Real Money Casinos
Fastest Payout Casinos
Mobile Casino Apps
New Online Casinos
Casino Payment Methods
Sweepstakes
Sweepstakes apps
No deposit bonus
Daily login bonus
Sweepstakes games
Crown Coins
Funrize
Hello Millions
High 5 Casino
Jackpota Casino
Mcluck
MegaBonanza
PlayFame
Pulsz
RealPrize
Stake.us
Sweepstakes coins
Awards
Search forums
Free Games
Free Blackjack
Free Online Roulette
Free Slots
US States
NJ Online Casinos
WV Online Casinos
PA Online Casinos
Michigan Online Casinos
Online Casino California
Online Casino Arizona
Online Casino NY
Bonuses
No Deposit Bonus
Crown Coins Promo Code
Funrize Primo Code
Hello Millions Promo Code
High 5 Casino Promo Code
Jackpota Promo Code
McLuck Promo Code
MegaBonanza Promo Code
Pulsz Promo Code
RealPrize Promo Code
Stake.us Promo Code
Games
Online Slots
Blackjack
Roulette
Poker
CardsChat Freerolls
How to Play Poker
Poker Hands
Poker Strategy
Free Online Poker Game
Poker Bonuses
Poker Tools
Poker Podcast
Poker School
Forum
News
Log in
Join
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
Log in
Register
Search
Install the app
Install
Forum
Poker Strategy
Cash Games
Blog crosspost: I'm Terribly Sorry
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
[QUOTE="F Paulsson, post: 373270, member: 6979"] My internationally acclaimed “Tip of the Day” was left out of my last post, for which I’ve received hundreds - if not thousands - of emails asking me to please add a bit of advice. Not wanting to disappoint, today’s entire post will be poker advice - and two at that, to make up for the lost one. [B]Fire All Three Barrels[/B] A common - sometimes too common - tactic in limit poker is the semibluff: Betting “on the come” with a hand that is unlikely to be the best hand at the moment, where you’re mostly hoping your opponent(s) will fold, but in case they don’t, you’re hoping your speculative hand will turn into a winner. This is usually done with straight- or flushdraws. So you have four-to-a-flush on the flop. It’s checked to you, and you decide to take a stab at the pot so you bet. One person to your right calls. He checks to you on the turn, which did not bring you a flush. You bet again, and again he just calls. The river is another blank, and your potential winner is now nothing but a jack-high. He checks to you. You should bet. Chances are far too great that he’s on a draw as well, and if he is, he will almost certainly fold ace-high here. Checking behind and finding out he has a higher nothing than you is not something you want happening. (Note that because ace-high is a probable hand that will fold, you should be less inclined to make this play if you have an ace yourself since you stand a better chance at winning an unimproved showdown) [B]Learn[/B] This may come as a surprise, but: Most of us who play extensively online don’t think through every decision we make. In fact, 80% or so of the time, we’re on autopilot. Thinking about it, it almost feels unfair - there are thousands of players who can sit and solve crossword puzzles while making good money playing poker. Maybe tens of thousands. How does one achieve an automated playbook that’s good enough to churn out money without having to think things through carefully? Through practise. I’ve said this before, but repetition is the key to learning: There’s nothing like experience in poker. The winning players, who can go on autopilot and still make money, have played tens of thousands of hands, and recognize almost every situation they find themselves in. So is it enough to just grind out hands to become proficient? No. Experience is only worth something if it teaches you something. Phil Hellmuth talks about his ability to remember almost every poker hand he’s played. Doyle Brunson refers to what he calls “Recall” - the ability to recognize situations. And recognizing situations in poker is a key to winning - if you learned something from the last time you played them. I’ll cut to the chase; This is how I recommend you learn: [I]Step 1: When you’re playing[/I] Dr. Shoonmaker taught me this gem in Psychology of Poker: When you make a decision (bet/call/raise/fold), tell yourself - out loud if you’re in the comfort of your own home - why you’re doing it. For example: Holding A-A on a board of A-8-2, you may say: - “I’m going to CHECK, because I don’t want to drive anyone away. There are no realistic flush-or straight draws, so it should be safe to slowplay this.” - “I’m going to BET, because the two other people in the pot are calling stations and will not fold anyway so I might as well play it straightforward” … etc. This way, you will make better decisions, and you will force yourself to make decisions for the right reasons - not just going with an instinct that may be motivated by other things than winning at poker (like revenge at that jerk in the small blind). Once you start doing this, you’ll learn more from every hand you’ll play. Still, there will be a lot of hands that you’re not sure about. And these are the hands for later review. [I]Step 2: Review Difficult Decisions Afterwards[/I] Always save your hand histories on your hard drive, if you’re playing online, so you can go back later and look up the difficult decisions you had to make. Think them through again, now that you don’t have a timer that tells you you only have 5 seconds left to act. Consider the possibilities. Then, once you’ve done this, copy the hand up until the point where you had a difficult decision to make, and paste it in a new thread at our Hand Analysis Forum. Include any reads you have on your opponent. Read the sticky post at the top about the hand converter, and use it - it makes it easier for everyone to read what you’re posting. [B]Do not include the results of the hand[/B]. I can’t state this strongly enough. If you have a difficult decision you want help with on the turn, don’t include what happened on the river. It’s of no consequence. Don’t include results showing what your opponents have, because that will make the discussion a lot less valuable, and the advice you get will not help you anywhere near as much. Following these two steps, you will gradually master more and more situations. Eventually, you’ll know the correct way to play enough situations that you, too, can be a master Sudoku solver while making 2BB/100 at $1/$2 limit hold’em! ;) Good luck! FP [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Forum
Poker Strategy
Cash Games
Blog crosspost: I'm Terribly Sorry
Top