Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Online Poker Cheating Scam Exposed: Cheat-At-Poker/pokercheatsexposed/No Rules Poker/pokerbot-pro

Visit the Largest Free Online Poker Library at Poker Nation for a Complete Copy http://groups.msn.com/PokerNation/

Warning Scam Alert! You are about to enter the BS Zone.


http://www.cheat-at-poker.com/ or http://www.pokercheatsexposed.com/ will lead you to a link that for 59.95 promises to allow u to cheat at online poker and make $25,000 a week OR YOUR MONEY BACK!!! (don't bother going to the sites because someone has posted the complete book as a comment at the bottom of this post. Click the comment to read it. )The following is from the advert:

"For a small investment of $59.95 you can download the most effective method of making enormous profits playing online poker. Guaranteed. All you have to do is click on the PayPal button on the bottom of this page, and safely and securely place your order with any credit card. Any information you submit is completely safe and will never, ever be shared. Once you complete the order you will have access to The Online Poker Cheaters Tool-Kit instantly. You will then be able to fiercely dominate any player out there! Just imagine what an edge you will have once you learn all these tactics. You will be able to make huge cash at will, whenever you feel like playing.
The Online Poker Cheaters Tool-Kit will change your life forever! Hurry before you miss out on the best opportunity that will ever come your way. *Introductory price of $59.95 will change at any time. **Limited time offer. But wait...we have more for you As was mentioned earlier, we have access and knowledge of all the latest methods and 'underground' tools that are available. If you order The Cheaters Tool-Kit today, we are going to include a FREE BONUS. This is the most radical poker technique available today...
X-Ray Poker Tool- (See what everyone is holding) Information FREE for ordering right now!*Not recommended to use or even attempt. We in no way endorse the use of this tactic. Information for educational and entertainment purposes only.For only $59.95 you really can't go wrong. Is today the day you decide to make a change and start dominating the poker room? There is absolutely no reason anymore to play with fear, anxiety and ignorance. Will you remain the sucker? The decision is yours. *WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO PULL THIS OFFER OFFLINE AT ANY TIME."
( he has moved the time back 4 or 5 times so far)

Well, what you get is an ebook and a link to http://www.pokerbot-pro.com/ that for 59.95 more (and the after you buy that another $90 .oo for the required upgrade) offers you "pokerbot-pro" a winholdemish program that apparently doesn't do as promised, read the following exchange of e-mails between Ken Chan/David Glazen and a "satisfied" and not so bright customer:

From: "David Glazen"
To: "tom shue"
Subject: Re: the poker bot your refund has just been issued and is on the way!

On Apr 11, 2005 7:55 PM, tom shue

david wrote: Hi tom, I am sorry that you feel taken advantage of as that certainly was not my intention. Unfortunatley there is no single winning profile you need to use different ones under different circumstances. I feel bad that you have lost money so if you send me the transaction ID I will send you a refund.

-----Original Message-----
From: tom shue
Date: Mon, 11 Apr 2005 16:23:25 >
To:David Glazen

Subject: the poker bot Well I am completely disappointed in the poker bot... I used it for 48 hours on a 1 to 2able in the solid mode i have lots over 75 dollars... I paid you 59 .00 then i had to pay 89 to up grade the inspector and have lost 75 dollars.. wow it was a huge loss... I would think that if you wanted me to make money as you did you would recommend a profile on the inspector a limit that i should of tried and all information that you have on how to manage the supposed income it generates... I have tried several profiles like the maniac it plays the big hands very aggressive which is great but It plays> too many hands.. If you choose the solid profile it plays way to soft when it has a premium hand like fold ace king off suit in the small blind for no raise... I think the exact specs of the inspector profile u used to make all of this money should of been disclosed....its like the inspector can be modified to work but it should be included information .. I know that the scrip! t that ! you wrote was some work but considering you are selling share ware and a demo inspector you are making a killing.... I feel taken advantage of....I play way better than the bot but i just wanted to play poker when i am asleep and revenue money .. the concept is awesome but the end result is very weak .. I hope you will refund my money or give me information that you used (exact specks and all available information on your limits and strategy).. oh by the way does poker in specotr know you are selling there demo for money oe the makers of auto it just wondering... I am sure you have made a fortune on this idea... Oh by the way I saw the interview u had with poker pages. I thought to told me not to tell anyone. please respond to this email as the last email was left UN answered , My money must of cleared,. Tom Shue ( i feel taken advantage of) "

These people are selling someone elses free demo of Poker Inspector and an upgrade to it w/ a malfunctioning bot!



In the advert they have screen shots from party poker and it shows his username as "steveglazer".

It also shows "$5000 new player freeroll""Make your first deposit to register!" and the "Cash Out" Button is disabled in his party poker account.

Hmmm, play money? No cash account? Freeroll? Steve Glazer(3 names so for for the same guy)? A little suspicious...

What about his magic "X-Ray Poker Tool- (See what everyone is holding)" according to his tome you first download and then run the client/server software at http://www.tightvnc.com/ ). Then ...:

"This software will actually allow you to see another computer as if you were right in front of it. Now it does not take a computer scientist to understand the obvious implications of what you can do with this software and how someone could perhaps use it to gain a massive advantage playing online poker. Let’s just say that me and you were playing heads up on party poker for example and that you were able to use the TightVNC software to see the desktop of my machine. Well that would mean that you can see whatever I can see. So as long as my hole cards were visible to me they would also be visible to you! "

"In order to connect to a target computer the target machine will have to have the TightVNC server running on the computer and you will need to know the password. This can seem like a major stumbling block to those who are not really determined to make massive amounts of cash. But I know that is not you. So if you really are willing to do whatever it takes to win then I know you will find a way around this. It can be done easier then you think believe me."

Hmmm, password and casino server running tightvnc...doesn't seem so magical. If had an in to the poker room's server and a password allowing me unlimited access why do I need your f***ing book and software???

But Ken Chan/David Glazen has more to share with us:

"I must caution you though that it is not legal to install it on someone’s machine without there knowledge so you will have to get their permission first. I cannot and will not encourage any illegal activity whatsoever. I wish you the best of luck and know that your poker success in now at your fingertips.
Well that’s it my friend. Just remember that winning online is all about attitude! So don’t be afraid to do whatever it takes to win. You now have to tools all you need is the will and determination. Best of Luck, Ken Chan." please note all the spelling errors and bs are from the original text which I obtained free via P2P.

You're asking yourself who is this clown?

He appears to be a...drumroll please...

law enforcement officer!

A Clown Cop...

I know you don't believe me so

here's the link to his resume:

http://www.rotman.utoronto.ca/difa/Resumes/KenChan.pdf

It appears that his e-mail address is:

balmon@hotmail.com or

kenchanpoker@gmail.com or

propoker@gmail.com

ONLINE POKER PLAYER, John Maynor,tel # 648-908-4531, E-mail Information is spamming for him.

What you do with this information is up to you. I discourage any illegal activity such as administering a "columbian necktie" or giving him a forced 5 gallon hot soapy enema. But, if you do go against my advice and contact him, tell Ken Chan/David/Steve Glazen or John Maynor that "Professor77" says hi.

Note: I absolutely do not endorse cheating at poker or any of the online cheating programs or books that are foisted on an unwary buying public. Although, some say that the buyers are probably getting what they deserve. If you go against my advice and buy these products I suggest you first buy a condom and then apply KY Jelly or Vaseline to your nether regions because you are about to get royally screwed.










Sunday, May 29, 2005

WSOP Winning Hands List

70 - n/a
71 - n/a
72 - n/a
73 - Pearson, As7s [no pair, beat KJ]
74 - n/a
75 - Roberts; 9s9h [beat AK]
76 - Brunson; Ts2s [full house, beat AJ 2 pair]
77 - Brunson; Ts2h [full house, beat 85 2pair]
78 - Baldwin; QdQc [set, beat 99 - also a set]
79 - Fowler; 7s6d [str8, beat AA]
80 - Ungar; 5s4s [wheel; beat A7 2 pair]
81 - Ungar; AhQh [1 pair Q's, beat T9 str8 draw]
82 - Strauss; AhTc [1 pair T's, beat A4]
83 - McEvoy; QhQs [beat KJ]
84 - Keller; TsTh [beat 64]
85 - Smith; 3s3h [beat A3]
86 - Johnston; AsTh [beat A8]
87 - Chan; As9c [beat 44]
88 - Chan; Jc9c [str8, beat Q7 1 pair]
89 - Helmuth; 9s9c
90 - matloubi - 6s6h [beat 44]
91 - Daugherty; KsJs [beat 73]
92 - Dastmalchi; 8h4c [str8 beat J7 2 pair]
93 - Betchel; Jc6h [beat 74]
94 - Hamilton; Ks8h [beat 85 with 1 pair 8's]
95 - Harrington; 8d9d [1 pair 8's, beat A7]
96 - Seed; 8d9d [2 pair, beat K8]
97 - Ungar; Ah4c [wheel, beat A8]
98 - Nguyen; Jd9c [full house]
99 - Furlong; 5c5d [set, beat 66]
00 - Ferguson; As9c [1 pair 9's, beat AQ]
01 - Mortensen; KcQc [st8, beat AA]
02 - Varkonyi; QdTs [made a full house]
03 - Moneymaker; 54 [made a full house]
04 - Raymer; 88 [made a full house]

Friday, May 27, 2005

Online Poker Cheaters: Good News and Bad News

Here's the good news: If these losers can't play a single hand at a single table well enough to win then if they try playing multiple hands it stands to reason that, even with their ill-gotten knowledge, they will still lose…

Here’s the bad news:
Winholdem allows them to cheat in 2 primary ways:
1. To manually play multiple hands at 1 table or multiple tables under more than 1 account/ID.
2. To program and use "bots" to automatically play hands for the user. Allowing the user to play many more hands than normal and to play multiple accounts/IDs simultaneously.

The following is from Pokerbot.com(their website)
"Supported Online Poker Casino Sites: Paradise Poker, Party Poker and Poker Stars.
WinHoldEm has complete support for the poker game of Texas Hold'Em including real money, play money, limit, no-limit, regular play and tournaments.
"AutoPlayer has the ability to play Hold'Em for you and in fact it probably plays Hold'Em better than you. Obviously the AutoPlayer has nothing to do until you are seated and playing Hold'Em at a WH supported site. It does this by visually reading and analyzing the Hold'Em game state and deciding on a course of action Allin, Bet/Raise, Call/Check or Fold. It will automatically press the necessary button in the poker casino table window for you."
"Online poker casinos do not want you to run WinHoldem. Some poker clients actively attempt to detect WinHoldem on your computer. There is nothing you can do to control how far they will go to do this. If they detect WinHoldem you are essentially at their mercy. Their reactions can range from just simply closing the poker software to closing your account and possibly conscripting your entire bankroll. "
"WinPP is the solution to the problem. WinPP is a remote window control application. Essentially, WinPP is a very basic instance of PCAnyWhere. WinPP gives you the ability to see a copy of a window that is running on another computer. You avoid detection by running your poker software on a machine where WinHoldem is not installed. And you use WinPP to let your WinHoldem machine see the poker window. "
"You need two computers. You must have physical access to two computers connected to a fast network such as a LAN. The idea is to run WinHoldem on one computer and run the online casino software on another computer.
If you want absolute maximum chances to avoid detection, then make sure that WinHoldem is NOT installed on the casino computer. Technically speaking, there is nothing you can do to control exactly what the casino software can or cannot see on the computer where it is running unless you downloaded/installed all casino software to a restricted windows user account and you're running it from that restricted account. "

Professor77 sez "May God have mercy on our enemies because I won't."

Complete List of Winholdem Poker Cheats User IDs

If they're stupid enough to buy, use poker cheat software and then to post about it, I might as well publish they're online IDs (obtained from winholdem support). They appear to be primarily focused on the site Party Poker. If you know any of the following people or have more information please contact me and I will publish it here and post it to the recpoker and twoplustwo forums after I verify it. I suggest that if u play w/ 1 of the mentioned IDs and u r suspicious; get a hand history and forward to me via my blog and I will start crossreferencing IDs that appear at tables together frequently and publish this info here and to the affected poker sites.

The following link will take you to the membership list at Winholdem. Many have email links(dropem a line and tellem what you think, let them know Professor77 said hi!) and a few website links. There are at this time 390 members.
http://www.winholdem.net/forum/memberlist.php


The Following is a complete list of all user id's from winholdem

jcb
RB1
-P-
Zoodoogie
gregg
yukonsm
swiftrhett
NoWay
j_happy
Zabulus
BlackDog
swedencheat
zippy
betme
dreamer
1outer
blobbo
apaul
Gordon
The Bot
jrs
jmags
FTN4Ever
joey3002
foldem
foldem2
jmoe
cheech
airbornemofo
Relevance
Wise1
brianmarc
Robast
xyz123
ezalog123
brianmarK
Rawr
express
tiptop66
Cooterbug
Pokerwise
fuddyduddy
Winpoker
Johnnyboy
LowLimitSoldier
low limit soldier
Tylius
stu_unger
suidmach
gusser
kcj.poker
manos
manos_
benny
Nackademin
holdme
rd3500
sickz
bcherb2
maddog2030
unsmashed
thrain
AndysDad
BettingB
halbemehal
MWM66
Paco
mossman76
PokerEly25
stancan
mildoh
Tophat
Kalin35
cjlax5
timmak
crispvx
Zee
slay2k
bad_dog (UK)
Axcssr
murda024
HowlMan
galaxyqueen
galaxyqueen50
mlamma
kalle66
Scotsman
Smooth
Chasmaster
Str8flush
zero
nenver
j21w
hatchfan
bigbad
albyitaly
andrew25
San Po
snikey
cDeli
Rage
Robert6902
sillywilly
corbyt
j0eYz
maxstax
Foyanontario
fullrange
gregson
jaygee
polkator
jugador615
BSGJunkie
Omar www.wizardshandicapping.com
ditrying
rideoffsoldier
TheStalk
stalker1
menoottawa
YippySkippy
Big_Dog_NY
TenFootBong
bmoney
rjnitto
resuna
samaj
Bot Anic
tkauto
marv
bot-town
knife44
jgsam
Gregatron
Phil
jrz1972
markyD
pokerjet
Cheat_Is_Fun
youcanownland
kd2559
skin1d
pokerslut
botnovice
franklinJ
dispatcher
Aries
masond24
gp
mhornnt
RayPlay
sesik
snowman
brrrblizzard
guiltyspark
kippe
Lormanthe
Wayfarer
Rump Ranger
mmind
neverlose
jdc
accordexi
lAggy
Majik
dvpoker
1TimePost
usernametaken
test
Nova
cOnfESed
bancode
Diamond
PB123
conman
pork
pokerman411
dunn1977
sublime
makewayhomer
whe123
John Jay
holdembotmaker
fishy
TheCoder
Cowheart
Wanderer
botman
albedoa
iplaypoker
shaft
hansol
STLBUM
Basil
cyma
dell
finpot
Pokah
zoz
very lame
White Rabbit
emotive
idinaahuy payse.boom.ru
Helix
Gigolo
GigoloRR
kidchicago
Godzilla99
RaiseManiac
jmt78
SmellyTuna
jmt1778
repco243 www.repco.ru
longrun
Rjdeliman
mike1212
brad
azlb
sjumper
liquidsyphon
WHODATDOOD
TheMagnus
Jim
dupont2br
RF
carapaufrito
baad_ass_grappler
940Johanny www.italian-charms-textbook.com
glue20
Monster
OscarTheGrouch
cubs-freak
ferox
Quadpants
Onionman England
Max In Montreal Canada
bjhuff
Serguei-Roudnevwww.multipureusa.com
cout
NLTyan
ArnoldEsNumeroUno
georgeggg
pmertens
Betty
Gster UK
aalves
Probot
mr poker
Lucian
MunkeySpaz
pokerplayer2005
anjur
opher
panzer
Gamer
LOD
Rabbot
kbzon
kaykad
ilikeaces86
PokerBot www.thenextgames.com
project_jason
cryonix
john@hotmail.com
thecollector510
philanthrope
ABreaux
DUstb2000
botist
george
JollyJoker
floppy
n_mitch
KaZhaR www.phportal.net
hejhej
Sven
mjaou
vectigal1994 www.chi-origin.be
akzeno
adonicane
Trinston
henrhuse
ILoveLamp
sweaver
sandog05
shrwater
curiousgeorge
ccgeorge
housetown
pokstorr
pokstor
lmkpresidio
Vampman
discordia
kinlog
Mart
mts
wild onion
suitedaces
luckbox
kristiangbg
Rikitiki
Maglun1
Serge_FT
stripclubgm
mattie6030
shortywib
rollallday
brm
Phrozt
weirdian
785785785
ht95134
Intexusa
chrismc
stinkypete
futurescrub
pokerpunk
stars
Splitter
jtravers88
easymeok
thefuture
bijanm
DoucheBag
b0b02OO5
486van
Vasia
onepoket
pokermaster
lupette
asdf
asdf1
joenobody
barfbag
pokwire
LooseCall Asheville, NC
ME ME ME
ahunter
ishoni
pokerpassion
Nicky St. Michael
bigdaddy
C3PO
justabum NYC
maxpc
Botter
yanni
il_capo
jonasquinn
MikeS
velesa
FreeAds
bigriki
treniets
escapeII
thedrunkenpolitician
huh?
diada
aDIRTYbum
macdaddy
27schoolst
El Niño
Monavor
grayforeman
coelacanth
rex4334
xtions
pd
Jakenaked
Kidchicago
jdc
Gster
longrun
RaiseManiac
FreeSpirit
wild onion
Gordon
Phil
zippy
PokerBot
adonicane
yanni
ferox
WHODATDOOD
Johnnyboy
bigdaddy
mike1212
jmt78
Zabulus
botist
ccgeorge
stars
opher
kbzon
barfbag
Maglun1
luckbox
cout
Winpoker
betme
escapeII
mememe
splitter
jtravers88
stinkypete
ilikeaces86
phroz
stripclubgm
jim
brm
rollallday
kristiangbg
wayfarer
lmkpresidio
shrwater
sandog05
yippyskippy
sweaver
mjaou
zero
cryonix
ebreaux
thecollector510
liquidsyphon
rjnitto
projectjason
pb123
munkeyspaz
helix
arnolds#1
grappler
dupont2br
themagnus
jdeliman
sesik
whiterabbit
lormanthe
cowheart
bancode
usernametaken
str8flush

Sunday, May 22, 2005

Games Offered List for the Better Online Poker Rooms

Games Offered List for the Better Online Poker Rooms

(click on name to download and play):

1. Paradise Poker:
One of the best in the industry, including no-limit and pot-limit at most standard games and more rare games such as five-card draw, five-card stud and crazy pineapple.

2. Doyle Brunson's Poker Room
Holdem and Omaha Hi-Lo and High (all available in both limit, pot-limit and Holdem in no-limit as well). Table stakes are from $0.02/$0.04 to $50/$100. There are both single- and multi-table tournaments. Soon seven-card stud High and Hi-Lo will be added.

3. Poker Room
Good variety, but traffic very concentrated to Texas Holdem. Finally pot- and no-limit games as well as Omaha and seven-card stud (both Hi and Hi-Lo) were launched in the spring and summer 2004. (Omaha is both available in fixed-, pot- and no-limit where the no-limit version is rather unusual for Omaha, in particular in the Omaha High version).

4. Party Poker
Holdem, Omaha and 7-Card-Stud in both High and Hi-Lo. However, Party Poker does not offer certain games such as heads-up matches, draw poker, crazy pineapple, etc. Moreover, there is no pot-limit version in any of the 7-Card-Stud games or the Omaha High.

5. Pacific Poker
Up to average, as there are no no-limit and pot-limit versions in the ring games. There are Holdem, Hi and Hi-Lo in Omaha and seven-card stud. There are also 1-on-1 tables. There are micro-limit tables down to $0.05/$0.10. Max limit is $15/$30 in all games, except for 1-on-1 ring game which still has only $3/$6.

6. Poker Stars
World's leading heads-up action and good volume in all major games. The games includes both Hi and Hi-Lo versions in Omaha as well as seven-card stud. The site also offers no-limit Omaha Hi-Lo games. Poker Stars started the trend with with their micro-limit tables, going as low as $0.01/$0.02 in Holdem, and Omaha Hi. At these micro-limit tables there is no rake! The "sit-and-go" tournaments have a 10-minute increase in blinds, instead of 10 hands at many other sites. The players also get 1500 worth of chips. This gives more play for the money and better odds for the good players. The Holdem tournament tables seat 9 players, as do the no-limit and pot-limit Holdem and Omaha ring game tables. Fixed limit ring game tables seats 10 players.

7. Ultimate Bet
A good game selection, with Holdem, Omaha Hi and Hi-Lo, 7-Card-Stud Hi and Hi-Lo, Crazy Pineapple and Lowball. There are no-limit and pot-limit in Holdem and pot-limit in both Omaha variants. There are 1-on-1 tables in both Holdem, Omaha and 7-Card-Stud. The site was also first to introduce crazy pineapple. There are also certain "kill games" in which a consecutive winner of two big qualifying pots has to post a forced blind, twice the big blind.

8. Planet Poker
Hold'em, Omaha Hi and Hi-Lo, seven-card stud Hi and Hi-Lo, razz, draw, lowball. There are also heads up games, no-limit in hold'em and pot-limit in hold'em. Razz and lowball online are quite unique at Planet Poker at present.

9. Inter Poker
Texas Holdem, Omaha Hi and Hi-Lo and seven-card stud - besides fixed limit games, there are no-limit and pot-limit offered in Texas Holdem and pot-limit in both Omaha versions. Games can be played in dollar, pound or euro. There are super high limit tables with £100/£200 in fixed limit and £5/£10 in no-limit Texas Holdem. The
$0.50/$1.00 games are the smallest limit.

10. Full Tilt
Holdem, Omaha Hi and Hi-Lo, 7-Card-Stud Hi and Hi-Lo. There are no-limit and pot-limit in Holdem and pot-limit in both Omaha variants.

11. Ladbrokes
Ladbrokes Poker has the standard games (Texas Holdem, Omaha and Seven-card stud) except the seven-card stud Hi-Lo version, which is currently unavailable. There is also a five-card stud game. The volume in the pot- and no-limit Texas Holdem is good, in particular at the higher stakes. There are strangely enough quite few Omaha games, considering the Eurocentric clientele. Actually, more players are found in the stud sections, than Omaha. There are many short-handed tables with a maximum of 5 or 6 players

My Poker blogs:
http://mypokerroom.blogspot.com/
http://spaces.msn.com/members/pokerrroom/PersonalSpace.aspx

Monday, May 16, 2005

Response to "Why Poker Pros Still Live With Their Moms"

The First Group of Responses is from Danial Negreanu Fans at Fullcontactpoker.com(primarily not serious poker players I would guess)

The Second Group Of Responses is from recpoker.com (primarily not human beings I would guess, lol jk)
____________________________________________
Full Contact Responses
____________________________________________
Jopke
Professional Poker Player Paul Phillips
Sat, May 14th, 2005

What is all this crap?
----------------------
Patricnz
Poker Forum Groupie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 5:56

because they love the game and some because they think its easy money where do you get these statistics from by the way?
--------------------
Custom36
Poker Forum Veteran

Sat, May 14th, 2005 5:59

The answer is pretty simple to me: They love what they do. It doesn't appeal to you? Good, don't do it. People like you (for some reason) get under my skin.

me thinkith,awww f-it go away....
-----------------------
happyjuggler0
Poker Forum Newbie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 6:05

Um, who exactly is living with their mom? A better chance of dying during the WSOP than while on death row in Texas? Where did you learn your math, from the California public school system? There were 2576 players in the main of event of the last WSOP. 5% is approximately 125 players who amazingly died during the tourney and no one noticed. Amazing. I fully expect some sort of sarcastic reply or flame of course based on your last two replies.
--------------------
Shakey90
Poker Forum Newbie
Re: hey, it's supposed to allow us to laff at oursel
Sat, May 14th, 2005 6:07

me thinkith,awww f-it go away....[/quote] yeah what he said
--------------------
Nate Dogg OC
Poker Forum Newbie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 6:09

First of all poker is censored not the most dangerous job in the world and I have no idea what made you say that. Fishing for crab in the Bering sea in Alaska has the highest death rate per worker of any job on earth as a matter of fact. Also poker is similar to many desk jobs in terms of the hours spent sitting down and what not, the only difference being that players have more freedom to take breaks if they need to re tune physically. If they misuse that freedom it is not the fault of the profession, it is a personal problem.
--------------------
Custom36
Poker Forum Veteran
Re: hey i'm sorry that you whiners live with your moms!
Sat, May 14th, 2005 6:18
My mom's in my dorm? WHERE?!?
--------------------
trippkc
Poker Forum Newbie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 6:22

Wow, why the hell is everyone throwing a fit over this? It was a joke, I'm not sure why anyone here would take offense to this.
--------------------
Random Fluke
Poker Forum Groupie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 6:29:
I agree, why the hell is everyone throwing a fit over this? It was a joke, I'm not sure why anyone here would take offense to this
--------------------
pdaconq9
Poker Forum Newbie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 6:30

Just for the record, the NATIONAL divorce rate in America is around 50% at the moment. It's a shame...
--------------------
MilesZS
Poker Forum Veteran

Sat, May 14th, 2005 6:41

Ok, so if no one figured it out this was supposed to be a joke. So... don't try to flame the OP, because it kinda doesn't make sense to flame a post that is a complete joke on purpose.
--------------------
pdaconq9
Poker Forum Newbie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 6:30

Just for the record, the NATIONAL divorce rate in America is around 50% at the moment. It's a shame...
--------------------
JimD82
Poker Forum Groupie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 8:37

I'm not a pro, but poker has been a nice secondary source of income for me lately. I live with my dad, not because I can't afford to live elsewhere, but it's better this way. He's on business a lot and I get to live in a big house with a big screen tv, pool table, pool, authentic hold'em table. He never gives me a hard time and looks the other way if I bring home an overnight guest. I've been able to save a ton of money so far and will be in great shape once I decide I want to move out on my own.
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Patricnz
Poker Forum Groupie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 8:41

how is posting BS Statistics funny ?????
i sort of expected a halfass response like that you censored please dont ever post on here again. P.S whats the statistic for men over 50 that have to use viagra? you should know surely?

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Lone*Trout*
Poker Forum Newbie
along the same lines....
Sat, May 14th, 2005 10:12

What do you call a professional pker player that just broke up with his girlfriend? Homeless How do you get a professional poker player off your front porch? Pay him for the pizza.
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vaglvr
Poker Forum Veteran

Sat, May 14th, 2005 10:14

You always know your first post went well when it causes a huge flame fest....
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harvey
Poker Forum Newbie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 10:43

I thought it was pretty funny.. although i've read freakonomics... can't believe people couldn't sense that he was at least trying to be funny... especially after he basically outright said it was a joke, lol
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Jelly-Filled Ace
Poker Forum Newbie

Sat, May 14th, 2005 11:00

Well I kicked my Mom out 8 years ago so I don't have this problem anymore. I don't take Viagra and don't call me Surely.
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peppericious
Poker Forum Newbie
funny?
Sat, May 14th, 2005 11:21

But it's not funny. It's not even in the neighborhood of funny. It's just... there. It has the same level of humor as watching static on a television.
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Patricnz
you really are the biggest jerkoff ive ever come across on here and theres people like Kdawg,allinbluff, cumstom36, sapphire and DKE_XP10 (SW) but i am serious about you being a jerkoff
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Random Fluke

Wow, you kids can't take a joke I guess. This is like if I told a blonde joke and some guys started telling me 'blondes aren't really predispositioned to be dumb, you should go f*ck yourself'. Just makes you all sound like lamers with no sense of humour. Even if it isn't funny it is obviously a joke, what the hell is up with the flames.

______________________________________
Recpoker Responses
______________________________________

Author: RussGeorgeiv@aol.com

I would live with my mother but she has a restraining order on me..
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Author: ArizonaRed (43080651@recpoker.com)

Well, if you're using Mom's credit card to post your buy-in at Pokerstars then
it probably makes sense to live with her and keep those expenses down.

Not to mention the fact that she can serve as your maid, personal assistant and
be there to remind you to take a shower and brush your teeth every once in a
while before you head off down to the local room for a long night of BIG action.

If you're really nice to her, she might even drive you down there and pick you
up when your done. Just like she used to do when you were in the third grade.
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Author: Lou Krieger (loukrieger@dc.rr.com)

Professional poker player s have a 1-in-2 chance of divorce << href="javascript:popup_window(%20710,%20430," email="%77%63%74%6f%6d%31%40%70%61%63%62%65%6c%6c%2e%6e%65%74&user_id=0',%20'1');">Bill T (wctom1@pacbell.net)
Actually, this is a statistical fallacy which has been promulgated for ages.
The actual claim is that for every marriage there are two divorces each
year. The actual chance of divorce would depend on how long a marriage
typically lasts, and how the population numbers change.
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Author: igotskillz.com (ROYALFLUSH@igotskillz.com)

Lou, i heard similar statistics so i married an Aisan { Philippine }
woman.

only 1 in 10 divorce American men and so far her cooking is tops
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Author: Irish Mike (mjostar@ameritech.net)

Many professional poker players have a tough time and need all the help they
can get. That's why I always tip them extra when they deliver my pizza.
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Author: Tad Perry (tadperry@comcast.net)
Nobody cooks like mom!
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Everyone's a critic! LOL

Sunday, May 15, 2005

Why Do Professional Poker Players Still Live With Their Moms?

Why Do Professional Poker Players Still Live with Their Moms?
(And I don't mean you, Daniel Negreanu, so don't call to complain!)

In other words, professional poker works pretty much like the standard capitalist enterprise: you have to be near the top of the pyramid to make a big wage. Notwithstanding the media's rhetoric about the million's of dollars available and the glamour of poker stardom, a player's "wages" are about as skewed as wages in corporate America. A low level pro has plenty in common with a McDonald's burger flipper or a Wal-Mart shelf stocker. In fact, most players also hold other jobs in the legitimate sector to supplement their skimpy poker earnings. Most low level pros make aproximately minimum wage for every hour at the poker tables. And how many burger flippers end up with less money than they started with as a result of flipping burgers?

Consider the cost of a weekend playing poker in Las Vegas:Flight: $440
2 Nights at MGM Grand: $450
Shuttle to the MGM: $9
Fri. Nite Dinner and Drinks: $50
Two breakfasts: $22
Bar: $12
Monorail Passes: $26
2 Hookers: $370
Saturday dinner and Drinks for 2: $50
Taxis: $32
Various Other Food/Snack/Drinks: $50
Long-Term Parking at airport: $24
Total:$1,535.
How many minimum wage earners can afford that?

Along with the bad pay and high cost, poker players face terrible job conditions. For starters, they have to sit in a poker room all day and "do business" with other players. Little or no family life, back problems, bad diet, hemorrhoids and the stink of smoke are some of the side benefits of sitting for 10 hour stretches at a poker table. Playing in home-games you also risk arrest and, more worrisome, violence.

Professional poker player s have a 1-in-2 chance of divorce and a 1-in-30 chance of fatal heart attack! Compare these odds to being a timber cutter, which the Bureau of Labor Statistics calls the most dangerous job in the United States. Over four years' time, a timber cutter would stand only a 1-in-200 chance of being killed. Or compare the poker player s odds to those of a death row inmate in Texas, which executes more prisoners than any other state. In 2003, Texas put to death twenty-four inmates-or just 5 percent of the nearly 500 inmates on its death row during that time. Which means that you stand a greater chance of dying while playing in this year's World Series of Poker than you do while sitting on death row in Texas. So if professional poker playing is the most dangerous job in America, and if the salary is near minimum wage, why on earth would anyone take such a job?

My poker page

(Thank's to "Freakonomics" for the inspiration and statisitics)
(To all the critics who do think I hate poker or don't like my math... I've played and at times loved poker for nearly 30 years.)

Friday, May 13, 2005

A Poker Player's Prayer

The room is cheap, the furnishings stark.
The florescent light is so damn dark.
When I look up, I fill with fear.
The end of this hand is drawing near,
this lonely table, a troubled place,
their cold dead stares, dealer's empty face.
Well, I see no reason to persevere,
no reason to laugh or shed a tear,
no reason to ponder or even to wait,
no cards to come, it's much too late.
And so this night I will raise my eyes
to imagine the clear but mysterious skies
that arch above us, so far from sin.
Are you there God cuz I'm goin' all in?

Thursday, May 12, 2005


Poker Strategy 101


mmmmm chips


Who's the handsome dude with the dog?


Did you say "all in"?

If this guy goes all in be sure to call!


Me & Sis



My PokerStars Pic.

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

World Series of Poker/WSOP Odds of Winning Main Event This Year

A Few Profiled Rankings

LOWEST ODDS
Daniel Negraneau
450 to 1
Yosh Nakano
450 to 1
Ben Affleck
450 to 1
Mark Pinsker
450 to 1
Tobey Maguire
500 to 1
Chris Ferguson
500 to 1
Eric Seidel
500 to 1
Johnny Chan
500 to 1
Gabe Kaplan
500 to 1
Ted Forrest
450 to 1
Howard Lederer
450 to 1
Erik Lindgren
450 to 1
Paul Phillips
450 to 1
Miami John Cernuto
450 to 1
Lyle Berman
500 to 1
Steve Zolotow
500 to 1
Mike Sexton
700 to 1
John Hoang
500 to 1
Phil Ivey
450 to 1
David Grey
450 to 1
Scott Fischman
600 to 1
Mel Judah
500 to 1
Greg Raymer
600 to 1

HIGHEST ODDS
David Williams
1200 to 1
Phil Hellmuth Jr.
900 to 1
Jennifer Harmon
1000 to 1
Annie Duke
1000 to 1
Hasan Habib
1000 to 1
Chris Moneymaker
1000 to 1
Larry Flynt
2000 to 1
James Woods
700 to 1
Rene Angelil
1500 to 1
Steve Wolf
600 to 1
Barry Shulman
900 to 1
Men "The Master" Nguyen
1200 to 1
John Juanda
600 to 1
Barry Greenstein
1000 to 1
TJ Cloutier
700 to 1
Antonio Esfandiari
900 to 1
Paul "Eskimo" Clark
800 to 1
Evelyn Ng
1500 to 1
Jeff Shulman
1000 to 1
Allyn Jaffrey
900 to 1
Kaseem "Freddy" Deeb
500 to 1
Lou Krieger
1200 to 1
Kathy Leibert
900 to 1
Tom McEvoy
700 to 1

Monday, May 09, 2005

Free Poker Strategy Instruction Videos

Poker Strategy Instruction Videos Courtesy Of Doyle's Poker Room(click on my links to view)

Topics:

Bonus Tells and Reviews
How to Use Tells
Poker Ploys
Secrets of the Chips
Waiting For You to Act
When are They Bluffing
When its Safe to Bet
Winning With Your Eyes Closed

NL TOURNY HOLD'EM STARTING HANDS LIST

MY NL TOURNY HOLD'EM STARTING HANDS LIST
1 Call in front of you
AA, KK, QQ=Raise(R) 90% of time/Call(C) 10% of time (R=3x to 5x BigBlind(BB))
JJ,TT=R90%/C10% (R=4x to 5x BB)
99=R50%/C50%
55-22=Call on Button
88-66=C
AKs,AKo= R
AQs=R, AQo=C
AJs, AJo=C
ATs=C, ATo=Fold (F)
A9-A2=F
KQs=Call, KQo=F
KJs=C if bettor is weak, otherwise fold KJ
Suited Connectors (not mentioned above)= 3 or more callers in front C, less than 3=F
3 Calls or more in front of you (you’re on button)
AA, KK, QQ, JJ,TT=R 4x to 5x BB
99-22=C and hope to flop set
AKso=R
AQs=R, AQo=C
AJso-ATso=C
Axs=C Axo=F
Suited Connectors=C
Unsuited Connectors down to 5,4=C, 4,3 & 3,2= F
KJso=C
KT etc.=F
Nobody shows strength in front of you
AA, KK, QQ=R 80 % of time 3x-4x BB from early and middle table position & 2x BB from late. Limp(L) 20% of time.
JJ,TT,99= Early: 70%R & 30%L (R=4x-5x BB)
Mid.: 100%R (R=3x-5x BB)
Late: 75%R & 25%L (R=3x-5x BB)
88,77,66= Early: 20%R & 80%L
Mid.: 88=R, 77 & 66=L
Late: 75%R & 25%L
55,44,33,22= Early: F
Mid.: 55&44=L, 33 & 22=F
Late: 55&44=R, 33 & 22=L (weak blinds=R55-22)
AKso,AQso= Early: 75%R & 25%L (R=3x-5x BB)
(caution if you get action and flop doesn’t hit you)
Mid.: 85%R & 15%L
Late: 85%R & 15%L
AJs,ATs= Early: 50%R & 50%L
Mid.: 75%R & 25%L
Late: Strong Raise
A9s,A8s= Early: 50%R & 50%L (weak table & little preflop action, if not fold)
Mid.: 50%R & 50%L
Late: 80%R & 20%L
A9o,A8o= Early: F
Mid.: F
Late: 90%R & 10%L
A7 & lower= on Button: R
1 b4 Button: A7 & A6=R, A5,4,3=F
late: A7s=50%R & 50%L, the rest only blind stealing or fold
KQso, KJso, QJso= Early: KQs=50%R & 50%L, KQo=50%R & 50%F (weak table & little preflop action, if not fold) KJso,QJso=F
Mid.: 50%R & 50%F
Late: steal blinds only, else fold
Suited Connectors= Under Gun(UG) & UG+1=15%R/85%F
Early: JTs=L, F the rest
Mid.: JTs=50%R & 50%L,T9s=15%R & 85%L, F the rest
Late: JTs,T9s=R, 89s,78s=L, F the rest
Misc. Hands= Late: KTs, K9s,QTs= 50%R & 50%F (R=3x BB)
On button=KTso, K9so,Qtso,Q9so,J9s= R=3x BB
You’re Small Blind attacking Big Blind
50%R & 50%L (R=5x BB) with:
1. any pair
2. Ax, Kx, Qx down to Q5
3. JTs & J9s

1 Raise of 3x BB or greater(not allins) in front of you
AA,KK= 85%RR(reraise)/15%C
QQ= 70%RR/30%C
JJ,TT= 20%RR/80%C
99,88,77= C
66-22= F
AKso= C
AQs= C
F everything elseRaise and Reraise In Front of You
AA=RRR
KK=RRR (with caution)
QQ=C
F everything else
3:56 PM



Card Counting- Theory vs. Practice
Many blackjack players make the mistake of learning the theory and mechanics of card counting and then head off to their favorite casino expecting to make a killing. Of course, learning how to count is important--but there is more to card counting than theory. Let's begin with the all-important penetration, which is the percentage or number of cards that are dealt before the dealer reshuffles the cards.Arnold Snyder (www.RGE21.com) has studied the effect of penetration on a counter's advantage in great detail. In one study, using typical Las Vegas playing rules with a 1 to 4 bet spread in a 2-deck game, a counter playing heads up with the dealer would have a 1.0% advantage if 70% of the cards were dealt. If the dealer dealt 90% of the cards in the same game, the counter's advantage would increase by 80% to 1.8%. If only 50% of the cards were dealt, the counter's edge would decrease by 50% to only 0.5%. This study and scores of others that followed have proven the importance of penetration to a counter's advantage. The bottom line is this: the more cards that the dealer deals out prior to reshuffling the cards, the greater is the card counter's advantage.Most counters will never play in a game unless the penetration is 75% or more. This means in a typical 6-deck game, only 1.5 decks of cards are cut out of play. Likewise, most counters would not waste their time and money trying to count in a game with only 50% penetration. To do so is a waste of time and money.Most casinos are fairly strict about the placement of the cut card by the dealer after the shuffle and cut. Many have a measuring device or a grove on the side of the dealing shoe that indicates to the dealer where to position the cut card. However, there are still many casinos that only give guidelines to the dealer as to how many decks to cut off. It's possible, therefore, to find a dealer who gives a more liberal cut, say cutting off only one deck instead of 1.5 decks in a 6-deck game. These are the games that become very profitable for card counters.One way of knowing which casinos that give more favorable penetration is to subscribe to either Stanford Wong's Current Blackjack Newsletter (www.BJ21.com) or Arnold Snyder's Blackjack Forum (www.RGE21.com). Wong lists the number of decks of cards that each casino cuts out of play and Snyder lists whether the penetration is bad, good, unexceptional, or varies. Another source of up-to-date information on penetration for different casinos is the Blackjack Insider Newsletter (www.blackjack.casino.com). If you are card counter or planning to become one, this information is invaluable.Another important criteria that card counters use to evaluate a blackjack game is the playing rules. For example, the fewer the number of decks of cards, the greater the edge to the player. Also, rules that allow doubling after pair splitting, late surrender, and the dealer standing rather than hitting on soft 17 are favorable for players. But a word of caution is in order: some games with marginal rules can still be beaten if the penetration is good. For example, most counters shun an 8-deck game, but if the rules are decent and the penetration is 80% it would be a better game compared to, say, a 6-deck game with similar rules but only a 50% penetration. Likewise, a single-deck game with bad rules but 70% penetration is more profitable than a game with 50% penetration and good rules. Donald Schlesinger--in his excellent book, "Blackjack Attack"--has quantified the relative attractiveness of different blackjack games using what he calls SCORE (Standardized Comparison of Risk and Expectation). There are plenty of charts in Schlesinger's book where you can locate the hourly profit potential based on different rules, number of decks, and betting spreads--again, very valuable information for determining which games is worth a counter's time.It's also to a card counter's advantage to play at tables that are not crowded with other players. The best is playing head up with the dealer. This allows you to see more cards before making your playing decision. Also, when the count gets high, you will have just as much chance as the dealer of getting the aces and tens. Counters can also spread to two hands in high-count situations, giving them an even greater chance of drawing the aces and tens. Playing at less crowded tables will increase the number of hands per hour dealt and a counter's win rate. Another important point is whether or not the pit boss will allow a decent bet spread. In single-deck games you'll need to spread at least 1 to 3-4 betting units; and in 6-deck games, 1 to 8-10 betting units. If you are limited in your bet spread by a nervous pit boss that gives you "heat" every time you make a large bet, your profit potential decreases. These are just some of the factors that skilled counters must evaluate to maximize their profit potential when they play blackjack. Others include balancing profits with risk, disguising skills when they play, and knowing the typical counter-measures that casinos employ against counters such as the continuous shuffling machines that are popping up in casinos everywhere. Yes, there is more to winning at blackjack then just learning the theory and mechanics of card counting.
12:10 AM


Card Counting - The Tricks
Developing your speed at counting is an important because if you can't count quickly at home, you'll never keep up with the dealer in a casino. Inaccurate counting can cause you to give up any edge you have over the house and it's frustrating to constantly "drop" the count when a faster dealer comes along.
At this point you should have the point values of each card memorized and you might be doing some single-card countdowns of a deck. I'm sure you're slow at it, but that's OK, since accuracy is the most important factor right now. Speed will come as you work your way through the exercises I'll show you this week.
Pairs Value Practice
Just as you learned the point value of each card according to the system you wish to use, here you will learn the point value of different PAIRS of cards. This is one of the real "tricks" of the card-counting business: the ability to count cards in pairs. With enough practice, you'll see a hand of Queen, Jack as both a "20" and an M-2. That capability will bring speed to your game. Here are the values of pairs using the Hi / Lo method of counting
Hand Net Point Value
If you understand everything above, then start going through a single deck and turn two cards over at a time. DO NOT keep a running count, just recite the value of each pair so you can get used to the adding and subtracting which is required. Do this until you are totally familiar with the values of all possible pairs. Then do it some more.
Laying down a good foundation here will allow you to build your speed quickly later on, so this exercise is time well spent. For you "Type-A's" out there, you might even push this to learning 3-card values. That is a very helpful skill to have, particularly if you intend to play one-on-one with a dealer, since you always see 3 cards at once; your initial pair and the dealer's up card. Most of you will want to begin play at tables with other players since things move slower that way, but like I said -- knowing the 3-card values won't hurt.
Pairs Countdown
Once again, remove three random cards from a single deck and set them aside. (No peeking!) Now, turn over the cards two at a time, keep a running (cumulative) count of the deck and check your accuracy by adding the cards you set aside in at the end. This exercise will be your primary way of practicing card counting.
Gradually, your speed will increase to a point where you will count as quickly as you can turn over the cards. To go even faster, hold the deck in your left hand, face up, and pull the cards -- two at a time -- off the deck with your right hand. (Opposite if you're left-handed). Help the cards along with your thumb and you'll start to build some speed. How fast is "fast"? I go through a deck in 10.5 seconds, but all you need to keep up at an average table with 2 or 3 other players is 20 seconds, though 15 is better (and easy attained if you practice).
Counting at the Table
The method we use to count cards at the table is the real secret of this business. For those games where the cards are dealt face up to the players, the diagram below will show you how we do it. Games where the cards are dealt face down (mostly single deck) require a different methodology.
Most dealers keep their up card face-down until each player has received both cards. The procedure for counting at a table like that is to begin counting when the player at "first base" receives his second card and to count each player's pair as the cards are dealt. End your count with the dealer's up card and then count each player's "hit" cards. Finally, count the dealer's hole card and any cards the dealer may take as a hit.
You can see that this method of counting by pairs allows you to look more natural at the table. Most people think counters track each card as it's dealt, so supervisory people at casinos watch for players who follow every cards as it comes out. This method allows you to look away from the table as the first card is going down and then watch as each hand is made with the second card. That looks a lot more natural, since most players are interested in seeing what hands other players get.
Homework
Besides continuing with your basic strategy practice, start playing some "kitchen table" Blackjack. If you can con someone into dealing to you, great, but if you can't, just deal four player hands out in a manner they use at your favorite casino. Don't assume the role of the dealer; you want to get used to seeing all this from a player's perspective so deal one card to an imaginary first-base player, then to yourself and then to two other imaginary players on your left. Finish with a dealer's card face down across from you and then deal the second player's card. Begin counting as shown above and finish with a dealer's up card. Now, play ALL FOUR player's hands according to proper basic strategy and keep the count. Busy, huh? Don't worry, with practice it will all come to you. When you're done with the first round, do another and then riffle through the few remaining cards to verify that you've kept the count accurately.
This exercise will form the basis for all of our practice -- except speed development -- from here on out. As you'll discover, this type of "overload" makes it very easy to play and keep count at an actual casino game; all you need to do there is just sit back, count and play.
12:03 AM


Monkey butts

A team from Duke University found that the male monkey will forgo his own rewards (juice) in exchange for being permitted to view pictures of female monkeys' bottoms. [Discovery-Animal Planet, 1-11-05] [LiveScience.com, 1-28-05]
10:08 AM



Blackjack Card Counting

If you can become proficient enough at Card Counting you will have an edge over the Casino, this is not a system. The secret behind Card Counting is knowing whether the deck or decks are loaded in your favor or the Dealers, if their are lots of 10 value cards then its big bet time, if their are few 10 value cards then be cautious with your bets. What we are going to learn here is called the Plus/Minus count.

We are going to beat the house by spreading our bets, what I mean by that is when the Pack or Shoe is rich in Tens we will bet high and when it is rich in low cards we will bet low. The first thing to memorise are cards 2,3,4,5,6 they are worth +1. Cards 7,8,9 we ignore and cards 10,J,Q,K,A are worth -1. We want to join a table after the cards have been shuffled, at this point we can effectively start our count. We start with a running count of zero, as the cards are dealt we add a point for any card from 2 to 6, we take a point away for cards 10 to Ace and ignore 7 to 9.

I need to point out at this time you will not be able to read this, walk into a Casino
and start counting at a Blackjack table, it will require some practice. If you practice for an Hour every day for 2 or 3 weeks you may be ready.


Start by getting a pack of cards, take out the Jokers and turn over the cards one
at a time face up and count them in the following fashion. In your head say one
for a 2 to 6 card and say Minus One for a 10 to Ace card (you may want to
shorten Minus to a single syllable for speed, anything that takes your fancy)
ignore the rest of the cards (7,8,9). Go through the pack over and over until
you can spot the cards fluently, when you are happy with your performance we will move onto the next stage.

We will now turn over the cards one at a time but this time we are going to keep a running count, start at zero and add one for a 2 to 6 card and take one away for a 10 to Ace card. Just to make things clear lets look at an example. First card Jack, your running count is now 1, next card Ace, running count 2, next card 5, running count 1, next card 9, running count 0, next card 2, running count -1. With a complete pack when you turn over the last card your running count should be zero, if it is not you have gone wrong somewhere, start again, slow down, once you are comfortable speed up. The ultimate goal is to be able to count faster than a dealer can deal comfortably, how fast is that? One step at a time, my advice is to practice until you get it right almost every time and as fast as you can turn them over. Another tip is to put 2 or 3 packs together, same rules apply as with one pack.

Until then happy practice and good luck...
3:45 PM


Poker Bankroll
How big does your bankroll need to be? It is folly to criticize a player for having an insufficient starting bankroll. Taking 100 shots with $50 each time gives you about the same chance of eventual success as taking a single shot with $5,000 - provided you play your best game at all times.
Of course, this isn't precisely true. Other factors may influence your fate substantially. What factors? Well, if you play with a single buy-in, you're more likely to go all-in. These all-in situations change your prospects. Actually, being all-in can often work to your advantage, because other players may then eliminate themselves from the showdown by not calling bets. While this is happening, you are guaranteed to make the showdown. This means you will win all pots where you can stumble into the best hand, while your opponents will not.
You may also play differently on short money and your opponents may play differently against you. You sometimes will not have the opportunity to stay in a good game with $50, although you might have stayed and made profit if you had a big bankroll behind you. There are many other factors to consider, but - in general - taking 100 shots with just $50 each time can be considered the same as gathering $5,000 before you play the first time. If you play the same type of poker, your prospects will be similar.
So, the common notion that short money is at a big disadvantage is a myth. You are much more likely to go broke with only a small buy-in, but the force of all those short buy-ins combined should give you about the same opportunity overall as one big bankroll.
Not everyone needs a bankroll. Players who only expect to play occasionally, or who are playing recreationally, can just bring whatever they can afford whenever they can afford it. Bankrolls are things you build and are designed for people without infinite assets who want to play regularly.
You must play your best game all the time. The policy of playing your best game most of the time is the greatest destroyer of bankrolls there is. At higher-limit games, players actually seem to take turns "going on tilt." If you pass your turn quite often, without your opponents realizing it, you'll win the most money.
It remains one of the most fundamentally important things you can learn if you want to succeed at poker. You are not likely to succeed if you decide to blatantly take advantage of knowledgeable opponents' super-loose play. If they're taking turns going on tilt, and you come into the game and play perfectly stable, you won't fit in. They will resent you and often they will stop providing you with profit.
The trick is to play along and show some fast action, too. Simulate tilt. Make them aware of it. But pass your turn when they don't notice. Among equally skilled players, the one who spends the least time on tilt (or simulating tilt) wins the most money.
Don't make the mistake of routinely promoting yourself to higher limits as you continue to win. You might eventually find a level you can't beat. When this happens, most players refuse to step back down, and they lose or "spin their wheels" for the rest of their poker careers.
This is actually an application of the Peter Principle (about how people get promoted until they reach their level of incompetence) to poker.
Be selective about your games. Don't routinely take the first one you see. Most of your profit will come from good games. Even most winning players lose money in tougher games.
Those are fighting words, but they're true. If I could select the worst 50 percent of games that professionals played in throughout their careers, most would be losers for those sessions. It is the other 50 percent of their games - and sometimes an even much smaller portion of their games - that supply the profit for most pros. Game selection is much more important than most players suppose.
You should be less protective of a small bankroll. The larger your bankroll grows, the more worthy it is of protection and the less chances you should take. That's because a large bankroll would be much harder to replace from sources in the world beyond poker. You can usually get a small starting bankroll from the "real" world, but it's unlikely that you will be able to replace an established bankroll in the same way.
Don't treat your bankroll like a tournament buy-in. You can have a "tournament" almost any day you want. Just keep jumping into higher and higher limits until you reach a long-shot goal or go broke. But in a tournament, only one player ends up with the chips. Everyone else goes broke. Don't treat your bankroll that way.
Don't spend your bankroll. It's tempting to start with $500, win $20,000, spend $12,000 you think you don't need, then lose $8,500. You'll be flat broke, on the rail, and begging for money. But you actually won $11,500! Don't let that happen to you.
3:29 PM

Poker Math
1. Odds
Some gamblers might have heard this word over and over again without really knowing what it meant. Odds are a cousin of probability. So, what’s probability? Probability is the chance that a given event will take place. When the weatherman says there is a 25 percent chance of rain today, he is expressing a probability. He is saying the probability that it will rain today is 25 percent. What that means is that if today happened 100 times, 25 of those times it would rain, and 75 times it wouldn’t. This brings us back to odds. Odds compare the number of times an event will happen to the number of times it won’t. In our weatherman example, the odds against rain falling today would be 75 to 25 — that is, for every 75 times that it would rain, it wouldn’t rain 25 times. We write these odds, 75-25. It is equivalent to express these odds as 3-1, because we can see that for every time it rains, it doesn’t rain three times (75 divided by 25 equals 3).
Let’s look at the probabilities and the odds for some different events.
Coin flip, heads: probability 50 percent, odds 1-1
Airline flight delayed: probability 12.5 percent (data from Bureau of Transportation Statistics), Odds 7-1
Picking the A out of a deck: Probability 1/52 = 1.9 percent, Odds 51-1 (in this case, it’s easier to do the odds)
2. Combinations
In a game like Texas hold’em, we are interested in questions like, “what are the odds against completing a four-card flush draw after the flop?” This is a much harder question than, “What are the odds against completing a four-card flush draw after the turn?” In the latter case, there is only one card left to come. There are 46 unknown cards at that point (52 minus the two in our hand and the four on the board). So, to calculate our odds of making a flush draw after the turn, we just compare the number of unknown cards that don’t help us (37) to the number of unknown cards that do (nine). The odds of making a flush draw after the turn, therefore, are 37-9, or about 4.1-1.
After the flop, with two cards still to come, it’s not as straightforward. If we don’t make our flush on the turn, we could still make it on the river. How do we account for this? We do it by counting the different combinations of cards that could come. Say we hold the 9 8 and the flop is 10 4 2. The turn and river could be A K. They could be A A. They could be 3 3. They could be J J. Each of these is a different combination of turn and river cards. Note that J J is the same combination as J J, because they result in the same board. Now, instead of counting cards to determine our odds, we count combinations. If you write down every last possible combination for the turn and river in this hand, it turns out that there are 1,081. Then, if you look closely at all of them, it turns out that 378 result in a flush for our hand. So, the odds against making a four-card flush draw after the flop are 703-378 (because 1,081 minus 378 is 703), or about 1.86-1.
Just by learning these two terms, you now know how to calculate the odds against making any hold’em hand after the flop, or after the turn. Cool, huh? It is cool, but it’s also a lot of work to calculate your odds for every draw you might run into. Luckily, you don’t have to, as I’ll explain.
3. Outs
Your outs are the number of cards in the deck that will improve your hand. The flush draw we held above had nine outs. An open-end straight draw has eight outs. Two overcards have six outs. You could go through the odds calculation for each of these draws — or you could just read the results off the chart.
Again, it’s not important to know these exact numbers. In fact, there’s a useful trick called the Rule of Four to help you. Multiply your number of outs by four, and that number is roughly your percent chance of improving after the flop. So, with a flush draw on the flop, you have about a 9 times 4 = 36 percent chance of improving to a flush by the river (the actual number is 35 percent). Notice that this is the probability of improving, and not the odds against improving. Here are some quick conversions:
25 percent = 3-1 against
33 percent = 2-1 against
40 percent = 3-2 against
50 percent = 1-1 against
If you understand what I’ve written, you understand everything you need to assess your chances of improving in a hold’em hand. With enough practice, the numbers will become natural enough to you so that you can focus on other things at the table.

Best Poker Sites

My Poker Videos (Partial List)
WSOP-04(all events), 03, 02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 95, 94, 93, 91, 90, 88, 87, 86, 83, 81, 79, 78, 73 (please contact me if you have the missing years)
WPT-All Season 1 & 2
Poker Million
Poker Million Masters
Poker for Dummies
Poker After Dark
All Lederer, Hellmuth and Caro instructional

"Vince Van Patten digs up his poker roots" or Vince's Painful Secret: HE WAS BORN HAIRLESS!
(From hollywood poker forum)
"Vince Van Patten digs up his poker roots
He hasn't come a long way from sporting fake facial hair...
I started playing at age nine and was taught by my father. I watched him play in a weekly game, which was a pretty decent size for back then, when poker wasn’t as big. They’d play every kind of poker you can think of and often, I’d be up watching until five in the morning. At age 14, I was asked to play with them and I loved it. I was incredible passionate about it and I learned a lot.When I was about 15 ฝ, I went to Gardena in California, where poker had been legalized. Still, the legal age to gamble was 21, so I put on a fake beard and moustache to get in. No one said anything, but I know I looked like a freak. To this day I still must wear a fake beard and moustache to get in casinos and adult book stores. Obviously, my playing wasn’t top-notch then, so I was broke within an hour.I’ve learned though, and I continue to learn. While after a certain point, your playing may never get better, there are always nuances of the game you can learn. It’s this boldness and maturity that really contribute to your knowledge of the game. I know I've learned some valuable stuff from my mistakes and from being as hairless as a cueball.
To ask Vince Van Patten a poker-related question, e-mail me (Hairless Vince)!"


Newbies' Safe & Simple Strategy for 1-2, 2-4 or 3-6 Limit Holdem
You need A-A, K-K, Q-Q, J-J, A-K, or A-Q suited, to raise, reraise, or cap it. In short, just put more money in. If you have 10-10, 9-9, 8-8, any suited blackjack or suited 20-point hand, you can call one bet. But if it’s raised to you and you can’t reraise, you can’t call two bets cold; you have to fold. After the flop, you can continue if you have top pair (or could beat top pair), an open-end straight draw, or a flush draw. Anything else, you are done with the hand!


Low-Limit Holdem Starting Hands ( Ring Game/Cash)

EARLY

RAISE
Pairs: AA, KK, QQ, JJ, (R & RR) (TT) (R)
Suit: AKs, AQs, AJs, KQs (R)
Unst: AKo, AQo (R)
CALL
Pairs: TT, 99, 88, 77
Suit: KJs, QJs, JTs, ATs A9s
Unst: KQo

MIDDLE


3 callers or less in front
RAISE
Pairs: AA, KK, QQ , JJ, TT, 99, 88
Suit: AKs, AQs, AJs, ATs, KQs , KJs,
Unst: AKo, AQo , AJo, ATo, KQo
CALL
Pairs: 77, 66, 55
Suit: Axs, Kxs-8s, QTs, JTs, J9s, T9s, 98s
Unst: KJo, QJo, JTo

4 callers or more in front
RAISE
Pairs: AA, KK, QQ , JJ, TT, 99, 88
Suit: AKs, AQs, AJs, ATs, KQs , KJs,
Unst: AKo, AQo , AJo, ATo, KQo
CALL
Pairs: 77-22
Suit: Axs, Kxs-8s, QTs, JTs, J9s, T9s, T8s, 98s, 87s, 76s
Unst: KJo, QJo, JTo


Luck versus Skill in Poker

Most people today misunderstand poker. Let's be frank: most people know poker from the low-stakes games they now play (or grew up playing) with their family and friends. In these low-stakes home games, luck often plays a much bigger role than skill.
The money to be gained or lost in a home tends to mean next to nothing, and everyone at the table plays almost every hand to the end. The dealer's choice games are often nonstandard, even bizarre variations (often fun) where, for example, deuces, black kings, or one-eyed jacks (or all of them) are wild. In this type of poker game, people just put their money in the middle (in the "pot") and hope to make the best hand. Often, there doesn't seem to be much strategy or thought involved. When the evening winds up, everyone seems to agree that "Mark sure was hot tonight!" You don't hear anyone saying, "Boy, did Mark play great tonight. I sure am afraid of him at the poker table."
One reason why luck has such a big role in home-style poker games is that many of the skills used in pro-style games just don't come into play in a home game. For example, three of the more important skills that used are being patient in determining which starting hands to play, bluffing, and reading people. Patience, like discipline, is a virtue in many areas of life, and poker is no exception. It is in the nature of professional or tough high-stakes poker games that it is mathematically correct to fold a lot of hands right away. If you are playing too many hands (which equates to too many bad hands) in a tough poker game, you will often find yourself "drawing mighty thin," that is, trying to win by catching particular cards that are in short supply.
The plain fact is that if you play too many hands in a pro-level poker game, you just cannot win, certainly not in the long run and probably not even on just one given night, no matter how lucky you are. But if you're playing a lot of hands in a home poker game, you may be in good shape anyway, because the sheer size of the pot will wind up offering you odds sufficient to draw to an inside straight (add a nine, for example, to your 7-8-10-J hand) or another "unlikely to hit" hand. You'll usually lose, but when you do manage to hit the card you need, you're going to win a huge pot.
Further, the number of cards that can complete what you need in the late rounds of a hand in a home game is often larger than one sees in the pro game, because the dealer has designated various wild cards or rules that allow you extra draws or give you chances to buy another card or replace a card.
Because you don't see these big pots and people paying you off with weak hands in a pro poker game, patience is crucial there. In the traditional home-style poker games, patience not only is not as important but may actually clash with the "spirit" of the game —that "We're all here just to have fun and gamble." Playing a more technically informed style may win you more money in a home game, but it might also mean that you're not invited back the next time the game is held! In a casino poker game or an online poker game, of course, you don't need to be concerned that you might not be invited back.
Another key difference between home poker games and the games that the pros play is that bluffing actually succeeds in the pro-style games! In a home game, it's extremely hard to pull off a bluff, because you usually can't bet enough money on the last bet to get your opponents to fold. For 25 cents, someone who is convinced he is beaten is nonetheless willing to throw the two bits into the pot, just to see what you have, and, oops, there goes your attempted bluff. In fact, in most situations in these home games where there is a "bet on the end" (in the last round of action in a given hand), someone is always egging someone else on to be the "sheriff." "Oscar, you call that boy and be the sheriff this hand! We can't let him bluff us!"
In the pro game, bluffing is a sound strategy, because in the late stages of a hand there aren't many people who haven't folded. If you've been playing very few hands (that is, patiently), and have seldom been caught bluffing during a day of play, then when you do bluff, it's hard for those remaining in the hand to "call you down" through the last bet. Long live the bluff! Bluffing well is an art form. The bluff is one of the poker craftsman's tools that is seldom available to players in wild, friendly, low-stakes games.
Another important element in pro poker games is reading your opponents. Are they riding on "hot air" or the real thing? In a lot of home games, there is just so much money in the pot, relative to the size of the final bet, that it makes sense to call that bet. (What do you have to lose?) In pro poker, there is enough money involved, and enough actual thought processes are being utilized, that many situations come up where you can take advantage of a good read—which might arise either from your ability to detect weakness or strength in body language or from your ability to assess the implications of the betting pattern on the hand—and make either a good call or a good fold. But it's hard to read someone who hasn't really been thinking about the hand and can't possibly be nervous about losing $1.75! The skill factor in poker is much higher in the pro game. There is just too much at stake for anyone to rely solely on luck.
Let's take a quick glimpse at the high-stakes poker world. At this level, too, luck is a factor on any given day, week, or month, but what's different is that if you play better poker than your opponents do, pretty consistently, you'll find that over almost any two-month period your winnings have exceeded your losses. Furthermore, if you play better poker than your opponents over a six-month period, your results will have moved very solidly in the winning direction. Making a few well-timed bluffs each day will add up to a lot of money each year!
In fact, if an inexperienced poker player were to sit down for a few hours with a group of world-class poker players, he would have virtually no chance to win over even an eight-hour period. This very fact is why five or six top pros might be willing to sit down in the same game with this fellow and each other: the money that even one amateur is likely to contribute makes it worth their while to do battle with so many respected opponents.
Right now, as you're reading this, there is a $600–$1,200-limit poker game at the Bellagio Casino in Las Vegas and a $400–$800-limit poker game at the Commerce Casino in Los Angeles. There is a $200–$400-limit poker game in Tunica, Mississippi; a $100–$200-limit game at the Taj Mahal in Atlantic City; and a $200–$400-limit game somewhere in New York City. They're playing no-limit poker in San Francisco at the Lucky Chances Casino and high-stakes pot-limit poker in London at the Grosvenor Victoria ("The Vic") and in Paris at the Aviation Club de France. In Vienna, at the Concorde Card Casino, they're playing $75–$150 Seven-Card Stud.
If that's not enough action for you, four nights a week in Los Angeles, there is a $2,000–$4,000-limit Seven-Card Stud game at Larry Flynt's Hustler Club Casino, with Larry himself often playing. In the $400–$800-limit poker game it's easy to take a $25,000 swing in one hour. In the $2,000–$4,000-limit game, where movie stars, former governors and billionaires play, it's not uncommon for someone to win or lose $250,000 in one night. In these "nosebleed" poker games (the term refers to the altitude of the stakes), strategy, discipline, calculation of the odds, and practiced observation contribute to a game that involves much more skill. Better play wins more hands in the long run.
Imagine facing down Larry Flynt in the $2,000–$4,000 Seven-Card Stud game at the Hustler Club Casino. You're sitting there trying to figure out if he has a strong hand or is full of hot air (bluffing). If you decide right, you will win $25,000, but if you're wrong, it will cost you $25,000. What do you do? You make a good read—of the situation, of the odds, of your opponent—and make an educated guess, rather than a plain old boldfaced guess! The chief difference between your home poker game and the games of the big players is the preponderance of luck in the one and the preponderance of skill in the other. In a game (the Flynt game) where winning just one $4,000 bet a night would mean an income of $16,000 per week (this game runs four days a week), one carefully earned bet can make a great deal of difference.
That's the way things look in the high-stakes "side game" world at large, but there is even more evidence that skill is present and important in high-stakes poker tournaments today. (When I say "side-game" world, I mean the nontournament poker world.) Why do the same people, by and large, keep winning poker tournaments year after year? They win because they apply finely honed strategies and tactics, calculate and recalculate the odds, read their opponents well, avoid becoming predictable, and know how and when to make a good bluff.
Some of the most famous poker players in the world today have made their names in poker tournaments. Doyle "Texas Dolly" Brunson has eight bracelets (titles) from the World Series of Poker at age 66. Phil Hellmuth and Johnny "The Oriental Express" Chan both have nine. "Amarillo Slim" Preston has nine WSOP titles, depending, as Slim himself would say, on "who does the telling."
If serious poker were a game where luck predominates, this would not and could not happen. Everyone involved would win about the same number of tournaments as everyone else (as tends to happen in slot tournaments or craps tournaments), and no one would make (or lose) any serious money. But that's not what years and years of proven, recorded results show.

HOW TO PICK AN ONLINE POKER ROOM
Online gambling is increasing at a staggering rate worldwide.
Total revenues for online gambling worldwide in 2003 were an
estimated $5 Billion – over 4.3% of all worldwide ecommerce.
The world's first virtual online casino, Internet Casinos, Inc.
commenced operation on August 18, 1995 with 18 different casino
games and is now publicly traded on NASDAQ. Most of these
online gambling companies are located outside of the U.S. to avoid
government prosecution. ICI operates out of the Turks and
Cayucos Islands and WagerNet is based in Belize. Site users can
either send cash through one of the companies offering secure
payment systems for the Internet or open an offshore account, a
requirement for Americans to use ICI's site. A number of foreign
governments have entered the business of online casinos holding
their sites out to people worldwide. For instance, the government
of Liechtenstein is operating an online international lottery in six
different languages, including Chinese. According to Rolling Good
Times Online gambling magazine, there are over 1300 gambling
related sites on the net and more are up and running every day.
The economics of the industry are amazing. While it may cost up
to $300 million to build a new bricks and mortar resort casino,
most virtual casinos can be developed for between $1 & 2 million
and will employ only 10 – 20 people as opposed to thousands for a
traditional casino. The industry averages about a twenty-five (25%)
profit margin, versus the typical U.S. casino, which ranges between
eight percent (8%) to sixteen (16%) of each dollar wagered.
Interactive Gaming & Communications International handled $48
million dollars in its first year of operations and has made a
staggering profit ever since.
In sum, an estimated twenty million people are currently on line
with a projected 160 million online by the year 2020. The major
online casinos register over 7,000,000 visits per month.
According to surveys conducted by the US government, the
majority of gamblers, 83%, play online, however, only a third of
that group plays for real money. In other words, the major
attraction for online players are casinos that offer free games. In
all, 28% of those who gamble do so online for real money.
According to a recent study 73% percent of those who play for real
money both online and offline lost money in the past month, while
80% of land-based-only players lost money.
If you’re wondering how safe your money is at an online casino,
there are a number of things to consider. Over the past few years
there have been a number of cases of winners at online poker
casinos being denied payment. Remember, as online gambling is
not allowed in the U.S., you have no legal recourse to recover
funds. My advice is to stay with well established online casinos
with an extensive track record and a reputation for paying out
winners. I list the largest & best known . All
have excellent track records, use well established software to
deliver the gaming experience and offer a wide range of tables to
select from.
You will be tempted sometimes by very generous offers of large
player bonuses from online casinos you’ve never heard of. Think
about it – if you started a new casino in a very crowded market,
how would you get the attention of potential new players? My
suggestion is to avoid these casinos. What good would it do to win
$10,000 and then find you can never claim the money? There are
numerous ‘systems’ being promoted that suggest you can use
these bonuses to multiply your winnings – even play for free.
That’s nonsense. Bonuses, if they are based on the number of
hands, will be returned to the house through the rake. Pick your
casino based on play quality and the volume of table options.
That’s the real key to winning.
I often get questions about how fair certain casinos are.
Electronic games of all types use random number generator (RNG)
software algorithm to determine card outcome,
the RNG algorithm is called into play
hundreds of times per second. The RNG has approximately
16,000,000,000,000,000,000 possible outcomes and, depending of
course on the type of game, there will be billions and billions of
outcomes that map into any set of cards. This ensures that all game
outcomes are completely random. There are no ‘hiccups’ in the
process you can use to beat the virtual dealer. The science of
random number generation is well established and impossible to
beat.
Here are a number of factors you can use to choose the best online
poker room.
Security and Privacy
You want as much reassurance that your credit info is safe, your
identity and contact info won't be sold and that game conditions
are as safe and as fair as possible (e.g. that the software isn't
vulnerable to manipulation; players aren't colluding because a
system of checks is in place; etc.). Secure servers are a necessity.
Sites should elaborate on the encryption system that they use. All
good sites should address the above issues to your satisfaction. Do
they discuss issues like their card-shuffling algorithm? Also, what
kind of RNG (random number generator) do they use? The best
ones increase the level of unpredictability in the cards being
played. What other safeguards do they have in place to prevent
game-rigging, collusion, hacker intrusions, etc.? You should
always read a site's privacy policy, including the small print.
Action
How many players log on to the games? Can you get action in the
poker game of your choice anytime, day or night? Do they have
diverse offerings with enough players to keep tables full? The
larger the pool, the more action you'll see in both game play and
cash winnings. I visit the sites at different times to see what the
overall action is like as well as the variety of players in all games
offered.
Gameplay
If your money and personal info are secure but the ease of game
play and visuals suck, then chances are you're not going to come
back. I look at the variety of poker games offered and keep a
close eye on how well a site creates a good poker environ-
ment. How easy is it to play? Converse with other players (or mute
them, if you wish)? Are the graphics and sounds fun? Interesting?
Can I play even if my system doesn't support the absolutely latest
graphics, etc.? Is all the information needed to play easy to access
and clearly stated? Some sites definitely have more appealing
gameplay than others.
Connectivity
How often does the game crash due to server issues at the online
poker room's end? How bad are the delays in transfer of info?
What about disconnection's? Are they repeated? Anything that
disrupts game play on a regular basis is going to be an annoyance
and a major problem (at the worst if the stakes are high and you're
on a streak). We realize problems can occur at the player's end
(with their computer and their particular ISP) but there's no
denying some sites are more reliable and offer less .downtime.
and other such irritations than others.
Cashouts
How much money have players won at their poker games? How
easy is it to cash out your winnings? Do they credit your credit
card? What charges are applied? How long does it take to receive
winnings? You shouldn't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out
how to cash out what you've won and whether extra charges,
delays, etc. are worth it. Or have the patience of a saint. And we
like features such as email confirmations of the withdrawal
transactions verifying request, dates, and amounts.
Free Play
Testing out poker game play, environment, percentage, etc. helps
to familiarize yourself with what to do in the event of server
crashes, how well you've understood the written rules of play at
the particular online poker room, and the mixed quality of other
players you may encounter.
This is an important feature of any good poker site – playing
first for free , although I recognize that people play very
differently when they've got real money on the line.
Some sites make it easier than others to identify how to get in on
the free play action without submitting heaps of personal
information in advance.
Other Features
Some sites will let you choose a character image which becomes
identified with you. Others will track your game play statistics for
you. Some provide no charges for certain kinds of cash outs. Some
track the top players. Some allow you to beta-test new games or
poker tournaments in development. Others offer good poker
resources in terms of celebrity columns, advice, links, etc. We like
both access to quality information that's useful to us in playing
poker as well as convenience.
Online casinos offer players bonus incentives to come play at their
casinos. These are know as casino bonuses, casino promotion, free
chip offers, and although there are several other terms used to
describe the free money given to players by the casinos the bottom
line is that it's free money. Outlined below are a few descriptions
of the different types of bonuses offered by online casinos.
No Deposit Casino Bonuses
This type of bonus is offered to players just for trying and
downloading and trying the casinos software out. In general this
type of casino bonus is in the range of $10 to $25.
Online Casino Match Bonuses
With a casino match bonus the casino gives players additional cash
to play at the casino upon making a first deposit. If a player
deposits $50 in a 100% match bonus situation the player would get
an additional $50 to play with at the casino.
Alternative Banking Bonuses
Since online gambling transactions made by players may
encounter some rejections by credit card companies many casinos
have resorted to alternative payment solutions. These include
NETeller, FirePay, PrePaidATM and others. Some casinos offer
players additional bonuses on top of their existing no deposit
bonuses and match bonuses for deposits made through these
alternative banking methods.
WHICH CASINO DO YOU TRUST?
You can’t go wrong if you select a poker site that has been in
business for several years, uses established and accredited gaming
software interfaces and has a record of paying big winners in a
timely manner. There are thousands of
casinos with new ones opening every day. Great player interfaces
are a real attraction for players but in the end, if the casino doesn’t
offer a multitude of tables and traffic and doesn’t pay off bets
quickly, what’s the point? You can not go wrong with the poker sites I list. They are the
most highly regarded and attended of all online poker sites.
9:41 PM

General George S. Patton's Poker Thought for Today
"May God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't.”

May 01
Edgar Allen Poe's Definition of a Great Poker Player
From The Purloined Letter by Edgar Allen Poe
The measures, then," he continued, "were good in their kind, and well executed; their defect lay in their being inapplicable to the case, and to the man. A certain set of highly ingenious resources are, with the Prefect, a sort of Procrustean bed, to which he forcibly adapts his designs. But he perpetually errs by being too deep or too shallow, for the matter in hand; and many a schoolboy is a better reasoner than he. I knew one about eight years of age, whose success at guessing in the game of 'even and odd' attracted universal admiration. This game is simple, and is played with marbles. One player holds in his hand a number of these toys, and demands of another whether that number is even or odd. If the guess is right, the guesser wins one; if wrong, he loses one. The boy to whom I allude won all the marbles of the school. Of course he had some principle of guessing; and this lay in mere observation and admeasurement of the astuteness of his opponents. For example, an arrant simpleton is his opponent, and, holding up his closed hand, asks, 'are they even or odd?' Our schoolboy replies, 'odd,' and loses; but upon the second trial he wins, for he then says to himself, the simpleton had them even upon the first trial, and his amount of cunning is just sufficient to make him have them odd upon the second; I will therefore guess odd'; --he guesses odd, and wins. Now, with a simpleton a degree above the first, he would have reasoned thus: 'This fellow finds that in the first instance I guessed odd, and, in the second, he will propose to himself upon the first impulse, a simple variation from even to odd, as did the first simpleton; but then a second thought will suggest that this is too simple a variation, and finally he will decide upon putting it even as before. I will therefore guess even' guesses even, and wins. Now this mode of reasoning in the schoolboy, whom his fellows termed "lucky," --what, in its last analysis, is it?"
"It is merely," I said, "an identification of the reasoner's intellect with that of his opponent."
"It is," said Dupin;" and, upon inquiring of the boy by what means he effected the thorough identification in which his success consisted, I received answer as follows: 'When I wish to find out how wise, or how stupid, or how good, or how wicked is any one, or what are his thoughts at the moment, I fashion the expression of my face, as accurately as possible, in accordance with the expression of his, and then wait to see what thoughts or sentiments arise in my mind or heart, as if to match or correspond with the expression.' This response of the schoolboy lies at the bottom of all the spurious profundity which has been attributed to Rochefoucauld, to La Bougive, to Machiavelli, and to Campanella."
"And the identification," I said, "of the reasoner's intellect with that of his opponent, depends, if I understand you aright upon the accuracy with which the opponent's intellect is admeasured."
"For its practical value it depends upon this," replied Dupin; and the Prefect and his cohort fall so frequently, first, by default of this identification, and, secondly, by ill-admeasurement, or rather through non-admeasurement, of the intellect with which they are engaged. They consider only their own ideas of ingenuity; and, in searching for anything hidden, advert only to the modes in which they would have hidden it. They are right in this much --that their own ingenuity is a faithful representative of that of the mass; but when the cunning of the individual felon is diverse in character from their own, the felon foils them, of course. This always happens when it is above their own, and very usually when it is below. They have no variation of principle in their investigations; at best, when urged by some unusual emergency --by some extraordinary reward --they extend or exaggerate their old modes of practice, without touching their principles.

Digital Poker and Blackjack Books
I have a large collection of poker and blackjack ebooks. If you will leave your email address in the comment below I will be happy to send you a list of them so that you can download them from me.
Light At the End of the Tunnel (Finally a poker room!)
I am doing the moon walk and playing the touchdown "hey" song as I type. No, I didn't win the lottery but I feel like I did. After nine years of living in Thailand there are finally plans for a 2 billion dollar casino (WITH A POKER ROOM!) in Singapore. Their government finally oked it after years of wrangling. It will be built and managed by the same folks who do Crown Casino in Australia. POKER HAS FINALLY COME TO ASIA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Poker Room Etiquette???
First, when you win a pot you should gloat loudly and tell your opponenthow badly he played. Always be sure to tell everyone how well you play andyour strategy for winning. Always explain in great detail why you make theplays you do. Tell your opponents how well you read them and point out everylittle error.Secondly, when you lose a pot you should throw the cards at the dealer andin a loud voice complain bitterly to the person that beat you about what a badplayer he is.Third. Always ask for new decks and setups and constantly complain abouthow the dealer in the box "cold decks" you whenever he deals. Tell the currentdealer and everyone at the table you will never play on one of his downs everagain and not only that he can't even deal the cards without making a mistake. Even if he doesn't make a mistake wait patiently for some very minor infractionand then loudly complain about his indiscretions.Fourth. Don't forget to glare and stare at players and dealers and try tointimidate people with your mean callous disposition. Constantly mutter underyour breath, always speaking just loud enough so people can hear the fouleststream of obscenities that you can possibly think of.Last. When you miss your straight, flush or full house or fail to maketwo pair when necessary, cry like a little baby about how unlucky you are andhow you never catch any cards. Moan and groan about how unlucky you are. Always complain out loud about the odds against your opponent beating you. Never forget to mention that he had only one card in the deck with which towin. Tell everyone how you can never catch a break. Let people know that ifit wasn't for the complete morons sitting at this table, you would be winning alot of money. Tell them that the world sucks, and wonder out loud about howyou could be so unlucky. Tell them you are the best player in the room, yetyou are still losing to a bunch of idiots that can't even spell poker.All of the above are acceptable, desirable character traits for partakingin any casino poker activity.

From a hollywood poker advice forum (lmfao)
Vince Van Patten's Tip of the week! March 18, 2005
Hollay's question:How do you disguise a big hand? What's your technique?Vince's answer: Be extremely deceptive and contrarian; leave your ego out of the game! To ask Vince Van Patten a poker-related question, e-mail me!

Vince attributes his amazing poker insight (or lack therof) to dick ...(his dad, I think).


No fold'em hold'em
No fold'em hold'em games are indeed beatable. Unfortunately, the frustration level in these games is extremely high for skilled players who patiently wait for premium cards to play because when they finally get dealt a good hand, with six or seven opponents drawing against them, it seems that someone invariably gets there. But that isn't always the case. Two aces is the best hand, period. Even though they are not the favorite to win the pot against seven opponents, I still would rather have aces than any drawing hand. And when they do hold up, you will win much bigger pots than you would have won with fewer callers.In no fold'em hold'em games, you will have much bigger fluctuations than in normal games, which means that your losses will be bigger ... but so will your wins. You must remain patient and not sink to your opponents' level. You see everybody playing trash hands so you start playing trash, too. When you lower your game to your opponents' level of play, it decreases your chances to win because now you are playing the same way that they are comfortable playing. They like playing 4-3 offsuit for a raise!In the short run it is true that any two cards can win, but in the long run you will get punished by playing trash. Solid play will win in the end - you should be able to make more money at no fold'em hold'em games that you can make in more traditional games.
Some poker players are on lifelong losing streaks mainly because they never have taken the time to learn how to play well. Sometimes when you change a game or a limit, you may not be a winning player at the new game or the new limit. Conquering one game and one limit doesn't mean that you will be an immediate favorite in a new scenario. Some winning players deceive themselves in this regard, when in reality they may only be able to win in a particular game or limit. As you escalate the limits that you play, the level of competition also rises and the games are tougher to beat.Also sorry to say that if you normally are a solid, winning player, it is not unusual to go for six months or more without making any money at poker. Tournaments are streakier than side games, of course, because the luck factor is higher than it is in ring play.
If you're playing correctly and don't make any radical adjustments to your usual winning style, eventually things should work out for you. It is OK to change games, limits, or casinos, and I also am a big believer in "manufacturing" a winning streak - that is, get in a game, try to win a hand or two, and then take the rest of the day off as soon as you're a little bit ahead. Now you've broken your losing streak. It's a psychological thing that helps you to get out of your negative frame of mind. Having a positive attitude is very important: If you expect a negative result, you're almost never disappointed. On the other hand, if you play your best at all times and start scoring even small wins, you begin to regain your confidence. Positive builds on positive just as negative can build on negative.

Our Inner Voice
There's this guy who lives in Thailand and one morning, he hears a voice in his head. The voice says, "Quit your job, sell your house, take all your money, and go to Las Vegas."
He ignores the voice.
Later in the day, he hears the voice again."Quit your job, sell your house, take all your money, and go to Las Vegas."
Again, he ignores the voice.
Soon he hears the voice every minute of the day. "Quit your job, sell your house, take all your money, and go to Las Vegas."
He can't take it anymore. He believes the voice. He quits his job, sells his house, takes all his money, and flies to Las Vegas.As soon as he steps off the plane, the voice says, "Go to Harrahs."
He goes to Harrahs.
The voice says, "Put all your money into a World Series of Poker (WSOP) entry."
He puts up his $10,000 and buys an entry into the WSOP.
He goes to his assigned tournament table. The first hand is dealt and the guy is dealt As & Ad.
The voice says, "Go all in."
He pushes his entire $10,000 bankroll into the pot. Three players call.
The dealer lays down the flop which is 8h9h10h.
The voice says, "UhOh..."
Toke the Dealer!
In a 10-20 Hold'em game at the Mirage, a drunk was begining to get out of hand. "Well that was one shitty river card from you dealer!" he bellowed after missing a flush. The dealer beheld the drunk gravely; "Sir, there is a young lady at the table. If you don't control your language, you will have to leave." On the next hand, the drunk doesn't improve his set on the flop and loses to a straight. "Jesus Christ! Why don't you just light my fucking wallet on fire pinhead!" The dealer was absolutely at his limit; "Sir, I'm telling you for the last time; there is a young lady at the table! Control your language or you will be escorted out of the casino!" On the following hand, every player in the game wades into the pot. There are raises and caps on every card. In the end, the drunk sucks out an inside straight and wins the 10-20 pot of the month. The drunk looks out over his pile of chips at the dealer and asks, "Do you boys pool your tips together or do you keep them for yourselves?" The dealer replies "All dealers here keep their own tips." The drunk tosses two green chips at the dealer and says with a grin; "Well have a Goddamn toke on me, motherfucker." The dealer picks up the $50, turns to the young woman and says, "Miss, I'm afraid you'll have to leave the table."


Poker Monkey
A guy shows up at the Bellagio poker room with his monkey. The monkey jumps on on an empty seat and the guy buys him some chips.
As the dealer starts to pass the monkey by, the guy says, "Hey, deal my monkey in!" Everyone looks rather askance but they deal him in.
To everyone's surprise, the monkey picks up the cards and begins to play!After a few hands one of the guys says, "Say, that's amazing! Your monkey ought to be in the Guiness Book of Records!"
The owner says, "Nah, he sees too many flops and is a sucker for a check-raise."

My Odds Winning WSOP Main Event
What are the odds of me winning the main event at the World Series of Poker? Theoretically, if there are 2500 entrants, the unbiased odds of any player winning would be 2499-1 (against). However, some players are superior, while others are inferior, to the average entrant. This means that the actual odds on most players would deviate from the base figure. The vast majority of entrants face very long odds — perhaps 5,000-1, 10,000-1, or even higher. But what about top players? What are the odds of a world-class player winning the championship? The chances are substantially better than 2499-1, but by how much?
David Sklansky addressed this question. He assessed the odds of a top player winning at no greater than 50-1 (based on 300 entrants). “Even a superstar is at least a 50-to-1 underdog,” Sklansky wrote. “Excellent players (as opposed to superstars) are about 100-to-1 to win a championship with the current fields.”
Winning the WSOP main event is becoming more difficult every year. This is occurring for two reasons. First, the number of entrants continues to increase each year. Second, the main event has become extremely competitive — much more so than just 15 or 20 years ago when the fields were still limited to approximately 100 entrants and the elite players were easy to identify. Clearly, the disparity of years past will be blurred by the sea of bodies at the WSOP this year making this year’s task even more challenging.
Based on the increase in the number of entrants since 1998 , and Sklansky’s 50-1 estimate, the odds of a top player winning are probably no greater than about 175-1. This estimate also affects the odds of an “excellent” player winning — which is probably no better than about 350-1 in today’s fields. Therefore, superstars are about six times as likely to win as an average entrant. An excellent player is about three times as likely to win. A very good tournament professional might be 600-1 or higher.
It's estimated that about 50 players would fit into either the “superstar” or “excellent” player category (this too is debatable). Of course, the decision as to exactly which players should be ranked in the top 50 is highly prejudiced, since there are no clear distinctions between talent levels in poker, and every observer is likely to have a different opinion. Where I fit in this scheme is........

WSOP 2005 preregistration
Hmmm, I only need a bit over 100k to enter all events.....
Unless otherwise noted, all events will be held at the Rio, Las Vegas.
Event Date Buy-In Description 1 June 2, Thursday $500.00 Casino Employee No-limit Hold'em 2 June 3, Friday $1,500.00 No-limit Hold'em 3 June 4, Saturday $1,500.00 Pot-limit Hold'em 4 June 5, Sunday $1,500.00 Limit Hold'em 5 June 6, Monday $1,500.00 Omaha Hi-low Split 6 June 7, Tuesday $2,500.00 Short Handed (6/table) No-limit Hold'em 7 June 8, Wednesday $1,000.00 No-limit Hold'em w/rebuys 8 June 9, Thursday $1,500.00 Seven Card Stud 9 June 10, Friday $2,000.00 No-limit Hold'em 10 June 11, Saturday $2,000.00 Limit Hold'em 11 June 12, Sunday $2,000.00 Pot-limit Hold'em 12 June 13, Monday $2,000.00 Pot-limit Omaha w/re-buys 13 June 14, Tuesday $5,000.00 No-limit Hold'em 14 June 15, Wednesday $1,000.00 Seven Card Stud Hi-low Split 15 June 16, Thursday $1,500.00 Limit Hold'em Shootout 16 June 17, Friday $1,500.00 No-limit Hold'em Shootout 17 June 18, Saturday $2,500.00 Limit Hold'em 18 June 19, Sunday $2,000.00 Seven Card Stud Hi-low Split 2pm start 19 June 19, Sunday $1,500.00 Pot Limit Omaha 20 June 20, Monday $5,000.00 Pot-limit Hold'em 21 June 21, Tuesday $2,500.00 Omaha Hi-low Split 22 June 22, Wednesday $1,500.00 No-limit Hold'em 23 June 23, Thursday $5,000.00 Seven Card Stud 24 June 24, Friday $2,500.00 No-Limit Hold'em 25 June 25, Saturday $2,500.00 Pot-limit Hold'em 26 June 26, Sunday $1,000.00 Ladies Event No-limit Hold'em 2pm start 1 day event 27 June 26, Sunday $5,000.00 Pot-limit Omaha w/re-buys 28 June 27, Monday $5,000.00 Limit Hold'em 29 June 28, Tuesday $2,000.00 No-limit Hold'em 30 June 29, Wednesday $1,500.00 Seven Card Razz 1 day event, 2pm start 31 June 29, Wednesday $5,000.00 No-limit Hold'em-Short handed 6/table 32 June 30, Thursday $5,000.00 Omaha hi-low split 33 July 1, Friday $3,000.00 No-limit Hold'em 34 July 2, Saturday $1,000.00 Seniors No-Limit Hold'em 1day event 35 July 2, Saturday $10,000.00 Pot-limit Omaha 2pm start 36 July 3, Sunday $3,000.00 Limit Hold'em 37 July 4, Monday $1,000.00 No-limit Hold'em w/re-buys 38 July 5, Tuesday $1,000.00 Super satellite day (10am/3pm/8pm)* Pre-registration not available for satellite events. Registration must happen the day of the event. 39 July 5, Tuesday $5,000.00 No-limit 2 to 7 Draw Lowball w/re-buys 40 July 6, Wednesday $1,000.00 Super satellite day (9am/2pm/9pm)* Pre-registration not available for satellite events. Registration must happen the day of the event. 42 July 7-15th, Thursday - Friday $10,000.00 No-limit Texas Hold'em World Championship Event July 7-13: Rio, Las Vegas July 14-15: Binion’s Horseshoe, Las Vegas 43 July 11th, Monday $1,500.00 No-limit Hold'em 1 day event 44 July 12th, Tuesday $1,000.00 No-limit Hold'em 1 day event 45 July 13th, Wednesday $1,000.00 No-limit Hold'em 1 day event

You Know You're Running Bad When...
You Know You're Running Bad When...From a thread on rec.gambling.poker
The last thing you hear is, "His 6 plays, Sir." -- SYeates485
You are down three racks, and have no bad beat stories to tell. -- John Cervanyk
You raise under the gun and it's a family pot. -- John Cervanyk
The board is four to a straight flush, and you bet your top pair top kicker. -- John Cervanyk
At the river, players start taking turns guessing your hole cards, and they're right 99% of the time. -- John Cervanyk
On every bet, the other players first look to see if you are in or not. -- John Cervanyk
The guy next to you keeps telling you where the ATM is. -- John Cervanyk
You start to straddle under the gun because it might be lucky. -- John Cervanyk
You order a cheese sandwich at $1.10, and by the time the waitress brings it, you can't pay for it. -- Gary Carson
When there is a waiting list for the table you're playing at, and the list goes with you when you change tables. -- Gunmetal
When you would ask for a seat change whenever a seat opens up (any seat is better than the one you're already in). -- Gunmetal
When you ask the dealer to change the deck every other hand. -- Gunmetal
When you ask for a new setup every third hand. -- Gunmetal
When you steal your kid's lucky rabbit's foot to "protect" your cards. -- Gunmetal
When you start cussing out someone for calling your pre-flop raise with JQ (suited)... -- Gunmetal
When you start to wear a hockey goalie's mask to hide your tells. -- Gunmetal
Sir, you turned over your cards, and there is still another card to flop. -- Art Santella
Did I fall asleep? -- Art Santella
I really don't give a damn anymore, just deal. -- Art Santella
What did he beat me with? -- Art Santella
Can I borrow another $500 from you, dealer? -- Art Santella
When you leave the table to go to the bathroom and you look back, and see the dealer and all the players with their feet up on the table, reading the newspapers and waiting for you to get back. -- Art Santella
You leave a full table to cash out the few chips you have left after 6 hours and see the game break as you are walking toward the door. -- Ken Kubey
You call two bets cold with K-9 offsuit. -- Ken Kubey
You win a hand playing 5-3 offsuit in early position and the guy next to you checks your pulse. -- Ken Kubey
The only things you say all night are "Nice hand," "Well played," and "Chips!!" -- Ken Kubey
You promise the Omaha-8 dealer a $2 tip if you win any part of a pot and then have to give him $2 after the next hand when you get 1/6th of the pot with the nut low. -- Ken Kubey
You try a check-raise bluff on the river for the first time in a week and get re-raised. You fold and then the re-raiser shows you a bluffing hand that was even worse than yours. -- Ken Kubey
When you have a big stack of chips and you hear several players say, "At least the money is in the right hands." -- Richard Farver
The nice little old lady with the big pile of (your) chips in front of her inquires if you play here often. -- Linda Sherman
Nobody seems to mind if you get a peek at their hole cards. -- Linda Sherman
The DEALER tells you how he would have played your hand. -- Linda Sherman
People keep asking you what you do for a living. -- Linda Sherman
You stand up to split from a table solid with players, the board has a long waiting list. You gather your few remaining chips and in one voice you hear, "You're not leaving are you? You're gonna break up the game." -- Smokie
You start thinking that you should limit your play to Wilson software. -- Ashley
You start tipping in quarters to save money. -- Ashley
You eye the 1-3 game to see if there are any bad players over there. -- Ashley
You eye the slot machines because you know the house edge is only 7%. -- Ashley
You actually think about playing to YOUR left to take advantage of bad loose play. -- Ashley
You start to wish for a heavy smoker to sit down next to you so you can have a good excuse to leave with some dignity intact. -- Ashley
Your mind wanders and you start thinking about what a wonderful game HEARTS can be. -- Ashley
You catch a fifth diamond on sixth street, raise and reraise an obvious straight held by an awful player. Bet and raise and reraise on the River and announce, finally and loudly, FLUSH only to see that you have only four diamonds and a heart. -- Ashley
You're thinking: "OK as soon as I'm only down $500 I'm going home." -- Ashley
The people who were in the game with you yesterday are playing again, and when you enter the room they all say, "Hey, seat open!!" -- Llew
You raise on the river, get called by 2 players, turn over your hand and say, "Straight flush! Oh, no it's not..."

You Might Have A Poker Addiction When...
You Might Have A Poker Addiction When...From a thread on rec.gambling.poker
You don't get "road rage," you start driving "on tilt." -- Terrence Chan
You start classifying people on your life as "weak-tight" or "loose-passive," even when they've never set foot in a poker room. -- Terrence Chan
You can stack $10.00 worth of quarters into 8 perfect stacks of 5 quarters each in three seconds flat. -- Terrence Chan
You yell, "Send it!" at the ATM when you withdraw cash. -- Terrence Chan
You go out to a restaurant and tip the waitress the second she brings your food. -- Terrence Chan
You use the phrase "bad beat" when lending a sympathetic ear to a friend. -- Terrence Chan
The guy on TV didn't win the lottery, he had the "nut ticket". -- Terrence Chan
You drive 35 miles with a bad battery and know you'll need a jump when you leave. -- SYeates485
But you pawn your jumper cables for a buy-in. -- Gary Carson
You fill up your gas tank before going in almost like a savings account you cannot lose. -- SYeates485
You tip your wife $.50 when she brings you a beer while watching baseball on tv. -- NoPairKid
You intentionally start a fight with your spouse so you can righteously storm out of the house saying "I don't have to take this!" and head to the poker room. -- Claude
It's been more than 24 hours since the first time you told yourself "Just one more round and then I'll get some sleep." -- Claude
Your two ATM cards and five credit cards have all reached their maximum cash advance for the day. -- Claude
You figure if your family leaves you that will give you more time and money and you can move up to a bigger limit. -- Claude
You figure there's still another higher game to get you unstuck after you started at 10-20 and moved up to 15-30, then 30-60, trying to get even. -- Claude
You finally get back to even on IRC, check the log in the player info, and see you've been playing for 19 hours and 59 minutes. -- John Cervanyk
You get an invite to a new home game and play until 3:30 am. It takes a solid week of begging and promises to your wife to get to go to the second game, and you play until 6:00 am. -- John Cervanyk
You lose down to two chips and you still can't make yourself get up and go home. -- John Cervanyk
You check for new posts in RGP more often than you check your e-mail. -- John Cervanyk
Your kids are named Check and Raise. -- John Cervanyk
You have 12 games on your computer, solitaire, minesweeper, and 10 poker games. -- John Cervanyk
Your bathroom library consists of Card Player and Poker Digest. -- John Cervanyk
You are a charter member of alt.cheap.bastard but you have $600 worth of chips in your collection. -- John Cervanyk
The only reason you go to your in-law's for Thanksgiving is for the nickel, dime, quarter game after dinner. -- John Cervanyk
Or because they live closer to Oceans 11. -- SYeates485
You are having such a bad day at hold 'em that you decide to take a break... and play Omaha. -- Michael Geifman
The only time you play tight is from 11:40 p.m. to 12 so that you won't lose your seat before you can hit the ATM for your next day's withdrawl. -- Ken Kubey
Your sweetie gets a certain look in her eye and you think it means that she want to go to the cardroom. -- Ken Kubey
You have nightmares about your cards changing during the hand. -- Ken Kubey
You have dreams about poker where you bet food instead of chips. -- Ken Kubey
You fret over whether you should get a medium or large Coke at McDonald's, but laugh at the $3 ATM fee at your local cardroom. -- Ken Kubey
You play all night, drive home, take a quick shower, go to work, leave work eight hours later and go play five hours of live no-limit hold 'em. -- Ken Kubey
You have a poker chip in your pocket right now. -- Ken Kubey
You nearly explode your bladder because, "That next hand might be the one where I get back to even." -- Ashley

Luck In Poker

The next hand always is based on a nearly random shuffle of cards, favoring no one in particular. No matter what has happened in the past, the next deal always means a brand-new start for you. The cards don't remember who won the last hand. But even if they did remember, they probably would be too lazy to gang up on you. It takes too much effort. The cards don't conspire to favor certain players or to aggravate others. But streaks do exist. The Way it Should Be
But this is all natural. This is what's supposed to happen. This is the way it should be. Streaks are normal, not something to be surprised about. If you flip a coin 20 times and it comes out tails, tails, tails, heads, tails, tails, heads, tails, heads, heads, heads, heads, heads, heads, tails, heads, tails, tails, tails, heads - that's nothing amazing. There were six heads in a row, but so what? If the sequence came heads, tails, heads, tails, heads, tails, heads, tails, heads, tails, heads, tails, heads, tails, heads, tails, heads, tails, heads, tails, that's peculiar. Each sequence is equally rare (just over a million to one against, in fact), but sequences with recognizable patterns suggest that something might be interfering with random events. There might be a bias - not necessarily, but maybe. There also may be a bias when you see long streaks, but probably not. Always remember that streaks are natural, something you need to learn to live through. If you don't, you will be unprepared to win at poker.
Luck has influence, but the longer you play poker, the weaker its influence. And the big secret is that the more you act as if forces other than fair and random distribution of cards determine your fate, the worse you'll do. If the game is honest, there are no mysterious forces to fear.
But your opponents will fall victim to the illusion of luck - and that's good. You just need to figure out how to take advantage.
Using the Illusion of Luck to Win Money
It's much better to declare that you're lucky than to let opponents know that you're running badly. If opponents truly believe you're lucky, you actually can see the fear in their eyes.
Conceptually, luck is the most powerful element of profit. But not your luck. It's everyone's luck - yours and your opponents' - that influences the way players will react. You can tap into their reactions to luck to make much profit. But don't trick yourself into thinking that luck is earning the money for you. You're earning the money because you understand the absurdity of putting faith in luck. And your opponents are losing the money because they do not understand this.
There is no guarantee that the cards will break even in poker in your lifetime. But if you have skill and you make each decision matter, you'll probably win even without your "fair share" of luck.
Even in life itself, things don't break even. Some people waste away in hospitals and other prance down pretty paths. In poker, it's possible for two break-even players to sit in the same $75-$150 game for a year. One might win $150,000. One might lose $150,000. It will be all dumb luck, but which one do you think will be giving the lessons? Which one will be taking the lessons?
Even if the cards do break even, other elements may not. Some of these other elements are: (1) whether you are able to find the best games; (2) the size of the games you're playing when you get your best and biggest cards; (3) getting backing for games beyond your bankroll; and (4) being in the right place when the "producer" comes to town to unload $10 million.
Good luck has great influence on your foes. They lose by calling more often with weak hands, because they can't believe what they're seeing. (Also, there's not as much discredit in being beaten by someone on a winning streak, so the weak calls won't be scrutinized if they lose.) They lose by not betting or raising with winning hands, because they're intimidated. If you think opponents stay out of your way when they think you're running well, you need to re-examine this. You need to make continual value bets and raises when you're conspicuously lucky. Opponents will call more. They also will be less likely to maximize their advantage by raising when they have quality hands. Both of these factors play heavily in your favor and dictate that you should go into high gear and bet and raise with small advantages. You've probably heard that so-and-so "knows how to play a rush." Well, now you know what that means. Nothing more.
Opponents tend to call more liberally whether they're on a winning streak or a losing streak. On a winning streak, they think that luck is with them and they should stretch their calling to take advantage. On a losing streak, they just don't care.
This means that you should value bet less often into opponents who are conspicuously lucky or conspicuously unlucky.
Streaks can be seen only in the rear-view mirror. They always are things that already have happened. They never have any influence on what the next cards will be.
Bet more liberally when winning; bet less liberally when losing. When you're winning, most opponents are too intimidated to try tricky responses to your bets. They'll usually call when weak and often won't raise when strong. But when you're losing, opponents are inspired. They play better against you. They raise for value when you least expect it. For this reason, value bets simply don't work as well - and often don't work at all - when you're losing.
Players who are complaining about their bad luck seldom bluff. So, seldom call. They would rather just show their bad hands and ask, "See what I mean?"
Never complain about your bad luck. Opponents won't be sympathetic. They'll be inspired. And they'll play better. Simply deny that you're experiencing bad luck. That's the road to profit

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Not only is poker good for you, it's the American way, where winners play fair, have the right stuff, and nothing else matters, except, perhaps, a bit of luck every now and then. Lou Krieger

 

Poker is a microcosm of all we admire and disdain about capitalism and democracy. It can be rough-hewn or polished, warm or cold, charitable and caring, or hard and impersonal, fickle and elusive, but ultimately it is fair, and right, and just. ~L.K.

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Understand all of the potential consequences of your actions so that you may properly balance the competing goals of survival and chip accumulation.Every time the action passes to you whether it is to bet, check, raise, or fold, any action or inaction you choose will have consequences.  Therefore, it is imperative that you consider all of the consequences prior to making a decision.  In no limit hold ‘em tournaments, a failure to consider all of the consequences can be fatal.  If you make a substantial semi-bluff bet from early position after the flop, you must know what you will do in the event of a re-raise. Any tournament strategy should revolve around two main driving forces – chip accumulation and survival.  These two forces will frequently be at odds with each other because in order to survive, you must protect your chips and in order to advance, you must accumulate chips.  Therein lies the paradox of tournament poker.  You must accumulate chips without jeopardizing your own stack.  How do you accomplish this?  While it is impossible to play poker with zero risk, careful consideration of all of the consequences of every action on your part can certainly minimize your risk and give you a significant advantage.  Poker is a game of imperfect information, which is why it is so important at least to know all of the available information each time it is your turn to act.  Maximizing your knowledge will open the door for you to pick up chips at minimum risk. To learn more about this principle and other principles, read Tournament Poker and The Art of War.

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Whether he likes it or not, a man's character is stripped bare at the poker table; if the other players read him better than he does, he has only himself to blame. Unless he is both able and prepared to see himself as others do, flaws and all, he will be a loser in cards, as in life. Anthony Holden

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In fact, good poker players are more likely to be the victims of luck than the beneficiaries. Michael Craig

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http://www.pokerplayernewspaper.com Poker news, tournament reports, strategy, biographies, stories and reviews Copyright 2005 Tue, 26 Sep 2006 12:30:12 -0500 http://www.lasvegasvegas.com/pokerblog/ http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss - - -

In the early nineteen-eighties, I defined a concept that would become central to my teachings about poker and the world beyond. It explains the enigma of relationships. It defines a world of comparative talents that isn't always easily listed in ascending order. Understanding it will make your life less confusing. Here is a lecture I delivered about a decade ago on the subject...

Caro's Conception: The lecture

It is a concept that takes us far, far beyond just the basic strategies of winning at poker. "Caro's Conception" makes us aware that there is a level of poker prowess that is very real, yet nearly not definable. This doesn't just happen at poker, but in real life, too. But, I'm getting ahead of the story. First, I've got to tell you what the Conception - or concept - is based upon.

It's based upon a puzzling truth, long known to those who ponder such things - the truth that strengths are not always ordered by hierarchy. Sometimes stren... Continue reading Today's Word is... Conception

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If I told you that you could win a half of a million dollars playing poker without leaving your house or apartment, would that be something you'd be in interested in? Of course, you are! The World Championship of Online Poker (WCOOP) sponsored by PokerStars allows you the opportunity to play in the largest online poker tournament with prize pools that rival the World Poker Tour and the World Series of Poker. The most appealing aspect of the WCOOP is that you do not have to travel long distances to play against some of the best players in the world. All you have to do is turn on your computer and log on to PokerStars.

On September 16th, PokerStars kicks off the 2006 World Championship of Online Poker featuring 18 different tournaments, ending with the $3 million guaranteed NL main event on October 1st. Just like the winners at the WSOP, every event winner in the WCOOP will also be awarded a gold bracelet. The 2006 WCOOP will be the largest series of online poker tournamen... Continue reading 2006 WCOOP

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In my prior article I addressed starting requirements of stud and how they differed from hold 'em. Let me address the later streets in this the second part of this two part series.

If you are selective on Third Street, you will generally continue to bet your Premium Pairs, even if they don't improve, unless you see opponents who seem to have surpassed your hand. On the other hand, if you are going for a straight or a flush with a drawing hand, you generally want to call or check, sticking around cheaply until you make your hand.

In Stud, unlike in Hold Em, you have extra information available to you to help you determine where you stand relative to your opponents - both in terms of your hand's current value and its prospects for improvement. You need to take advantage of this information.

You need to keep an eye on the cards you need to make your hand, as well as the cards that may help your opponents' hands. Stud is a game of live cards. If... Continue reading A Stud Lesson for Hold'Em Players, PART 2 OF 2

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Last issue I revealed how our local maniac stumbled onto an extremely effective strategy in tournament play. The wording here has double meaning as Doug was usually plastered at this point in the tournament as a result of his intake of alcohol. While everyone else was tightening up their play hoping that someone else would get unlucky and bomb out, Doug was stealing pot after pot and increasing his stack size even more. It didn't matter to Doug whether he won or lost and as a result he had no fear. This made his aggressive play even more effective than usual and doubly so in tournaments (at least on the sober and reasonably minded players).

There are several strategies that one can utilize to make it deep in a tournament ( the structure of the tournament does influence these strategies ). The two most common styles that are successful in most tournaments are loose aggressive play and tight aggressive play. There are definite advantages and disadvantages to each style of ... Continue reading A Maniac Named Doug

]]> http://www.pokerplayernewspaper.com 3 Mon, 25 Sep 2006 12:00:00 -0500 - - - I've run into people even now who do not know that I have not dealt a card in over 5 years - sans some extra curricular activity that I am waiting to divulge. No matter, to them I am still that dealer that dealt them broke, a jackpot or have always given them good cards. So, even though your opponents at the table are either betting, folding, or receiving cards, the one person that players remember just as well are the dealers.

Conversely, when I dealt the cards and then played afterwards, I would make mental note of most of the player's tendencies as it related to some unconscious gestures they would do.

That brings me to the point that I was illustrating in my last paragraph in the last issue. People reveal more about themselves unconsciously than if they were to engage you in conversation. Before there was ever card games people were revealing "tells" about themselves on a daily basis.

Why else would a person gifted in this respect -readi... Continue reading Listen Carefully

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