The Poker Lab Rat

April 14, 2008

Poker pro: the importance of table image - going wild!

Filed under: pro tips, Mike Caro, Doyle Brunson — Mike @ 5:23 am

Mike Caro professional poker player tips and advice

 

 

 

 

You should always adopt a poker table image that’s most comfortable for you. Fine. But I teach that in most games, a quiet conservative image doesn’t extract the most profit. That’s because the biggest mistake most opponents make is that they call too often. And the money that excellent players earn is directly related to this one overwhelming mistake by your opponents.

Sure, you can play against other solid opponents and still win sometimes, because you’ll find weaknesses in their games. Maybe they’re easily bluffable in key situations or maybe they don’t get maximum value from their hands. But when your try to earn a living from other players who are also trying their best to make rational decisions, you’d better be exceptionally talented. And even if you are, I believe you still won’t average as much profit as you would against non-analytical players who simply make too many calls.

That’s why I teach that the biggest secret to winning poker is to create a wild and playful image. You image can even be bizarre, one that encourages opponents to think you’re playing much worse than you really are. That way, they’ll be less likely to exact full advantage when they have you beat, because they’re worried about what you’re going to do next. And, at the same time, they’re going to reward you with even more weak calls than they give other opponents, because you’re fun and playful, and losing against you is less painful.

ONSTAGE
If you’re uncomfortable being onstage, this isn’t the right image for you. There are other demeanours you can bring to the poker table, and I teach these too. But the wild image remains my favourite. It’s a very dangerous image, and you can easily get caught up in the chaos and end up playing a losing game. I know: I’ve done that.

PROBLEM
The problem is something I call FPS (Fancy Play Syndrome). It’s the disease that presents itself when you believe you’re so superior to your opponents that you need to prove it. So, you choose the fanciest and most unusual play, rather than the one that is apt to earn the biggest profit. Beware of FPS! You’re not going to be able to prove you’re the best player in a single session. No matter how good you are, your opponents may never acknowledge that you’re the best. Now, it’s true that the best players might not win the most money. They may be capable of winning the most, but – instead – they choose to play exhibition poker, as I did. They become to poker what the Harlem Globetrotters were to basketball – playing for the show, rather than the points. The Globetrotters still won – and I still won – but not by the big margins I should have!

I’d rip up $100 bills at the table, and sometimes I’d burn them. I did this in bigger games, because it got attention. The first $100 bill burned may have been profitable advertising. It suggested to the opponents that I didn’t care about them money, and made them more likely to call and to make mistakes against me. But I overdid it. Sometimes I’d destroy many hundred dollar bills in one sitting. If you’re in the retail business, it often pays to advertise, but you can buy too many ads and not be able to sell enough merchandise to cover the cost. That’s what I did. Often I made too many bizarre plays and didn’t have enough legitimate hands to sell and overcome the expense.

I remember playing all my hands open heads up – showing them face up on the table – for half an hour. And I’d almost always play like a maniac the first 20 minutes I entered a game. I wanted to establish an early image and then tighten up and reap the profit. I’ve often joked that opponents could have gotten rich just following me around and sitting down for the first 20 minutes wherever I played.

Showmanship can win money. It’s the image I advise for those who have keen psychological skills. But too much showmanship can ruin your bankroll.

Why am I telling you this? Because I do not want other players who follow my advice about poker image to get caught up in the act. Remember, the object isn’t to get attention. Getting attention is only a tool for making money, which is the object.

So advertise, but be stingy with your budget.
MC

Clcik to visit the only online poker room endorsed by Mike Caro and Doyle BrunsonYou can play the mad genius of poker, Mike Caro, online at DoylesRoom.com Poker.

Players from around the world including 39 States of the USA are welcome at Doyles Room poker site     Read the latest review of Doyles Room Poker, Doyle Brunson’s own online poker site

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April 4, 2008

The most advanced poker software on the planet?

If you’ve always wanted an easy way to relive those poker hands of the past or a more personalised poker experience, check out the latest software release at Doyles Room.

This week popular online poker room, Doyles Room, has upgraded their poker platform with a major revamp. Not just “tweaks” either, this one’s a major coup that in our view positions Doyles Room as one of the very best sites to play poker!

Replay hand histories an excellent new feature at Doyles Room pokerThe new feature we like the best is the ability to replay poker hands from your play history. Relive them to analyse, or show off - we don’t care - just check it out.

 

 

 

 

 

Resize and tileing tables just got easier at Doyles Room pokerWe also like the new ability to resize and more readily tile tables for multiple table play. Excellent.

Doyles Room also now lets you customize stuff…like, uploading your own avatars, changing the colour of the table felt and even the poker room floor to make a personalized poker room on your own PC.

Other stuff has changed too so check it out.

If you’re already a member at Doyles Room, upgrade to the new poker software by opening your game client and the system will automatically do the rest.

If you’ve not tried Doyles Room poker yet, Download and experience how the game is meant to be played - the software is free.

Mike 

PS: Doyles Room may still not - in your view - offer THE most advanced or even THE BEST PLAY EXPERIENCE on the net, lots of this stuff is subjective - but it is pretty damned good poker software and the 500,000+ active players on the Microgaming Poker Network can’t be all wrong! I personally like what Carbon Poker has going down too… :-)

Click to visit Doyles Room Poker siteDoyles Room is a lead member of the Microgaming Poker Network and is endorsed by poker greats like Doyle Brunson and Mike Caro. For more read the latest Doyles Room Poker Review here at PokerLabRat.com.

Poker players from around the world including 39 States of the USA are welcome at Doyles RoomPoker players from around the world including 39 States of the USA are welcome at Doyles Room 

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March 15, 2008

Mike Caro: When not to bet

Filed under: pro tips, Mike Caro, Doyle Brunson — Mike @ 10:34 pm

Mike Caro plays online at DoylesRoom.com 

 

 

 

 

Knowing for certain when not to bet can save you thousands of dollars! On the more esoteric side I teach:

You shouldn’t bet into frequent bluffers, because you’ll average more money by checking and calling.

You shouldn’t bet with small advantages if your image is dominating, because your opponents will respond more rationally and get maximum value from their hands when they have you beat.

Closely related, you shouldn’t value bet when you’re losing, because opponents are inspired by your suffering and play better, making otherwise-moneymaking bets unprofitable.

There are other more complex reasons not bet to, but here’s a simpler situation – pay attention…

You simply lose money when you bet poker hands that have average prospects of being best. Don’t do that!

Mike Caro (extract from ‘What Not to Bet in a Nuclear Winter’)

Mike Caro “The Mad Genius of Poker” is a world-class professional poker player, renowned poker trainer and fanatic on poker strategy, the role of psychology in poker and statistical analysis of poker games.

Join Mike Caro at an online poker table at Doyle Brunson’s Poker site: DoylesRoom.com. Players from around the world, including 39 States of America, can play at Doyles Room. It’s a leading member of the Microgaming Poker Network.

>>Doyles Room Poker Review (What’s hot and not about DoylesRoom.com)
>>More tips and poker strategy from professional players

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February 22, 2008

“Mixed Grill” Celeb Bounty and Quick Draw Freerolls at Doyles Room

Filed under: General Blog Rant, Mike Caro, Poker Tournaments, Doyle Brunson — Mike @ 4:35 am

There are two great tournaments pending this week at Doyles Room… and you might like to check them out!

Click for more info onsite at DoylesRoom poker

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

First up, if you love celebrity poker, here’s a tournament opportunity not to be missed.

In what can only be decribed as “a mixed grill”, Doyle Brunson is giving you the chance to play against Soprano’s star Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Nicky Hilton (the less slutty Hilton sister), WSOP champion Hoyt Corkins, “The Mad Genius of Poker” Mike Caro, and online pros Jim “P0KERPR033″ Campbell, and Alex “AJKHoosier1″ Kamberis - and of course himself.

Every bounty player has a $500 price on their head (knock ‘em out it’s yours), and there’s over $25K in prizes up for grabs.

You can even get to play for free as Doyle’s Room offers a first-time Bounty Tournament rebate. All first-time entrants will receive a 100% refund of their $27.50 buy-in and fees back! Space is limited and registration is already underway.

Celebrity Special Bounty Tournament - Wednesday, February 27th at 9:30pm ET (02:30GMT+day)

Register now: In the lobby - Scheduled Tournaments>Special>The Bounty Celebrity Special

 

The second - is a completely different style of poker tournament called the “QuickDraw FreeRoll

These tournaments play every day and are the fastest freerolls on the net. There’s no buy-in, no rake requirement, and the games have 2 minute blinds. Wow. If you can out you have the option of recharging your bankroll with a $1 rebuy (or trade action points), but no Deposit is necessary to play in these tournaments.

Register now and get in on the accelerated action with freerolls all week long at Doyles Room Poker.

Good luck and great skills at the tables!
Mike

PS: Doyles Room poker is a leading member of the Microgaming Poker Network and as such players from around the world can join, including Americans from 39 States.

PPS: You’re eligible for a join bonus of up to $550 as a 110% first deposit match at present if you’re new to Doyles Room Poker.

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January 30, 2008

They’re fast. They’re free - and you can win real money without risking any of your own

Filed under: General Blog Rant, Poker Tournaments, Doyle Brunson — Mike @ 8:33 pm

Quick Draw Freeroll schedule - click for more info on site at DoylesRoom.comDoyle Brunson’s poker site (Doyles Room) has extended their ultra popular QuickDraw freeroll tournament series for one more week. They’re fast. They’re free - and you can win real money without risking any of your own.

No buy-in, no rake requirement, 2 minute blinds! The action is crazy-fast so you really do end up hoping that the flop is with you, as chip stacks swell or sink in the turn of a card. Don’t miss out on the addictively fun action. Some of the PokerLabRat.com team really enjoyed last week’s freerolls.

You can even rebuy into these freerolls for just $1 (real money) - but that’s your call!

Check out the timetable (left) and register now for some freeroll action.

 

Click to visit Doyle Brunsons poker roomDoyles Room poker plays on the latest Microgaming Poker Network software and welcomes players from around the world including Americans from 39 States.

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January 24, 2008

Really Free Freerolls at Doyles Room Poker

Filed under: General Blog Rant, Poker Tournaments, Doyle Brunson — Mike @ 2:58 am

Click for more info online at DoylesRoom.comIf you’ve been hankering to try Doyles Room poker (a leading member of the Microgaming Poker Network) - or are just looking for some really free freeroll tournaments - now’s the time.

DoylesRoom.com are running a series of no buy-in, no rake requirement, freerolls with 2 minute blinds! (And you can recharge your bankroll for $1 real money, real quick if you want to!)

QuickDraw Freerolls, What are they?

It’s a full on Texas Hold’em tournament where the action is fast and the blinds escalate every 2 minutes. If you expect to win, you’ll have to be on your feet and on your game. Everyone starts out with 1,000 tournament chips and although it’s a freeroll, you can rebuy for $1 or with Action Points. Consider the rebuy a little bit of bad beat insurance, or maybe your way to never miss the bubble again!

Register now, space is limited. Don’t miss out on any of the 9 events spread out over the next 5 days at Doyles Room!

Players from around the world, including 39 US States are welcome to play poker at Doyles Room. Check out the latest poker review on this stylish and popular online poker room.

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January 1, 2008

Mike Caro on Poker and Life Strategy

Filed under: Poker News & Views, pro tips, Mike Caro, Doyle Brunson — Mike @ 10:50 pm

 Mike Caro only endorses online poker at Doyles Room

 

 

 

 

In gambling you can’t beat many games, because the odds are fixed against you. So, you need to stick to the ones for which your skill is sufficient to win - such as poker, private wagers, gin rummy, and sometimes blackjack. Avoid roulette and craps. These are games with odds that are permanently on the casino’s side. There is no way you can overcome this disadvantage, so you shouldn’t play. But life’s different. You’re in that game, even if you sometimes wish you weren’t - and your decisions always matter.

Gambling games are merely formalized, simplified ways of experiencing exactly the same risks we experience in everyday life. Formally or informally, you gamble.

Not surprisingly, many of the same strategies I’ve lectured about and analyzed with computers apply just as powerfully to everyday life as they do to formalized gambling. Here are some useful examples of gambling tips and philosophies I hope you’ll successfully be able to adapt to the world around you.

1. The cards probably won’t break even–not in gin rummy, not in poker, and not in real life. There’s a common misconception that if you play poker long enough the cards will break even. Fat chance! Maybe, if you could play forever, never stopping, never sleeping, eventually you’d break even on luck. But not in just one lifetime! Early on you’d probably break even on, say, the number of full houses you were dealt, but it would take much longer to break even on circumstances surrounding those full houses.

You might lose more hands than you should lose on average. On the other hand, sometimes opponents might have nothing to oppose you with, and you’ll win nothing. You might get many full houses when you’re sitting in big-limit games, or you may receive most in smaller games. You might be against weak opponents, you might not. On and on. And the more factors you consider, the broader the range of luck, and the longer it will take for you to break even.

Does this mean some people are luckier than others for their lifetimes? You bet! But there’s good news. You can still win, year after year, in gambling games requiring skill, even if you’re not lucky. How? Simply by making the best decisions again and again without fail. Then, instead of being a break-even big-money player who may win $100,000 one year and lose $100,000 the next, you might win $250,000 in a lucky year and win $50,000 in an unlucky year. In this over-simplified example, the $200,000 swing from lucky year to unlucky year isn’t enough to cause you to lose. At seminars, I teach that you should go to the poker table day after day on a simple mission. That mission is to make the best decisions always, and never worry about whether you’re lucky or unlucky. You can’t control your luck, but you can control your decisions.

Same in life. Some people spend half their lives in hospitals. Others are healthy. All your belongings might be swept up in a tornado. You might discover a million dollar painting in you attic. Stop expecting life to be equal for everyone. It won’t be. Your mission is simply to make the best decisions with the “hands” you’re dealt.

2. If you’re a winner–in formal gambling or in life–you should never try to get even “for the night.” By doing this, you’re perverting your practice of making meaningful decisions while pursuing a meaningless goal. The mistake is in looking at each gambling session, or each financial venture, as a game to be won or lost. Don’t! In poker, it’s better to win $10,000, lose $2000, and lose $500 than to win $4,000, win $998 and win $2. In the first case, you won $7,500, but you only had one win and two losses. In the second case, you won only $5,000, but you won all three times. Oddly, most gamblers and most people in real life unconsciously feel better about the second scenario than the first. Such feelings are natural, but they’re also dangerous.

If you agree with me that $7,500 is better than $5,000, then you should clearly see that it doesn’t matter where the profits come from. The next two points are closely related, and they demonstrate how most people diminish their overall success.

3. Never make anything worse. Sure, it sounds obvious? But guess what? I’ve never met anyone who didn’t make things worse sometimes, including myself. People get angry, and they make things worse. They lose at business or at romance, and they make things worse. It’s because they’re feeling so miserable that those extra losses don’t seem to register. In gambling, I call this dangerous practice crossing the threshold of misery. Here’s how it works.

A player sits down at blackjack thinking that the worst that can happen is he’ll lose $500. Everything goes wrong and suddenly he’s losing $1,000. He has now crossed the threshold of misery and maximized his ability to register pain. Losing $1,114 doesn’t feel any worse than losing $1,000. That extra $114 doesn’t matter, and so he concentrates less and plays worse. It happens all the time in life. Romance does this to you. Unexpected misfortune does this to you. Decisions that would normally matter (like that extra $114 in blackjack) don’t seem to matter by comparison. But these decisions all add up. In life people who are heartbroken sometimes make the worst business decisions imaginable. Those decisions don’t seem to matter much compared to the heartbreak. And those decisions all add up, and eventually they will matter.

In poker, many lifelong losing players would actually be lifelong winners if they simply never made things worse. Worse out of anger, worse out of exasperation, worse out of apathy, worse out of self-pity, worse out of temper. If it doesn’t matter now, it will matter tomorrow. So from now on, promise yourself you will never make things worse. You will never make things worse.

4. What you’ve already invested doesn’t matter. Too many poker players damage their bankrolls by calculating how much they personally “invested” in the pot before making their decision about whether to bet or fold. Don’t do that. The pot, all that money you’re competing for, is simply there. It doesn’t matter where it came from or how much of it you invested. It wouldn’t matter whether it had originally been all yours or whether the players just happened to find it forgotten on the table. The pot belongs to no one right now.

Same in life. It doesn’t matter how much money, how much time, how much effort you have invested in a project. Say you purchased land for $50,000. One morning you wake up and it’s only worth $25,000. That same day, someone offers you $40,000. You should accept this offer, because you’re not losing $10,000, you’re gaining $15,000. That’s because what the land used to be worth doesn’t matter, and what you’ve invested doesn’t matter. You don’t need to win on this investment. The trick is to make winning decisions again and again and let lifelong success take care of itself. Ignoring taxes, write-offs or anything else that will complicate this example, the land is worth $25,000 now. You can get $40,000 by selling. Selling is the right decision, and it has value–in this case, $15,000.

5. Never seek sympathy. I teach gamblers never to complain about bad luck. First of all, nobody really cares. Their own exaggerated memories of personal bad luck dwarf whatever you’re complaining about. And if you complain to opponents–such as in a poker game–they’re inspired because you’re unlucky. They’ll think you’re not a force to be reckoned with, they’ll play better, and they’ll cost you money.

It’s the same in life. There’s absolutely no reason to tell tales of misfortune. You’ll inspire life’s opponents, and you’ll lose esteem among life’s allies. So, if your luck is bad, keep it to yourself.

6. Keep your hand secret. If you habitually exposed your poker hand before the showdown, opponents would know what you had, and they’d know for certain whether to play against you, whether to raise you, whether to pass. It would be stupid to play poker that way, but people do that everyday in real life. How? They don’t keep secrets. Listen: Never volunteer personal information to anyone who isn’t a friend, unless you know specifically that you have something to gain by volunteering the information. Sound heartless? Well, OK, it’s all right to volunteer useful information if it can’t harm you. It’s also all right to give information sometimes if you’re getting information in return.

But think back. I’ll bet for every time you regretted keeping secrets, there are many more times you regretted telling secrets. People simply give away too much information, and it eventually haunts them. Secrets can seem insignificant at the time they’re shared, but later the sharing turns out to be an important mistake.

Like it or not, successful people keep secrets much better than unsuccessful people, just as successful poker players conceal their hands better than unsuccessful players. Repeating: It’s a fact that people who succeed keep secrets. Never reveal important information about yourself unless you have a specific reason for doing so. Starting now, practice telling yourself mentally why you’re giving information before you give information.

People talk about their lives and their opinions, giving information that may later be damaging. They do this because they want to seem friendly. But, there’s a special way you can be just as friendly and, instead of putting yourself in jeopardy, gain an advantage. How? Instead of giving information about yourself, use the same time to ask other people about themselves. If you’re talking to a potential competitor, don’t volunteer information; ask for opinions. I do this at the poker table. After a hand, I ask an opponent how he would have played. Usually, the player is flattered and offers a sincere answer, such as he would have bluffed. I remember that answer, and weeks later–long after the opponent has forgotten our conversation–I call and win the pot. It’s the same in real life. You remember the information, and you use it later.

By the way, when I consult with businesses, there seems to be one recurring problem that comes up again and again. How can supervisors best smooth up relationships between themselves and employees who don’t like them. The answer is simple. Ask the employees for their opinions. In life, you can patch up most relationships simply by softly asking a person: “What do you think?”, “What would you do in this situation?”, “How would you handle this?” People are universally flattered when you ask for opinions. It works with enemies, it works with employees, it works with children. Trust me, and try it. And it’s consistent with the powerful poker technique of concealing your own hand while learning as much as you can about your opponents.

One of life’s most important goals is to gain as much useful information from others as possible, while guarding your own secrets wisely.

7. Don’t humiliate your opponents. Always allow opponents to save face, no matter how tempting it is to gloat. When you make it painful for opponents to lose, they play better, but you want opponents to play worse . Additionally, life is complicated enough without motivating people to get even with you. So, always give those you conquer a chance to save face–unless you’ll never have to confront them again.

In poker, it’s the same–unless your opponent is permanently broke after losing this pot, don’t humiliate him. Angry players often return to harm you. Don’t gloat; win graciously.

8. Don’t even the score. This one’s hard on your ego, but listen anyway. In life you don’t need to get even with the person who did you wrong. Similarly, you don’t need to get even with the person who bluffed you in poker. You shouldn’t care where your next opportunity to gain comes from. You don’t have to get even or break even with anyone. Play the opportunities as they arise. Success stacks up the same, no matter where it comes from. Some people are so busy getting even, they never have time to get ahead.

In gambling and in life, a few people are going to get the better of you. So what? If you won a bet on a basketball game, would you be upset that the other team’s center scored more points than your team’s center? Of course not! You won the bet, so what do you care? Same in life. If you win overall, don’t fret over a few lost skirmishes, and never waste energy trying to get even with those who beat you.

9. Act last. Almost no one realizes the importance of acting last. At my poker seminars, I teach how important it is to understand your position at the table. Players must act in turn, and those who act after you have an advantage because they get to see what you do before they make their decisions. So, I teach that you should use psychology and make friends with players who act after you. They’ll then be less motivated to exploit their advantages. This works in life, too. Befriend those who have an advantage, so they will be less motivated to make it difficult on you. That’s important, and I’ll repeat it: In life, make friends with those who could do you the most damage.

And there’s more. You should usually strive to gain advantage by acting last. If you’re sure that everyone will have an equal chance to act, it’s better–with few exceptions–to wait to see what your opponents do, then adapt your strategy accordingly. In poker, we call it a positional advantage. Let’s call it the same thing in real life.

10. Save your fancy moves for when you’re running good. In skillful gambling, when your luck is running bad, opponents often become inspired and play better. You’re no longer a force to be reckoned with in their minds. Most of your fancy plays won’t work because you’ve lost the intimidation factor, which is fundamental to many aggressive strategies. At these times, you should become a more timid player. In life, do the same thing. Sometimes in conversations or in business, things aren’t really clicking and you’re losing ground. You can feel it happening. Play defensively. Your image is wrong for asserting yourself, so–if possible–just lurk and don’t take a stand yet. Many people desperately try to prove themselves when they are at a disadvantage, but they ought to just sit silently. As a bonus, this silence often seems like strength to others. Repeating: When you’re at a disadvantage, or you’re just not in sync, don’t try to prove yourself immediately. Wait it out. Sooner or later an opportunity will come, and then you can be profound or assertive.

11. Cheer for your friends. I want to warn you about envy. Many people don’t want their friends to succeed. In gambling, I never feel envious of friends who are winning more than I am. I want my friends to succeed so they can share their secrets, so they can tip me off to better games in the future, so they introduce me to rich novices looking for a game–all sorts of benefits. If your enemies win, you don’t get any of these advantages. It’s the same in life. You should want your friends to succeed always. The more friends you have succeeding, the more opportunities you’ll have. It’s just plain crazy, but common, to be jealous of your friends’ successes.

12. Don’t fret over each injustice. In gambling and in life, there’s always injustice. Bet on it! Poker’s worst starting hands often win. And bad players sometimes get lucky. In life, the same. In fact, there’s so much injustice that we couldn’t possibly devote ourselves to setting things right.

Next year there will probably be 246 unbelievably unjust things that will happen to you personally. Cashiers will hand you too little change. People will spread falsehoods about you. Someone will misunderstand what you say. Crooks will scam you. On and on. And we’re guessing that this will happen 246 times next year. If it only happens 230 times, you’re having a good year! So, you can either just going on to the next thing, or you can damage you chances of success by dwelling on each injustice, talking about it, fuming over it. All that fusing, all that fuming, all that waste of mental energy really doesn’t make sense. Why should you get aggravated, especially if you’re having a good year? So, simply, learn to overlook injustices unless you’re prepared to act on them. Yes, It’s noble to act against injustice, but it’s wasteful to dwell on personal injustices you’re not willing to act on.

Click to visit Doyle Brunsons poker siteMike Caro plays online at Doyles Room - Make a deposit of $200 befire January 31st 2008, earn 5000 Action Points and a leatherbound copy of the much acclaimed poker book Super System 1 & 2 is yours!  (Players from around the world are welcome at Doyles Room. USA residents from 39 States can play for real money or for free). 

Check out the latest Doyles Room poker review here at PokerLabRat.com - and Happy New Year!

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December 30, 2007

Money For Nothing, Flops for Free

Filed under: Poker News & Views, pro tips, Doyle Brunson — webmaster @ 10:12 pm

Click to visit Doyles Room poker site for a look aroundACCEPTING A GIFT 

“Don’t accept a gift in the big blind in hold ’em,” Kelly told me years ago. He was wrong. 

In hold ’em there are no antes. Without antes or something to replace them, there’s nothing to fight over, and if you’re against wise opponents who are playing perfectly, you should sit hand after hand, badly bored and mumbling mantras about your cattle farm. Finally one hand you’ll find a pair of aces. Logically, only then can you play, because you can defend aces against other intelligent players with equally perfect patience. Against such players, you shouldn’t even start with the second-best hand – a pair of kings. The only time you’d get action would be against a pair of aces and you’d be a decided underdog. All other times, you’d win an empty pot and gain nothing. 

That’s why the ante was invented: to give poker players a motive for war. Human nature being as it is, I believe that most players would find reasons to play inferior hands sometimes, even without incentive. They lack patience. But, poker would be a pretty pitiful game without something in the pot to fight over. Well, in hold ’em there isn’t an ante. So what motivates players to enter pots? 

NOT OPTIONAL 

It’s the blind bets. There are two of them in the seats to the dealer’s left, a small one and a big one, usually twice as large. You must make these bets before seeing any cards. They aren’t optional. 

In most hands, there’s going to be a raise before the action gets back to the big blind player. Whether to call or not will be a matter of judgment. But there’s a time when players, like Kelly, often misjudge. And that’s on those occasions when there’s no raise at all. If  opponents just call the big blind, there’s a special rule in hold ’em that can get you in all manner of trouble. Normally in poker, if you’re just called, then the betting ends. You move along. But in hold ’em if the player in the big blind isn’t raised, there’s a peculiar option. That player – who’s been merely called – can continue the wagering by doing the raising himself. It’s called the “live blind” rule. 

FREE GIFT 

Doyle Brunson poker professional eliteMy lesson today is that you should usually treat this situation as a gift when you’re in the big blind. You’re about to see the flop that happens next for free. Yes, it’s sometimes tempting to raise your opponents right out of their chairs, and that sort of aggression is in my nature. But usually, I decline. I accept the gift and see what happens at no cost. 

Doyle Brunson poker legendIt’s often bad to try to bully the game when you’re in the big blind with the opportunity to see a free flop, because on all following betting rounds, you’re going to act first (unless it was the small blind who called you). That’s a big positional disadvantage, making it harder for you to take charge. Another caution is that players who just call are frequently laying traps. They’re hoping you’ll raise. 

Put it all together and you’ll fare better ignoring Kelly’s advice and following mine. Unless you have a powerful hand in the big blind, whenever you’re merely called, think, “Thanks for the present, buddy,” unwrap the flop, and see how you like it. 

Doyle Brunson 

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December 20, 2007

Poker has developed the web more than anything apart from pornography

I suggest you check out an online article in the Economist titled “Poker is getting younger, cleverer, duller and much, much richer“.

Its like, way long, but it’s a good read, compiling quotes from top pros over the years and portraying the good, bad (and ugly? nah!) side of poker. It covers but does not dwell on the US anti gambling luck vs skill debate (and irony), but is really all about the changing environment for poker.

Doyle Brunson Poker legend - click to visit his online poker site, Doyles Room (US OK from 39 States)The article compares still-going-strong legend, Doyle Brunson, with savvy Internet players like annette_15 (a 19 year old Norwegian, Annette Obrestad) plus has plenty of colourful input and comment on other pro poker players along the way.

(…modern-day poker luminaries as Chris “Jesus” Ferguson, a hirsute scholar of game theory, Dave “Devilfish” Ulliott, a somewhat less cerebral but wily British professional who wears diamond-encrusted knuckledusters, and Phil “Poker Brat” Hellmuth, arguably the most celebrated (not least by himself) modern player…)

Here’s a few more quotes from the article:

Today poker is the third most watched sport on cable television in the United States, after car racing and American football, trumping even NBA basketball…while Britain has its own poker channel.

“It doesn’t take most young people long to realise they won’t be the next Michael Jordan. But they can all aspire to be the next Phil Hellmuth, and they don’t even have to work out,” says Mr Hellmuth, slurping a full-cream mocha.

After two weeks of poker, with daily sessions lasting up to 16 hours, Jerry Yang, a psychologist, went home $8.25m richer

Thomas Bihl, winner of a recent HORSE tournament, in which players have to show mastery of five different styles of poker, thinks the game has more in common with finance than it does with basic forms of gambling, because it requires the constant pricing and repricing of risk. 

Ms Coren: “Cash is nothing more than chips, just the tools of the trade, like fishing rods to an angler. The game is all about money, and nothing to do with money.”

It blends with skill to produce a game that is “much like life, full of incomplete information and second-guessing,” says Mr Lederer. Poker is certainly more exciting to most than chess, a game of complete information and limited psychology where the better player always wins.

Ms Duke sees other ways in which poker teaches “life skills”. It taught her, for instance, how to be a good loser (“Even the best lose most of the hands they play. If you let that get to you, it will kill you”). She says she even uses poker theory when dealing with her children: “I always bet the minimum when making a threat. If you say no TV rather than no Disneyland, you can always raise later.”

A recommended read! Check it out here at The Economist.

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November 26, 2007

Exorcising bad beats

Filed under: General Blog Rant, Chris Ferguson, Doyle Brunson — Mike @ 1:19 am

Poker wouldn’t be poker if players didn’t get to exorcise their bad beats in public afterwards. Here are some examples of bad beats – those unlikely little twists of fate - from WSOP play. (This posting courtesy of Australian owned & US-friendly online poker room, CarbonPoker.com)

Doyle Brunson versus Jesse Alto (1976)
Brunson won a big pot, he called a raise from the steaming Alto with 10s-2s to see a Ah-Js-10h flop and called a bet on the flop. When the 2s fell on the turn, Brunson moved all-in with two-pair, but Alto already had that on the flop with A-J in the hole, and it took the 10d on the river to seal it for Brunson (he also won a year later with the 10-2, making two pair on the turn to beat his opponent’s flopped two pair).

The board that won Doyle Brunson the WSOP with 10-2

 

 

 

 

Hal Fowler versus Bobby Hoff (1979)
Hoff raised with A-A and Fowler called. When the flop came J-3-5 rainbow, Hoff bet half of his remaining chips and Fowler called again. The turn fell a seemingly innocuous 4 and Hoff bet the rest, only to be called by Fowler who had stayed the whole way with 7-6 off-suit and got a lucky straight!

Chris Ferguson versus TJ Cloutier (2000)
When the two great players got heads up, Ferguson had a 10-1 chip lead, but Cloutier chipped away, and eventually managed to take the lead away from Ferguson, who went slightly on tilt after suffering such an onslaught.

Cloutier sensed it was time to go for gold, and moved all-in with A-Q after a raise from Ferguson. The move paid off, as Ferguson made a slip and called with A-9. A flop of 2-K-4 was no help, nor was the turn, (another K). However the river came a fateful 9 to seal the victory for Ferguson.

TJ Cloutier was philosophical afterwards: “He thought he had to beat me in a major pot, so he just decided to go with the hand. Obviously, Chris thought that if he caught the Ace, he’d have a hand, but he was in horrible position…and you know what? O saw that nine coming before the dealer even peeled it off. It was as though I was looking right through the deck”.

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