Learn Poker With The Texas Holdem

By Adam S. Kingston

Gambling is no more an intimidating pastime for some not used to the idea of placing bets and winning. Suppose you want to get started in the world of gambling, the first thing to try - and it is worth trying - is poker. When you sign up for an account in the best online casinos, you get the chance to see and enjoy different variations of online games. Any beginning player would know that they can start off with the easy and simple games as they learn strategies and perfect their techniques.

One good thing about most casino sites is their free downloads which allow you to be able to go through mastering your skills before you can go any farther. As you earn more skills and learn more techniques and develop the right attitude, you can slowly move up and participate in more thrilling games with the experienced and seasoned poker pros who display more skillful strategies during meets.

Practice to hone your skills

Visit different casinos over the internet and find out the best site that offer poker for both the well-experienced and the new gambler. Be patient while you learn new tricks each time and you can actually get amazing tips from books and from the internet, which you can use during your learning sessions. As you play more you develop more skills and you obviously improve with each session and take note of the fact there is no real ideal strategy in casino games.

Poker is largely based on luck to which any player is bound to and anybody is simply going to be surprised in ways they could never have fathomed. As earlier implied there is no perfect strategy because even the thing seasoned pros learned over the years could fail during unfamiliar instances. This is the true whim of luck, keeping the game up and exciting, otherwise predictability may cause the game to lose its vital aspect.

Starting off with the basics like Texas holdem poker can be a great way to kick start poker as it is simple and the strategies are easy to pick up, and then leave it to your luck to do the rest. It will take some time before you learn to place the right bets as well as control them and read the hands of others. - 31897

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Texas Hold'em: Advanced Betting Techniques - Part 3 of 3

By Daniel L. Cox

Winning poker comes down to being able to squeeze a profit out of tough situations. The object is not to win every hand played, but to win every hand you play. The best way to do this is to out bet your opponents. Every bet made should have a purpose. Either it is made to induce a weaker hand to fold, or it is made to maximize the winnings on the hand.

There are many opportunities to outplay your opponents, and you have to know which opponents you can outplay. It is difficult to finesse weak players. The slow play often backfires because one of the loose limpers will hit a hand. The bluff does not work, since these players call with any two cards. The following sections demonstrate many of the advanced aspects of the game and how best to play them.

Selective Aggression

Showing selective aggression by taking the lead in betting can win many pots. This is true from early position or after other players check to you in middle or late position. A strong raise under the gun from a tight player usually represents a strong hand, as does a re-raise from late position. One can use these bets to increase the pot size with a strong hand or to take down the pot with a semi-bluff when holding a big drawing hand.

Fallacy of Pot Commitment

Many poker advocates espouse that at a certain point in a betting round the amount of chips you have already put in the pot requires that all of your remaining chips should follow. Sometimes, even if the pot or implied odds warrant an All In bet, it is not the right move. If you put your opponent on a hand that you feel you cannot beat, fold- no matter how many chips you have invested-so you may live on to fight another day (or at least another hand).

Learning to Let Go

Never become so married to a hand that you cannot lay it down. You have to pay attention to the community cards as they fall. You have to watch the betting patterns of the players and see how they correspond to previous hands. Most players use a slow play at one time or another. Due to this, a premium starting hand can fall to a better one. They also fall to limpers or big blinds that hit miracle flops or mediocre hands that improve tremendously on the flop.

The majority of the money you lose does not come from folding pre-flop hands that hit big. Instead, it comes from keeping the second-best hand and paying off the best hand at the river. Getting married to a hand that was initially strong is a critical error when playing Hold'em. There is an old adage in 7-Card Stud that says you should fold as soon as your hand is not the best on the table. In Hold'em, unlike 7-Stud, you cannot see what cards the other players have, so it is not possible to fold as soon as you are beat. You can try to avoid having the second-best hand by folding hands that may lose pre-flop. If someone in early position puts in a strong raise, fold that Qs-Jh or low pair. You can reasonably assume the raiser is holding Ace-King, Ace-Queen, King-Ten or now has a high pair.

You should throw your hand away the minute you know you cannot win. To continue to call or raise because your hand was very strong early is highly unprofitable. Constantly watch the board and modify your decision to hold or fold as each new card appears and as each player reacts to the board with their actions or inactions. If you cannot learn to let go-even those pocket Aces-you can lose a large number of chips over the course of a gaming session or during a tournament.

When you are not sure where you stand with your hand, it is alright to fold. Even if your opponent is known as a blind stealer or often bluffs, keeping a weak hand is never the right move. Continuing on when you are not sure you have the best hand is often costly, in both chips and emotions. Of course, if you are planning to bluff, keep the hand and attack if you sense weakness.

Putting on the Brakes

One thing that is important to winning poker is recognizing when to put on the brakes. No-limit poker is all about aggression, but not knowing when to exercise caution is costly. The betting strategies above are when, at each street, you feel you have the dominant hand. Trying to gauge the strength of another player's hand with a check or a call is the correct play when you are no longer confident of having top hand. The check is also an inexpensive move when changing gears or altering your table image.

Do Not Get Greedy

If you have strong hand, keep watching the board for flush and straight draws and, if noted, put on the brakes. A pocket pair of Eights or Kc-Qc loses value with Ks-8s-Qh-10c-6s on the board. Flopping a set or two pair is hard to lay down, so just limiting your desire to raise and re-raise or go All In can save many chips if your opponent hits.

Being a Table Bully

There is a difference between getting greedy and over-betting your hand and purposely controlling the action when you have a larger stack. This is most common in tournament play, where players develop large-stacks of chips, but is also prevalent in no-limit ring games. Any time your stack is larger than the other players at the table, you can become a table bully. The purpose is to use your chip stack to force other players out of a hand with the threat of their losing it all. This is an effective way to steal blinds and force medium to good hands to fold without challenging your hand. - 31897

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