Posts Tagged ‘play poker’

Holdem Poker Tournament Basics

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

First, understand what a poker tournament is. It’s not a battlefield. It’s not a debate. If there is a modern analogy, it might be the so-called ‘caged match’ in so-called ‘professional wrestling. Ten men enter and only one survives. But that analogy is not perfect, as the truth is that five, ten, sometimes 25 or more entrants survive every tournament very well thank-you. Maybe it’s like the popular TV show, “Lost”. You’ve landed on an island in the middle of nowhere and you have to find a way to survive. You only have so much food. There are beasts in the jungle. And your fellow passengers are not to be trusted.

Survival: That’s your first objective. You need to make it to the next hand, and from there to the next table, and from there to the remaining tables, and so on.. To do that you can’t just sit on the beach and wait. You have to get off your butt and do a little exploration of the island, take a few chances. You have to find food (chips), water (chips), and to a way to deny these necessities (chips) to the other passengers. So what’s your strategy?

Weapons: What do you have in your arsenal? What makes poker interesting is that everyone has access to the same weapons: rules of the game, knowledge of the odds, insights into character: it’s how you handle those weapons that makes the difference. Your weapons are only as effective as your expertise in handling them. Know the odds, and know your opponents (or at least be actively assessing them as you play)

The Stack: As you move through a tournament each level will bring with it a new crop of generally more skilled players, bigger blinds, and greater pressure. At all times you should be aware of your stack, and how to protect it. While you need to have a consistent strategy and stick to it, that strategy must be adapted to circumstance. You won’t take the same risks in the early part of a tournament as you will toward the latter stages. Be patient, but know when to strike. And when you are confident you hold a winning hand, work the table to build that pot.

Energy and Focus. The difference between a champion and a good player is often very simple: focus. We’ve all seen the speed skater heading toward the finish line suddenly ‘lose an edge’. He may have been the strongest and the fastest, but a momentary lapse of focus and everything is lost. You may have the greatest knowledge of the game, a sure-fire strategy, and a big stack of chips but if you lose focus, aren’t paying attention, and let yourself get pulled into a duel with another player who is paying attention, that may be all she wrote. To maintain your energy and focus in a long tournament take advantage of any breaks to eat well, drink water (never alcohol), stretch and revive. If you get a chance, take a relaxed walk around the block, a bathroom break, and maybe wash your face and brush your teeth. (Back at the table though, don’t let anyone know how refreshed you feel..)

Strategy: No one can tell you what your strategy should be: you know best what works for you. Of course there are plenty of examples (books and books) of strategies that have worked well for others, and a familiarity with these approaches is important. More important to tournament success however, is that your strategy is not obvious to others. Especially at the beginning of a tournament, or when you first sit down at a new table, it’s important to mix it up. Be aggressive one hand. Limp into another. Make a bad play or two. Remember, the good players are paying more attention to how you play, than their own cards. If you don’t mix it up, especially in the beginning, the good players will soon figure you out and – no matter what cards you are dealt, will minimize your effectiveness.

Be Lucky.

Why do you play poker?

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

Why do you play poker – online, or with friends? Is it a different reason for different ‘competition’?

A little money, sure, that’s always a possible motivation. So let’s say that you have a weekly Friday game with a few friends. The most you ever lost at this game was a bit over $200. The most you ever won, about the same. So chances are you didn’t do an analysis of the competition, of the hands that they have played in the past. And you didn’t go online and review their play at one of the big online sites. It’s a friendly game so you just played the cards you were dealt.

Okay so on Saturday, flush with your winnings, you go online and play for cash with the big boys (or at least, with a cast of characters who are not your friends). Now you expect the best – and the worst, from those you play with. You assume that they are not who they pretend to be. You assume that they may be pros, grinders perhaps, making a little pocket money off the amateurs. That’s not necessarily bad either: it excites you, makes you concentrate a little more.

Okay so now in this online game you expect that the competition is also a bit more focused and certainly better prepared than your Fridays. You expect that they know the rules, inside and out, the odds, the statistics. But, you tell yourself, they don’t know you.

What if they did? What if they had an assistant who could analyze your play on a laptop, while you sat there? What if there was more than one, working the table together?

I don’t know about you, but the attraction of poker for me, is in the moment. I want to believe, I am attracted to a scenario where, every player is on their own. Their experience, knowledge, talent and – call it chutzpah, is either in their head and heart at the table, or not. If that’s true, then it’s me against them, one on one. Now there’s gambling going on. Now there’s shared risk.

Here’s what I would hope for: that I am playing with people not too far removed from my own tax bracket. Or if not, that their resources are well known to me; that if they are aware of how I play, it is because they have played against me. When the big boys play at the main table for big money, I understand that the hole-camera is critical to ratings success. But otherwise no one should ever know what cards I played or folded. Not ever. I think it’s cool that Full Tilt lets you play against their top players. But there should be a cap on the money they can bring to the table in a day – if they are playing ‘down’. And they should always make it known what their status is. They are pros, oftentimes wealthy, and nowadays they are on the payroll or part-owners of the big online sites.

And finally, if any of these rules and others is broken, the penalty should be at least a year suspension from all public gambling: online or televised events. And all poker sites should agree to mutually honor any penalties imposed by another.

I am not naïve. My sense is that this golden goose is not going to last. That greed will claim most of the sites, and that there will be massive consolidation. Overall unless strict ethical policies are put in place, the bread and butter of online gaming (donkeys like me) will decided to get more exercise, eat better, and say screw you to the corporate poker world.