Poker
Terminology
Blind (Small blind/big
blind): These are the forced bets that take the place of an ante. The
person to the left of the dealer must pay the small blind and the
person after him must pay the big blind.
Board Cards: The cards in the
middle of the table that are shared by everyone.
Draw: Drawing means hoping to
improve your hand with the cards that will come on the board. You are
on a draw when you want other cards to come out on the board to
complete your hand. If you have 10 9 and the flop is QJ2, you are
trying to draw an eight or a king on the turn or river.
Flop: This is when the first
three cards come out in Holdem.
Implied odds: The same as pot
odds (read below) except it takes into account making bets in the
future. Thus, you may call a bet at the flop, but have implied odds of
making bigger bets on later rounds if you hit your draw. So, if you
have AK of diamonds and the flop comes two diamonds, your implied odds
are what you have to call at the flop compared to how large the pot
will be at the end of the hand.
Limit Poker: Poker with fixed
bets. In a $2-4 limit game, all bets and raises are two dollars in the
first two rounds (preflop and flop), and all bets and raises are four
dollars in the last two rounds (turn and river).
Longhand: This refers to a poker
game with seven or more people.
Outs: Number of cards that
can improve your hand. If the flop is QJ2 and you have 10 9, you want a
king or an eight to complete your straight. There are 4 kings and 4
eights in the deck, so you have 8 total outs.
Position: Where you sit at
the poker table. The dealer has the best position because
he bets last and therefore has a better understanding of what other
people have in their hand. The small blind has the worst position
because he goes first.
Pot Odds: This is the odds
you are getting when you are drawing. For example, say you have Ace and
2 of diamonds and the board is King, seven, six- the six and seven are
of diamonds. You are sure that someone else has the king. Nevertheless,
there is a total of 9 other diamonds out there (13 - your two, - two on
board), so you have a roughly 18% chance of hitting a flush on the next
card. Thus, if the pot is 100, and the bet is 10, even though you are
clearly losing, you have odds with your flush draw. However, let's say
the pot is 100, you're at the turn (one card left) and your opponent
bets 300. The pot is 400 and you must put in 300 to see the river. Your
pot odds are 300/700 which is too high, considering your chances of
hitting your flush are about 1/5.
Preflop: When you just have
two cards in your hand and there are no cards on the board yet.
River: This is the fifth and
final card that comes on the board in Holdem, after the
turn.
Shorthand: This refers to a poker
game with six or fewer people.
Turn: This is the fourth
board card that comes out in holdem, the card after the
flop.
The Mind of A Poker Player
THE FOUR FUNDAMENTAL SKILLS
Poker pros are commonly
described as tight and aggressive: "These poker pros do not play many
hands, but when they play them, they play them like they had the nuts."
That's a nice general
description, but it doesn't say much. And it's not even totally right
about no limit games, as a solid loose, aggressive player is a person
to be feared. Thus, when I think people say a player is
tight/aggressive and therefore good, I really think they mean that the
player has mastered four critical elements of poker.
1. Number skills
- Good poker
players know general percentages. They know that you have about 1 in 8
chance of hitting a set when holding a pocket pair, and that you have
about a 1 in 3 chance of completing a flush draw at the flop.
- They
know the importance of 'outs.' Outs are simply the number of cards that
will improve your hand. Count your outs, multiply them by two, and add
two, and that's roughly the percentage shot you have at hitting.
- They
can figure out the 'pot odds.' Knowing outs is meaningless unless it's
translated into rational, calculated betting.
Knowing you have a 20% chance
of hitting, what do you do then? Well, simply once you figure out your
chance of hitting/winning, you divide the size of the pot at the river
(i.e. the current pot plus the amount of money that you think will be
added through future bets) by the amount you have to put in. If you
have a 20% chance of hitting and the bet to you is 50, if the pot at
the river will be greater than 250, call. If not, fold.
- Math skills are
the most basic knowledge. The purpose of this guide is not to go over
pot odds, implied odds, etc. That's day one reading. Anyone who doesn't
understand these concepts should not play in a game until they do.
2. Self-Discipline
- Good poker
players demand an advantage. What separates a winning poker
player from a fish is that a fish does not expect to win, while a poker
player does. A fish is happy playing craps, roulette, the slots; he
just hopes to get lucky. A poker player does not hope to
get lucky; he just hopes others don't get lucky.
-
Good poker players understand that a different
game requires a different discipline. A disciplined no limit player can
be a foolish limit player and vice versa. A disciplined limit player is
always very tight preflop. He or she will not play too many hands, only
the ones that have a very good chance at winning.
However, a disciplined no limit player is VERY different. This
player is not so concerned with paying too many blinds; instead, he or
she does not want to get trapped. The main difference between a
disciplined limit and no limit player is that the limit player avoids
piddling away his stack bit by bit while a disciplined no limit player
avoids losing his whole stack in one hand. Hence, a disciplined no
limit player can play a lot of hands. Preflop, he or she can be as
loose as 'that' girl in high school. However, a good no limit player
knows when to toss hands that will get him or her in trouble.
- A disciplined player knows when to play and when
to quit. He recognizes when he is on tilt and is aware when a game is
too juicy to just quit while ahead.
- A disciplined
player knows that he is not perfect. When a disciplined player makes a
mistake, he learns. He does not blame others. He does not cry. He
learns from the mistake and moves on.
3. Psychology
-
A good
player is not a self-centered player. He may be the biggest SOB you
know. He may not talk about care about anyone but himself and may enjoy
stealing food from the poor. However, when a poker pro
walks into a poker room, he always empathizes with his
opponents. He tries to think what they think and understand the
decisions they make and why they make them. The poker pro
always tries to have an answer to these questions:
a- what does my foe have b- what does my
foe think I have c- what does my foe think I think
he has - Knowing the answer to these
questions is the first step, manipulating the answers is the second and
more important step. If you have a pair of kings and your foe has a
pair of aces, and you both know what each other have and both know that
you each know what the other has, why play a game of poker?
A poker pro manipulates the latter two answers by
slowplaying, fastplaying, and bluffing in order to throw his opponent
off. Good poker players know that psychology is much, much,
much more important in a no limit game than in a limit one. Limit games
often turn into math battles, while no limit games carry a strong
psychology component. I would NEVER play against a solid computer 'bot'
in a limit game. However, in a no limit game, that bot would be toast.
4. Understanding Risk and
Rewards
- Pot odds and
demanding an advantage fall into this category. Poker
players are willing to take a long shot risk if the reward is high
enough, but only if the expected return is higher than the risk.
- More
importantly, they understand the risk-vs-reward nature of the game
outside of the actual poker room. They know how much bank
they need to play, and how much money they need in reserve to cover
other expenses in life.
- Good poker
players are fundamentally slightly risk-averse. In economics, a person
is defined as risk-neutral, risk-averse, or risk-loving, depending on
how that person rewards the next dollar they gain or lose. Risk loving
are perfectly happy risking their entire roll on an even odds bet, a
risk-neutral person is indifferent towards it, and a very risk-averse
person would never risk his whole roll. Thus, a good poker
player is slightly risk averse b/c he demands a big enough advantage to
not be considered 'risk-neutral,' but he tends to value every dollar in
his roll equally. If you cannot afford to lose your entire roll, you
should not be playing with that much money.
Your Bankroll
How much money should I
invest?
This is an important
question, with two simple answers.
If you are looking to just
have fun, don't invest any more than is 'fun' to lose. Hence, if you're
comfortable blowing 100 bucks, put in $100 and see if you can win with
it. This is what I did. My original roll was only $100 but I built it
up into my current, much more powerful bankroll.
If you are looking to make
money, you should be able to bank 200 big bets at the limit you play.
Hence, if you play a $2-4, you should have $4 X 200= $800 dollar roll.
For $5-10, your target roll should be $2000. These numbers prevent you
from blowing your entire bankroll b/c of one bad run.
Some may say that the 200 big
bets is too low for shorthand, but I believe you need to be reasonable
about potential losses.
You don't want to invest more
than 200 big bets unless you've proven that you're successful at that
limit.
Your Starting Hands
The first thing you must
understand when you play Texas Holdem is which hands are
good and which are bad. Though it depends on the number of people in
the game and the type, here is a general guide to use when you are just
starting out but want to be a winning player at the lower limits. I
suggest starting out at a fixed limit of $1-2 or lower.
Hands to Raise with:
These are 'premium hands'
that you want to jam the pot with preflop:
AA, KK, QQ, AK, JJ, AQ, 1010
Hands to call with:
You want to see the flop with
these hands and then decide. Do not call three bets with these hands,
call only one or two.
AJ, KQ, QJ, J10, 109 (only if
of same suit),99, 88, 77, Ax (same suit)
Odds at the Pot
Once you hit the flop, you
should use pot odds to decide your next action. When you hit the flop,
either you will be winning or hopefully winning (with a made hand) or
you want cards to improve your hand (you are drawing). If you have a
made hand, you should bet and raise. You want to win the pot now
because more cards can only help your opposition. An example of a made
hand is if you hold AK and the board is KJ4.
If you do not have a made
hand, you are drawing. You must use 'pot odds' to determine if you
should call or fold. First, you must count the number of outs you have.
An out is a card that will make your hand the best hand. For example,
if your hand is KJ, and the board is Q 10 7, then your outs are 4 Aces
and 4 9's, or 8 outs total. To calculate your percentage of hitting an
out, you take the # of outs times 2, then add 2. Once you figure out
this number, you multiply it by the pot to see what the maximum bet is
that you can call. For example, if you have 6 outs (6 cards will help
you), you have about a 14% chance of hitting. If the pot is $100 and
you must call $10, you should call b/c you can call up to $14 (.14 X
100) but the cost is only $10. However, if the bet to you was $20, you
should fold, because that would require a 20% chance of hitting.
Deceiving Your Opponents
Bluffing and Slowplaying are
two deceptive techniques you should employ.
Bluffing
Contrary to popular belief,
bluffing is almost useless in a low limit game (anything less than
$2-4). Rarely will people not call to a showdown, so there is no point
in scaring people out of the pot. I suggest waiting to bluff until you
play at a higher limit. When you play at a higher limit, it's best to
bluff when you 'represent' something and there are only one or two
opponents in the pot. For example, betting at the flop with a high card
on the board 'represents' a pair, raising when a flush is possible
'represents' the flush.
Playing it Slow and Steady
Slowplaying means deceiving
your opponents into thinking you have less of a hand then you do. For
example, suppose you hold KK. The flop comes K33, so you flopped a full
house! There is no need to scare people out of the pot because there is
little chance of someone drawing out on you. Thus, you should wait to
the turn or maybe even river to jam the pot with bets and raises. You
should slowplay if two conditions are met:
1. You hold a whopper and
there is almost no chance of someone drawing on you
2. You will only get action
if some other cards come out that will improve your opponents' hands,
but these cards are not good enough to make these hands beat yours.
Tilt
Being on tilt means letting
your emotions disrupt your ability to play. All poker
players go on tilt at least once during their career, but limiting
these episodes is essential to winning at poker. Poker
is a game that requires reason. If you have JQ of spades, and the flop
comes AQ10, all of hearts, and there is a lot of betting action, you
need to know to fold. If you were on tilt, you would let your emotions
take control and make you do whatever it took to take down the pot. You
would keep chasing, hoping to catch a king and hoping that no one had a
flush.
In general, people who get
upset and don't stay focused and reasonable will lose all the money
they brought to the table.
Poker is almost anti-human in
the way it triggers emotions but rewards people who are made of stone.
I don't mean to scare you or act as if all poker players
are unemotional stones, but it is imperative to stay focused and
rational while at the poker table.
Generally, most players tilt
due to a bad beat or if they just can?t seem to win a hand. Some
players have a slight tilt after they win a big hand or two, but those
episodes generally are much shorter than tilts caused by losing.
For example, take a hand I
played recently. I had AQ and the flop came AQ2. I bet and was called.
A 10 came on the turn. Bet, call. River was a 7. I bet and he raised. I
decided to just call, thinking he may have actually had KJ. No, he had
77. The idiot had called me to the river with little hope but won on a
very lucky river catch. Needless to say, I was not playing well the
next couple of hands.
While going on tilt is
natural, you need to limit it. Generally, the best way is to sit out a
couple of hands and go on a walk. Another good way to handle a bad beat
is to just think about all the bad beats you have laid in the past.
After the bad beat I mentioned above, I sat back and thought about the
time I stupidly went all in in a pot limit omaha with
bottom set. I had 33J7, 3J7 of spades, and there was 368 on the board-
the 8 was a spade. My opponent had 88, the best hand when all the money
went into the pot. I was lucky enough to catch a backdoor flush on the
turn-river and took down a huge pot. I went on to win the most money
that day that I have ever won. If I had lost that hand, I probably
would have called it quits and never would have won all of that money.
Thinking about the time I pulled off this bad beat and went on to win
such a huge sum helps me get through the times that some idiot rivers
me.
Many people, myself included,
tend to curse at the computer if they get bad beat. However, for myself
at least, cursing is not nearly as therapeutic as thinking about that
huge bad beat I laid at the omaha table. Cursing tends to
make you more mad and will cause you to develop some bad habits. When
you are about to go on tilt, sit out and think of happy thoughts (as
cheesy as it sounds, it's true) and hopefully you can resume playing
your best.
Going
from Offline Poker to Online Poker
Most people who play
poker just played in a typical home game at first. The structure of
these games was simple. Generally, everyone would ante a certain amount
(say 25 cents) and then the betting was structured as to have a minimum
and maximum bet.
For example, everyone would
ante 25 cents and then the bets/raises would range between 25 cents to
$2 each round.
The play at the home games
was generally bet, call or perhaps bet,raise, call. Most hands would go
to a showdown and generally the person who had the hottest cards (not
one who necessarily made the best plays) would win at the end of the
day.
Internet poker is very
different from this in 3 ways: the ante structure, the betting
structure, and the competition.
Ante Structure
First, unless you are playing
7 stud, there is no ante. The person to the left of the dealer must pay
the small blind and the person after him must pay the big blind. These
are forced bets. All the other players are not forced to bet anything
to receive cards (they do not need to ante), but they must match the
big blind or any raise to the big blind to see the flop.
Thus, a typical game,
involving 6 people, with a small blind (sb) of 50 cents and a big blind
(bb) of $1 would go as follows preflop:
Seat one: SB ($.50) Seat
two: BB ($1) Seat three: Fold Seat four: Calls BB ($1) Seat
five: Raises BB ($2) Dealer (Seat six): Fold
Seat one: Fold Seat
two: Calls raise ($1) Seat three: Calls raise ($1)
Then the betting would begin
with the big blind (since the small blind folded) after the flop.
Betting Structure
In addition to the blind/ante
structure being different in online games, the type of betting differs.
The most similar to the spread limit (i.e. the minimum/maximum bet)
would be 'no limit.' In other words, there is still the minimum bet,
however the maximum bet is the amount of chips in front of you. The
best place to play no limit is Party Poker or Ulitmate Bet.
There is a common myth at no
limit that if someone bets more chips than you have, you must fold.
THAT IS NOT TRUE. If Tom bets $30 and I only have $15, I only must put
in $15 to call. Thus, Tom is essentially only betting $15 dollars if
I'm the only person in the pot. However, if the pot is between me, Tom,
and Jane and both Tom and Jane have $50 dollars, Jane must match Tom's
bet of $30. The extra $15 would be in a sidepot. So, at the showdown, I
would be in contention for $45 dollars and Tom and Jane would be in
contention for the $45 plus the extra $30. Thus, if I have the best
hand and Jane has the second best hand, I would win $45 and she would
win $30. If Jane hand was in fact better than mine, she would win the
entire $75.
Closely similar to no limit
is pot limit, where you can bet any amount from the minimum bet to the
size of the pot.
Finally, the most popular
form of betting is known as limit. This type of game has fixed bets.
For example, in a $2-4 game, the size of the bets are $2 or $4,
depending on which round it is. In Texas Holdem and Omaha,
each bet preflop and at the flop (when the 3 cards come out) is $2. If
someone wishes to raise, he or she must do so by $2 dollars. Thus, in a
4-handed situation, this would be a typical case:
Seat one: Check Seat
two: Bet $2 Seat three: Raise $2 (to $4) Seat four:
Call $4
Seat one: Fold Seat
two: Call $4
The bets on the turn (when 4
cards are out) and the river (when all cards are out) would be the
higher amount- $4. So, taken the above example, this is how the turn
betting may happen:
Seat two: Bet $4 Seat
three: Fold Seat four: Raise $4 (to $8)
Seat two: Call $4
Competition
Finally, skill pays off more
on the internet than dumb luck. People actually try to win because the
money exchanged is often more than just nickels and dimes. You should
not just call to the river 'just to see what he has' and such. You must
use strategy to expect to win in the long run. Someone who plays his
typical home game strategy may win at first, but will probably lose in
the long run (unless his or her home game is particularly tough). The
other strategy articles on this website will prepare you to become a
winning poker player.
Poker Strategy - e-cash
By the time you begin to
really make money at online poker, you'll have a great
understanding of how the ecash system works.
But if you are new, here's a
quick primer.
Don't use your credit cards
at these websites. If you are a US citizen, chances are your credit
card company has blocked online gambling purchases. Even if you are
not, there are much more efficient ways to deposit/withdraw money. The
best one is Neteller, though Firepay is decent as well.
First of all, many of you may
be wary about not being paid. DON'T WORRY. Every site that I have
listed (except Planet Poker)
I have sent and received
money from. I trust these places more than I trust my university. Most
of these sites will credit your ecash account within two business days.
In fact, it is a major rarity if it takes longer than that. So deposit
there, play for awhile, once you make money (say after a week), cashout
some and it should be in your Neteller account within 2 days.
Anyways, here's an
explanation of the more popular ecash options.
Neteller
This place acts as an e-cash
middleman. It is a Canadian company with no direct ties to any
government or pokerroom/casino.
How to deposit into Neteller:
After you sign up at Neteller.com, you have two good options for
depositing money. First, just deposit with a credit card. That's what
I've always done. They charge you a small fee, but who cares. The
second option is transferring money from your bank account. You should
register your bank account with neteller. The process takes about 3
days. What happens is you put in your bank account information, and
they verify it by sending you two small deposits of less than a dollar.
When your bank account is verified, you can transfer money through an
Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) which takes about 3 business days. So,
if you're new to neteller, it takes about 15 min to deposit with a
credit card, but about a week to deposit straight from your bank
account.
How to withdraw: There are
two good ways. After you credit back any credit card deposits, they can
just send you a check or they can EFT you the money to your bank
account. This is why it's good to register your bank account with
neteller; once you do so, you simply transfer your poker
room winnings to neteller (about 1 day) then you transfer your neteller
money to your bank account (2-3 days). I've never used an EFT to
deposit, but I've made many EFT withdrawals.
Firepay
Sign-up at Firepay.com. This
place acts as an online debit card.
How to deposit: You can't
with a credit card. You must verify your bank account with them and
then you write them an 'e-check.' In other words, you tell them how
much to deduct from your bank account and they do it. The process is
instantaneous (unlike Neteller, where it takes 3 days to send them
money from your bank account).
How to withdraw: You can have
them EFT you the money back to you. They charge you 10 dollars to do
this and it takes several days. One problem though is that you must
wait 6 business days after your last deposit to withdraw any money.
I heavily recommend neteller
over firepay or any other ecash account for several reasons:
1. Firepay accounts sometimes
take longer to credit back. I'm not exactly sure why this is, but a pokerroom
that takes 1 day to credit back my neteller account will sometimes take
a week to credit back my firepay account.
2. Some poker
rooms will only send you as much money to your firepay account as you
put in. They then force you to redeem your other winnings by check
(which takes about a week) or neteller.
3. Firepay's only advantage
over neteller is that you can send them cash from your bank account
instantaneously for free.
However, with proper
planning, you can avoid any major credit card fees with Neteller
(either deposit a little with neteller through credit card or just wait
the week and deposit with an EFT.) Yet, there is no way around that 10
dollar fee to EFT your winnings from firepay to your bank account.
So, in brief, create a
Neteller account. It takes maybe 20 minutes to create it and fund it
through credit card. You can withdraw your winnings to it easily and
quickly. Once your money is in your neteller account, you can receive
it quickly through an EFT or check (the checks take about a week unless
you have them fedex it to you). |