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If you could open up
your opponents’ heads, you’d find them thinking about all sorts of
things at the Texas Holdem poker table: the cocktail waitress
sauntering by, a football game on TV, the newspaper that’s propped
open on the tray beside their seat, a vexing issue at work, a
problem at home, the impending mortgage payment, or anything else
that comes to mind. We’ve all been distracted during poker games —
you and I and everyone else who’s ever played. We’re only human, and
no one can focus exclusively on poker during a five-hour session.
Our minds wander. We daydream. Let’s face it, sometimes we’re just
not there.
But we all know
better, or should. After all, there’s information floating
around whenever you’re playing poker — lots of it — but you won’t
pick much of it up when your antennas are not tuned in. Let’s
examine some typical thoughts that run through other players’ heads
at the table. Perhaps you’ve had them, too. “Hmm, someone just
posted behind the button in addition to the usual blinds. There’s
lots of dead money in the pot. I think I’ll go ahead and raise with
nothing; I want to steal that money.” If that’s not familiar,
this one surely is: “I have to make this bet on the river even
though I missed my flush. It’s the only way I can win this pot. If
they reraise, I’ll fold; otherwise, I just might win this pot.”
Is there
anything wrong with these statements? Not really, but like so much
of poker, the answer is, “It depends.” And in these cases, it
depends on whether you’re considering these moves because you have
some real information that leads you to believe you have a good
chance of succeeding, or are just making a play at the pot because
in your heart of hearts you’re just responding to some primal urge,
and somewhere deep down inside yourself, you believe the force of
your will and the strength of your desires can be imposed on your
opponents.
Boxers always
talk about imposing their will on their opponents, and the fighter
who is able to dictate the style and pace of a boxing match is
usually the guy who walks away with the decision, if not a knockout.
But poker is not boxing, and the force of your will has little to do
with winning. Poker is all about guile and cunning, skill and
technique, leading when you want to, and trapping when you can. But,
it’s also all about the cards. Even the best players will be beaten
when an opponent makes a big hand, the kind you can’t drive him off
with a truck.
When you’re
alert at the poker table, you’re always aware of people’s betting
patterns. There’s no excuse for not being alert. Your opponents are
providing oodles of free information about the quality of their
hands and their playing styles, and if you don’t devote sufficient
effort and energy to processing it, you’re giving up far too much to
those opponents who do. Moreover, if you are obviously unaware, like
the guy who’s glued to a football game on TV or marking his racing
form while he plays, your opponents realize it and will use that
knowledge to their advantage. So, while your mind wanders, your more
observant opponents will be reading you like an open book.
Ask yourself the
right questions — the kind the top Texas Holdem players and pros
always do. Who is cautious? Who is aggressive? Always review a
player’s holecards against the cards on the board and his betting
pattern. Is he careful? Does he bluff when he should, or does he
bluff when he shouldn’t? Does he feel he has to call to keep his
opponents honest, even though his hand is weak and has little chance
of winning? If he’s dealt A-K, does he usually come out betting even
when the flop misses him completely? How long does he continue to
push a hand that the flop doesn’t help at all? If he has a pocket
pair of sixes, will he play back at an opponent who raised before
the flop and is now betting into a ragged board?
Replaying each
betting round of every hand that’s shown down to see how the
participants coordinated their betting patterns with the cards they
held and those that were in full view is critically important to
winning poker. This exercise tells you all you ever want to know
about an opponent’s starting standards, how he is playing at the
moment, whether he likes to chase with weak hands, and how willing
he is to call a raise or make one himself, given the mix of cards at
the point in the hand when those decisions are made.
Take notice of
every hand shown on the river and rewind the tape in your head. From
what position did they play that? How much did it cost them
to call? Did they bet, raise, or simply call with that hand?
It’s so
important to get a fix on the playing styles of your opponents that
it’s a good idea not to get involved too soon in a new game. It
takes a good 15 minutes or so to get the lay of the land. Sure, if
you’re dealt a big pocket pair, like aces or kings, dive right into
the pot because you figure to come away with the money at hand’s
end, even when you’re unaware of how your opponents play or what
they’re likely to do in various situations. But most hands are not
strong enough to overcome the lack of table perception you’ll suffer
from when first sitting down to play. So, stay away from speculative
hands until you’ve got your opponents characterized and know the
playing propensities of them all.
A good rule of
thumb is to try to win the first hand you play to conclusion. If
you’re able to achieve that, you will have established yourself as a
good, tough Texas Holdem player in the minds of your adversaries,
and you’ll be off to a great start, too. By trying to win the first
hand you play, you are saying, in essence, that you will avoid all
but the very best hands when you first sit down at the table.
If you have the
option, seat selection matters at a poker table, and where you sit
relative to aggressive players can increase your chances for a
winning session, because you can adjust your strategies based on
their predictable play. In an ideal world, you want tough,
aggressive players on your right, as well as any maniacs at the
table, so that you can get out of their way unless you have a very
strong hand. This enables you to reraise the maniac when you have a
hand that figures to be better than his, so that you can play heads
up against him. You want tight, cautious, predictable, and
conservative players on your left, so that you can bet them out of
the pot. They don’t represent all that much of a threat to you
anyway, since they tend to raise infrequently, if at all.
If you happen to
have an aggressive player on your left, you’ll have to limit the
number of hands you play. On the other hand, when you have a good
hand, you can let your aggressive table mate do the betting and you
may be able to trap him for lots of chips. Watch your opponents;
look for tells. Even if they’re hiding behind their Oakleys like the
pros on TV, it’s usually their hand motions rather than their eyes
that give them away. Are they getting ready to call or fold? Is this
tell reliable or is he just pretending that he’s going to call? Many
players hold their cards with their wrist cocked when preparing to
fold, and this tell is very reliable. So, look to your left before
it’s your turn to act, and if you see that your opponents are
preparing to release their hands, you might wind up with the
distinct advantage of being last to act, and you’ll be able to raise
into a group of players you know were going to fold anyway, thus
representing a very strong hand to your less observant adversaries.
You need reasons
for every decision you make at the poker table, and your reasons
need to be rational. A hunch doesn’t count, and neither does that
vague feeling that the cards were “due.” Cards are never due. They
don’t respond to hunches. They are inanimate objects made of plastic
or cardboard, with no intelligence or magical powers built into
them. Cards are as dumb as dumb can be, and even a truckload of
turnips looks like a Mensa convention compared to the cards at a
poker table. Every winning player knows this. If you believe
otherwise, or act as though you do — even for the briefest of
moments — it will cost you some chips.
When you play
poker, you’ll always be conducting an internal dialogue between your
heart and head. It’s tough to shut it off for any length of time.
So, learn which voice in your head is the most reliable, and listen
to it. Don’t be afraid to tune in to that instinct you know is the
right one. Listen to it, and ignore all those false prophets
rattling around inside your head. When you can do this, you are
almost guaranteed to play winning poker.
Thanks to
literary agent par excellance, Texas Holdem poker maven, and
talented writer Sherree Bykofsky for suggesting this topic and
contributing mightily to it. |