ArticleBiz.com :: Free article content
Authors: Maximum article exposure. Publishers: Reprintable article content.  
BROWSE ARTICLES
ArticleBiz.com Home
Featured Articles
Recently Added Articles
Most Viewed Articles
Article Comments
Advanced Article Search
AUTHORS
Submit Article
Check Article Status
Author TOS
PUBLISHERS
RSS Article Feeds
Terms of Service

George Christodoulou's Texas Holdem Strategy guide
Home :: Sports & Recreations :: Casino-Gaming
By: George Christodoulou Email Article
Word Count: 824 Digg it | Del.icio.us it | Google it | StumbleUpon it

4 Basic Rules for Texas Holdem

1. Don't be afraid to fold. You don't need a good hand to win, you need the best hand.
2. Don't be afraid to bet the maximum. If you have a good hand, maximize your winnings.
3. Don't chase the pot. Don't worry about whether there are cards that could win it for you; worry about whether the odds are good of getting the cards that can win it for you.
4. Play long term. To make a profit at Poker, you have to play the odds you lose a few hands for a few dollars each and then you win a hand and make it all back plus some.
Poker Strategy ..1 Starting Hands
Fold more in early position (among the first to bet) than in middle or late position. The later you are in position, the more you can figure out about your opponents hands by watching how they bet, or don't bet. General guidelines (s = same suit, o = off suit):
In early position:
Raise AA, KK, QQ, AK
Call JJ, AQ, KQs
Fold Everything else
Middle Position:
Raise same as above plus JJ, AQ, KQs
Call TT, 99, 88, 77, AJ, ATs, KJs, QJs, KQo, KTs
Fold Everything else
Late Position:
Raise same as above plus TT, II, AJ, ATs
Call 88, 77, 66, 55, 44, AT, A9, Axs (where x is any small card), KJ, KT, K9, K8s, QJ, QT, Q9s, JT, J9s, T9, T8, 98, 97s, 87s
Fold Everything else
Poker Strategy ..2 Aggression
There are two ways to win: get the best hand, or get everyone to fold. The less people still in the game, the better chance you have of beating them. Be aware, however, that in low limit games rarely fold. Its harder to get a $3 bet to fold, than a $300 bet.
Poker Strategy ..3 The Math
When you want to figure out whether its worth betting, thing about this. The first thing you do is count your outs the number of cards in the deck that make your hand. For example, if you need a straight and you have 5689, you need a 7 to win (assuming there is no one with a higher hand). There are four 7s in the deck so you have four outs. If you have 4567, you can get a straight with a 3 or an 8, which means you have eight outs.
If you have a flush draw (four cards to a flush) after the flop (when the first three cards are laid down) it will leave forty seven unseen cards. 52 (total cards) 3 (flop) 2 (in your hand) = 47. When the next card is laid (the turn), 38 cards are bad and 9 are good. That means the odds against making the flush are 38 to 9, approximately 4 to 1, meaning for every four times you don't get your hand, you will get it once.
The next step is figuring the pot odds. Don't count money you've already put in the pot as part of your odds. That money is gone; it is no longer yours. If you are playing $3-$6 Holdem and there are 9 small bets in the pot (meaning 9 people have bet and called) then you have 9 to 1 pot odds on your bet. In other words, if thats the last of the betting, you would make $27 on a win and lose $3 if you lose.
Next, look at the odds together. The pot odds are 9 to 1, and the odds of getting your hand are 4 to 1. Over time, you'll miss four out of five times. In five hands you will loose $3 x 4 = $12 during your losses and you'll win $27 the time you hit. That means your profit will be $15, or $15/3 = $3 per hand. So you should call. To put it simply, the pot odds are bigger than the odds of hitting.
Heres a shortcut on figuring out whether you'll make your hand. After the flop, multiply your number of outs by four to get a general percentage of winning your hand This is your probability of improving, not the odds against it. To figure out your odds, just switch it. If you have a 35% chance of winning, then you have a 100 35 = 65% of losing. 65 to 35 = 1.86 to 1 odds If there is only one card left to come, multiply your outs by 2.2, or you can be more general and just go with 2, although the calculation won't be as accurate.

George Christodoulou, Get strategies like this one and much more, including a gambling forum , reviews for the best casinos on the net, my gambling blog, a gambling tips newsletter and much more at; gamblerstrategies.com

Article Source: http://www.ArticleBiz.com

This article has been viewed 191 times.

Rate Article
Rating: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).

Article Comments
There are no comments for this article.

Leave A Reply
 Your Name
 Your Email Address [will not be published]
 Your Website [optional]
 What is five + two? [tell us you're human]
Notify me of followup comments via email


Related Articles


Copyright © 2009 by ArticleBiz.com. All rights reserved.

Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Submit Article | Editorial