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The Pre-Flop Re-Steal – No Limit Texas Holdem

Posted by Curtom | August 31, 2007 | Posted in: Articles, News | Comments (0)

By Sasha
I suppose there is a library of advice that can be offered in regards to every poker play; however, the stealing blinds is a necessity in tournament play if you hope to build your stack towards the leader, and maintain a workable stack as the blinds increase and players decrease. The pre-flop re-steal is simply a re-raise based on an initial raise that someone has bet in an effort to steal the blinds. So if you were thinking it had something to do with robbing a bank with gymnastic ability the day after someone else robbed it, you’ve come to the wrong place.Often times in a game of No-Limit Texas Holdem, players will lose patience when they feel the looming blanket of desperation begin to wrap around their tournament run, or perhaps their cash game budget. They realize that they will need to make an effort at stealing blinds or they won’t have any blinds to offer. At this point, it’s not uncommon to see a player move all-in pre-flop, but in the case that they make an effort to simply raise and steal the blind, they are a prime target for a re-steal. If you are sitting further down the line, a re-raise will put the pressure on the remaining competitors; and if you happen to have posted the blind and sit on a strong pocket, it may be worthwhile to challenge the thief and retain your stack.

There are many strategies for most effectively utilizing a re-steal, but ultimately it comes down to reading opponents. The player with a stack that is smaller than yours might as well have a target on their back if they raise early; as much as they want to add the blinds to their dwindling stack, they’ve also got to think to protect. If they were remotely confident in what they were holding pre-flop, they would more than likely…  Read rest of article at Smoke Poker


Uconventional Aesthetics and Experimental Tournament Poker

Posted by Curtom | August 17, 2007 | Posted in: Articles, News | Comments (0)

by nowapowa
It is often said of posthumously successful artists who were underappreciated in their lifetime that they were somehow ahead of their time. Their contribution to their craft could not be appreciated at the time because of its deviation from commonly accepted notions. Moby Dick is considered by many authorities and readers alike to be a brilliant work of fiction. However, looking at the reviews upon its release, one might think it was doomed to obscurity and failure.

Experimental poker players have a comparable advantage over artists in terms of the potential reward their risk entails. The avant-garde of the poker world may be blasted by their tablemates for their unorthodox play, but these players ultimately are having the last laugh. Their willingness to experiment is the key to their success. Try and imagine what people must have thought of the first squeeze play gone wrong.

Blind-stealing. The squeeze play. The resteal. These plays represent just some of the ways winning tournament players have stayed ahead of the field by employing strategies that vary from traditional card dependent methodologies. Today these plays are common knowledge, though they did not always exist. We have a handful of enterprising…. read rest of article at PocketFives.com


Gettin a leg up

Posted by Curtom | August 13, 2007 | Posted in: Articles, News | Comments (0)

By Joe Navarro
This is a question I ask attendees at the various poker seminars and training camps I conduct every year. The answer is important, because once you know the most honest part of an individual’s body, that’s where you’ll want to look to pick up the most accurate read on what your opponent is holding. The problem is that few attendees know the right answer; in fact, unless they are familiar with Read ‘em and Reap, they almost always respond incorrectly and, thus, they ignore the part of a person’s anatomy that gives significant, uncensored information about his true card strength.The correct answer to the question: “What is the most honest part of your body?” is… your feet!

That’s right: Your feet win the honesty award hands, uh, feet down every time. The feet are truly remarkable and truthful in the information they convey. Unfortunately, when it comes to reading body language, most poker players start at the top (face) of their opponent(s) and work their way down, in spite of the fact that the face is the one feature of the body that is most often used to bluff and conceal true sentiments. My approach is the exact opposite: I begin with the feet and move up from there. This is because when it comes to the honesty of a person’s responses, the degree of truthfulness decreases as we move from the soles of our feet to the top of our head. Thus, our feet are the most honest part of our body, and our face is the most deceptive.

When you think about it, there’s good reason for the deceitful nature of our facial expressions. We lie with our face because that’s what we’ve been taught to do since early childhood. “Don’t make that face!” our parents growl when we honestly react to Aunt Wilma’s treacherous meat loaf. “At least look happy when your cousins stop by,” they add, and you learn how to force a smile. Mom and Dad are, in essence, telling us to hide, conceal, deceive, lie with our face… so we tend to get pretty good at it. So good, in fact, that when we put on a happy face at the poker table, we might look like we’ve got…. Read rest of article at Bluff Magazine

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