deviate from it only if there’s a reason to do so, such as being deceptive for future profit or making extra money right now. That’s a tough thing to teach, because skillful players often enjoy making unusual plays. The trick is to mentally condition yourself to make these plays only for profit, not for show. If there isn’t a clear and compelling reason to play a poker hand in an unusual way, don’t.

5. Should you play tighter on a limited bankroll?

Yes – unless the bankroll is so small that it isn’t worth protecting. You need to sacrifice some of the aggressive but risky profit you’d make with daring bets, raises, and calls. Survival becomes the more important factor with a limited bankroll. So, you should play tighter.

6. In hold’em, should you play 9-8 suited if first to act?

Only in a loose game without many aggressive opponents, and just sometimes. This hand, and 8-7 and 7-6 suited even to a greater degree are tremendously overvalued by average players, and often are played unprofitably play poker by pros. Be selective with these hands.

7. Is a player probably bluffing who says that he’s bluffing?

No. But he’s more likely to be bluffing than usual, and you often should call with borderline hands. We’re talking about limit poker here. Because the size of the pot usually is much greater than the size of the call, you don’t need to win very many similar calls to show a profit. A player who tells you he’s bluffing is somewhat more likely to be bluffing. In fact, players verbally tell the truth about their hands asurprising amount of the time. Of course, in most games, a player who claims to be bluffing probably is lying more than half the time. So, you’ll probably lose if you call. But he is telling the truth enough of the time that if your decision was otherwise borderline, you should strongly consider calling.

8. What percent of players have more winning hours than losing hours?

Zero. In most full-handed poker games, an hour is too short a time for you to have a sufficient chance of winning the big pots that often are needed to score an overall profit. Often, you will win no pots whatsoever in an hour’s time. This is easy to grasp if you asked, “What percent of players win more than they lose in a one-minute period?” Clearly, most players will just lose an ante – if there is one – on a given hand, which is all you can expect to play (at most) in a minute. The same concept applies to an hour, but to a smaller degree. So, yes, I’ll entertain arguments that some players in some games can have more winning hours through eternity than losing hours – but it’s not likely.

9. Who keeps accurate records of how much money they make bluffing?

Nobody. They can’t. If your bluff seems successful, you’re seldom sure whether the hand that was folded was actually better than yours. This illusion – that a bluff succeeded when you might have won anyway – is one reason why so many players think a bluffing strategy works better than it does. Against most opponents, you need to pick your bluffing spots very carefully. They tend to call too often – and this means that you are apt to lose money to them in the long run if you bluff.- Mike Caro

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.



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