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Winning Texas Hold Em - Pot Odds in Practice

January 15, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Texas Hold 'em

By Christopher John Sharpe

No-limit Hold ‘Em theory is extremely complex. The fact that you can bet any amount you want to makes for unlimited variables, and few but the keenest math experts can grasp it all on the fly. While it’s tough to do advanced equations at the table, there are a few concepts and numbers that I feel are necessary to compete successfully.

Pot odds are the most important key to any poker problem. Pot odds are represented as a ratio between the size of your current risk vs. the size of your potential reward. For example, if it costs you $20 to see if you’ll win a pot of $100, then you are looking at a 5-1 payout. Your pot odds are then 5-1. Pot odds, by any name, are critical for any investment ideology.

Once computed, pot odds can and should be compared to any information you can successfully quantify. For a simple example: if you must have a 6 to win on the last card, with one card to come, then your chances of winning are about 11-1. (You have one chance to hit one of four cards, taken from 46 unseen cards; 42: 4 = approx. 11 - 1.) If you are being offered a payout of more than 11 - 1, you should attempt to hit your long shot. If you are being offered less than 11 - 1, you should not invest. Read the rest of the Fabulous Article

Texas Hold ‘Em Bluffing 101 For Beginners

November 15, 2008 by admin  
Filed under Texas Hold 'em

Online Texas Hold 'em

By Tyler James Ellison

From what have you probably seen in television, you might have noticed some great bluffs that made many doubt if their hands are strong enough (when it truly is), then throw it away out of fear. It is a skill that serious poker players have to incorporate into their game to be successful in poker and stack up the chip count in the long run.

There are basic bluffs that one really has to do especially in short-tables and ones that you only do sparingly that pave the way to the pot.

A Basic Bluff

Technically, this technique is a semi-bluff, but it is deceptive nonetheless. It makes your opponents believe that you have the top pair but in reality, you merely have a drawing hand. Let’s look an example:

You have J-6, both hearts, with four people in the table. The flop shows A-5-8 with the last two having hearts as suits. It’s an ugly flop for those holding face cards except ace and this is an opportunity to make a good-sized flop of around 2/3 of the pot. You seem to represent that you have a pair of eights or aces but you only have the flush draw. In the case that a suit other than a heart shows up on the turn card, don’t fold immediately to a bet. See first if you get sufficient pot odds for calling it. A good size is 3/5 or below as compared to the size of the pot. This way, not only do you have an opportunity to hit a flush, you make sure that it won’t eat up your stack substantially that it renders you soft and defenseless.

Advanced Bluffs

These kinds of bluffs usually appear in the latter stages of the betting round, done when the turn and/or the river card shows up. It may be a panicked all-in when you have the nuts or a soft-looking bet in the river that scares advanced players out their wits (I’ll explain why later).

First is the jumpy all-in bet. There is a specific sequence of circumstances that makes this bluff work. First is that you must raise pre-flop with medium to low suited connectors like 3-4 diamonds or 6-7 hearts. The raise, of course, represents something else like Queens or Jacks.

When you hold 6-7 hearts and the flop shows 4-5-9, with the first two having hearts for a suit, put down the automatic continuation bet of around half the pot, showing that you have high face cards and you seem to believe that the flop didn’t hit your opponents either. Of course, they will call that bet.

When 8-of-hearts is shown on the turn, then you have the nut straight flush, beating anyone who holds a straight. When this happens, don’t just shove your chips right there. Think for a long while and then go all-in. This gives off the impression that you have a set. If anyone has a straight, which is likely because he/she called a good-sized bet, he/she will call it given the seeming desperation of your bet.

The second bluff I’ll teach you is the Post-Oak Bluff. It is very simple; both are bold enough to bet until the river card shows up, when you make a smallish bet of around 1/3 of the pot. It seems as if you are begging him to call you, in an attempt to maximize your gain. But in truth you only have a weak hand, trying to outplay your opponent. This bluff only works for top players, who know the science behind poker betting.

There is an old adage that says large bets scare the beginner while small ones frighten the strong ones. Keep that in mind and you’ll have a good base for your bluffs, and you’ll win more pots in the long run.

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