Reaching A New Level of Popularity

June 29, 2009 by Poker Boy  
Filed under Poker Pros




of poker has recently reached a new level of popularity. Poker tournaments are regularly featured on sports and entertainment networks. Skilled professional poker players like Annie Duke, Phil Hellmuth, Chris Moneymaker, and Daniel Negreanu have become unlikely celebrities. Variations of the card game are showcased at casinos around the world. Poker is no longer played in back rooms by a select number of card players. Texas Hold ‘Em, Carribean Stud, and Omaha are just a few of the most played types of poker. Las Vegas is known around the globe as one of the top destinations for gaming. Most serious gamblers believe that Vegas offers the best odds for winning among the world’s gaming meccas. Some of the top poker rooms in Las Vegas include The Bellagio, The Venetian, and The Mirage. Many professional players such as Jen Harmon and Chip Reese can often be spotted playing in the well-run Bobby’s Room at the Bellagio. Texas Hold ‘Em fans will be thrilled with the offerings at The Venetian. Hold ‘Em is the most played poker game at this location. The Mirage boasts a broad variety of poker variations and limits. This is the place for players desiring a smorgasbord of poker samplings. It’s interesting to note that The Excalibur in Vegas has recently made the move to change all of their poker tables to fully automatic tables. Spokespeople for Excalibur have likened this new poker playing experience to playing at an online poker room. Atlantic City is another renowned destination for serious poker playing. The Trump Taj Mahal, The Borgata, and The Tropicana are casinos with outstanding poker rooms. The trump has a vast selection of various poker games and limits. Daily tournaments are hosted in their massive poker room. The Borgata has a recently renovated poker room that offers Vegas-style poker in Atlantic City. The staff has an exceptional reputation for service at this locale. The Tropicana, situated on this city’s boardwalk, offers a large variety of poker games at over 43 tables. Visiting poker players will want to try a hand of the casino’s signature brand of hold ‘em called “Pink Chip.” Poker enthusiasts that want to stay close at home have the option of playing the game in online poker rooms. Some of the best online casinos include PokerStars, Titan Poker, and Full Tilt Poker. PokerStars is the largest online poker room in the world. It’s estimated that there are over 60,000 players in the online rooms during peak hours. The site offers users the opportunity to play with poker celebs. Chris Moneymaker and Gregory Ramer both got their poker careers started at this online casino. The top benefits of Titan Poker are the fast gaming action and inviting graphics. Titan is also a well-known online poker room. Full Tilt Poker is endorsed by many professional poker players including Phil Ivey, Chris Ferguson, and John Juanda. This venue also offers a chance to play with big-name players. This online casino is especially suited for high rollers. It isn’t unusual for pots to exceed $20,000 at Full Tilt. For more information on poker, visit http://casinomicroblog.com and http://pokermicroblog.com

The Best Poker Players Of All Time

June 29, 2009 by Poker Boy  
Filed under Poker Pros




The best of anything is a matter of opinion and perspective, and this is absolutely true when trying to decide who are the best poker players. This also has to be broken into tournament play, cash game play, and the type of poker game. Some poker players are great in certain games like Holdem and not so great in other games. According to what is said about Chip Reese, the great poker player, many professionals think he would be the choice, even though his WSOP wins are not as prolific as Brunson, Chan, and Hellmuth. However, Reese won three WSOP tournaments before his death in 2007. In 2006, Reese won the prestigious $50,000 Buy-in Horse Tournament at the WSOP. The Horse tournament is difficult to win, as it combines several poker games in one tournament. These are Holdem, Omaha, Razz, Seven-card Stud, and Seven-card Stud Hi Low. Reese’s long time friend, Doyle Brunson, considered him one of the best poker players he ever played against. That is high praise from a player many considered the Godfather of Poker. Brunson, Hellmuth, and Johnny Chan are considered the best when it comes to playing Holdem. Hellmuth has the most wins at the WSOP at this time with eleven wins all in Holdem.

The Poker Kid, Daniel Negreanu, after a failed try at Las Vegas poker when he was 21, has come on very strong in his play in TV tournaments like the WPT and other tournaments that were TV oriented. Negreanu is also considered a very tough cash game player, unlike Hellmuth who is considered an excellent Holdem tournament player, but an average cash game player. The top cash game players are supposedly happy to see him show up for the big cash games in Vegas.

T J Cloutier, another long time opponent and friend of Doyle Brunson, has long been considered one of the best players in the poker world. His consistency is amazing in showing up at final tables. His cash game prowess has always stood him in good stead. Like Brunson, he makes few mistakes, and players who win against him are usually just a shade luckier than he was in the tournament.

One of the long time faces at final tables is the player, Dan Harrington. He made the final table two years in a row against huge fields in the WSOP. That is a testament to his skill at playing tournament poker. In one website vote, he was voted the best player of the professionals.

Some of the recent winners of the WSOP main event have become money leaders, or very high on the list of earnings due to the huge 1st place prize money. However, few if any are considered the best poker player in the world at this time. It will take several years to see if these winners were a one trick player or have the real skill to get to final tables again.

The public has little knowledge of another group of players that are extremely good players. These are the players that take a seat in some of the biggest cash games in the world. Las Vegas has long been the place to play if a player wanted to play in a poker game which had the highest stakes Almost every day, you can see some of the best cash game players play in places like the Rio, the Bellagio, or the Venetian casino. These games are not only for solid players, but also for players with ample resources to play in a game where a bad day could be well over a $100,000 loss. This play not only takes money to play, but the courage to take that level of risk on the turn of a card. These players have to live with the risk that a better hand can ***** a solid hand. Many of these player-participants are only known to the cash players and are rarely seen on TV. The only place some of them have been seen is playing in the High Stakes Poker program that is now on TV. But when you watch their play, you can easily see that they do not play bad hands. It is also obvious that they are not prone to making playing mistakes or bad calls. Some of these players cannot afford to play in tournaments, as they would lose too much time and would make less money than they do in cash games. The only time you will see them is in a game like High Stakes Poker, or in a big cash game in a casino. Yet, several of them could be rated in the running for best poker player. Their play warrants it as well as their annual winnings.

Conclusions

The best poker players of all time come down to personal choice and perception. Most of the well-known names in the current poker scene have shown they know how to play very well. Current old timers remember some of the old time players as the best they ever played against. The problem is most people never saw them play. Stu Unger was a kid when he first won the WSOP two years in a row. His play was the best, say the players who tried to beat him. Unfortunately for him, he was a drug addict and addicted to other forms of gambling like sports betting and horses. He disappeared from play after his second win, and when he came back for a third try, he won again. Three tries in the WSOP and three wins. That is an amazing record. The question that still goes unanswered is how good would he have been if he had taken care of himself and lived a less wild life. His talent was at a level that most players only dream about. His name has to be considered when discussing the best poker players. His mental skills were genius level as was his card playing skill. His weakness was his drug addiction. Make your own choice as to the best poker player. Your pick is as good as most.



What to Look for to Find Good Online Poker Rooms

June 28, 2009 by Poker Boy  
Filed under Poker Rooms




Read this article if You are looking for good online poker rooms. It will show You what exactly makes up a good online poker room and how to find one. I will discuss all the aspects You should look for before You decide to join online poker rooms.

First of I want to give You a list of things to consider when choosing a poker room. Some might be very obvious to You while others won’t. So let’s get started.

The most important thing in my opinion is the poker client or poker software the room uses. There are many different poker softwares on there on the net. Some are used by many poker rooms, like the microgaming or the boss media client. Other poker rooms have developed their own software.

As important as the software is the reputation of the poker room. You will not want to play at sites that are not fully secure or where You encounter problems when trying to cash out Your money.

Third thing is customer support. You should check this out before signing up, just by contacting the room and see how long You will have to wait for a response.

Fourth important point is the quantity of games offered and how many players are online, as well as the quality of Your opponents.

Now let’s get back to the poker software. If You play poker a lot then You will use it for many hours. So if the look and feel of the client doesn’t appeal to You then You will not enjoy the game as much as You should. It is also important that the software supports all features that You as a player needs. If You play at multiple tables at the same time then it is vital to You that You can freely resize and move tables on Your Desktop. Not all poker rooms support this. A great software for this is Full Tilt Poker where You can even store multiple layouts for different numbers of open tables and easily switch between them while playing.

The reputation of the room. Check out the website of the poker room. Are their games monitored by a third party to ensure that the games are fair and the random number generator used to shuffle the cards is truly random? Which authority or legislation is the poker room regulated by ? You will want to avoid offshore sites that are barely regulated by anyone at all. Have there been payment issues in the past?

Good customer support is also a must have for a good online poker room. If You send them an email You can expect them to get back to You within 24 hours. At least during weekdays. In my experience the customer support is usually a good way to measure how long it will take for Your payouts to be handled. If a simple email takes them more than a day, then You will probably have to wait even longer when requesting a cashout.

The quantity of the games offered is important too. Not everyone likes to play No Limit Hold’Em all day long and good poker rooms will offer You many more games like Omaha, Stud or Draw Poker Games.

The quantity of players online is also important, especially for people who prefer the not so popular varieties of poker. It’s of no use to You when the poker room offers Omaha games, but it takes hours before a table is filled because there are few opponents.

The quality of Your opponents is vital to You of course. Rooms with many weak players will give You more profit, but unless You have access to poker databases ( there are some available online, but usually You will have to pay to use them ) it will be hard to know in advance. On the other site rooms with many good players enable You to learn from them and become a superb player Yourself faster.



Poker After Dark s3 e1 p1 2008 – Dream Table

June 28, 2009 by Poker Boy  
Filed under Poker Vids




First show of Poker After Dark in 2008 daniel negreanu – phil hellmuth – jeniffer harman – mike matusaw – scotty nguyen – Ken Light …

Glossary of Poker Terms Pt. 2

June 27, 2009 by Poker Boy  
Filed under Poker Pros




Sometimes poker players seem to be speaking in a different language. Here is a list of commonly used poker slang and terminology beginning with letters C – E so you can get acquainted with what players are actually saying.

Calling Station: A calling station is a player who calls (rather than raise, bet or fold) unusually often. They are considered to be the worst type of players. “I love playing with calling stations.”

Call-me bet or Sucker bet: This is a very small bet which seems to cry out to the opponent “Call me.” It is made when a player has a very strong hand and wants to be called. “He bet $1 on the river, how could I not call?”

Card Rack, Rack or Rush: When a player picks up a number of premium hands in a short period of time they are said to be a card rack, a rack, or on a rush. “He raised 12 hands in a row, he was just on a great rush.”

Check-raise: A check-raise is a high profile poker move where a player first checks then raises when someone bets. It is considered to be the strongest move in poker. “I had him trapped so I check-raised a sucker bet and had him priced in.”

Cold Deck: A single hand with several different players all possessing unusually strong cards. It is said to be a cold deck because poker cheats have been known to replace a live deck with an illegitimate pre-arranged “cold” deck to trick other players. “I had a full house, the lucky idiot had four-of-a-kind! How am I going to fold?! What a cold deck!”

Community Cards: These are cards that are put face up on the table and belong to everyone still in the hand at once. “I don’t like Hold’em because it becomes too inexact with all of those community cards.”

Computer Hand: The Queen-7 is referred to as the “computer hand” because it is mathematically the hand with the most average pre-flop strength in Texas Hold’em. “I usually call with anything better than the computer hand from the big blind.”

Cowboys: A pocket pair of Kings. I don’t know the epistemology behind “cowboys” but Kings are called cowboys just the same. “I love to look down and see cowboys.”

Crack Aces: Whenever you have beaten someone holding pocket Aces you are said to have “cracked Aces.” “Sure I lost the tournament, but I was holding Aces, sometimes they just get cracked.”

Dead Man’s Hand: A pair of Aces and a pair of eights to make two pair. This is referred to as the Dead Man’s Hand because Wild Bill Hickok was holding it when he was shot dead at the poker table. “I’ve made a lot of money with the Dead Man’s Hand, I don’t get what all the fuss is about.”

Defender or Protector: This is a player who calls most raises when he or she is a blind. They are said to be defending or protecting their chips which have already gone into the pot. “Phil Ivey is a famous defender.”

Deuce or Duck: A two. “Deuce on the flop means nothing.”

Dime: A dime is a $10,000 chip. “I’ve only ever bet a dime in a tournament.”

The Dolly Parton: 9-5 in the Hole. This nickname stems from Dolly’s song “Working nine to five.” “How does Dolly Parton have a poker hand named after her?”

Donkey: A bad player is referred to as a donkey. “The guy was such a donkey he called me with middle pair.”

Double Belly Buster Straight Draw: To have two inside straight draws simultaneously. “I was holding 4-5 and by the time we got around to the river the Board read A 2 7 8. I was looking for a 3 or a 6.”

The Doyle Brunson: The Doyle Brunson is an unsuited 10-2. It is called the Doyle Brunson because Doyle won two consecutive WSOP Main Events holding 10-2. “I love Doyle Brunson but I **** Doyle Brunsons.”

Drawing Dead: When a player has no outs which could come to make a winning hand, they are said to be drawing dead. “Turn paired the board and I was drawing dead.”

Early Position: Players who are amongst the first to act post-flop are said to be in early position. “Early position is the best position to bluff from.”



Poker Strategy – A Simple Six Step Guide to Big Profits

June 26, 2009 by Poker Boy  
Filed under Poker Strategy




There is no one set strategy that suits everyone in poker. We’re all different, and if everyone could win by playing the same way, then poker would not be such a challenge, or as much fun!

Devising an Individual Poker Strategy for YOU

You need to work out a strategy in poker that is customised to your personality and this involves many things. Are you a tight player or a lose player? What game do you want to focus on – Texas hold’em, Omagh hold’em or another game? What is your bankroll? Do you want to play poker seriously for a living, or as a fun pastime? For big winnings at online poker, you will find below a simple six-point guide to forming your own individual poker strategy.

Poker Strategy #1 – Adopt the Correct Mindset

If you want to be successful in poker, then you must really have the desire to succeed. In fact, this is true not just in poker, but also in ALL areas of life. If you don’t have the desire to succeed from the outset, then you are probably not going to put in the required effort to earn those big winnings.

Poker Strategy #2 – Learn the Basics for Profit

How many players play poker online without knowing the basics of the game? The answer is the majority; don’t be eager to play until you know the basics. You need to learn all you can before you play including: Bluffing, pot odds, slow playing, rules and variations of the game and the game you wish to focus on. Sure, you can’t learn everything from books – you need experience as well, but you don’t want to gain experience without knowing the basics first, it will be more expensive!

Poker Strategy #3 – Have a Money Management Plan

How much money do you have to play poker with and what level of stakes should you play at? You need to decide this, and as rule of thumb, set a bankroll aside that will give you staying power of at least 200 – 300 bets. Don’t make the mistake of playing in high stakes games unless you have the experience and the money.

Poker Strategy #4 – Expand Your Knowledge of the Game

You will never know everything about the game; there is always something new to learn. Try to keep learning all the time, and have an open mind to new poker ideas and strategies. Do some reading at least once a month to improve your strategy.

Poker Strategy #5 – Focus on other Players

Poker is a game of psychology and you need to beat other players mentally. Keep in mind, that as we all know, the best hand does not always win at poker. Pay as much attention to the way your opponents play as your own play.

Poker Strategy #6 – Analysis Yourself

Continually, after each game, reflect on your own play. Don’t just analyse why you won, but why you lost as well. Why did your bluff not work? Why is your slow playing strategy losing you money? Keep thinking about what went wrong, what went right and how you can improve your overall play.

A Poker Strategy for Success

Not everyone can become a great poker player; life is simply not like that. However, we believe ANYONE can become a good poker player, i.e. win more money than they lose, but this is dependent on having an individual strategy for profit that reflects you.



Beating Up the Donkey or the Monkey?

June 26, 2009 by Poker Boy  
Filed under Poker Pros




Any poker fan knows where they have heard “donkey” before: Phil Hellmuth, “resort[ing] to one of his favorite zoological epithets, saying it’s hard to win when he’s so smart and his opponents are playing ‘donkey poker’,” a recent article on Phil stated. As much fun as Hellmuth can be to watchers and as annoying as he can be to his opponents, this is a typical case of tantrum reaction – or as a psychological source suggested, a dominant monkey behavior.

According to psychologist Steve Pavlina, “the mind is like a hyperactive monkey.” More than once in our lives, if not everyday, we are prompt by the uncontrollable urge to vent, slur or strop. Some of us choose to close up and keep quiet until it passes, others become chronic complainers, and there are few who even believe it’s not only acceptable but also appropriate to do an impression of a toddler in a supermarket after mom said, “No, Philly, no gummy bears for you this week.” However, approximately at the age of 25, most adults learn that the only two things you accomplish by displaying a tantrum are to embarrass yourself and amuse others. Of course, once some become powerful or successful enough, they go back to their old ways because they know their subordinates or fans will tolerate, condone and even reward such behavior. They become powerful toddlers.

Mentally, when humans experience a negative emotion – for example, a bad beat in poker – they react in different ways, which according to Dr. Tim Lavalli “can include attitude ([getting] angry), emotion ([stalking] away from the table talking to yourself), belief (that guy is a donkey!), [or] behavior (take it well or take it badly, it’s still behavior).” These emotions make us uncomfortable, and in order to ease that discomfort, the mind naturally starts looking for ways to settle it down. However, through cultural imitation, we have learned to dwell on the negative emotions and block our natural solution-seeking response. We grow hopeless. This makes us feel anguish and desperation and suddenly our world collapses, which pushes us to surrender to any of the reactions above mentioned. Our animal instincts resemble a monkey. If you do not get to know and control the monkey inside you, your mind will be dominated by it.

Complaining is the most socially acceptable reaction, but it is as harmful and as primitive as a tantrum: it perpetuates negativity and blocks you from brainstorming for solutions. Capitalism goes hand in hand with complaining: as consumers, we face countless situations in which almost every service we pay for makes us complain.

A universal human behavior, complaining seems like a normal way to express ourselves; even lawyers make a living out of it, but it is often confused with standing up for oneself until it becomes a constant chronic ailment and our friends and family start criticizing us by our constant bickering. So, what do we do about complaining? Is there anything to do with it?

Finnish artists Tellervo Kalleinen and Oliver Kotcha-Kalleinen have actually turned the energy of complaining into a world-wide organization called Complaints Choir. Literal translation of the Finnish expression Valituskuoro, complaints choir is used to describe the phenomenon of lots of people complaining simultaneously, and when the couple caught themselves simultaneously complaining about how cold a winter day was while taking a walk, they thought: “Wouldn’t it be fantastic to take this expression literally and organize a real Complaints Choir?”

They proposed the choir project to different event organizations they worked with as artists but were not taken seriously until they talked to the people at the Springhill Institute in Birmingham, who loved the initiative, maybe because Birmingham is known as the “arsehole province of England,” as some quote. This project has already spread around the world and it is most popular in places like Hong Kong, Gothenburg and Buenos Aires, where the level of complaining is higher than in other areas. The purpose of the choirs is to liberate the frustration of usual complaints and give them a positive, humorous outlet by singing them collectively.

Thus, what happens if we don’t do anything about it? The worst part about complaining is how addictive it becomes and how it can attract more negative experiences to one’s life. As Dr. Pavlina states, “your lifetime of thoughts acts like a resonating band of intention. That band’s overall signature determines what kind of life you live. A chronic complainer will manifest a predominantly negative life. A positive thinker will manifest a predominantly positive life.”

Surprisingly enough, negative people who often let their interior monkeys control them are aware of this problem and are not happy about it. “I act the way I act and I’m not proud of it,” Hellmuth often says of his crybaby antics. Yet he can definitely become trapped or addicted to this behavior to the point of not being able to break away form it. What closes the loop of the negative cycle of complaining is beating yourself up for being negative. Dr. Pavlina calls this process useless, since he says it is exactly like fighting with a hyperactive monkey: “the more you fight with the monkey, the more hyper it becomes. So, instead, just relax and observe the monkey until it wears itself out… Complaining is the denial of responsibility. And blame is just another way of excusing yourself from being responsible. But this denial still wields its own creative power.” You can catch yourself and learn from your behavior to deal with the monkey better until it starts losing the protagonist role in your life.

When experiencing a bad beat in poker, as any other unpleasant experience, one must see it as an opportunity to improve. It is a sign that you lack knowledge about a certain situation and by “failing” and analyzing how you could have avoided it or succeeded at it, you acquire the knowledge necessary to actually conquer it next time. According to Dr. Lavalli, if instead “you walk away from a bad beat and your entire thought process is ‘That guy was an idiot’ or ‘I am just unlucky’, then you have lost a valuable opportunity to improve your game.”

An exception to the rule, Phil Hellmuth has managed to become of the top poker players in history, despite his negativity. Even worse, according to Hellmuth, “the irony is that back in ’97 and ’98 people were saying my behavior was bad for poker. And I’ve really tried to stop whining. I really want to be better for me. But the last couple of years my sponsors, my producers, my agents, my companies tell me they want me to be Phil Hellmuth, the bad boy of poker. That’s what sells and grows the brand.”

Doesn’t it make you wonder how a world poker champ can accumulate bracelets and millions and still be popular in the gaming industry for behaving like a chimp? Well, such is the excitement of the game. The truth is that power and fame will set our interior monkeys free if we let them, and Phil’s drama sells. People are fascinated by the monkey act, which sets a toxic example for any player who longs to get as far as Hellmuth in game history. The good thing is that anybody can achieve the success Phil has without the embarrassing toddler behavior. Hopefully the poker champs of the future will honor that.



Phil Hellmuth Jr. – Professional Poker Player Review Series

June 26, 2009 by Poker Boy  
Filed under Poker Pros




Phil Hellmuth Jr. is a Professional Poker Player. He has won 11 bracelets in World Series of Poker and made a great history in the world of poker game. Phillip J. Hellmuth, Jr. or Phil Hellmuth Jr. was born on 16th July in 1964. He was born in Madison which is the capital of the Wisconsin of the United States. He is by profession a poker player. He holds the world record of securing the most bracelets as the champion’s award of the World Series of poker tournament that took place every year in Las Vegas.

Phil Hellmuth Jr. is also a member of the Poker Hall of Fame. This 44 years Professional Poker Player is one of the greatest players all over the world. He is well known for his tough attitude to the other players. He has a very good sense of humor and he often makes sarcastic remarks during the play. Phil Hellmuth Jr. was studied in the University of Wisconsin-Madison for three years. He then dropped out his studies for playing poker as a full time player.

He made himself professional in this play but that was not an easy thing to do. He practiced the strategies for a long time and invented new strategies to win the casino game. He is a self made poker professional of his home town California. He presently lives in Alto in California with his family. His wife is Katherine Sanborn and she is also a poker player. Phil and Catherine have two sons, Phillip and Nicholas.

Phil Hellmuth Jr. is the only poker player who has got 11 bracelets and established a milestone in the way of poker game. He won the bracelets from the year 1989 to 2007. In the year 1989 Phil first took part in the World Series of Poker tournament. In that tournament he got the first bracelet in $10,000 no limit hold’em world championship and won $755,000 as the prize money. In the year 1992, Phil Hellmuth Jr. won in $5,000 limit hold’em and got $188,000 as the prize money. In 1993 world championship he got 3 bracelets in the tournament.

He earned $138,000 in the game of $1,500 limit hold’em, $161,400 in the game of $2,500 no limit hold’em and $173,000 in the game of $5,000 no limit hold’em. After four years of this great achievement he again secured his next bracelet in the year 1997. In this tear Phil Hellmuth Jr. earned $204,000 for winning in the game of $3000 pot limit hold’em. And again after four years of that he won another bracelet in the World Series of Poker 2001.

He earned $316,000 for winning the game of $2,000 no limit hold’em. He already got 7 bracelets and naturally he already became very famous in 2001. In 2003 he again got 2 bracelets and won $171,400 for the game of $2,500 limit hold’em and $410,860 for $3,000 no limit hold’em. He also won a bracelet in 2006 and the latest bracelet he got in the year 2007 and earned $631,863 and $ 637,254 respectively. Phil Hellmuth Jr. is one of the most successful Poker Players in the world.



Various Poker Strategies You Can Employ

June 24, 2009 by Poker Boy  
Filed under Poker Strategy




When playing poker, players use many different poker strategies depending on the opponents seated at the table, the type of hands you have had, the size of the- pot and the odds in the game. Deception is one of the main strategies you can employ to outwit your opponents and try to manipulate them into thinking that you have the winning hand. You may actually have the winning hand but in this game, you won’t know that until the end.

 

Bluffing is one form of a deception strategy in which you know that you have an inferior hand but you still place a bet or raise the bet. You can use a stone-cold bluff when you feel that if you raise the bet all the other players will fold. A semi-bluff means to place a bet on your hand in one round hoping that you will get better cards in the next round to improve your hand. One thing you do need to know about bluffing in poker and that is the situation in which it is advantageous for you to use this strategy. Sometimes it will work against you, such as when you have only a few or you have opponents who do have sufficient bankroll that they will meet any raise you bet.

 

Slow play is another deceptive strategy that is the opposite of bluffing. This means that you make a weak bet when you know you have a strong hand to lead others to think that they have the winning hand and draw them into the betting to increase the size of the pot. You can keep your opponents going by not raising their bets and by just playing along until the final hands are revealed.

 

Other strategies often used in poker include:

- Hand Reading. This is the strategy of making educated guesses about the cards your opponents are playing based on their actions and his/her past playing performances.

- Tells. These are detectable changes in an opponent’s actions or movements based on the cards they see. Once you have been playing with the same players for a while, you will learn to read their expressions, even though they try to maintain a poker face.

 

- Poker Face. With some players you can tell by their ****** expression whether or not they have a good hand. Some of them already know what their telltale signs are and wear sunglasses to hide their eyes or try to hide their faces with large hats so that the other players cannot read their faces.

- Fake Tells. This is a strategy in which you can make your opponents think you have a good hand when, in fact, you don’t. They think they can read you and will therefore fold allowing you to move in and win the pot.

 

Stealing is a strategy similar to bluffing. In this strategy, you raise the bet even though you know that you don’t have a winning hand in hopes that other players will fold. 



Poker News – Be on the Cover Now!

June 24, 2009 by Poker Boy  
Filed under Poker News




Seeing poker in a legal perspective, it may differ a little bit from the online casino gambling. Online poker is relatively legal and it is regulated in wide array of countries which comprise of various nations within the Caribbean Sea and notably the United Kingdoms. In the place of United State particularly in North Dakota, their House of Representative passed a bill during the year 2005 of February with an aim to legalize as well as regulate online poker cardroom operators and the online poker per see. The primary aim of the legislation is to physically locate the whole operation in the state. It was Nigel Payne who testifed in front of the Judiciary committee that they would have to relocate to the state just in case the bill is made into law.

Nonetheless, the measure was defeated during March 20005 by the State Senate later when the US Department of Justice provided a letter to Wayne Stenehjem who is North Dakota’s attorney general. The letter contains the note that online gaming ‘may’ be regarded as illegal plus the pending legislation ‘might’ in one way or another violate the federal Wire Act. On the other hand, a lot of legal experts were against the claim of the DOJ.

Now, for the latest poker news, many poker enthusiasts will be happy that Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) wisely taken a new route in order to win the battle for poker acceptance by the Congress. It was poker news that everyone is talking about. Basically, he introduced a bill that will not mainly focus on the regularization of online gambling, nevertheless it will be able to earmark the income obtained through the collection of taxes for programs that will serve as an assistance to the U.S. citizens who are deeply in need, financially. Through this means, Rep. McDermott is pleading on his knee that those legislators who have beforehand opposed the regulation will be able to open their eyes not to vote against the bill.

The said Human Resources Act of 2008 (H.R. 6501) will be able to funnel revenue which may be as high as $40 billion in just a span of 10 years. This money will be used for programs that would grant job training for those people who belong to the struggling parts of the economy. Furthermore, this will also provide educational assistance that will foster children. In addition, the said legislation will also tender gambling safety and accountability. In view of this, it is not hard to imagine why the National Council on Problem Gambling approved such legislation.

The credit should be given to the two Democratic leaders in the person of Rep. John B. Larson (D-Conn.) who is a vice chair of the Democratic Caucus and Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.), a chairman of the House Democratic Policy Committee. This poker news will surely paint a smile on the faces of people who wanted nothing but to legalize their source of happiness and relaxation; online poker.



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