Top 10 Poker Tips to Make You a Better Player

May 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Want to become a better player, fast? Follow these 10 tips to boost your poker performance & profits. While geared to beginner players, there’s poker tips that even seasoned pros should remind themselves of once in a while.

1. Don’t Play Every Hand / Do Fold More
Probably the number one mistake beginning poker players make is that they play far too many hands. When you’re just starting out playing poker, you want to play poker, and that means staying in hands that aren’t very good just to be part of the action. But playing more doesn’t mean winning more, it usually means losing more. If you find you’re staying in half or more the hands you’re dealt, you need to upgrade your starting hand requirements.

2. Don’t Play Drunk
Countless nights have I sat across a table from someone & watched them get plastered silly and throw away their entire stack of chips. I’ve been that person too - and there are nights where you’re just playing with friends for low stakes and it’s more about the fun than the poker - but if you’re in a casino, watch the alcohol. The truth is, while you may be more relaxed after 2 drinks, it may lead to you playing looser and less sharply, even if one’s not ‘drunk.’

3. Don’t Bluff Just For Bluffing’s Sake
A lot of beginner’s understand that bluffing is a part of poker, but not exactly how. There’s is NO rule that one must bluff a certain amount or at all during a poker game, but many players don’t feel like they’ve won unless they’ve tried a poker bluff. Bluffs only work in certain situations & against certain people, and if you know a player always calls to the showdown, it is literally impossible to bluff that player. It’s better never to bluff than to bluff “just to bluff.”

4. Don’t Stay in a Hand Just Because You’re Already In It
Another common mistake beginners make is to think that “Well, I’ve already put that much in the pot, I have to stay in now.” Nope. You can’t win a pot just by throwing money at it. There may be cases when pot odds warrant a call, but if you’re sure you’re beaten, and there’s no way your hand can improve to be the best hand, you should fold right away. The money you’ve already put in the pot isn’t yours anymore, and you can’t get it back just by playing a hand all the way to the end.

5. Don’t Call at the End of a Hand to “Keep Someone Honest”

This one follows the last tip. I see a lot of players look at another player’s final bet, look at the hand, & say “I know you’ve got me, but I have to keep you honest,” as they throw in a final call. It may be worth it to see if a player really has the hand if you’re not sure & you’re gaining information that will help you later on, but if you really feel a player has the hand he’s representing & you’re beat, why give him another pile of your money? Those bets will add up over an evening.

6. Don’t Play When Mad, Sad, or in a Generally Bad Mood
When you play poker, you shouldn’t do it to escape from being depressed or having a really bad day. You start out on tilt — playing emotionally, not rationally — and you won’t play your best. Likewise, if during a poker game, you lose a big hand or get sucked out on and feel yourself going on tilt, stand up & take a break until you feel calm later on. Fellow players will sense your mood & take advantage of it.

7. Do Pay Attention to the Cards on the Table
When you first start playing, it’s enough just to remember how to play and pay attention to your own hand. But once you’ve got that down, it’s incredibly important to look at what’s going on at the table. In Texas Hold’em, figure out what the best possible hand would be to fit the flop. Make sure you notice flush & straight possibilities. In 7-card stud, pay attention to what’s showing & what people have folded when you consider calling opponents.

8. Do Pay Attention to the Other Players
As you play, one of the single best things you can do is observe your opponents, even when you’re not in a hand. If you know if one player always raises in a certain position, & another has a poker tell when he bluffs, & a 3rd folds to every re-raise, you can use that information to help you decide how to play against them. Once you know that player 3 always folds to a re-raise on a river, that’s when you can bluff & steal a pot.

9. Don’t Play at too High Limits

There are many reasons people move up to a higher limit game than they usually play. Good reasons like they’ve been winning consistently at a lower lever & are ready to move up, & bad reasons like the line is shorter for higher limits or you want to impress someone. Don’t play at stakes that make you think about the actual money in terms of day-to-day life or with money you can’t lose. Even if you had one super-good night at $2/4, resist the urge to play $5/10. The next tip explains more why.

10. Do Pick the Right Game for Your Skill Level & Bankroll
One of the reasons you shouldn’t jump into a $5/10 game after winning a huge bunch of money at $2/4 is because as the stakes rise, so does the average skill level of the players sitting there. You want to be one of the best at the table, not the fish who sits down with sharks. If you’re making stacks of money at a lower level game, why move? You’re winning stacks of money. The swings up & down at higher limits are much bigger, and one big night’s win won’t last long at a high-stakes game.

Poker Pot Odds

March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

The mathematical game of poker is something that anyone can learn and understand if they take the time to learn the theory and study the numbers.  no matter how much of an instinct-type of player you are, you don’t want to be one of those players who are too lazy to learn how to understand when you have the best of it.
The math of poker is the grinder’s foundation from which he or she builds their game.  The true poker player does not omit it from their game because their ego tells them they need not learn it.
This part of the game should not intimidate you.  The math isn’t hard calculus. It’s just some basic ration and percentages that can become second nature after a while.  Pot odds are simply the ratio of the size of the pot compared to the bet that has to be called.  This has nothing to do with your cards.  It only compares the amount of the bet to the amount of the pot into a ratio.  If the pot has $60 in it and someone bets $10, then the pot odds are 6 to 1.  If the pot is $160 and someone bets $40, the pot odds are 4 to 1.  Learning to calculate the odds for every hand will take a little while to become second nature, but practice will certainly make it so.
Once you understand how to figure out the ratio, you have to convert that number into a percentage.  This doesn’t take genius to understand.  If your ratios is correct, all you have to do is add the two numbers together and divide the second number by the new combined number to get the percentage.  4 to 1 odds would be 4 + 1 = 5.  Then 1 divided by 5 = .20, so your percentage is 20%.
If you’re in a drawing situation and you have to decide whether to stay in the hand for another card, you need to compare the pot odds against the odds that your hand has to win.  Your hand has a winning percentage at every step of the hand.  Your winning percentage for the draw will be determined by the amount of outs you need to hit the winning hand, or what you think will be the winning hand.  You can learn what your winning percentage is by studying an “outs chart”, which displays all the percentages for each number of outs.
This theory must be flexible sometimes.  In some situations, it may be required for a player to use implied odds instead of the actual odds to make the best decision.  Implied odds are an estimate of how much the pot will be at the end of the betting round.  If you have a middle position and there is a bet ahead of you, your decision to call or fold may require that you assume one or more opponents will also call the bet.  This will change the ratio of your pot odds, making some negative chance situations change into positive ones, if in fact those other players remain in the hand.
once you can calculate and compare the two percentages, you can begin to make some of your decisions with this information in mind.  If your pot odds are bigger than your draw odds, you are in a negative drawing situation.  If it’s reversed, then you can call the bet.  Math can make some difficult situations a little easier to decide upon when you find yourself in front of a tough call.

Poker Types - Texas holdem

March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

  1. A small dealer button identifies one player as the dealer. The dealer button moves clockwise to the next player after every completed hand.
  2. Before any cards are dealt to the players, any enforced bets must be put into the pot. These enforced bets are usually in the forms of blind bets and antes.
    1. The first player to the dealers left must post the first blind bet, called the small blind.
    2. The second player to the dealers left must post the second blind bet, called the big blind.
    3. The small blind is usually smaller then the big blind- hence the terms ‘small’ and ‘big’ as identifiers. In most games, the small blind will be half of the big blind.
  3. Each player is dealt two cards face down, called hole cards. A players hole cards may be used only by him, and are visible to nobody.
  4. After the deal, the player to the left of the big blind must open the betting action by either calling the big blind, raising, or folding. All players participate in the first round of betting, and continue to the next.
  5. In the next round, known as the flop, or Third Street, three community cards are dealt face up. Betting begins with the player to the left of the dealer. A betting round ensues.
  6. After betting ceases on the flop, a fourth community card is dealt face up for all players to use. A new round of betting begins. This round is known as the turn, or Fourth Street. On Fourth Street, the bet amount doubles to the game’s highest limit.
  7. Once betting is complete on the turn, a fifth and final community card is dealt face up. A betting round follows, known as the river, or Fifth Street. This is the final round of betting in a hand of Holdem.
  8. After the final round of betting, any players remaining in the round must show down their hands. The player with the highest ranked five-card poker hand wins the pot. If two players show down identical hands for a tie, they must split the pot.
  9. The round of Holdem is over after the pot has been returned to the winner, and dealer button moves clockwise to prepare for a new hand.
  10. Now that you know the rules of Holdem, test your skill by playing a complete hand using our interactive tutorial! You don’t have to spend a penny!

Rakeback Bonus - What is Rake?

March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

What is rake?

Rake is the money taken out of the pot by the house. Depending on the limit it can be from $.05-$3.00.

What is a Rakeback or rake back?

Rakeback is a percent of the rake paid back to you for playing at a poker site. Serious players earn thousands of dollars a month just in rakeback. When you sign-up for a rakeback deal via RRR your rakeback money is usually paid automatically by the poker room directly to your poker account. However, sometimes your rakeback money will be paid to your Neteller account.

What is a rakeback affiliate?

A rakeback affiliate such as RRR is a site that helps promote online poker rooms. In return we are paid a percent of the rake collected from poker players that sign up via us. Each month we pass on the vast majority of our cut from poker rooms to our players.
I am already signed up at a room, can I get rake back there?

No. You can, however, on some networks switch skins and play on the same network.

What is a skin?

A skin is a group of poker rooms that share are on the same poker network. For example Cryptologic skins would include InterPoker and Sun Poker and a handful other rooms. Players at all of these rooms play in the same games. Most networks will allow you to sign up under all skins regardless of the number of rooms on the network you are already signed up for.

How does the poker room come up with my rake amount?

The rooms use a formula called Monthly Gross Revenue (MGR) a ka net rake. This is the amount from which your rakeback is calculated, i.e. if your rakeback percentage is 30 and your MGR is $1,000 you would get $300 in rakeback.

To calculate your MGR some rooms subtract any bonuses earned during the month, while others don’t. The same goes for whether or not tournament fees are included in MGR. Rooms also have different methods for calculating your share of the actual rake. Some poker rooms use what is called contributed rake where you must participate in the pot to have rake credited. Others use the dealt method where you are credited with rake in every hand where you’re dealt cards.

Read more about how a certain poker room calculates rake by visiting its page here on RRR.

Will I get a sign-up bonus when I sign up for a rakeback deal?

In most cases yes. Read more about a certain poker room’s sign-up bonus by visiting its page here on RRR. Please note that in some cases this bonus will be subtracted from your net rake.

Can my spouse, parent, brother, sister, roommate or anyone else that shares my computer have an account at the same poker room as me?

Usually, but they will need to get their own funding source for their account. You usually can not share Neteller or Firepay accounts with them. You may however transfer them money at most poker rooms. Signing up underage people, pets, appliances, lawn gnomes or some other figment of your imagination just to get a rakeback deal is fraud. You risk the poker room asking for ID and then having your account frozen and funds confiscated. It will also be hard to fund this account as it is not possible to get Neteller accounts for these fantasies.

Reading the Board in Poker

March 2, 2009 by admin · 1 Comment 

To play winning poker, you have to be able to determine what hands are playable on the board as soon as the cards come out.  To be fair, it might not actually be important that you analyze the board in that split second, but you must be able to analyze it quickly enough that you won’t get burned by betting against a possible hand you missed.  let’s do a quick test on reading the board:  Qd, 10d, 4c, 8h
What is the best hand you can make on that board?  The correct answer is, of course, a queen-high straight.  To make that hand, you would have to have 9-J as your hold cards.  Let’s add a river card and see how that changes things.  The river card drops and the board now shows: Qd, 10d, 4c, 8h, Ad
Now what is the nuts?  If you said ace-high flush you are partially right.  Since the ace is on the board, the actual nuts is the ace-high flush with the king of diamonds in your hand.  Since anyone who makes the flush would have the ace in their hand, the next-highest card would decide a winner between two flushes.
This example shows how one card can dramatically change the value of your hand.  After the turn card fell, anyone holding the 9-J hand a great hand but once the diamond hit on the river, their once-powerful straight is vulnerable to anyone holding two diamonds.  By reading the board and spotting this possible flush draw on the turn, a smart player would be able to protect their hand with a strong bet.  Being able to read the board not only allows you to pick out the best hand, it also helps you make better-informed betting decisions.

Poker Positions and Why they Matter

March 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

In real estate, it’s all about location, location, location.  In poker, there’s a similar adage that says it’s all about position, position, position.  If you’[re not taking your position at the table into account when playing Texas Hold ‘em, you’re likely playing hands that you should have folded.
At a full table of 10 players, position is divided into four categories before the flop.  There is early position, middle position, late position and the blinds.  Players sitting in the three seats to the left of the blinds are said to be in early positions.  The three seats to the left of the early positions are the middle positions.  The two seats to the left of the middle positions are the late positions.  The blinds, of course, refer to the small and big blind positions.
The number one rule when it comes to position is the later your position at the table, the more hands you can play pre-flop.  This all has to do with information.  When you’re playing poker, the more information you have, the better decision you are able to make.  If you knew what cards everyone else at the table has, you would have so much information you would never lost a hand at the showdown.
When you’re trying to decide whether you should play your cards or fold, the earlier your position at the table the less information you have.  because of this, you should only play premium cards from an early position.  Think of it this way: you can call the big blind with anything in an early position, but there are at least seven more players to act behind you.  Are your cards good enough to call if one of them raises?  If they are not, you have basically given away some of your chips.  In an early position, you are vulnerable to raises throughout the entire hand.
If you’re in a middle position, you have seen more players bet or fold, and there are fewer players to act behind you.  This means you can play lower-valued hands because you have more information on how the hand is going.
In a late position, your list of playable hands has increased even more.  At one of the late seats, only the blinds are left to play after you.  You have seen almost the entire table play, and you should have a better sense as to who may have good cards.  You will also be in a late position in every betting round that follows, which allows you to react to how your opponents play the hand the rest of the way.
Late position is also a strong seat at the table because it is generally believed to be the best seat from which to attempt a bluff or attempt to steal the blinds.  With only the blinds left to act, you can more easily attempt to steal the blinds or attempt a bluff later in the hand because you’ve seen the rest of the table play their cards.  Pulling off successful bluffs or blind steals requires information on the rest of the table, and you always have the most information from a late position.  Bluffing or attempting to steal the blinds from an early position or a middle position can be dangerous because there are so many players left to act that can call your bluff or break up your attempt at a blind steal.

Betting the Turn in Poker

March 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Playing after the turn is an area of Hold ‘em that needs to be first understood and then properly executed.  There’s more to post-turn play than just betting when you have the lead.  To be a winning player, one needs to know when a turn bluff opportunity is in front of them.  This is the point in the hand when a skilled player can determine what type of hand an opponent is likely to be holding, and it is also where opponents will make assumptions about your hand.  I’ll try to outline the process of contemplating the situation and acting accordingly.
Most of your decisions on how and when to bet the turn will be determined by the cards on the board and the opponents you’re in the hand with.  In limit Hold ‘em, if an opponent raises pre-flop, then checks and calls a flop bet with low cards on the board, a turn bet will tell you what they are likely holding.  If they raise your turn bet, you know they most likely have a big pair, or perhaps trips, and they have just waited to raise the bigger turn bet instead of the flop.  If they have a big ace or two big cards they will usually fold to a bet on the turn, and you will pick up the pot with anything in your hand.
Let’s say that you’re in a hand with no pre-flop raises with the big blind and the flop has come with small cards in it.  You bet out and get a call.  Knowing the blind player is capable of having any two cards, the small flop is likely to have hit them if they called your flop bet.  So let’s say the turn card is a big card, preferably a king or an ace.  Betting out this turn will often prove profitable because the blind player will assume that you are on big cards, and think their lower pair is no longer any good.
In a no-limit Hold ‘em game, the turn becomes a place where the hand is often decided.  Betting the turn in no limit is not something one should do on a whim.
The most common mistake players make on the turn is not to bet their good hands big enough.  Allowing players to remain in the hand because you don’t want to top them off about your good cards is not a great idea.  Win pots when you can, and betting with a lead is always the way to go, unless you have the absolute nuts.  If you make a big bet on the turn and get called or raised, then you know you need to watch out for possible draw cards hitting the river.
The turn is also when you show opponents that you’re serious about your hand.  Many players will take a stab at a pot after flop, but few will bluff twice at a pot on the turn.  If you think you’re opponent is on the draw, you will win pots by continuing to bet when no draw cards come.
It doesn’t matter if it’s limit or no limit Hold ‘em, the turn is a crucial point in most hands.  Learning what each flop means will be the most important part of your decision on how to play the rest of the hand.  This is when you should have some type of read on your opponents.  When in doubt, bet anyway and see what effect it has on your opponents.  You will be surprised how many free pots you will begin to pick up.

Best 3 Poker Books

March 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Poker books should not be seen as an expense, but rather as an investment - one that’s absolutely critical for improving your game. They enable you to obtain information and knowledge in just hours or days that otherwise could take years to learn on the tables. If you walk away with just one good idea from a book, it will return the cost of its initial purchase many times over.

There are over 500 poker books at present, and the number is growing every day. Of course, no one is capable of reading all of them. Based on advice from the most respected poker book reviewers, we set up a list of books that are must reads for every serious poker player.

The Book of Bluffs: How to Bluff and Win at Poker

The Book of Bluffs
Authors:
Publisher:
Length:
Date:
Price:
Matt Lessinger
Warner Books
256 pages
2005
$11.35

From the publisher:

Twenty years ago, Mike Caro wrote the book on what to look for in a players movements, gestures, and facial expressionstheir tellsto determine if they were bluffing, and it remains one of the bestselling poker books of all time. But what Caro didnt do was teach players how to bluff. Enter Matt Lessinger, a professional poker player and columnist, who in THE BOOK OF BLUFFS shows players how to get their opponents to foldno matter how strong a hand theyve been dealt. Lessinger reveals how, with the correct timing and artistry, bluffing will allow a player to win while holding an inferior handthe very essence of poker.

Hold'Em Poker for Advanced Players (Advance Player)

Holdem Poker for Advanced Players
Authors:
Publisher:
Length:
Date:
Price:
David Sklansky, Mason Malmuth
Two Plus Two Publishing
332 pages
2003 (3rd Edition)
$19.77

From the publisher:

Texas Hold ’em is not an easy game to play well. To become an expert you must balance many concepts, some of which occasionally contradict each other. In 1988, the first edition appeared. Many ideas, which were only known to a small, select group of players, were made available to anyone who was striving to become an expert, and the hold ’em explosion had begun. It is now a new century, and the authors have again moved the state of the art forward by adding over 100 pages of new material, including extensive sections on “loose games,” and “short-handed games.” Anyone who studies this text, is well disciplined, and gets the proper experience should become a significant winner. Some of the other ideas discussed include play on the first two cards, semi-bluffing, the free card, inducing bluffs, staying with a draw, playing when a pair flops, playing trash hands, desperation bets, playing in wild games, reading hands, and psychology.

Winning Low-Limit Hold'em

Winning Low Limit Holdem
Authors:
Publisher:
Length:
Date:
Price:
Lee Jones
Conjelco
288 pages
2005 (3rd Edition)
$16.47

From the publisher:

For the last ten years, Winning Low Limit Hold’em has been the reference standard introduction to Texas Hold’em. Experienced hold’em players give this book to their friends who want to learn the game. Recently updated and expanded to include coverage of online poker and no-limit hold’em single-table tournaments, this is the one book that you need to start your hold’em career. “I always thought poker was a game of luck. After reading Lee’s book and applying the techniques recommended, it was as if I were in The Matrix. It all came clear to me. I simply saw the truth at the poker table.” - Antonio “The Magician” Esfandiari, Winner, 2004 L.A. Poker Classic and 2004 World Series of Poker $2000 Pot Limit Hold’em event.