poker tips

HOLD’EM FOR BEGINNERS

ADVANCED CONCEPTS

SPECIAL SITUATIONS

PLAYING SOME HANDS

CONTINUING EDUCATION

DICTIONARY

 

 

      

 

A PAIR ON THE BOARD


  In tight games, a pair on the board does not automatically present a significant risk that   someone has three of a kind.

  In fact, depending on the rank of the pair, there might not be much risk at all.

  In Q Q 7 and a flop of Q 7 7 . That’s because players are more likely to have   played a hand with a Queen in it than a hand with a 7 in it.

  This is not true in a loose game. In a loose or very loose game, the risk that a pair on   the board has given someone three of a kind is significant. Tread cautiously.

MADE HANDS

  There are three kinds of made hands:

          1. A strong hand that might improve. Top pair or a large overpair are examples.
          2. A very strong hand that can improve. Examples are a set or a straight with a flush               draw.
          3. A very strong hand that won’t improve. A flopped straight or flush are examples.

    A Strong Hand that Might Improve

  In most game conditions, this kind of hand, which is probably the best hand, should be   played aggressively on the flop. You want to bet or raise in order to reduce the pot odds   that players calling with draws are getting.

  When the game gets loose, however, and especially when the game gets very loose, the   situation changes.

  Now, if the flop contains draws, in particular a flush draw but sometimes also a straight   draw, the idea of Morton’s theorem kicks in and the best hand is not always the one to   benefit from bets and raises on the flop.

  In loose or very loose game conditions, usually you should bet top pair or an overpair, but   you usually should not raise with it.

  In very loose-aggressive games, often you should not even bet top pair.

  The chances of being raised by a draw and getting many callers are just too great, and you   won’t benefit from those bets on the flop if there are many loose callers.

  The benefit will go to the best draw, not the best hand. When you add the possibility that   you might not actually have the best hand, then it pays to be careful in very.


  loose-aggressive games with hands that you would be betting very aggressively in tighter   or more passive games.

  The looser the game, the more often the best thing to do is to wait until the turn to get   aggressive with strong hands.

  Examples of what I mean by strong hands that might improve are A A with a flop of 10    9 3 or the same flop with a hand of overpair, if you’re not best now then you   probably have about five outs-another Ace or a 3 will probably be good enough.

  With the top pair and a good kicker, you might only have the three Aces as outs, because if   you’re not best, then it’s likely that another 10 makes a full house for someone.

  In either of these examples you should usually play the hand very strongly on the flop. The   exception comes when the game is both very loose and very aggressive.

  Then you’re likely to have players with good draws raising and reraising.

  As I showed earlier, if the field is large and their combined outs are large, then you won’t   benefit from bets and raises on the flop, even though you probably have the best hand.

  Just a small change in these hands, however, can make a big difference.

  If you had A A or A 10 to give you to a three-flush backdoor draw, then that would   add about the equivalent of two outs to the hands.

  Those extra outs, combined with the value as the probable best poker hand, are usually enough to   play the hand very aggressively, even against a large loose and aggressive field.

  In close situations look for a little extra.  If you don’t have it, you should slow down.

   

Pick the Right Table / Picking a Seat / Theories of Poker / Betting Theory: The Odds

A Theory of Starting Hand Value

A Theory of Flop Play: Counting Outs and Evaluating Draws

The Dynamics of Game Conditions / Table Image / Player Stereotypes

Women and Poker / Spread-Limit Games / Double Bet on the End Games / Kill Games

Short-handed Games / Tournaments / No-limit and Pot-Limit Poker

 

Our Partners

Casino Software India | Playwin Poker | Poker.tj

poker online

© COPYRIGHT 2005-06 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED WWW.POKER.TJ