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Texas Holdem Poker Tournaments or Cash Games

September 25, 2008 by Craig in Holdem Poker

Texas Holdem Poker is a great game and has been popularized on television by showing a lot of great tournaments. Times have changed these days you can turn on the television and find great cash games to watch. The game is the same, but the way you play it will change. When playing poker tournaments you can get a lot of praise and acknowledgment for your accomplishments. You play cash games for a different reason, to make money and to make money only. There are subtle differences between the style of play and both have there advantages and disadvantages.

Tournaments

When playing poker tournaments you buy in for a specific amount of money and get a specific amount of chips to play with. The amount of chips doesn’t necessarily correspond with amount of money you bought in for, for example you can play a $5 tournament and get $1500 worth of chips. The main goal of a tournament is to move yourself up the pay scale and make as much money as possible. Winning isn’t everything you can make money for finishing near the top of the leader board.

The Check Down

When playing in poker tournaments sometimes you need to team up with other players to eliminate a competitor. A check down is when a player is all in and gets multiple calls, the players who called would check to the showdown to increase the chances of eliminating the all in player. The reason you should do this is to move yourself up the pay scale, eliminating players increase your chances of winning.

Bad Example

player #1 moves all in and gets called by player #2 (A – K)  and player #3 (9 -9), when the flop comes 9 – 10 – 2 player #3 bets and forces player #2 to fold. When the cards are flipped up the all in player has 8 -7 and the turn comes Q and the river comes J meaning the all in player makes a straight and stays alive. If player #3 had checked down, the player who folded would have made a bigger straight and eliminated the player.

Eliminate players when you have the chance in Poker tournaments, the less players in the event the better chances of you having a good pay day. You never know if that player you allowed to stay alive by not checking down, will hit a card rush and eliminate you later on. Stack size is also very important when playing in a tournament, each players needs to control there chips because that is all they get. You need to manage your risk, and make sure your playing in pots you have no business playing in. Tournament players need to pay close attention to pot sizes and bet amounts. You need to stay ahead of the blinds when playing in tournaments, they will increase consistently throughout the event. If the blinds are high and you are getting low on chips you may have to go all in with a weaker hand.

Cash Games
When playing cash games you buy in for an amount of money and that is the amount of money you will play with. You can always top up your money and insure you have the most money possible for when you pick up a monster. Blinds don’t increase in a cash game, for example if you play $1/$2 holdem, the blinds will remain there for the whole game. A check is not necessary in a cash game, the only thing you have to worry about is making the most money possible for yourself. It doesn’t matter what other players are doing, your goal is not to eliminate other players it is maximize your winnings.

The Straddle Bet

A straddle bet in a cash game in essentially buying the big blind. To player under the gun (left of BB) will have the chance every hand to increase the stakes to play. For example playing $1/$2, the player under the gun can put in $4 before they receive there cards to buy the big blind and act last pre flop. When this happens the stakes are increased for that hand and you will have to put in the straddle amount to call. Its important to know that you can also double straddle, the person next of the straddle can re-straddle and so on. The reason to straddle is to create action in the game, there will be more people in the pot and the standard raises will increase.

Hand strengths change when playing for cash, basically you want to make monster hands and get paid for them. Suited connectors are good hands, you can disguise your hand strength and hopefully stack your opponents (make them go broke). If you go broke in a cash game, you can simply go into your pocket and take out money to continue playing. You can play for as long or as short as you wish, there is no schedule or specific rules. You will also find the in game rules to be a little loser during side games, you may be able to show a card to your opponent or leave and return any time you wish without having to post blinds.

Tournaments and cash games are different, but they are both Texas Holdem. You won’t get a lot of glory for playing in side action games. You will not win a bracelet, people won’t clap for you and you probably won’t end up on television. You play for yourself, you can get personal satisfaction for good plays and winning sessions. The nice thing about tournament is you know how much you will lose when you start, you play a $10 tournament you know at worst you will lose $10. When sitting at cash table there are more questions about money, if you have a bad session you could lose a lot of money. My suggestion is play holdem for cash and in tournaments, you can be successful at both.

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The Limp-Reraise in Holdem Poker

September 17, 2008 by James in Holdem Tips

A tactic that I like to use in texas holdem poker, especially in sit-n-go poker tournaments is what is known as a limp-reraise.  This type of move is best used at a table where you have a player or a couple of players that do a lot of raising or that like to try and steal your blinds a lot.  ersonally, I am a very tight poker player.  I am the type of poker player that an aggressive player will try and steal my blinds at every opportunity.  This type of move has been very beneficial in the past.

An example I will give is a sit-n-go that I played at the Trump Taj Mahal last year.  We had one player at the table that early on had raised a lot and even took a pot off me with a semi bluff that hit on the river.  I was in early position and I looked down to pocket kings.  I looked over to the guy that raised a lot and I could sense he was itching to raise.  He also happened to be on the button.  I limped into the pot.  A late position player then raised the pot.  At first, I was a little disappointed as I felt that the late crazy raiser would get out.  I was mistaken.  He reraised the pot.  I then moved all in.

Suffice it to say that every poker player gave me a stunned look.  The initial raiser looked at me, shook his head and said “nice limp” as he mucked his cards.  The crazy raiser then called my bet and flipped over pocket tens.  The flop actually came with a king and gave me a set and most of the crazy limpers chip stack.  He just shook his head after the hand and went, “that was a good move.”

The above example just happened to be a near best case scenario.  There are downsides to this type of play.  First, if you limp in you do risk the chance of nobody raising.  This will allow players to see a flop and cheaply outdraw you.  Next, if you try this with a hand such as jacks or queens, you very well could get unlucky and run into kings or aces.

Titan Poker Bonus

The limp-reraise is a move, not a regular play.  When executed correctly, it will accomplish two things.  First, it will win you chips.  Next, it will put a little bit of confusion in your players heads.  They know you are capable of limping in with monsters.  They may be afraid to raise you when they hold strong hands.  I know in the scenario above that only one player would dare raise me after I won that hand.  Other players let me see a lot of cheap flops.

Again, use this move in very aggressive games.  Using it in rocky games will usually cost you money and make you look like a poor player.  As always, continue to mix up your play and it should reap dividends. Good luck at the tables.

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The Transition to Live Poker Games from Online Poker Rooms

by Craig in Poker

If you are having success playing online poker there is no doubt you will eventually want to give a live action game a try. Beyond the obvious there are a lot of subtle differences between the games. You need to look beyond just betting patterns and look for physical tells your opponents are giving you. As a live poker player you also need be aware of tells that you may be giving your playing competitors to use. Things are not given to you easily in live games as they are online, you will have to calculate your own pots and bet amounts. There is specific amount of time for which you have to make your decision, and there are  rules that you have to follow. I am going to explain a few things that will help you in your transition from online games to live action poker.

The biggest difference in playing live poker versus online poker is that you have physical chips in front of you. Before you start to play you to make yourself comfortable with amounts that each chip represents. The chip amounts/colours will vary from home game to home game and casino to casino. When playing in live action it is important to remember that verbal bets are always binding. By this I mean if you say that you $5, but only put $4 in the pot, you owe another $1. The verbal declaration of $5 is the bet that will count.

Pet Peeve – Your in a pot and you make a bet of $10, your opponent announces that he “calls your $10 and raises you $20″. You cannot call and raise at the same time you have to do one or the other. You should say, “raise to $30″ or “raise $20″.

String betting is another rule you will not run across when playing on an online table. When playing live poker its important to note that you can only make one motion at the pot with your chips unless a verbal declaration is made. An example is if you want to bet $100, you cannot place $50 into the pot and then go back to your stack and put in $50 more, the original $50 would be binding. There are multiple ways to avoid this problem, one is to always count your bet amount out before you motion at the pot, if are going to bet $100 count it out behind the line and then place it into the pot in one motion. I would also suggest making verbal bets, by saying the amount you wish to bet out loud it becomes binding and you can’t make a string bet. By making verbal bets you will also eliminate the chances of you making a mistake adding up your chips because the dealer will insure the fact you put the right amount in the pot. The over sized chip rule is one that a lot of players don’t know. If you place one over sized chip into a pot, it is a call, if you want to raise with an over sized chip you have to announce raise. An example is if your opponent bets $1 and you put a $5 chip into the pot without saying anything, you are only calling.

Control your emotions, when playing in front of your opponents they will see the emotions you let them see. When playing online you can kind of hide the fact that you may be on tilt, but when playing live games you may have your emotions on your sleeve. If you feel the onset of tilt, I suggest get up and take a walk, go to the washroom, get a drink whatever just get away from the table and collect your thoughts. Drinking alcohol while playing poker is also not suggested, just like anything else drinking impairs your judgment. Unless your just in for fun and the money doesn’t matter, getting drunk will not turn you into a winner.

Pet Peeve – Your playing in a casino, you get into a heads up pot with a guy who is loud and obviously drunk. You raise pre flop with pocket aces and the “Drunk Guy” calls quick as if the cards didn’t matter. The flop comes with Ace – 4 – 10, you bet he calls and the turn comes Jack, there is no flush draw and you make a big bet. The “Drunk Guy” without thought says, “GAMBLE” and shoves all he’s chips in the pot. You call and you have him where you want him and he flips up 2 – 3, guess what the river comes a 5, he made a wheel. The “Drunk Guy” wins, and lets you know about it with a lot of happy yells and maybe a little dance.

The Clock is when players think another is taking to long to make a decision and ask the director/dealer to put a clock on the player. Unlike online there is no specific amount of time you have to make a decision and you will find some players who take along period of time to make easy decisions. Calling the clock on someone will no doubt upset your opponent and I don’t suggest doing it. If an opponent takes way to much time and you feel its been to long (it happens), just call for the clock and depending on where you are playing your opponent will have to make a decision.

If you have learned how to play the game online, you already know how to play, but knowing these simple rules can make you transition to the live casino easier. I suggest that when playing home games you follow these rules as well, it will make it easier to remember them when you play in more structured games at casinos. I hope you enjoy playing live poker, it is a different game and you will have lots of fun. Have fun and good luck at the tables.

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Beginner Table Imaging

September 15, 2008 by Craig in Holdem Poker

How are you viewed when you are sitting at the table? What are your opponents thinking about you? Answering these questions can help you understand how to win playing Texas Holdem. Whether you play online or in live games you need to create a table image or have a specific way you want to play. You can create an image that is crazy / loose or you can go the other way and create a solid / tight image. You need to realize what your competitors think of you and use it to your advantage. I am going to show you a few simple ways to create a table image and how to take advantage of it.

The main goal when you play poker is to win, and you win by exploiting your opponents weakness’. Forcing your opponents to make mistakes and exploiting them is a major perk to creating a table image. Figure out what your competitors think about you and wait for them to fall into your trap.

Aggressive / Crazy Image – Well if you are a bluffer, if you like to raise a lot of pots pre flop, its safe to say that your image is probably that of an aggressive or loose player. To get this image is easy, if you get caught bluffing often at a table of experienced players they will assume you are a crazy player. When you play this way there area few ups and downs, you will find your raises will start getting less respect and people will start calling you with weaker hands. Ironically by bluffing a lot it makes it extremely more difficult to bluff. On the other side of the coin, when you have a big hand people won’t respect it and you can get action that a tighter player will not get. Playing aggressive for an extended period of time makes it harder to pick up loose pots, but will make it easier to get into big pots and make a lot of money.

Example – You’ve been playing at an online poker room for three hours, you have been playing well over 40% of hands and raising most of them pre flop. You start to notice that people aren’t respecting your raises and playing back at you. It’s official you have the table right where you want them, a couple hands later you pick up pocket aces, what should you do? Raise just as you have been all day, and you get two people to call you. The flop come with a ace high rainbow (no suited cards), you have made top set. It will be hard for your opponents to think you spiked a set, you bet out and get raised. The big pot you have been waiting for has arrived and you have the goods, keep the pressure on as if you were bluffing and you will take this pot down.

Experienced poker players hate being run over by aggressive players and you can force them to play back at you. Try to get them on tilt and they will start to make mistakes for you to take advantage of.

Tight / Solid Image – The exact opposite of the aggressive image, if you don’t play a lot of hands your image will be that of a tight player. If you are sitting back and waiting for huge hands and not getting into a lot of pots, it will surely be noticed by good players. If this is the way you play it will start to become difficult to get action with those big hands, but can open up opportunities to steal pots with weaker hands. Your competitors will start to respect the fact that you have big hands every time you are in a pot. Beware if you are getting action as a solid player there is a strong chance your opponent has a big hand, or else they would have folded to you. An experienced poker player may also see you as weak and try to run over you with weaker hands, they may feel like they can bluff you out of most pots.

Example #1 – You have been at a table for a couple of hours and have been extremely card dead, you have only showed down monster hands. Your playing competitors should have noticed, and you pick up pocket queens and limp in. Everybody folds except the big blind and you hit your queen on the flop for three of a kind and the blind an aggressive player bets out at you. Now if you play back at him he will have no choice, but to assume you have a big hand, so feel free to just call and see if the blind player will continue to fire bets at you.

Example #2 – Your on the button with a mediocre hand and everyone folds to you. It’s time to exploit your tight image raise a good amount and the blinds fold quickly without thought. Since you raise they have to assume you have a big hand and you won money with little or no effort.

As a solid player you will find it hard to get action and play big pots. You will be forced to slow play hands to get into big pots and risk being sucked out on. A tight player has to have faith that they will pick up a big hand and be able to exploit there opponents to make money.

It’s important to understand table imaging not just to understand what your opponents think of you, but understand what image your competitors are creating themselves. Your image doesn’t have to be the same every time you play, feel free to play tight one day and be the aggressor the next. This will confuse your opponents and can be a lot of fun. Play the way that you are most successful at, and exploit the image you worked hard to create. Force your opponents to make mistakes and take advantage of them.

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Holdem Sit-N-Go Tournament Strategy

September 6, 2008 by James in Holdem Poker

Tournament Texas Holdem is one of the most popular forms of poker in the world.  Every poker player imagines making the final table and winning it all.  One way to get final table experience without having to plan an entire tournament is Sit-n-Go tournaments.  Today, we will look at some basic strategies for both live and online Sit-n-Go tournaments.

Sit-n-go tournaments are single table tournaments that are played with either nine or ten players.  Each player starts with the same amount of chips, which is usually equivalent to 30 big blinds.  Most online poker rooms will pay the top three players in a sit-n-go.  Live Sit-N-Go tournaments pay either two or three players.

The early stages for most sit-and-go tournaments you want to play extremely tight.  The blind are low and all players are still involved.  You have no reason to try and steal blinds at these levels.  The risk to reward ratio is too high. Sit back and play strong starting hand.  Weaker and looser players will tend to gamble big in the early stages to try and amass a large amount of chips.  Sometimes you will even see players move all-in pre-flop or on the flop when the pot is very small.  You want to only play the strongest starting hands during this stage.   Weaker hands should only be played from the blinds in an unraised pot.  The early stage of a sit-n-go last typically the first four levels or until you are down to 6 players.

The middle stage of the tournament comes around the 75-150 or the 100 – 200 blind level.  At this point, if you have not won any pots, you only have around 7 to 10 big blinds.  Stealing blinds starts to become important.  Players that are short will begin to push on a wide array of hands at this level.  You can loosen up your raising requirements from late position at this level.   A well timed bluff or two may be beneficial against overly tight players.

The middle stage of the tournament is when we arrive to the bubble period.  The bubble period occurs in a sit-n-go with 4 players remaining.  Only three players will receive a payday, and nobody wants to go home empty handed.  If you have fewer than three sets of blinds left in your stack, you need to find a hand to move in with.  A couple of big cards or even any ace would be a hand to take a chance.  Sometimes you can play a couple of small cards and the cards will be very live.  A player is said to have live cards if he is facing a non paired hand and the other player has not paired yet.

Middle stacks need to be careful at this point.  You don’t want to get into too many pots with the chip leader without the goods and you do not want to tangle with too many short stacks and risk not only doubling them up, but making yourself a short stack in the process.  Sit back and play strong hands.   Only take on short stacks in cases where either doubling them up will not cost a significant portion of your stack, or when you have a strong holding.   Chip leaders should use their chips as a weapon.  Put the short stacks at risk.  Put pressure on the middle stacks that are just trying to hold on to their chips.  Chip leaders can open up their play quite a bit.  In some cases regarding short stacks, you may want to take them one with any two cards.   Be careful not to go overboard with this strategy or you may end up giving your chips to the other players.

After you get to three players, it is time to try and win the tournament.  If you are short, make a stand and try and pick up chips.  You will make a profit, so you have nothing to lose.  If you are a medium stack, try and make some moves to challenge for the chip lead or knock out the short stack to get to heads-up.  If you are the chip leader, continue to attack the short stack.  Be careful not to get too aggressive against the medium stack as now that everyone is in the money, they may play back at you.

Once you reach heads up, your style of play will vary greatly on your other opponent and how you are perceived.   Is your opponent very aggressive?  If so, tighten up a bit and play strong to mediocre hands.  Are you perceived as being tight?  If so, make a few plays at the pot in situations that makes you look strong.  One thing I do is keep close watch on how I play various types of board and also how I am betting my strong hands.  I will then mix up my play to give off strength tells when I am on bluffs.

You will also see many more hands heads up than any other time in the tournament.  Big cards, suited connectors, any ace, and many suited hands are playable.   You will want to raise with a wider range of large cards and most any ace.  You will want to raise all pair, even deuces.  A pair is very strong heads up.  Heads up requires several adjustments and even readjustments on in order to stay ahead of your opponent.

One difference you will notice in live sit-n-go tournament that you will not find online is that many players will want to make deals to chop up the prize pool once you get heads-up and in some cases when you are three handed.  There are many ways to make a deal, but typically the fairest way to make a deal is by a chip count percentage.  For example, if you have 60% of the chips and your opponent 40%, then you will receive 60% of the prize pool.  Deals in tournaments are entirely voluntary and if you do not feel a deal is fair, do not accept it.  You can always play it out for the full prize amount.

Sit-n-Go tournaments are great practice for the final table end game.  You get the feel of the final table and are allowed the chance to experience the different scenarios that can arise as you work your way to heads-up and finally the win.  If you want to win in tournament poker, then start playing Sit-n-Gos.  They are great experience and in the end, they are also highly profitable.

Most of online poker rooms offer sit-n-go tournaments. Visit poker reviews website to find out your choice of online poker room to play sit-n-go tournament.

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