That's a horrible way to play the game.Parl said:I know somebody who insists on playing Texas Hold-em where nobody bets until after the flop!! There's no blinds either, just an ante.
Everybody who plays it under his rules says that "poker" is pretty much all luck, but of course it's nearly all luck if you've taken away 90% of your ability to figure the state of your opponents' hands.
They don't see the point in the betting round before the flop, and how it assists in your analysis of the situation as it stands after the flop.
I'm up to over $450 now.B-Rad Lascelle said:Currently on a streak of 8 consecutive cashes between 6 Double or Nothings, one 24th-place finish in a 500-person capped MTT and one Double Shootout satellite win to the Sunday Million. I effectively turned $5 into a bankroll of $294 in just over 24 hours built on a foundation of Double or Nothing play. Going to stick with the $20 tables until I lose one. Many thanks!
XiaNaphryz said:The WSOP final table's in a week or two, right?
Even if you don't think you're doing anything, you easily could be. You really need to pay close attention to everything you're doing - in that sort of game, it sounds like you can easily set up your opponents into reading something entirely different.VALIS said:The weekly home game my GF and I play in is starting to freak me out. These guys are really into reading each other's tells, and the accuracy is uncanny.
One time I had pocket aces, the call comes around to me and I min raise. Only one other person calls me, so we're heads up. Both the flop and the turn don't look like anything that can beat me, and since the guy I'm heads up against is notoriously a big pusher, I keep checking thinking he's going to see me as weak and try to price me out, then hit him with the aces. He doesn't bite, finally I bet 4x the big blind on the river and he folds. The guy next to me then goes, "Okay, let's see those aces." The fuck? How? Maybe my slow play was a little obvious (min raises usually never work), but still to call my pocket aces? Crazy.
Another time the small blind to my right folded to my big blind because he thought I was going to raise his call because I was in a "betting posture." I don't think I moved an inch. Didn't reach for my chips, didn't shift forward, didn't think I did anything telling at all. But he was right.
Big pot late in the game, one guy folded to another's big push because he said he rocked in his chair when the turn card came out, and he never rocks in his chair, so he must've been happy. Again, he was right.
Had to be 4 or 5 other instances of that tonight when someone called out someone else's barely noticeable smirk or squint and accurately predicted their situation. All this game-within-a-game stuff is fun and interesting, but it's pretty intimidating, too. I think I'm gonna wear a fucking deep sea diver's helmet to the game next Thursday.
Well I know what I'm doing next SaturdayMister Zimbu said:It starts on Nov 6th at 3:00pm EST and you'll be able to watch it live on ESPN3 if you have it. They'll play down to heads up. Heads up begins Nov 8th at 11:00pm EST.
Had a blast watching the final table via an online gamecast last year (while playing my own weekly live game oddly enough). Almost every hand that went to showdown wound up with the underdog sucking out. Exciting stuff!rhfb said:Well I know what I'm doing next Saturday
Also not so angry at poker as I made quite a bit of money over this weekend. Helps to have full houses when they have flushes![]()
Yeah pay close attention to what you do and throw in some fake tells. Just do a whole bunch of random stuff at times so people find it hard to read you. Also, frequently change up your betting patterns. I'm notorious for being really tight-fisted, so I'll bluff with high bids every once in a while just to scare people off the pot.VALIS said:The weekly home game my GF and I play in is starting to freak me out. These guys are really into reading each other's tells, and the accuracy is uncanny.
One time I had pocket aces, the call comes around to me and I min raise. Only one other person calls me, so we're heads up. Both the flop and the turn don't look like anything that can beat me, and since the guy I'm heads up against is notoriously a big pusher, I keep checking thinking he's going to see me as weak and try to price me out, then hit him with the aces. He doesn't bite, finally I bet 4x the big blind on the river and he folds. The guy next to me then goes, "Okay, let's see those aces." The fuck? How? Maybe my slow play was a little obvious (min raises usually never work), but still to call my pocket aces? Crazy.
Another time the small blind to my right folded to my big blind because he thought I was going to raise his call because I was in a "betting posture." I don't think I moved an inch. Didn't reach for my chips, didn't shift forward, didn't think I did anything telling at all. But he was right.
Big pot late in the game, one guy folded to another's big push because he said he rocked in his chair when the turn card came out, and he never rocks in his chair, so he must've been happy. Again, he was right.
Had to be 4 or 5 other instances of that tonight when someone called out someone else's barely noticeable smirk or squint and accurately predicted their situation. All this game-within-a-game stuff is fun and interesting, but it's pretty intimidating, too. I think I'm gonna wear a fucking deep sea diver's helmet to the game next Thursday.
Ya I've been watching the final table for the past few years live. Last years took quite a bit of time :lol Best part are the side commentary from the Pros they rope in and not knowing the hole cards.B-Rad Lascelle said:Had a blast watching the final table via an online gamecast last year (while playing my own weekly live game oddly enough). Almost every hand that went to showdown wound up with the underdog sucking out. Exciting stuff!
Most people figure Racener is the best bet to win it all. I'll be cheering for Jarvis and Duhamel as they're Canadians.
Coverage of the Final 18 being widdled down to the November Nine airs Tuesday night on ESPN. Worth watching if only for the legendary hand between Affleck and Duhamel that made him the chip leader.
That confrontation between Jarvis and Mizrachi was absolutely sick. Especially given the way the board developed after the all-in & call.rhfb said:Ya I've been watching the final table for the past few years live. Last years took quite a bit of time :lol Best part are the side commentary from the Pros they rope in and not knowing the hole cards.
Unbelievable. Was he bluffing all night and finally got caught? Was he just fatigued?newelly87 said:Epic blowup from Joseph Cheong![]()
Also doesn't seem like a giant douchebag.ToxicAdam said:Duhamel qualified through a Pokerstars qualifier
Rooting for him.