Poker Strategy - Key Poker
Skills
Thinking Like a Poker
Player
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,
since a solid, loose-aggressive player is a person to be
feared. Thus, I think when 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. Math skills
They know that you have about 1 in 8.5 chance of
hitting a set when holding a pocket pair, and that you have
about a 1 in 3 chance of completing a flopped flush draw by the
river.
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 one, 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; it's day one
reading. Anyone who doesn't understand these concepts should
not play in a game until they do.
#2. 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 has solid pre-flop skills. When there is not much
action pre-flop, he or she only plays the better hands. When a
lot of people are limping in, he or she will make a loose call
with a suited connector or other speculative hand.
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 disciplined limit players and
disciplined no-limit players 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 extremely loose and limp in with hands as odd
as 5 3 . 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. Psychological Skills
Able to accept the variance in poker. The best poker
player does not always win, and at times the cards are not in
your favor. A good poker player is able to separate his
feelings from the cards and can use a bad period to improve his
poker skills.
A good player is not a self-centered player. He may be
the biggest SOB you know. He may not care about anyone but
himself, and he 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:
What does my foe have?
What does my foe think I have?
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. Thus, poker tells are much more
important in no-limit games than limit games.
#4. A Clear Understanding of Risk vs.
Reward
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.
ยท Good poker players
understand they need to be more risk-averse with their overall
bankroll than their stack at the table.
When you play in an individual game, you must value
every chip equally at the table. You should only care about
making correct plays. If you buy in for $10, you should be okay
with taking a 52% chance of doubling up to $20 if it means a
48% chance of losing your $10.
However, you should be risk-averse with your overall
bankroll. You need to have enough money so that any day at the
tables will not affect your bankroll too much. If you worry too
much about losing, then you will make mistakes at the table.
You need to leave yourself with the chance to fight another
day.
If you are looking to get started with poker
Golden Palace Poker is a
great place to start!
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