Poker Beginner Tips

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  • Archive for July, 2009

    Outs and Odds

    Friday, July 10th, 2009

    While playing a 5$ sit’n go this afternoon I came upon an ideal hand to explain to you beginners out there the important concept of the combination between outs and odds. This mathematical side of poker will turn out to be very profitable in the long run!

    Outs

    In poker you come across situations in wich you don’t hold the best hand and surprisingly enough that happens quite a lot :) This doesn’t mean you have to fold the hand immediately cause you could still have a draw to the best hand. Outs is the amount of cards that turns your hand into the best hand. Let’s make this clear by giving an example. You have and the flop comes . You probably don’t have the best hand as you only have a high card but if a club comes on turn or river you have a flush and likely the best hand. 52 cards minus the two in your hand and the three on the flop makes 47 unseen cards of which 9 could give you a flush. That gives you a percentage of 9/47 = 19,6 %

    Luckily there’s an easy way to calculate this percentage: the 2/4 rule. If you wanna know the chance of hitting your draw on the turn, just multiply the outs with 2. In the above example this gives you 9×2 = 18%. If you wanna know the chance of hitting the draw on turn ór river, multiply the outs with 4.

    Odds

    Eventually you will have to compare the chance of hitting one of you outs with the price you pay, in comparison with the pot, for this hand or an extra card. This price is called pot-odds. Let’s explain first how to calculate them, next how to use them.

    Pot-odds = required input / total pot

    For example, the pot is 6 and your only contestant bets 2. Your pot-odds are now 2/10= 20%. 10 is the starting pot plus the bet of your contestant en your own input. You have to put 2 in to call so the pot-odds are 1 to 5 (which means that an input of 1 could bring in 5 times your input). An important thing to remember is that in some causes pot-odds are very uncertain as you don’t know what players behind you will do. In these situations you will have to rely on your knowledge of that player.

    Combination

    Let me show you how to combine outs and pot-odds by showing you the hand I played this afternoon.

    I had :10h and the board was . There was 560 in the pot and I was heads up after a preflop raise. I’d put my contestant on a Jack with a good kicker (Ace/King). He bet 80. So I had to invest 80 to stay in the run for a pot of 640. So 80/640 = 12,5%. There were still 46 unknown cards in the deck of which 8 (four Queens and four 7’s would make me the winner. So 8/46 = 17 %.

    Pot-odds were 12,5%. So I needed at least 12,5% chance to win to call this one. According to the 2/4 rule I would obtain this percentage when I had a bit more than six outs. And because I had eight outs, it was necessary for me to call this bet.

    Eventually the river was so it didn’t help me and I folded after my opponents river bet. But in the long run I definitely made the right decision on the turn. I was crippled after that hand but still made it to a third place, just in the money.

    Phill ‘The Emperor’ Hellmuth

    Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

    You love him or hate him, but you have to admit he knows how to play his fans as well as his opponents. Cause let’s look at it in an objective way. By showing up for the main event of such a tournament in such a way he immediatly leaves an impression which his contestants bare in mind while playing against him at a table and which definitly gives him the advantage.

    Top 10 poker tips (2)

    Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

    6. Pay attention to the other players

    A key aspect in poker is getting to know your opponents. Observe them carefully, even when you’re not in a hand. If you know if one player always raises in a certain position or another has a poker tell when he bluffs, you can use that information to help decide how to play against them.

    7. Pick the right game for your bankroll and skill level

    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 $1/2, resist the urge to play $2/4. When the stakes of a game rise, so does the average skill level of the players sitting there and off course, you always want to be one of the best at the table. ” Little fish have no business swimming with big sharks! ”

    8. Never show

    Never show your hand if you don’t have to. Off course it gives this nice warm feeling inside when you could show an other player you bluffed him out of a pot but in fact you are only giving the other players free insight in you way of playing, which will sooner or later turn against you. It’s true that in some cases showing a bluff could benefit your ‘table image’ but in general…don’t show !

    9. Never play if you’re tired

    As a poker player you always have to be focused. At every point of the game you have to be able to observe your opponents under the best circumstances and remember the way they play. Otherwise your hard earned dollars could be thrown out in just one unattentive hand.

    10. 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

    So now you know the basics, remembered these tips … time to hit the tables !

    Top 10 poker tips (1)

    Saturday, July 4th, 2009

    1. Don’t Play Every Hand !

    Probably the biggest 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. Be more selective. We’ll be talking about starting hand strengths later.

    2. Never Drink and Play

    Simply just don’t do it, playing drunk or drinking while playing is a sure fire way to throw away your bankroll. You will be easier to tilt, swifter to call marginal hands or make just plain crazy bets for the hell of it.

    3. Bluffing is nót the objective

    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. Watch and Learn

    Railbirding, watching other players online may seem like valuable time wasted when you could be playing at the tables yourself but you can learn alot. Pick out some of the higher stakes games and just watch and learn, being out of the game enables you to spot plays and moves which you may not notice if you were actively involved.