<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/xsl/rss2html.xsl" type="text/xsl" media="screen"?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/scripts/wpcss/wiki/pokerplanet/skin/sporty/rss" type="text/css" media="screen"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"><channel><title>POKERPLANET - Recently Updated Pages</title><link>http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/pageSearch/updated</link><description>Recently Updated Pages on http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com</description><language>en-us</language><webMaster>info@wetpaint.com</webMaster><pubDate>Thu, 05 Oct 2006 10:13:35 CDT</pubDate><lastBuildDate>Thu, 05 Oct 2006 10:13:35 CDT</lastBuildDate><generator>wetpaint.com</generator><ttl>60</ttl><image><title>POKERPLANET</title><url>http://www.wetpaint.com/img/logo.gif</url><link>http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com</link></image><item><title>FREE POKER BOT</title><link>http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/page/FREE+POKER+BOT</link><author>pokeroracle</author><guid isPermaLink="false">http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/page/FREE+POKER+BOT</guid><pubDate>Thu, 05 Oct 2006 10:13:35 CDT</pubDate><description>&lt;h2&gt;   &lt;/h2&gt;  &lt;h2&gt;  &lt;b&gt;&lt;u&gt;MAKE MONEY WHILE YOU SLEEP WITH THIS AMAZING FIRST CLASS CHECK RAISING ,FULLY ADJUSTABLE POKER ROBOT&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/h2&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;u&gt;What is a poker bot?&lt;/u&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;A poker bot is a program that plays poker for you in an Internet &lt;br&gt;poker game. Most bots are programmed to play a certain way based &lt;br&gt;on mathematical formulas. A bot can play for as long as any poker &lt;br&gt;game lasts.&lt;br&gt;What are the advantages of using a bot?&lt;br&gt;The greatest advantage of using a bot is that you do not need to &lt;br&gt;know how to play poker in order to win. A bot can also be set to &lt;br&gt;play poker for you automatically so that you don&amp;#39;t have to sit &lt;br&gt;there and spend time playing yourself.&lt;br&gt;What kind of poker games can I play with POKER Robot?&lt;br&gt;POKER Robot was developed to be used in fixed limit, Texas Hold&amp;#39;em &lt;br&gt;games only. However, the new semi-auto mode allows you to play at &lt;br&gt;no limit tables too, as it will fold all bad hands for you. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;u&gt;&lt;b&gt;SPECIAL Technical Features &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/u&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;FULLY ADJUSTABLE PLAYING STYLE FROM TIGHT TO LOSE -13 SETTINGS&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;FULLY ADJUSTABLE PLAYING STYLE FROM PASSIVE TO AGGRESSIVE -11 SETTINGS&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;FULLY ADJUSTABLE CHECK RAISE FREQUENCY 4 SETTINGS&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;u&gt;Technical Features &lt;/u&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Artificial Intelligence - POKER Robot&amp;rsquo;s secret lies in its use &lt;br&gt;of Neural Nets and Genetic Algorithms.&lt;br&gt;Multiple Table Capability - gives you the opportunity to run &lt;br&gt;POKER Robot on an unlimited number of tables.&lt;br&gt;Auto Screen Scrape - POKER Robot automatically recognizes each &lt;br&gt;card in your hand.&lt;br&gt;Pot Odds - the program displays pot odds so that you know how &lt;br&gt;much to call.&lt;br&gt;Implied Odds - the program automatically adds implied odds to &lt;br&gt;your pot odds, giving you the maximum betting advantage.&lt;br&gt;Chance To Win - POKER Robot uses opponent modeling, player stats &lt;br&gt;and simulations to calculate your chances of winning.&lt;br&gt;Opponent Modeling - recognizes the players betting pattern &lt;br&gt;using an artificial neural network.&lt;br&gt;Player Stats - memorizes the game styles of your opponents, &lt;br&gt;and applies this information to your implied and hand odds.&lt;br&gt;Simulation - POKER Robot can randomly simulate games to &lt;br&gt;determine which decision will be most profitable for you (i.e. &lt;br&gt;check, raise etc.).&lt;br&gt;Automatically Changes Playing Style - you can customize your &lt;br&gt;style of play to fit real or play money tables while &lt;br&gt;optimizing player assumptions.&lt;br&gt;Randomized Response Time - this feature allows POKER Robot to &lt;br&gt;simulate the same unpredictable actions of a human being.&lt;br&gt;New: Semi-Auto mode - allows you to play the good hands, while &lt;br&gt;POKER Robot folds all bad hands automatically.&lt;br&gt;New: Watch mode - Just disable the Auto Play feature, and &lt;br&gt;POKER Robot will display tips and statistics for you!&lt;br&gt;New: Auto-stop timer - Allows you to set a time limit for how &lt;br&gt;long the POKER Robot plays for you.&lt;br&gt;New: Hand strength bar - POKER Robot displays your hand strength &lt;br&gt;automatically for easy monitoring.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;How does POKER Robot make decisions about what moves to make?&lt;br&gt;POKER Robot calculates your chance to win, then compares this with &lt;br&gt;the pot odds. The result of this comparison is the advice that &lt;br&gt;POKER Robot gives you. &lt;br&gt;How does POKER Robot calculate my chances of winning?&lt;br&gt;Before beginning any calculations, POKER Robot has to collect &lt;br&gt;information from several sources, including your cards, your &lt;br&gt;position and your opponents&amp;#39; bets. The betting pattern of the &lt;br&gt;first opponent is then transferred to POKER Robot&amp;#39;s neural network. &lt;br&gt;The network is already &amp;#39;trained&amp;#39; to predict the next 101 hand &lt;br&gt;strengths of an opponent (0%-100%). This procedure is performed &lt;br&gt;for all opponents, after which POKER Robot determines 1 to 3 of the &lt;br&gt;strongest. POKER Robot then stores all the information collected &lt;br&gt;into a hand-strength probability table. &lt;br&gt;POKER Robot can also calculate the probability of an opponent having &lt;br&gt;a certain pocket hand. For example, if the opponent had double &lt;br&gt;Jacks in the Flop, and you calculated that he, at the time had a &lt;br&gt;hand strength of 30%, then we can, thanks to the hand-strength &lt;br&gt;probability-table, find out the probability of our opponent having &lt;br&gt;double Jacks. &lt;br&gt;Finally, POKER Robot has one very complex procedure to perform: the &lt;br&gt;evaluation of all possible card outcomes, for both the strongest &lt;br&gt;opponents and the next betting round. All outcomes for an opponent &lt;br&gt;are weighted proportionally with the card probability-table. The &lt;br&gt;result is calculated with this formula: &lt;br&gt;Win-Loss+Tie/2 divided by all outcomes &lt;br&gt;The result is a very accurate prediction of your chances to win. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;u&gt;Frequently Asked Questions &lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;u&gt;How do I set up POKER Robot?&lt;/u&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;1. Run POKER Robot.&lt;br&gt;2. Open a fixed limit Texas Hold&amp;#39;em table (no limit works only in &lt;br&gt;semi-auto mode).&lt;br&gt;3. Turn on all chat options (dealer, cards etc.).&lt;br&gt;4. Lean back, relax and enjoy!&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;u&gt;What happens if POKER Robot is detected by the poker site?&lt;/u&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;First of all, it is impossible to detect POKER Robot, simply because &lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;of its human-like playing style.&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;But if you were to get caught using another poker bot, you&amp;#39;d &lt;br&gt;receive a message similar to &amp;quot;Poker robots are not allowed, please &lt;br&gt;contact our support for more info.&amp;quot; and you&amp;#39;d have to shut down &lt;br&gt;the bot and restart the poker site. However, they will NOT suspend &lt;br&gt;your account for using a bot.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;But remember, POKER Robot is 100% guaranteed to be &lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;undetectable by the internet poker sites.&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I tried adjusting the &amp;quot;Playing Style&amp;quot; settings, but am not seeing &lt;br&gt;any changes.&lt;br&gt;The &amp;quot;Playing Style&amp;quot; settings will only work at real money tables. &lt;br&gt;But at play money tables, POKER Robot will play in a more aggressive &lt;br&gt;mode with the &amp;quot;Playing Style&amp;quot; settings disabled. If you disagree &lt;br&gt;with the bot&amp;#39;s playing style, follow these instructions: &lt;br&gt;Using the default settings, enable semi auto mode and watch &lt;br&gt;POKER Robot&amp;#39;s suggested moves while you experiment with the &lt;br&gt;settings. Remember to save your settings after you change them.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;u&gt;POKER Robot Check List&lt;/u&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Remember, POKER Robot&amp;#39;s settings can only be used at real money &lt;br&gt;tables. After sitting down at a table, you need to play manually &lt;br&gt;up to two hands before POKER Robot starts up.&lt;br&gt;Make sure all chat options are checked, including Player &lt;br&gt;Actions.&lt;br&gt;The chat box must be located in the left bottom side of the &lt;br&gt;poker table.&lt;br&gt;POKER Robot is English only, so make sure your poker site is in &lt;br&gt;English.&lt;br&gt;If the POKER Robot program freezes on startup, try disabling your &lt;br&gt;firewall and/or allowing it to run POKER Robot.exe.&lt;br&gt;Make sure the poker table is fully visible.&lt;br&gt;Make sure you are using the default skin on your operating &lt;br&gt;system.&lt;br&gt;Make sure your Windows color depth is set to 32 bit. Here&amp;#39;s how &lt;br&gt;to set it: &lt;br&gt;Right click on the desktop &lt;br&gt;Choose &amp;quot;Properties&amp;quot; &lt;br&gt;Click the Settings tab, and set the color depth to 32 bit &lt;br&gt;If you change this setting, you need to close down and restart &lt;br&gt;the poker room. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;u&gt;CURRENTLY SUPPORTED SITES&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;TITAN POKER-&lt;a class=&quot;external&quot; href=&quot;http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.comhttp://banner.titanpoker.com/cgi-bin/redir.cgi?id=N&amp;member=grubberr&amp;profile=1&amp;quot;&gt;&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;CD POKER-&lt;a class=&quot;external&quot; href=&quot;http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.comhttp://banner.cdpoker.com/cgi-bin/redir.cgi?id=N&amp;member=18500000&amp;profile=13433&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;NOBLE POKER-&lt;a class=&quot;external&quot; 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target=&quot;_top&quot;&gt;dazzer99@ntlworld.com&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;AND I WILL SEND YOU POKER ROBOT FREE&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;hr size=&quot;1&quot;&gt;&lt;br/&gt;</description></item><item><title>Home</title><link>http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/page/Home</link><author>pokeroracle</author><guid isPermaLink="false">http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/page/Home</guid><pubDate>Thu, 05 Oct 2006 10:13:21 CDT</pubDate><description>&lt;h2&gt;  &lt;b&gt;&lt;u&gt; &lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/h2&gt;  &lt;h2&gt;  &lt;b&gt;&lt;u&gt;GET YOUR FREE CASH HERE&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;u&gt;100% GUARENTEED&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/h2&gt;STEP 1-SIMPLY SIGN UP TO THE POKER SITE BELOW USING THE LINK AND DEPOSIT $20 (approx &amp;pound;10 )   &lt;br&gt;USE THE EMAIL THAT YOU REGISTERD WITH PAYPAL SO I CAN SEND YOU YOUR FREE CASH &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;(they will give you extra free cash for signing up) &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;STEP 2-DO NOTHING AS SOON AS I RECIEVE CONFIRMATION FROM THE SITE&lt;br&gt;THAT YOUR ACCOUNT IS OPEN I WILL PERSONALY SEND &amp;pound;20 POUNDS&lt;br&gt;STRAIGHT TO YOUR PAYPAL ACCOUNT,USUALLY WITHIN 24 HOURS&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;STEP 3-CHECK YOUR PAYPAL ACCOUNT,ITS THAT SIMPLE&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;HERE IS THE LINK-TO PACIFIC POKER YOU MUST USE THIS&lt;br&gt;&lt;a class=&quot;external&quot; href=&quot;http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.comhttp://www.pacificpoker.com/PokerInstaller?s=111111111111111111&amp;sr=334483&amp;lang=en&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot; title=&quot;PLEASE CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP &amp; GET YOUR FREE CASH&quot;&gt;PLEASE CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP &amp;amp; GET YOUR FREE CASH&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;HEY PRESTOW YOU HAVE JUST DOUBLED YOUR &amp;pound;10 POUNDS &lt;br&gt;TO &amp;pound;20 POUNDS STRAIGHT INTO YOUR PAYPAL ACCOUNT&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;PLUS YOU HAVE OVER $20 PLUS YOUR BONUS MONEY IN YOUR POKER ACCOUNT TO DO WITH AS YOU PLEASE&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;EMAIL ME AT-&lt;a href=&quot;http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.commailto:ATdazzer99@ntlworld.com&quot; target=&quot;_top&quot;&gt;dazzer99@ntlworld.com&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;DONT FORGET TO CHECK BACK AS MORE FREE CASH OFFERS ARE&lt;br&gt;COMMING SOON&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;ENJOY YOUR FREE CASH AND TELL YOUR FRIENDS&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;hr size=&quot;1&quot;&gt;&lt;br/&gt;</description></item><item><title>PLAYING THE FLOP</title><link>http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/page/PLAYING+THE+FLOP</link><author>pokeroracle</author><guid isPermaLink="false">http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/page/PLAYING+THE+FLOP</guid><pubDate>Tue, 03 Oct 2006 21:11:01 CDT</pubDate><description>There is no abstract available for this page revision.&lt;hr size=&quot;1&quot;&gt;&lt;br/&gt;</description></item><item><title>INSIDER SECRETS TO TEXAS HOLDEM BY THEO CAGE</title><link>http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/page/INSIDER+SECRETS+TO+TEXAS+HOLDEM+BY+THEO+CAGE</link><author>pokeroracle</author><guid isPermaLink="false">http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/page/INSIDER+SECRETS+TO+TEXAS+HOLDEM+BY+THEO+CAGE</guid><pubDate>Tue, 03 Oct 2006 20:26:39 CDT</pubDate><description>Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;INSIDERS SECRETS TO PLAYING &lt;br&gt;TEXAS HOLD&amp;rsquo;EM POKER &lt;br&gt;ONLINE &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;2004 &lt;br&gt;All Rights Reserved.&lt;br&gt;Theodore Cage 2004 Canada&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;All rights reserved under International Copyright Conventions. &lt;br&gt;Published in Canada by CardShark Books. Unless otherwise noted, &lt;br&gt;all materials contained in this document are copyrighted and may not &lt;br&gt;be used except as provided under these terms and conditions. This &lt;br&gt;document is for personal use only and is not to be redistributed, sold &lt;br&gt;or copied without the author&amp;rsquo;s explicit permission. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Edition 4.0 August 2004 An Official CardShark Publication &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;AN INTRODUCTION &lt;br&gt;TO ONLINE POKER &lt;br&gt;THINKING AND &lt;br&gt;INSIDERS SECRETS &lt;br&gt;&amp;ldquo;I discovered the secret recipe to KFC Chicken 15 years ago and I &lt;br&gt;have been hooked on &amp;lsquo;Insiders Secrets&amp;rsquo; ever since.&amp;rdquo; &lt;br&gt;H ave you ever been to a party or a bar where you&amp;#39;ve met &lt;br&gt;someone for the first time who told you an insiders secret &lt;br&gt;to their business or work? Maybe I&amp;#39;m just a good listener &lt;br&gt;but this happens to me all the time. We all know these insider &lt;br&gt;kinds of details about our own little world. For example, if we &lt;br&gt;worked at Cadbury, the Cadbury Secret would be one of the first &lt;br&gt;things we would learn about on the job (even if it wasn&amp;rsquo;t officially &lt;br&gt;part of the training program). There are other kinds of insider &lt;br&gt;knowledge -how something is really made at the plant we work &lt;br&gt;at, how certain products are marketed, where an idea really came &lt;br&gt;from, or how you can make a product yourself for one-tenth the &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;price. &lt;br&gt;Don&amp;#39;t you wish you could talk to an insider at the plant where the &lt;br&gt;car you are considering buying is made? Or someone who really &lt;br&gt;knows the scoop on the mortgage industry when it&amp;#39;s time to get refinanced? How about talking to the guy who programmed the &lt;br&gt;VLT machine you play everyday at lunch? Would that help you &lt;br&gt;win more? &lt;br&gt;Everybody we have talked to about Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em has said that &lt;br&gt;what they really want is more than just a book that tells them the &lt;br&gt;rules to the game. They want something new. Something fresh &lt;br&gt;that will give them an edge over the other players. Something &lt;br&gt;exciting. &lt;br&gt;So we talked to the insiders. How does the system work? How are &lt;br&gt;the cards shuffled (what&amp;rsquo;s the randomizing algorithm)? Has &lt;br&gt;anyone done any studies on what cards really pay the best? What &lt;br&gt;tables play the best? Are there systems that work online better &lt;br&gt;than others? What do the insiders know about cards to play? Can &lt;br&gt;we really make money at this game? &lt;br&gt;From this feedback we develop this book concept. Then we hunted &lt;br&gt;down the facts. In the end, this has been a lot of fun and quite &lt;br&gt;profitable. We love the game of Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em but now we have &lt;br&gt;the tools to win more games. As usual, if you have the insider &lt;br&gt;&amp;lsquo;stuff&amp;rsquo;, you are better armed to succeed. Pretty much one of those &lt;br&gt;simple rules to live your life by if you ask me. &lt;br&gt;I believe that winning in life, love, business and sports &amp;ndash; and yes, &lt;br&gt;poker, is all about three dynamics I like to call the CSI&amp;rsquo;s. &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Contingency (chance or luck) &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Self-awareness (know your strengths and weaknesses) &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Intelligence (or &amp;lsquo;street smarts&amp;rsquo;) &lt;br&gt;We have divided this book into these three key areas for a very &lt;br&gt;good reason. When you play online poker for real money for the &lt;br&gt;first time you will find it difficult just to survive. Your stack (your &lt;br&gt;personal chips) will disappear like an umbrella in a typhoon. If &lt;br&gt;you have what it takes to stick it out through this initiation (and &lt;br&gt;the expendable cash to last), you will next discover that what you &lt;br&gt;are lacking is real technical knowledge. You will soon realize that &lt;br&gt;you need to play this game more with &amp;lsquo;field intelligence&amp;rsquo; than &lt;br&gt;instinct. That is, if you want to win consistently. &lt;br&gt;Finally, as you progress into larger pot games, the real test will be &lt;br&gt;your ability to be mentally tough, disciplined and aggressive. Our &lt;br&gt;last section on self-awareness discusses the philosophy of great &lt;br&gt;poker players. &lt;br&gt;There are dozens of books available today on poker. I&amp;rsquo;ve read most &lt;br&gt;of them. They tend to focus on one or more of the following areas: &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Analysis of odds and strategy &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; History and actual play examples &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Techniques on &amp;lsquo;tells&amp;rsquo; or how to read the other players &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Mental preparation for the game itself &lt;br&gt;Not even the best books cover all of these areas or attempt to bring &lt;br&gt;these different practices together in some meaningful way. This is &lt;br&gt;our goal with Insiders Secrets To Playing Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Online; &lt;br&gt;to link strategy and intelligence and mental preparation in a way &lt;br&gt;that will ramp you up to be successful at the best game in the &lt;br&gt;world in the shortest possible time. &lt;br&gt;What&amp;rsquo;s new about this book? First, unlike most of the books on the &lt;br&gt;market, this volume is NOT based on fifty years of writing around &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;the traditional &amp;lsquo;bricks and mortar&amp;rsquo; game of Poker. Our focus is &lt;br&gt;specific to the new online versions of Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker, played &lt;br&gt;by over 20,000,000 people worldwide over the Net every single &lt;br&gt;day. Anyone who has played online poker knows this is quite a &lt;br&gt;different animal indeed. &lt;br&gt;Secondly, we present the Cage Food Chain Theory, a new system &lt;br&gt;of play based on the results of three major research programs &lt;br&gt;carried out by computer simulations on Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker. If &lt;br&gt;you follow the system religiously, you will find your winnings &lt;br&gt;increasing -gradually at first, and then substantially. All the &lt;br&gt;research shows that aggressive play is the key to winning monster &lt;br&gt;pots; aggression at the right time and based on a solid body of &lt;br&gt;knowledge. We will show you the process and outline the steps to &lt;br&gt;being a true &amp;lsquo;card shark&amp;rsquo;. But you must follow the rules. When we &lt;br&gt;run &amp;lsquo;labs&amp;rsquo; on the Cage Food Chain Theory we find that players get &lt;br&gt;caught up in the game and bend the rules of the system, letting &lt;br&gt;their emotions rule their play. Or they go by gut feeling on a &lt;br&gt;decisive hand instead of considering pot odds and card odds. The &lt;br&gt;online casinos love that kind of play &amp;ndash; it makes them millions &lt;br&gt;every month. It won&amp;rsquo;t however put any extra money in your bank &lt;br&gt;account. You&amp;rsquo;ve got to stop playing by &amp;lsquo;gut&amp;rsquo; feel. &lt;br&gt;Of the three dynamics, we start with the &amp;lsquo;intel&amp;rsquo; section and &lt;br&gt;contingency data first; this is where the rubber hits the road for &lt;br&gt;most players and we wanted to get you started with an exciting &lt;br&gt;new system of playing that will give you a first-hand advantage. &lt;br&gt;What&amp;rsquo;s Intel? &amp;ndash; typical &amp;lsquo;military speak&amp;rsquo; for &amp;lsquo;field intelligence&amp;rsquo; -or &lt;br&gt;relevant knowledge. What you need to know, now. In the covert &lt;br&gt;world of spies and agents, having the right nugget of information &lt;br&gt;available when required can save your life or someone else&amp;rsquo;s. In &lt;br&gt;Poker, it means making the win when others wouldn&amp;rsquo;t and adding &lt;br&gt;a few points to your odds. This is different from lifetime &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;experience -which you can only gain from playing the game &lt;br&gt;thousands of times. &lt;br&gt;Field intel helps you parachute in to a situation and be competent &lt;br&gt;and savvy in a big hurry. &lt;br&gt;The Theo Cage Food Chain Theory of Poker condenses dozens of &lt;br&gt;schools of thought on Poker into an easy to digest program that &lt;br&gt;you can begin using immediately. The goal of this technique is to &lt;br&gt;get you out of the &amp;lsquo;fish&amp;rsquo; category and in to the &amp;lsquo;shark&amp;rsquo; category &lt;br&gt;before you get eaten alive. Pardon the food puns but the speed and &lt;br&gt;aggressiveness of real money online poker can spin your head &lt;br&gt;around. You will need to be armed and ready. &lt;br&gt;In many areas of this book we deal with the latest in research on &lt;br&gt;&amp;lsquo;contingency&amp;rsquo;, another word for &amp;lsquo;odds&amp;rsquo;. Why not just call it &amp;lsquo;luck&amp;rsquo;? &lt;br&gt;Because contingency is a far broader and more elegant term. Luck &lt;br&gt;is not a &amp;lsquo;thing&amp;rsquo; you can buy or create and you certainly cannot &lt;br&gt;attract it or capture it (or chase it away). What we as humans see as &lt;br&gt;&amp;lsquo;luck&amp;rsquo; is really just chance circumstance playing out before us. &lt;br&gt;The best way to visualize contingency is to imagine a fork in the &lt;br&gt;road. Which then leads to another fork. And still another. Each &lt;br&gt;requires a decision and each decision can lead to very different &lt;br&gt;conclusions. That&amp;rsquo;s what contingency is all about. Sometimes we &lt;br&gt;choose the path without knowing where it will take us and other &lt;br&gt;times we don&amp;rsquo;t get to choose at all. &lt;br&gt;In Poker, we can use math to better understand the odds of certain &lt;br&gt;combinations occurring in your game. Really understanding the &lt;br&gt;odds in Poker is one of the keys to success; not only because it &lt;br&gt;helps you to better understand the possibilities but because it &lt;br&gt;teaches us the expected monetary value of our hand as well. &lt;br&gt;What&amp;rsquo;s the good in knowing that the chance of pulling another &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Queen is 1:7 if we don&amp;rsquo;t know how to translate that information &lt;br&gt;into a practical betting decision? &lt;br&gt;Recent computer simulations of Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em have taught us &lt;br&gt;quite a bit about real game odds and strategy. What they&amp;rsquo;ve also &lt;br&gt;shown us is that it takes several lifetimes to average out the odds &lt;br&gt;between matched players. So you need a powerful advantage to &lt;br&gt;win against others with similar skills and preparation. That &lt;br&gt;advantage is better self-awareness. &lt;br&gt;Assume that you and another player are perfectly matched in card &lt;br&gt;skills. You play each other every week. But one of you has had &lt;br&gt;lifetime wins of several times the other based on pulling better &lt;br&gt;cards. How long do you have to keep playing before the winnings &lt;br&gt;even out? About 250,000 years according to computer research. &lt;br&gt;So how does a better player gain advantage if they don&amp;rsquo;t have a &lt;br&gt;few thousand lifetimes at their disposal? By being significantly &lt;br&gt;better than the other players. You need huge advantage to be a &lt;br&gt;consistent winner. You need to know the other players and you &lt;br&gt;need to gain this advantage as quickly as possible. You need to &lt;br&gt;understand betting odds better. You need to know yourself. And &lt;br&gt;you need to be very aggressive when the time is right. &lt;br&gt;That&amp;rsquo;s the essence of a shark. Skilled. Aggressive. Knows the &lt;br&gt;environment. Knows the prey. Undaunted. &lt;br&gt;Have fun and best of luck at the tables. &lt;br&gt;Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;June 2004 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;TABLE OF CONTENTS &lt;br&gt;INTRODUCTION .............................................................................. 2&lt;br&gt;WHY IS ONLINE POKER SO DIFFERENT?................................... 9&lt;br&gt;GETTING STARTED......................................................................... 14&lt;br&gt;THE CAGE FOOD CHAIN THEORY!............................................ 15&lt;br&gt;ODDS, PERMUTATIONS AND ROI............................................. 37&lt;br&gt;THERULES OFTEXASHOLD&amp;rsquo;EM...............................................77&lt;br&gt;WINNING BEFORE THE FIRST CARD&amp;rsquo;S DEALT..................... 83&lt;br&gt;THE IMPORTANCE OF TABLE POSITION ............................ 103&lt;br&gt;PLAYER PROFILING ...................................................................... 108&lt;br&gt;PLAYING LIMIT TOURNAMENTS ............................................ 155&lt;br&gt;HOW TO PICK AN ONLINE CASINO........................................ 168&lt;br&gt;POCKET CARD WINNING ODDS.............................................. 180&lt;br&gt;HOW TO THINK LIKE A SHARK................................................ 182&lt;br&gt;TEXAS HOLD&amp;rsquo;EM DICTIONARY................................................ 190&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;WHY IS ONLINE TEXAS &lt;br&gt;HOLD&amp;rsquo;EM POKER &lt;br&gt;SO DIFFERENT? &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker has become the fastest growing game on the Internet. Play it a few times and &lt;br&gt;you will understand why. It&amp;rsquo;s addictive. Fast. Entertaining. Colorful. And there you are, playing live &lt;br&gt;with people from all over the globe, a great virtual &lt;br&gt;casino experience -and real money is being won by people just &lt;br&gt;like you and me. What&amp;rsquo;s not to like? &lt;br&gt;Well, you say, &amp;ldquo;I would like to win more often . . .&amp;rdquo; &lt;br&gt;Like the people who play slots or video poker terminals (VLT), &lt;br&gt;most people just play poker online for fun. Don&amp;rsquo;t get me wrong. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;They would love to win; they just aren&amp;rsquo;t prepared to do the &lt;br&gt;homework necessary to get really good at the game and win &lt;br&gt;consistently. Who has time for that? &lt;br&gt;The Pro&amp;rsquo;s do, that&amp;rsquo;s who! &lt;br&gt;And the Pro&amp;rsquo;s like Online poker. Unlike VLT&amp;rsquo;s, the odds are not &lt;br&gt;stacked so much in favour of the house and players can actually &lt;br&gt;make consistent profits -if they understand the game well enough. &lt;br&gt;I have an uncle who is famous in our family. He has an unusual &lt;br&gt;career. He has made a great living playing professional poker for &lt;br&gt;over 40 years. (He was known in the trade as a &amp;lsquo;rounder&amp;rsquo; &amp;ndash; for &lt;br&gt;details see the dictionary at the end of this book.) And he has made &lt;br&gt;more than just a decent living &amp;ndash; he has several homes and a yacht &lt;br&gt;he moors in Florida. He&amp;rsquo;s an interesting character and he has &lt;br&gt;taught me a lot. Much of this book is based on his advice and &lt;br&gt;teaching. &lt;br&gt;My uncle says there are two major differences between casual &lt;br&gt;players and professionals. &lt;br&gt;One -Professionals always know exactly whom they are playing &lt;br&gt;with. &lt;br&gt;Don&amp;rsquo;t be deceived. When you play poker you are not playing &lt;br&gt;against the cards &amp;ndash; you are playing against the other players. Great &lt;br&gt;poker players never forget this. The goal of our book is to teach &lt;br&gt;you how to better understand the guy or gal sitting across from &lt;br&gt;you at the virtual poker table. A better understanding of the &lt;br&gt;dynamics between humans at the table alone will dramatically &lt;br&gt;improve your chances of winning. &lt;br&gt;Two &amp;ndash; Pro&amp;rsquo;s understand the odds. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;This book will teach you how to calculate odds using actual game &lt;br&gt;examples and give you shortcuts that will help you to increase &lt;br&gt;your chances of winning every time you play. &lt;br&gt;&amp;ldquo;Odds don&amp;rsquo;t tell you how to play, they tell you how to bet.&amp;rdquo; &lt;br&gt;First you need to understand why reading about the conventional &lt;br&gt;&amp;lsquo;brick and mortar&amp;rsquo; game of Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em (the kind you play in a &lt;br&gt;real casino) certainly won&amp;rsquo;t hurt &amp;ndash; but it will definitely not prepare &lt;br&gt;you for the unique experience of playing the game online. &lt;br&gt;WHY IS ONLINE POKER SO DIFFERENT? &lt;br&gt;Online poker adds several interesting wrinkles to the game of &lt;br&gt;Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em. So much is changed in fact, that there are a whole &lt;br&gt;new set of game strategies. The odds of winning the online version &lt;br&gt;of this game are now stacked even more in the favour of the better-&lt;br&gt;educated players. This is one of the secrets to real success at the &lt;br&gt;virtual table. &lt;br&gt;1. YOU CAN WATCH. &lt;br&gt;If you walk into a bricks and mortar casino tomorrow and decide &lt;br&gt;you would like to just watch a game of Texas Hold&amp;#39;em to better &lt;br&gt;understand how it&amp;rsquo;s played, security will soon hustle you out of &lt;br&gt;the building. Poker is not a spectator sport at casinos. If you want &lt;br&gt;to learn the game -you need to play. And playing when you&amp;rsquo;re a &lt;br&gt;rookie (or as the pros call it &amp;ndash; a &amp;lsquo;fish&amp;rsquo;) can be a very expensive &lt;br&gt;learning experience. &lt;br&gt;On the other hand, online, you can watch a real game as long as &lt;br&gt;you want, for no cost and for no risk. Watching a table can teach &lt;br&gt;you a lot about the players and their betting style and the game in &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;general. Watching players for &amp;lsquo;free&amp;rsquo; is one of the great advantages &lt;br&gt;of online poker. &lt;br&gt;Taking notes is another great strategy in Online Poker. &lt;br&gt;There is nothing wrong or unethical about keeping notes on other &lt;br&gt;players. Some Online Poker rooms even provide a feature that &lt;br&gt;allows you to take notes online while you play. This feature &lt;br&gt;facilitates the building of a database around the playing styles of &lt;br&gt;consistent players. Our advice is to record what kinds of hands &lt;br&gt;they play, how quickly they react, and to record detail on betting &lt;br&gt;and raising behaviour. &lt;br&gt;In the heat of the game, you may not always have time to go &lt;br&gt;through all of the details. But one day, a regular player will join &lt;br&gt;your table with a healthy stack of chips and you will appreciate &lt;br&gt;knowing everything you can ahead of time about their playing &lt;br&gt;style. &lt;br&gt;2. YOU KNOW EXACTLY WHAT&amp;rsquo;S IN THE POT? &lt;br&gt;At a regular card game, you need to do some rough guessing at &lt;br&gt;pot totals. (The other players rarely encourage you to go digging &lt;br&gt;through the pot to come up with a tally). Online, the total is &lt;br&gt;calculated for you to the penny. This makes calculations about &lt;br&gt;how much to bet very accurate. Why is this important? You will &lt;br&gt;learn later that one of the keys to winning is a system used by pros &lt;br&gt;for decades called Pot Betting. The more accurate your knowledge &lt;br&gt;of the pot, the better able you are to know exactly how much you &lt;br&gt;should be betting on a given hand. Online Poker is a Pot Betting &lt;br&gt;dream come true. Sharpen up your math skills a bit, and you are &lt;br&gt;on the road to making money. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;3. YOU HAVE MORE TABLE AND BETTING CHOICES! &lt;br&gt;Have you ever walked into a real casino looking for a seat at a card &lt;br&gt;game? You may be lucky to find a few dozen. Which one is the &lt;br&gt;best for your playing style? You won&amp;rsquo;t know until you sit down &lt;br&gt;and play a number of hands. And if you don&amp;rsquo;t like your company &lt;br&gt;at that table? You move to another table and try again. &lt;br&gt;There are thousands of online casinos with dozens or hundreds of &lt;br&gt;tables at each one fro you to choose from. You can pick from a &lt;br&gt;wide-range of betting options and from an infinite variety of &lt;br&gt;different player combinations &amp;ndash; combinations you will have &lt;br&gt;observed before putting down your hard-eared money. And you &lt;br&gt;can do this in a matter of minutes right from your computer &lt;br&gt;screen. &lt;br&gt;Never have there been so many options for the poker player &lt;br&gt;willing to learn. Remember, you are not just playing against the &lt;br&gt;odds, you are playing against other players and in a mathematical &lt;br&gt;sense, the table as a whole. This is the real key to winning. Look &lt;br&gt;for a table with the greatest number of weaker players and you &lt;br&gt;will have an automatic advantage. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;FOR THOSE OF YOU &lt;br&gt;WHO JUST WANT TO &lt;br&gt;GET STARTED NOW!&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I f you are anything like me, you just want to get to the good &lt;br&gt;stuff. So let&amp;rsquo;s jump right into the game and the Food Chain &lt;br&gt;system. &lt;br&gt;Sure, there are rules to learn and techniques to understand -and &lt;br&gt;all kinds of interesting tips on betting and odds. This book is &lt;br&gt;full of strategy and background. &lt;br&gt;But I just want to jump into the game itself as a starting point. &lt;br&gt;How can you be a winner? OK! Let&amp;rsquo;s start with an example of how &lt;br&gt;this system works. Then you can learn about the details more at &lt;br&gt;your leisure. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;The Cage &amp;lsquo;Food-Chain Theory&amp;rsquo; of Online Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker! &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Fish, as they are called in Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em, are prey. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Fish are the losers -and the beginners -and the sloppy &lt;br&gt;players who get eaten everyday by the bigger fish. In &lt;br&gt;nature they are called &amp;lsquo;prey&amp;rsquo;. Thank goodness for the &lt;br&gt;fish. They sustain the entire poker &amp;lsquo;food chain&amp;rsquo;. Without fish, there &lt;br&gt;would be no monster pots or big paychecks and the game would &lt;br&gt;not be nearly as interesting nor as profitable. &lt;br&gt;Don&amp;rsquo;t get me wrong. Everyone is a &amp;lsquo;fish&amp;rsquo; in the beginning and &lt;br&gt;there is no way around this essential truth. Everyone gets burned &lt;br&gt;and eaten repeatedly when they start to play poker. Everyone &lt;br&gt;loses on even the best &amp;lsquo;nuts&amp;rsquo; hands. &lt;br&gt;This book is about how to get out of the &amp;rsquo;fish&amp;rsquo; category as &lt;br&gt;quickly as possible and start taking money home. &lt;br&gt;A note about the research that backs this book. &lt;br&gt;The book you are reading, unlike most of the poker books &lt;br&gt;available on the market today, is not based on anecdotal examples &lt;br&gt;and table stories told by the &amp;lsquo;old pros&amp;rsquo;, a few lucky winners or &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;guys who have spent decades learning the ropes; the majority of &lt;br&gt;them playing the old fashioned &amp;lsquo;bricks and mortar&amp;rsquo; version of the &lt;br&gt;game. &lt;br&gt;I am a Computer Programmer with an intense love for Poker (and &lt;br&gt;other games) where there is a strong component of skill involved. &lt;br&gt;Insider Secrets 2004 is all about the science of Poker. &lt;br&gt;CardShark, our research team, has gone through millions of lines &lt;br&gt;of code, data results and analysis on billions of played hands of &lt;br&gt;Poker. A good percentage of this research was sourced from the &lt;br&gt;same online casinos you and I play at everyday. The rest came &lt;br&gt;from reputable sources such as Carnegie-Melon University where &lt;br&gt;grad students have been running computerized Texas Hold&amp;#39;em &lt;br&gt;simulations for years. Our theories are based on solid &lt;br&gt;mathematics, proven odds calculations and the results of some &lt;br&gt;very interesting computer studies. &lt;br&gt;At least three major research studies over the past three years &lt;br&gt;have generated over 5 billion virtual hands of Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em &lt;br&gt;poker. &lt;br&gt;You would have to play poker every day for several million years &lt;br&gt;to experience that many hands. (I know you&amp;rsquo;re trying to live a &lt;br&gt;healthier lifestyle but I&amp;rsquo;m not betting on anyone&amp;rsquo;s chances to make &lt;br&gt;it that far!) &lt;br&gt;Most of the strategy in this book is based on this new exciting &lt;br&gt;research PLUS some good old-fashioned table sense based on &lt;br&gt;over 20 years of reading great card players. &lt;br&gt;You may be surprised by what this new research shows. I know I &lt;br&gt;was. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;The better the information you have about what is really &lt;br&gt;happening with the cards and the table, the faster you will get out &lt;br&gt;of the &amp;lsquo;fish&amp;rsquo; category and into the winning zone. We open up the &lt;br&gt;big black online poker box and show you the insides. What could &lt;br&gt;be more fun? &lt;br&gt;Here&amp;rsquo;s the question we hear every day. How much money can &lt;br&gt;you make? Again, based on recent surveys, a good player can &lt;br&gt;make $40,000 to $50,000 per year playing medium $3-$10 stake &lt;br&gt;games. &lt;br&gt;A real expert, a SHARK, can make $100,000 or more per year &amp;ndash; &lt;br&gt;and hundreds do. &lt;br&gt;Let&amp;rsquo;s start with the results of a recent computer analysis. &lt;br&gt;Imagine what we could learn about this game if we created a &lt;br&gt;&amp;lsquo;virtual&amp;rsquo; 10-player Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em table, programmed the players &lt;br&gt;in different ways &amp;ndash; and then just let them play for a few thousand &lt;br&gt;years. &lt;br&gt;With some of the test runs we would use very aggressive player &lt;br&gt;behaviours just to see how that type of combination of players &lt;br&gt;effects winning and losing. In other examples we would use a very &lt;br&gt;tight and conservative group of players to see how that affects the &lt;br&gt;game over a period of time. Billions of hands were then played &lt;br&gt;and analyzed again and again over several months. More than &lt;br&gt;many lifetimes of play. &lt;br&gt;Here is the simplest form of the results of this research based on &lt;br&gt;your chances of winning with the first two hole cards. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Player Type &amp;ndash; If you are a beginner, you are fish. If &lt;br&gt;you are more interested in playing than winning, you &lt;br&gt;are fish. If you don&amp;rsquo;t do your homework and completely &lt;br&gt;understand how the odds affect your chances then &amp;ndash; yes Virginia, &lt;br&gt;you are a fish. &lt;br&gt;But even good players can become fish during play. Tournament &lt;br&gt;play is a good example where the game can change radically &lt;br&gt;depending on the number of players left in the game. If you start &lt;br&gt;to panic or get short-stacked, you may unintentionally revert to &lt;br&gt;&amp;lsquo;fish&amp;rsquo; tactics. As a beginner you will tend to &amp;lsquo;act&amp;rsquo; like a fish &amp;ndash; you &lt;br&gt;may stay in the pot longer than your hand would justify. You may &lt;br&gt;raise when your cards are not that strong. Fish are typified by a &lt;br&gt;playing characteristic called &amp;lsquo;loose&amp;rsquo;. Looseness implies a disregard &lt;br&gt;for card odds and a general lack of knowledge about the other &lt;br&gt;players. Combine this looseness with aggressive behaviour and &lt;br&gt;you have one of the most interesting creatures at a Poker table &amp;ndash; a &lt;br&gt;&amp;lsquo;maniac&amp;rsquo;. &lt;br&gt;To survive and make money, fish need to play a very tight game. &lt;br&gt;As knowledge and table smarts improve, they can increase their &lt;br&gt;aggressiveness, bold with fresh winnings. &lt;br&gt;The best guide to beginner card play is to use the Fish Rule as &lt;br&gt;stated in the Player Type Chart. Based on the latest computer &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;research, fish should only stay in the hand if they have one of &lt;br&gt;the top 24 pocket cards dealt. &lt;br&gt;Why? Because if they have one of these hands, regardless of the &lt;br&gt;type of talent at the table, they will have an excellent chance of &lt;br&gt;winning. They will also begin to understand the discipline of a &lt;br&gt;&amp;lsquo;tighter&amp;rsquo; playing style, which is based on knowing the odds and &lt;br&gt;reading the table. &lt;br&gt;Betting tactics should not be an issue here and neither should the &lt;br&gt;reading of &amp;lsquo;tells&amp;rsquo; or even player position (which we will discuss in &lt;br&gt;detail later). &lt;br&gt;Here are the top 24 pocket hands in any Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em game &lt;br&gt;(out of a possible 169). &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Let&amp;#39;s start off with the top of the hit parade. (The &amp;lsquo;s&amp;rsquo; refers to cards &lt;br&gt;in the same suit.) &lt;br&gt;The big Top 4 &amp;ndash; AA, KK, QQ, JJ &amp;ndash; are ridiculously profitable at any &lt;br&gt;table. Always raise and re-raise with these cards. They don&amp;rsquo;t come &lt;br&gt;along often, so take advantage. Not raising on these cards is a sign &lt;br&gt;of foolishness. Being aggressive here is a no-brainer. &lt;br&gt;The top 16 ranked starting 2 -card Hold&amp;#39;em hands (or pocket &lt;br&gt;cards) are fundamental to winning play. They make up only 7% &lt;br&gt;of all hands dealt, so it&amp;rsquo;s unlikely that you will get rich by &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;limiting your play to just these card combinations. But you need &lt;br&gt;to know what they represent when they do come along. &lt;br&gt;If you compare this chart to older books on Poker you may notice &lt;br&gt;an obvious variation. The latest research has shown that the &lt;br&gt;overall power of AKs is slightly greater than that of KQs &amp;ndash; &lt;br&gt;especially in games where few players are left after the river. &lt;br&gt;In fact, with six players after the river, AK places 10th, while in a &lt;br&gt;game with 6 players, it places 5th. This revelation was first &lt;br&gt;discovered in the R&amp;amp;D being done using the latest computerized &lt;br&gt;poker simulations in the late 90&amp;rsquo;s. &lt;br&gt;JJ is another example of hole cards that vary greatly depending on &lt;br&gt;the type of game they are played in. They have been highlighted &lt;br&gt;on the chart for the following reason-&lt;br&gt;At a large table of 6 or more players, JJ is ranked 4th in power. In a &lt;br&gt;situation where there are fewer players, the power of this pair goes &lt;br&gt;down to 9th. &lt;br&gt;Game rank with only TWO players after the river (Top 10) &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Game rank with SIX players after the river (Top 10) &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;The key decision any Hold&amp;#39;em player makes is whether or not to &lt;br&gt;play the starting 2-card hand they are dealt with. And if they do &lt;br&gt;play, how do they play smart through the hand. &lt;br&gt;&amp;ldquo;I you are a FISH, never bet on anything but the top &lt;br&gt;ranked 24 pocket cards.&amp;rdquo; &lt;br&gt;Insider Secret &lt;br&gt;We would also suggest that you ALWAYS raise on the Top 10. &lt;br&gt;Raise on the Top 16 -unless you think the raise is not likely to &lt;br&gt;drive out other players in a very loose game. &lt;br&gt;Under very tight table conditions, only the Top 5 should be raised &lt;br&gt;before the flop. &lt;br&gt;However, our advice would be if you find yourself at a very tight &lt;br&gt;table, you should probably get up and go find better playing &lt;br&gt;conditions elsewhere. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;AK is a good example of hole cards that only do really well in a &lt;br&gt;short-handed game &amp;ndash; so you need to raise and drive out other &lt;br&gt;players right away. If you can&amp;rsquo;t, you will have lost most of the &lt;br&gt;power and advantage of these cards. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;TT on the other hand drops dramatically in power with fewer &lt;br&gt;players so raising to push out weaker hands is a poor strategy. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Barracuda &amp;ndash; The next level up from the Fish category is &lt;br&gt;Barracuda. You&amp;rsquo;re not the biggest and meanest fish in &lt;br&gt;the sea, but you have experience and you&amp;rsquo;ve survived. &lt;br&gt;And you&amp;rsquo;re making money when you play. &lt;br&gt;The Barracuda Player can safely play the Top 40 pocket cards as &lt;br&gt;listed next. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You are now in the land of the medium-suited connectors -KQs, &lt;br&gt;QJs, JTs, T9s -which do very well in small-stake games as well as &lt;br&gt;the biggish offsuit aces -AQ, AJ. &lt;br&gt;Barracuda Tip: &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Pick your 10-player table carefully. Look for players &lt;br&gt;who seem to be having fun, and where at least half &lt;br&gt;of them stay in to see the flop. Picking the right table &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;is a major determinant of how well your hands will hold up in &lt;br&gt;the long run. &lt;br&gt;When other players know what you&amp;rsquo;re holding, you suffer &lt;br&gt;tremendous disadvantage. Just playing good cards is not enough &lt;br&gt;as a Barracuda. Raising AA and KK is clearly not enough. &lt;br&gt;You need a carefully planned but hard to read raising strategy as &lt;br&gt;well. At the Barracuda stage you begin to experiment with more &lt;br&gt;aggressive play. As you will read later, timing your aggressive &lt;br&gt;strategy is the key. Being aggressive with a large number of &lt;br&gt;players at the table, unless they are all very conservative, will not &lt;br&gt;work most of the time. And no matter how aggressive you are, if &lt;br&gt;you are surrounded by sharks, you will be chum. &lt;br&gt;As a Fish you were focused on the top 10-16 pocket cards dealt. &lt;br&gt;You need to expand this now in two ways. &lt;br&gt;One, you need to be more aggressive before the flop on a wider &lt;br&gt;range of cards. &lt;br&gt;Two, you need to mix up your betting strategy. As you will see &lt;br&gt;later, the best player type is &amp;lsquo;tight-aggressive&amp;rsquo;. This &lt;br&gt;characterization is based more on how the other players see you &lt;br&gt;and less on your own strategy. In poker, perception is everything. &lt;br&gt;You need to be seen by your opponent as someone who&amp;rsquo;s style is &lt;br&gt;slightly hard to read and occasionally unpredictable. Then when &lt;br&gt;you do raise aggressively, your opponents will take you seriously &lt;br&gt;and surrender the pot. &lt;br&gt;Be aware that in online Poker, because players come and go &lt;br&gt;constantly, it&amp;rsquo;s more difficult to build a reputation at the table. It&amp;rsquo;s &lt;br&gt;like performing on the stage; you need to exaggerate your moves a &lt;br&gt;bit more than you would on a one-to-one basis. Because it&amp;rsquo;s easier &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;to be aggressive online, your aggression needs to be clear &amp;ndash; that &lt;br&gt;means pushing up the bets more than you would at a real table. &lt;br&gt;Slow play can have its advantages here too. It tends to catch the &lt;br&gt;attention of other weaker players anxious to donate to the pot. &lt;br&gt;Even if you know exactly how much you plan to raise, slow down. &lt;br&gt;Let the counter click off. This is a great attention-getting device. If &lt;br&gt;after stalling, you fold, you communicate indecision. On the other &lt;br&gt;hand, if you raise heavy, you&amp;rsquo;ve made the move quite clear &amp;ndash; and &lt;br&gt;you&amp;rsquo;ve got the other players thinking. &lt;br&gt;Mental toughness is one of the keys to success as you move up the &lt;br&gt;poker food chain. Being mentally tough means ignoring the other &lt;br&gt;players concerns about how fast you play. &lt;br&gt;Mr. Slow Play &lt;br&gt;One of the toughest tournaments I&amp;rsquo;ve played in had one player &lt;br&gt;who constantly ran up to the last few seconds of their available &lt;br&gt;time on every turn. At first it looked like they were distracted, or &lt;br&gt;playing another game online at the same time. Virtually every time &lt;br&gt;it came to their turn, they would stall until the count down. Soon, &lt;br&gt;other players began chatting about the slow play. Name-calling &lt;br&gt;began. One player suggested taking aggressive action against this &lt;br&gt;player as a group, simply because of the shared aggravation. &lt;br&gt;Which is exactly what happened. At one point, one player bet &lt;br&gt;aggressively against Mr. Slow Play and went all in and lost. &lt;br&gt;Who won the tournament? Mr. Slow Play. What a great strategy. &lt;br&gt;He rattled almost all of the other players with his slow determined &lt;br&gt;pace. He went right down to the last few seconds on the clock &lt;br&gt;dozens of times. The more the other players complained, the more &lt;br&gt;he hesitated. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Because he was slow on every play, it was very tough to read his &lt;br&gt;actual playing style. He was consistent. He also got a lot of &lt;br&gt;attention. When he won, no one missed it. He managed to control &lt;br&gt;the table in a way. Table control is clearly a goal of the consistent &lt;br&gt;winner. &lt;br&gt;The Shark Player will have 80 hands in their play list (see chart &lt;br&gt;following) knowing that they are good hands if the flop is good &lt;br&gt;flop, that your opponents will generally discount the likelihood &lt;br&gt;you&amp;#39;ll be holding them, and that they will have the will to fold on &lt;br&gt;as many rounds as it takes when the flop doesn&amp;rsquo;t go in their favor. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;As a gambler, with these cards, the real magic is getting the right &lt;br&gt;flop cards. &lt;br&gt;Based on using the Shark play list you would on average, &lt;br&gt;participate in about 1/3rd of all pots at your table. &lt;br&gt;The actual number will fall in the range of 25% to 33% depending &lt;br&gt;on the raising by other players. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Again, if your goal is to win, please stay away from very tight &lt;br&gt;tables because no matter how well you play, only the house wins &lt;br&gt;when everyone is good. &lt;br&gt;Authors Sklansky and Malmuth (S&amp;amp;M) have authored one of the &lt;br&gt;most popular poker book to date called Hold&amp;#39;em for Advanced &lt;br&gt;Players. Our pre-flop recommendations differ in many ways. &lt;br&gt;S&amp;amp;M has always advised raising with your strongest hands and &lt;br&gt;limping (calling) with your weakest. But this a major mistake in &lt;br&gt;tighter games, since your strongest hands are worth much more &lt;br&gt;than the blinds, while your weakest hands are worth much less &lt;br&gt;than the blinds. Folding is the wisest choice. &lt;br&gt;Also, S&amp;amp;M advises not raising with hands like KT after several &lt;br&gt;loose limpers. The newest research however indicates you should &lt;br&gt;usually raise since your hand is likely to be best and will win more &lt;br&gt;than your fair share of pots (though usually not much money). &lt;br&gt;S&amp;amp;M&amp;#39;s argument is that fish will call correctly with gutshots &lt;br&gt;(drawing one card to a straight) and pairs on the flop if you raise &lt;br&gt;preflop, and you will suck more players into the pot. Raising will &lt;br&gt;not greatly reduce your chance of your winning the pot, so if you &lt;br&gt;will win more than your fair share of pots, you should generally &lt;br&gt;raise. &lt;br&gt;Stats from a number of online casinos have revealed another S&amp;amp;M &lt;br&gt;myth -that you should raise with baby pairs like 33 even if you &lt;br&gt;know the blinds will call. The odds are that you will flop a thrip &lt;br&gt;more then 1 in 9 times but you will win the pot less than 1 in 9 &lt;br&gt;times. Since you will win the pot less than your fair share, you &lt;br&gt;should not raise. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;PLAYING THE PROGRAM STEP-BY-STEP &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Let&amp;rsquo;s start with an example hand. If there are terms here you don&amp;rsquo;t &lt;br&gt;understand, you can check the Dictionary in the back or the &lt;br&gt;Introduction To The Game chapter. &lt;br&gt;Ready? &lt;br&gt;The three basics you need to understand before you bet one cent &lt;br&gt;on any Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em game. &lt;br&gt;1) Check out the other players! Are they good or lousy? Check out &lt;br&gt;the section called &amp;lsquo;Watch Who You Play With&amp;rdquo; and then make &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;notes on the strength of each player. I have supplied a system you &lt;br&gt;can use to determine their ability to play. &lt;br&gt;2) Decide on the right spot at the table. Very important. Probably &lt;br&gt;one of the most important decisions you will make in the game. &lt;br&gt;You will find a lot of tips in the chapter on &amp;ldquo;Table Position&amp;rdquo;. &lt;br&gt;3) Make sure you have enough chips. Stack size does matter in &lt;br&gt;this game. You will find tips on how to decide on how much to &lt;br&gt;play with this later in the book. &lt;br&gt;OK! You&amp;rsquo;re seated. You have &amp;lsquo;read&amp;rsquo; the table and the other players. &lt;br&gt;You have enough chips to win. Now what? &lt;br&gt;From this point on, just follow our system. &lt;br&gt;In this example you are dealt a King and a nine. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Your first question will be &amp;ndash; how good is my hand? &lt;br&gt;Well, we&amp;rsquo;ll tell you. Refer first of all to the Opening Odds Chart at &lt;br&gt;the end of this book. &lt;br&gt;Look up K9 from the chart (which you will keep by your side &lt;br&gt;when you play.) &lt;br&gt;The odds of winning with these two cards is 14%. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Now look at the pot. What is the total now? This is easy because &lt;br&gt;the computer keeps track of this for you to the penny. &lt;br&gt;Let&amp;rsquo;s say the pot total is $80. &lt;br&gt;14% of $80 is $11.20. (This is our Pot Odds calculation. This tells &lt;br&gt;you how much you should bet based on what you have.) &lt;br&gt;So you match the bet of $10 and you are in. (Ten dollars is less &lt;br&gt;than your $11.20 limit. You &amp;lsquo;underpaid&amp;rsquo; to stay in the game. &lt;br&gt;Now the others keep betting. It gets back to you again and the pot &lt;br&gt;is now $120. &lt;br&gt;What&amp;rsquo;s 14% of $120? Around $17. &lt;br&gt;You&amp;rsquo;ve already bet $10. That leaves $7. (Your first bet on that &lt;br&gt;round plus $7) &lt;br&gt;You need another $10 to stay in. &lt;br&gt;According to my rules then, you should fold. &lt;br&gt;Now the $3 difference is not much. You might decide to go to the &lt;br&gt;$20 if necessary. But don&amp;rsquo;t go any further. The odds are against &lt;br&gt;you and you are over-paying for the cards you have yet to see. &lt;br&gt;Now you are playing scientifically and based on well-understood &lt;br&gt;odds. This is how the pro&amp;rsquo;s play. They watch the other players. &lt;br&gt;They watch the other cards. And they know the math. &lt;br&gt;&amp;ldquo;The secret to winning Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em? Beat the odds by &lt;br&gt;knowing the odds.&amp;rdquo; &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;You need to beat the other players by knowing the odds better &lt;br&gt;than they do. Now let&amp;rsquo;s learn more about the secrets of online &lt;br&gt;poker. &lt;br&gt;Let&amp;rsquo;s get back to our two pocket cards. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Here&amp;rsquo;s the FLOP. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Now you&amp;rsquo;re pretty excited. You just ended up with a pair of &lt;br&gt;Kings. Is a pair of Kings good enough to win? Are you ready to &lt;br&gt;bet the farm? Do you have the Nuts? &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;ldquo;50% of Texas Hold&amp;#39;em pots are won with a pair of 9&amp;rsquo;s &lt;br&gt;or better.&amp;rdquo; &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;So that sounds good. Except there is a partial straight on the &lt;br&gt;table. &lt;br&gt;At this point, after the FLOP, there are THREE things to consider. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;What do the other players have (Tells)?&lt;br&gt;What are my odds of getting a winning hand?&lt;br&gt;What will it cost me to see the next card?&lt;br&gt;Back to the first point.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;What do the other players have? Short of those x-ray glasses they &lt;br&gt;used to advertise in the comics when you were a kid, how will you &lt;br&gt;know? This is the art of the &amp;lsquo;tells&amp;rsquo; &amp;ndash; evaluating the other player&amp;rsquo;s &lt;br&gt;cards. &lt;br&gt;First, look at the odds for the other players. &lt;br&gt;In our game, there is a 2 card straight on the table. Another player &lt;br&gt;needs to have a 56 or 69 or 9T in any suit and they are close to a &lt;br&gt;straight. (Later on we will show you exactly how to figure out the &lt;br&gt;exact odds.) &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;It is very likely that someone at the table is 1 or 2 cards from a &lt;br&gt;straight. And they still have two more cards to fill that straight. &lt;br&gt;Clearly, you need three-of-a-kind to stay in the game. Another &lt;br&gt;King. &lt;br&gt;As far as you know, there are 2 other Kings in the deck (you never &lt;br&gt;count what you think someone else has in their down cards). &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;The odds are simple to calculate. &lt;br&gt;There are 17 cards dealt (based on 3 down and 7 players with 2 &lt;br&gt;cards each). &lt;br&gt;You need 2 out of 17 cards = 11.7% odds. &lt;br&gt;The betting starts and you can see the pot is $180 when it gets to &lt;br&gt;you. &lt;br&gt;How much can you bet? &lt;br&gt;11.7% of $180 = $20. &lt;br&gt;If you know that you need another King to win, the most you &lt;br&gt;should bet to see the next card (based on what you know) is $20. &lt;br&gt;You have one other very valuable bit of information at this point. &lt;br&gt;You can see how others are betting. This should give you a good &lt;br&gt;sense, combined with your reading of the table before you started, &lt;br&gt;of what kind of hands they have. &lt;br&gt;Let&amp;rsquo;s see the next card &amp;ndash; the TURN card &amp;ndash; a six of hearts. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;WHAT WOULD YOU DO AT THIS POINT IF YOU KNEW &lt;br&gt;THAT ONE OF THE OTHER PLAYERS ALREADY HAD A &lt;br&gt;STRAIGHT? &lt;br&gt;You would fold. Right? Well -never bet on &amp;lsquo;the come&amp;rsquo;. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;ldquo;A cardinal rule in poker -if they&amp;rsquo;ve got you beat and &lt;br&gt;you know it, fold now.&amp;rdquo; &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;Yes, you may get a card to improve your hand but so can they, so &lt;br&gt;unless you can see the next card for free, don&amp;rsquo;t waste your money. &lt;br&gt;The question is, how do you know what the other player has? Are &lt;br&gt;you making the determination based on how they are betting? &lt;br&gt;Maybe they&amp;rsquo;re bluffing. &lt;br&gt;You know you can&amp;rsquo;t beat a straight with a thrip (three of a kind). &lt;br&gt;On the other hand, beside the PAIR of KINGS, you have four cards &lt;br&gt;in a straight &amp;ndash; 6,7,8,9. &lt;br&gt;Why you should not play anything below AT off suit? Why it&amp;rsquo;s &lt;br&gt;best to have A5s and below or ATs and above over something in &lt;br&gt;the middle like A8s? &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Any Ace unsuited hand below AT can be big trouble in any kind &lt;br&gt;of game. &lt;br&gt;Some people might even consider AT and AJ difficult hands too &lt;br&gt;but for the games you are going to be playing in they are adequate &lt;br&gt;starting hands. &lt;br&gt;The reason A8, A7, A5 all suck is because you really can&amp;#39;t hit much &lt;br&gt;to win. Take A8 for example. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Your kicker isn&amp;#39;t that great, the 8, and you have no chance of &lt;br&gt;hitting any straights or flushes. The only way you can win really &lt;br&gt;is to hope that they have a weaker Ace then you do and you catch &lt;br&gt;one. &lt;br&gt;Playing poker is like investing in the stock market. &lt;br&gt;You want to put your money into great stock that has a chance to &lt;br&gt;deliver a good return. A8 isn&amp;#39;t that kind of stock. &lt;br&gt;Now to answer the question of ATs and above and A5s and below &lt;br&gt;versus A9s A8s A7s A6s. &lt;br&gt;The first ones work because you can also make a straight with &lt;br&gt;them. I would take A5s over A8s because the A and the 5 can &lt;br&gt;work together to make a straight, unlike the A8s. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;When you play weak Aces though like A5s, you have to be extra &lt;br&gt;cautious if you catch an Ace on the flop. &lt;br&gt;You won&amp;#39;t be sure if your kicker is good or not so you&amp;#39;ll have to &lt;br&gt;give the next step some thought. Playing these only in later &lt;br&gt;positions can help you make better decisions because people will &lt;br&gt;check most likely if they don&amp;#39;t have the A or that hand beat. &lt;br&gt;Why do hands like AA, KK, QQ, AK, AQ work best at smaller &lt;br&gt;tables? &lt;br&gt;Imagine a scenario where everyone is in the hand, and you look &lt;br&gt;down and see two gorgeous red Aces? &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Your pulse starts to race. Then you look up to see that everyone &lt;br&gt;has already called. At this point you have to know that your &lt;br&gt;chances of winning are slim. &lt;br&gt;Power hands like this rarely win when there are that many people &lt;br&gt;calling pre-flop. Why? &lt;br&gt;How do you improve this hand? &lt;br&gt;In big all-in pots two pair rarely wins against flushes and straights. &lt;br&gt;So what do you do? &lt;br&gt;There&amp;rsquo;s only one tactic left. You could check raise on the flop &lt;br&gt;instead of betting right now. The idea would be to try to force &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;some of the other players to leave. Limiting the field would &lt;br&gt;increase your chances to win. &lt;br&gt;Why are hands like KT&amp;rsquo;s, QJ&amp;rsquo;s JTs, 89s,79s, and 46s better when &lt;br&gt;you have a full table of players in? &lt;br&gt;You can almost never get into trouble with these kinds of pocket &lt;br&gt;cards. If you hit something, it&amp;rsquo;s likely to be quite strong. If you &lt;br&gt;don&amp;rsquo;t get the cards you want, it&amp;rsquo;s easy at this point to fold. &lt;br&gt;Try that with a pair of Aces! With those kinds of cards you are &lt;br&gt;married to the pot &amp;ndash; usually to the bitter end. A hand like JTs and &lt;br&gt;89s are ideal for playing against big all-in pots. Our advice is to &lt;br&gt;always raise to build the pot. &lt;br&gt;The reason these favour big pots is because they are always &lt;br&gt;drawing to flushes and straights. &lt;br&gt;Make your hand . . . and you will be hard to beat. &lt;br&gt;SUMMARY FOR THE BEGINNER &lt;br&gt;-Read the table. &lt;br&gt;-Play very tight, especially in the beginning. &lt;br&gt;-Start with enough chips. &lt;br&gt;-Bet based on what the pot odds are (never over-bet the pot) &lt;br&gt;-Watch the odds for upcoming cards. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED &lt;br&gt;TO KNOW (AND MAYBE DIDN&amp;rsquo;T) &lt;br&gt;ABOUT ODDS, PERMUTATIONS &lt;br&gt;AND RETURN ON INVESTMENT &lt;br&gt;WHAT ARE CARD ODDS? &lt;br&gt;If you haven&amp;rsquo;t already noticed, probability is a huge factor in Texas &lt;br&gt;Hold &amp;#39;em. For example, there are 2,598,960 possible hands in a 52card deck but only 4 Royal Flushes. If the average serious poker &lt;br&gt;player is dealt 100,000 hands in their lifetime, they will never hold &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;(on the first five cards) more than 4 percent of all the possible &lt;br&gt;hands. And likely a lot less. &lt;br&gt;Figuring out straight card combinations for the purpose of this text &lt;br&gt;are called Card Odds (you will be introduced to other kinds of &lt;br&gt;odds later). Card Odds can reveal some quite interesting information. &lt;br&gt;For example, how many pat straight flushes will you see in your &lt;br&gt;lifetime? To determine that number, the expected number of hands &lt;br&gt;that could be dealt during your lifetime is estimated by the &lt;br&gt;following calculation: &lt;br&gt;10 complete poker hands / hr. x 5 hrs. / game x 50 games / yr. &lt;br&gt;x 40 yrs. / poker life = l00,000 hands of poker per lifetime. &lt;br&gt;This is a pretty aggressive estimate, as most people will never &lt;br&gt;come close to this number of complete hands in Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em. &lt;br&gt;Based on this level of play, the number of pat (on the first five &lt;br&gt;cards) poker hands that you should get during your lifetime is &lt;br&gt;calculated from the card odds and tabulated as follows: &lt;br&gt;Cards Dealt Number of Pat Hands &lt;br&gt;No pair 50,000 &lt;br&gt;One pair 40,00 &lt;br&gt;Two pair 5,000 &lt;br&gt;Three of a kind 2,000 &lt;br&gt;Straight 400 &lt;br&gt;Flush 200 &lt;br&gt;Full house 170 &lt;br&gt;Four of a kind 25 &lt;br&gt;Straight flush 1.4 &lt;br&gt;Royal straight flush 0.15 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;So statistically, you should see a pat straight flush on your first &lt;br&gt;five cards once or twice during your lifetime. Most average poker &lt;br&gt;players will never see even one. &lt;br&gt;Card players often talk about having a &amp;lsquo;lucky streak&amp;rsquo; or a &amp;lsquo;run&amp;rsquo;. &lt;br&gt;Mathematically, &amp;lsquo;streaks&amp;rsquo; don&amp;rsquo;t exist. But suppose you did have an &lt;br&gt;amazing run of cards one evening. What would the odds be of &lt;br&gt;having five consecutive straight flushes in a row? &lt;br&gt;Royal Flush 4 .0000015391 &lt;br&gt;Other Straight &lt;br&gt;Flush &lt;br&gt;36 .0000138517 &lt;br&gt;Four of a kind 624 .0002400960 &lt;br&gt;Full House 3,744 .0014405762 &lt;br&gt;Flush 5,108 .0019654015 &lt;br&gt;Straight 10,200 .0039246468 &lt;br&gt;Three of a &lt;br&gt;kind &lt;br&gt;54,912 .0211284514 &lt;br&gt;Two Pairs 123,552 .0475390156 &lt;br&gt;One Pair 1,098,240 .4225690276 &lt;br&gt;Nothing 1,302,540 .5011773940 &lt;br&gt;Total 2,598,960 1.0000000000 &lt;br&gt;In every 1.7x1024 deals . . . or once in every &lt;br&gt;700,000,000,000,000,000,000 years. You&amp;rsquo;d have to read those cards &lt;br&gt;in the dark though, because our sun will be long gone by that &lt;br&gt;time. &lt;br&gt;Players use card odds to make playing decisions. A decision made &lt;br&gt;without taking into account card odds makes poker a guessing &lt;br&gt;game. The chances of finishing a flush or a straight, the probability &lt;br&gt;of getting an over card (face card), the percentage of times you&amp;#39;re &lt;br&gt;going to flop a card to match your pocket pair -are all extremely &lt;br&gt;important factors in Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Knowledge of these statistics is key to winning. &lt;br&gt;Here are some other basic probabilities that you should know &lt;br&gt;about: &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; You need one more heart to make your flush on the turn &lt;br&gt;or river -35% &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Probability of hitting an open-ended straight draw (i.e. 4 &lt;br&gt;straight cards, need one on either end to hit on turn or &lt;br&gt;river)-31.5% &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Probability of being dealt suited cards: 23.5% &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Probability of hitting a three or four of a kind at the flop &lt;br&gt;when you hold a pocket pair: 11.8% &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Probability you will make a pair at the flop, holding two &lt;br&gt;unpaired cards in the hole: 32.4% &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Probability of being dealt AA: .45% &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Probability of no one holding a specific card, by number of &lt;br&gt;players, assuming you do not have that card, by number &lt;br&gt;of total players. &lt;br&gt;2 -84.5%&lt;br&gt;3 -70.9%&lt;br&gt;4 -59%&lt;br&gt;5 -48.6%&lt;br&gt;6 -39.7%&lt;br&gt;7 -32.1%&lt;br&gt;8 -25.6%&lt;br&gt;9 -20.1%&lt;br&gt;10 -15.6%&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Probability someone else does not have an ace, assuming &lt;br&gt;you do have an ace, by total number of players: &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;2 -88.2%&lt;br&gt;3 -77.5%&lt;br&gt;4 -67.6%&lt;br&gt;5 -58.6%&lt;br&gt;6 -50.4%&lt;br&gt;7 -43%&lt;br&gt;8 -36.4%&lt;br&gt;9 -30.5%&lt;br&gt;10 -25.3%&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;HOW ARE THE ODDS CALCULATED? &lt;br&gt;Lets look at the example of having 4 outs (four cards you need to &lt;br&gt;make your hand). Say you&amp;#39;re holding 6c 7d and the flop comes 9s &lt;br&gt;10h Kc. In this case you need an 8 to make the straight. Since there &lt;br&gt;are four 8&amp;rsquo;s in the deck, you have 4 outs. &lt;br&gt;YOUR POCKET &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;THE FLOP&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;ODDS WITH ONE CARD TO COME &lt;br&gt;Calculating the odds with one card to come is relatively &lt;br&gt;straightforward. &lt;br&gt;When you&amp;#39;re looking to make the inside straight, you have four &lt;br&gt;outs. There are a total of 46 unknown cards (52 minus the 2 cards &lt;br&gt;in your hand minus the 3 cards for the flop and the 1 turn card). 42 &lt;br&gt;of the cards don&amp;#39;t make your hand and four do. 42:4 or 10.5:1 = &lt;br&gt;about 9%. I prefer to use the percentage as it helps when &lt;br&gt;calculating Pot Odds (to come later). &lt;br&gt;ODDS WITH TWO TO COME &lt;br&gt;To calculate the appropriate odds with two cards to come, you &lt;br&gt;must first determine the total number of two-card combinations &lt;br&gt;possible after the flop. &lt;br&gt;The easiest way to calculate this is by multiplying the number of &lt;br&gt;cards available for the turn (47) by the number of cards available &lt;br&gt;for the river (46) and dividing that number by 2 (because a card &lt;br&gt;can&amp;#39;t match itself). 47*46/2 = 1081. &lt;br&gt;A certain number of these 1081 two-card combinations will have &lt;br&gt;eights in them. To determine odds properly, you need to calculate &lt;br&gt;two more figures. &lt;br&gt;EIGHTS ON BOTH THE TURN AND THE RIVER &lt;br&gt;One of the four eights can appear on the turn. And if one does, &lt;br&gt;there will be three left for the river. If you multiply 4 by 3 and &lt;br&gt;divide by 2 (because a card can&amp;#39;t match itself) you see that there &lt;br&gt;are six unique pairing of 8s. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;EIGHTS ON THE TURN OR RIVER &lt;br&gt;If an eight comes on the turn, there are 46 unseen cards remaining. &lt;br&gt;But you&amp;#39;re no longer interested in the three remaining eights, so &lt;br&gt;you can subtract those. This leaves 43 unseen cards that will make &lt;br&gt;a unique pair with one of the eights. Multiply 4 (the number of 8s &lt;br&gt;in the deck) by 43 (the number of unseen cards) to arrive at 172. &lt;br&gt;FINISH THE CALCULATION &lt;br&gt;172 plus 6 comes to 178 --the total number of two-card &lt;br&gt;combination that have at least one eight in them and as many as &lt;br&gt;two eights. &lt;br&gt;Out of 1081 possible two-card combinations on the turn and river, &lt;br&gt;178 of those combinations help us make our hand. Subtract 178 &lt;br&gt;from 1081 to find the number of combinations that don&amp;#39;t make the &lt;br&gt;straight (1081-178=903). &lt;br&gt;The odds against making a straight by the river are: 903:178, or &lt;br&gt;20%. &lt;br&gt;What About The Cards The Other Players Are Holding? &lt;br&gt;Ever wonder why we never factor the opponents&amp;#39; cards or the &lt;br&gt;burn cards when figuring out how many cards are left? &lt;br&gt;The reason is that we only consider &amp;quot;unseen cards&amp;quot;. If you saw &lt;br&gt;what the burn cards were, or an opponent showed you his hand, &lt;br&gt;you would know that those cards are not going to be drawn and &lt;br&gt;could use that. We typically do not know what they have, so we &lt;br&gt;don&amp;#39;t even think about it when talking about odds. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;For instance, take a standard deck of 52 cards, remove 2 Aces and &lt;br&gt;burn 25 of them. If you drew the next card, what are the chances of &lt;br&gt;it being an Ace? It would be 2/50 (2 Aces left out of 50 unseen &lt;br&gt;cards). It would NOT be 2/25 just because you burned half the &lt;br&gt;deck. Okay, do the same thing again, but this time you get to look &lt;br&gt;at the burn cards. Let&amp;#39;s say that of all the cards you burned, none &lt;br&gt;were an ace. Now your odds are 2/25 because there are still 2 Aces &lt;br&gt;and now only 25 &amp;quot;unseen cards&amp;quot;. &lt;br&gt;You will find that you can easily remember a few of the most &lt;br&gt;common situations for outs such as the four flush or straight draw &lt;br&gt;but there has to be an easier way than memorizing the figures for &lt;br&gt;every number of outs. The good news is that there is a way to get a &lt;br&gt;good estimation of the odds without the heavy math and you can &lt;br&gt;also use handy odds charts. &lt;br&gt;WHAT HANDS WILL WIN THE POT? &lt;br&gt;The following are the most valuable starting hands in Texas &lt;br&gt;Hold&amp;#39;em. This chart assumes a medium to loose $5-10 Texas &lt;br&gt;Hold&amp;#39;em game. The results are based on a computer simulation of &lt;br&gt;5,000,000 played hands. The percentage shown indicates how &lt;br&gt;many times in typical game that these hands win the pot. &lt;br&gt;2 Pair 31% &lt;br&gt;Pair 27% &lt;br&gt;Three of a kind 12% &lt;br&gt;Straight 9% &lt;br&gt;Flush 9% &lt;br&gt;Full house 9% &lt;br&gt;Bust (nothing) 2% &lt;br&gt;Four of a kind 1% &lt;br&gt;Straight flush &amp;lt;1% &lt;br&gt;Royal flush &amp;lt;1% &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;This is interesting data &amp;ndash; but here&amp;rsquo;s the kicker &amp;ndash; look at the power &lt;br&gt;of two pairs and single pair hands. It&amp;rsquo;s not only higher than the &lt;br&gt;WHAT ARE MY CHANCES OF WINNING? &lt;br&gt;What are my chances of winning a hand with a given set of pocket &lt;br&gt;cards? What are the odds of filling a straight? &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;How much you can expect to profit from these starting hands? &lt;br&gt;The starting hand average win for each time played based on &lt;br&gt;medium to loose Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker games with a $5/$10 limit. &lt;br&gt;AA $34.19 &lt;br&gt;KK $24.13 &lt;br&gt;QQ $17.36 &lt;br&gt;JJ $12.08 &lt;br&gt;AK suited $11.63 &lt;br&gt;AK offsuit $ 8.65 &lt;br&gt;AQ suited $ 8.32 &lt;br&gt;10 10 $ 7.72 &lt;br&gt;AJ suited $ 5.69 &lt;br&gt;AQ offsuit $ 5.47 &lt;br&gt;POCKET CARD ODDS&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Hole Cards Odds &lt;br&gt;Any Pair 16 : 1 &lt;br&gt;Suited Cards 3 : 1 &lt;br&gt;A-K 82 : 1 &lt;br&gt;Suited Connecting Cards 24 : 1 &lt;br&gt;A-A or K-K 110 : 1 &lt;br&gt;A-anything 5.3 : 1 &lt;br&gt;Any two cards J&amp;#39;s or Higher 10:1 &lt;br&gt;After the Flop &lt;br&gt;Pair J&amp;#39;s or Higher 55 : 1 &lt;br&gt;No Pair improving to a Pair 2.7 : 1 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Pair improving to 3 of a Kind 8 : 1 &lt;br&gt;Flop being 3 of a Kind 391 : 1 &lt;br&gt;The River (5th Street) &lt;br&gt;A-K hitting an A or K by the River 1:6 : 1 &lt;br&gt;Q-Q vs A-K (A or K hitting) 1.5 : 1 &lt;br&gt;Hitting 5th card to complete a Flush 1.6 : 1 &lt;br&gt;Completing an Open Ended Straight 2.9 : 1 &lt;br&gt;Three of a Kind improving to Full House 2.7 : 1 &lt;br&gt;Pocket Pair improving to 3 of a Kind after the &lt;br&gt;12 : 1&lt;br&gt;Flop &lt;br&gt;Hitting a Backdoor Flush 33 : 1 &lt;br&gt;More Interesting Texas Hold&amp;#39;em Odds &lt;br&gt;5 Players, there&amp;#39;s an A on the flop. Chances a &lt;br&gt;player has an A in their hole. &lt;br&gt;1.7 : 1 &lt;br&gt;4 Players, there&amp;#39;s an A on the flop. Chances a &lt;br&gt;2.1 : 1&lt;br&gt;player has an A in their hole. &lt;br&gt;3 Players, there&amp;#39;s an A on the flop. Chances a &lt;br&gt;player has an A in their hole. &lt;br&gt;2.9 : 1 &lt;br&gt;2 Players, there&amp;#39;s an A on the flop. Chances a &lt;br&gt;4.3 : 1&lt;br&gt;player has an A in their hole. &lt;br&gt;WHAT ARE POT ODDS? &lt;br&gt;Pot odds are the odds you get when analyzing the current size of &lt;br&gt;the pot vs. your next call or bet. Pot Odds help you make &lt;br&gt;important call, raise or fold decisions. &lt;br&gt;Example 1: There is $200 in the pot and a final $10 bet coming at &lt;br&gt;you. You are looking to fill in your 4-card flush. Based on needing &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;one of four suits, the short-cut math is 1:4 chances or 25%. &lt;br&gt;Winning consistently is about beating Pot Odds and not over-&lt;br&gt;betting. If your Card Odds are 25% (you have four hearts and need &lt;br&gt;another to win) and you only need to bet 5% of the present pot &lt;br&gt;($10 as a percentage of the $200) to see the last card, you are in &lt;br&gt;great shape. Based on Pot Odds for this hand you could go as &lt;br&gt;high as 25% of the pot based on your odds to pull a heart on the &lt;br&gt;river. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Example 2: You are in a $5/$10 Hold&amp;#39;em game with Jack-Ten &lt;br&gt;pocket cards and one opponent left on the turn. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You have an outside straight draw with a board of 2-5-9-Q, and &lt;br&gt;only the river card left to make your straight. Any 8 or any King &lt;br&gt;will finish this straight for you, so you have 8 outs (four 8&amp;#39;s and 4 &lt;br&gt;K&amp;#39;s left in the deck) and 46 unseen cards left. 8/46 gives you a 6:1 &lt;br&gt;chance or a 17% chance of getting the win. Your opponent bets &lt;br&gt;$10. &lt;br&gt;6/1 = 17% Pot Odds &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;If you take a $10 bet you could win $100. Your bet is then 10% of &lt;br&gt;the final pot. The 10% bet is smaller than the 17% odds, so you are &lt;br&gt;in good shape from an investment point of view. &lt;br&gt;Whenever your call or bet (in this case 10% of the pot) is smaller &lt;br&gt;than your odds of getting the winning hand (17%) you are buying &lt;br&gt;the next card at a discount. The key is looking at the odds of a &lt;br&gt;winning hand, not building a part of a winning hand. &lt;br&gt;Too many beginners just play good cards and just toss bad ones or if they have the prospect of straight or a flush -they will just &lt;br&gt;draw and draw with little consideration to anything else. &lt;br&gt;Unless you have the NUTS (nuts = the very best possible hand) &lt;br&gt;every time there is a certain degree of risk when you put your &lt;br&gt;money in the pot. &lt;br&gt;In the heat of the battle you may not always have time to get out &lt;br&gt;your calculator and do the number crunching .You can look at Pot &lt;br&gt;Odds in a much simpler way -just ask yourself if there is enough &lt;br&gt;money in the pot to justify the risk? &lt;br&gt;If there is a big pot -unless you just know you are beat, or it &lt;br&gt;simply costs too much too call (which means your pot odds may &lt;br&gt;not be so great after it&amp;#39;s all said and done) -try to get some action. &lt;br&gt;Even if you knew you were a long shot -would you bet $25 or $50 &lt;br&gt;on a chance to win $500 or $1000 or more? While you may be a &lt;br&gt;long shot -it&amp;#39;s not a bad bet if there is a reasonable chance you &lt;br&gt;could win. &lt;br&gt;On the flip side, and this is important, you may have a decent &lt;br&gt;hand -and it may even be the winner, (use your opponent or &amp;lsquo;tells&amp;rsquo; &lt;br&gt;knowledge) -but if it&amp;#39;s going to cost you $250 to call and you stand &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;to only win a few hundred then your pot odds are not so great and &lt;br&gt;is probably not worth the risk. &lt;br&gt;Pot odds ratios are a useful tool to see how often you need to win &lt;br&gt;the hand to break even. &lt;br&gt;If there is $100 in the pot and it takes $10 to call, you must win this &lt;br&gt;hand 1 out of 11 times in order to break even. The thinking goes &lt;br&gt;along the lines of: If you play 11 times, it&amp;#39;ll cost you $110, but when &lt;br&gt;you win, you get $110 ($100 + your $10 call). &lt;br&gt;The usefulness of card odds and pot odds becomes very apparent &lt;br&gt;when you start comparing the two. As we know now, in a flush &lt;br&gt;draw, your card odds for making your flush are 1.9 to 1 or 35%. &lt;br&gt;Let&amp;#39;s say you&amp;#39;re in a hand with a nut flush draw and it&amp;#39;s $5 to you &lt;br&gt;on the flop to call. Do you call? Your answer should be: What are &lt;br&gt;my pot odds? &lt;br&gt;If there is $15 in the pot plus a $5 bet from an opponent, then you &lt;br&gt;are getting 20:5 or 4:1 pot odds &amp;ndash; 25%. This means that in order to &lt;br&gt;break even, you must win 1 out of every 5 times. However, with &lt;br&gt;your flush draw, your odds of winning are 1 out of every 3 times! &lt;br&gt;You should quickly realize that not only are you breaking even, &lt;br&gt;but you&amp;#39;re making a nice profit on this too. Let&amp;#39;s calculate the profit &lt;br&gt;margin on this by theoretically playing this hand 100 times from &lt;br&gt;the flop, when is then checked to the river. &lt;br&gt;Total Cost to Play = 100 hands * $5 to call = -$500 &lt;br&gt;Pot Value = $15 + $5 bet + $5 call = $25 &lt;br&gt;Odds to Win = 1.9:1 or 35% (From the flop) &lt;br&gt;Total Hands Won = 100 * Odds to Win (35%) = 35 wins &lt;br&gt;Net Profit = Net Cost to Play + (Total Times Won * Pot Value) &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;= -$500 + (35 * $30) &lt;br&gt;= -$500 + $1,050 &lt;br&gt;= $550 Profit &lt;br&gt;As you can see, you have a great reason to play this flush draw, &lt;br&gt;because you&amp;#39;ll be making money in the long run according to your &lt;br&gt;card odds and pot odds. The most fundamental point to take from &lt;br&gt;this is: &lt;br&gt;If your Pot Odds &amp;gt; Card Odds, then you are making a profit. &lt;br&gt;So, even though you may be faced with a gut shot straight draw at &lt;br&gt;times, which is a terrible draw at 5 to 1 hand odds, it can be worth &lt;br&gt;it to call if you are getting pot odds greater than 5 to 1. Other &lt;br&gt;times, if you have an excellent draw such as the flush draw, but &lt;br&gt;someone has just raised a large amount so your pot odds are 1:1 &lt;br&gt;for instance, then you obviously should not continue trying to &lt;br&gt;draw to a flush, as you will lose money in the long run. In this &lt;br&gt;situation, a fold or semi-bluff is your only solution, unless you &lt;br&gt;know there will be callers behind you that improve your pot odds &lt;br&gt;to better than break even. &lt;br&gt;Your ability to memorize or calculate your card odds and figure &lt;br&gt;out your pot odds will lead you to make many of the right &lt;br&gt;decisions in the future. Just be sure to remember that fundamental &lt;br&gt;principle of playing drawing hands when your pot odds are &lt;br&gt;greater than your card odds. &lt;br&gt;Another good rule to follow -a lot of players want to somehow &lt;br&gt;factor in money they wagered on previous rounds. With the last &lt;br&gt;example, you probably had already invested a significant portion &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;of that $200 pot. Let&amp;#39;s say $50. Does that mean you should play or &lt;br&gt;fold because of that money you already have in there? $50/$200? &lt;br&gt;That&amp;#39;s a big no. &lt;br&gt;That&amp;#39;s not your money anymore! It&amp;#39;s in a pool of money to be &lt;br&gt;given to the winner. You have no &amp;quot;stake&amp;quot; in that pot. The only &lt;br&gt;stake you might have is totally mental and has no bearing on hard &lt;br&gt;statistics. &lt;br&gt;The next step is to use bet odds and implied odds. That&amp;#39;s tougher, &lt;br&gt;because it involves predicting reactions of other players. With bet &lt;br&gt;odds, you try to factor in how many people are going to call a &lt;br&gt;raise. With implied odds, you&amp;#39;re thinking about reactions for the &lt;br&gt;rest of the game. One example on implied odds ... &lt;br&gt;Say it&amp;#39;s another $5/$10 Hold&amp;#39;em game and you have a four flush on &lt;br&gt;the flop. &lt;br&gt;Your neighbour bets, and everyone else folds. The pot is $50 at this &lt;br&gt;point. First you figure out your chance of hitting your flush on the &lt;br&gt;turn, and it comes out to about 19% (about 1 in 5). You have to call &lt;br&gt;this $5 bet vs. a $50 pot, so that&amp;#39;s a 10x payout. 1/5 is higher than &lt;br&gt;1/10, so bet odds are okay, but you must consider that this guy&amp;#39;s &lt;br&gt;going to bet into you on the turn and river also. That&amp;#39;s the $5 plus &lt;br&gt;two more $10 bets. &lt;br&gt;So now your facing $25 more till the end of the hand. So you have &lt;br&gt;to consider your chances of hitting that flush on the turn or river, &lt;br&gt;which makes it about 35% (better than 1 in 3 now), but you have to &lt;br&gt;invest $25 for a finishing pot of $100. $100/$25 is 1 in 4. That&amp;#39;s &lt;br&gt;pretty close. &lt;br&gt;But there&amp;#39;s more! &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;If you don&amp;#39;t make it on the turn, it&amp;#39;ll change your outs and odds! &lt;br&gt;You&amp;#39;ll have a 19.6% chance of hitting the flush (little worse than 1 &lt;br&gt;in 5), but a $20 investment for a finishing pot of $100! $100/$20 is 1 &lt;br&gt;in 5. So the chances could take a nasty turn if you didn&amp;#39;t hit it! &lt;br&gt;What&amp;#39;s makes it more complicated is that if you did hit it on the &lt;br&gt;turn, you could raise him back, and get an extra $20 or maybe even &lt;br&gt;$40 in the pot. &lt;br&gt;Once you&amp;#39;ve mastered simple outs and pot odds, bet and implied &lt;br&gt;odds are just a longer extension of these equations. If you think &lt;br&gt;about these things while you play, they will eventually become &lt;br&gt;second nature to you. &lt;br&gt;More Odds Examples: A pocket pair &lt;br&gt;You start with a pair of Jacks in the pocket. Not too shabby. The &lt;br&gt;flop however, doesn&amp;#39;t contain another Jack. &lt;br&gt;YOUR POCKET &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;THE FLOP&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Lesson 1: What&amp;#39;s my chance of getting a Jack on the turn? &lt;br&gt;You need to just figure out the number of outs and divide it by the &lt;br&gt;number of cards in the deck. There are 2 more Jacks. There&amp;#39;s 47 &lt;br&gt;more cards since you&amp;#39;ve seen five already. The answer is 2/47, or &lt;br&gt;.0426, close to 4.3%. &lt;br&gt;Lesson 2: No luck on the turn, how about the river card? &lt;br&gt;Still 2 Jacks left, but one less card in the deck bringing the grand &lt;br&gt;total to 46. What&amp;#39;s 2/46? That&amp;#39;s .0434, which is also close to 4.3%. &lt;br&gt;Your chances didn&amp;#39;t change much. &lt;br&gt;Lesson 3: Forget just getting just one Jack! I want them both! What &lt;br&gt;are my chances? &lt;br&gt;Since we&amp;#39;re trying to figure out the chances of getting one on the &lt;br&gt;turn AND the river, and not getting one on EITHER the turn or &lt;br&gt;river, we don&amp;#39;t have to reverse our thinking. Just multiply the &lt;br&gt;probability of each event happening. Chances of getting that first &lt;br&gt;Jack on the turn was .0426, remember? The chance of getting a &lt;br&gt;second Jack on the river would be 1/46, because there&amp;#39;ll only be &lt;br&gt;one Jack left in the deck. That&amp;#39;s about .0217, or 2.2%. &lt;br&gt;To get the answer, multiply them. .0426 X .0217 is about .0009! &lt;br&gt;That&amp;#39;s around one-tenth of a percent. I wouldn&amp;#39;t bank on that &lt;br&gt;one. &lt;br&gt;Lesson 4: Hey, what were my chances of getting a pair of Jacks &lt;br&gt;anyway? &lt;br&gt;To figure that out, think of it as getting dealt one card, then &lt;br&gt;another. What are your chances of the second card matching the &lt;br&gt;first one? There will be 3 cards left like the one you have. There&amp;#39;s &lt;br&gt;51 cards left in the deck. 3/51 is .059 or 5.9%. What the chance that &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;it&amp;#39;ll be Jacks? Well, there are 13 different cards. So, .059/13 is about &lt;br&gt;.0045, a little less than half a percent. &lt;br&gt;Lesson 5: What were my chances of getting a Jack on the flop? &lt;br&gt;Now you do have to &amp;quot;think in reverse&amp;quot; as in the previous example. &lt;br&gt;Figure out the chances of NOT getting a Jack on each successive &lt;br&gt;card flip. First card you have a 48/50 chance (48 non-Jack cards left, &lt;br&gt;50 cards left in the deck), second card is 47/49, third card is 46/48. &lt;br&gt;Those come out to .96, .959, and .958. Multiply them and get .882, &lt;br&gt;or an 88.2% chance of NOT getting any Jacks on the flop. Invert it &lt;br&gt;to figure out what your chances really are and you get .118 or &lt;br&gt;11.8%. This will be your chance to get one or two Jacks. &lt;br&gt;Example #2 &amp;quot;The straight draw&amp;quot; &lt;br&gt;THE POCKET &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You start with a Jack of Spades and a Ten of Spades. You get a &lt;br&gt;rainbow flop with a Queen of Spades, a Three of Diamonds, and a &lt;br&gt;Nine of Clubs. You&amp;#39;ve got a straight draw. &lt;br&gt;THE FLOP &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Lesson 1: What are my chances of hitting it on the next card? &lt;br&gt;Same as before, but with different outs. A King or an Eight will &lt;br&gt;complete your hand. There is presumably four of each left in the &lt;br&gt;deck. You&amp;#39;ve got 8 outs. The chance of getting one of them on the &lt;br&gt;turn is 8 over 47, because there&amp;#39;s 47 cards left in the deck. That &lt;br&gt;comes out to about .170, or around 17%. &lt;br&gt;Lesson 2: I didn&amp;#39;t get it on the turn! What are my chances now? &lt;br&gt;There are still 8 cards left in the deck that&amp;#39;ll help you, but 46 cards &lt;br&gt;left in the deck. That&amp;#39;s 8 over 46. It changes to .174. It&amp;#39;s improved to &lt;br&gt;a whopping 17.4%! &lt;br&gt;Lesson 3: I should of thought about my total chances first, I&amp;#39;m such &lt;br&gt;an idiot. What are my chances of getting that card on the turn OR &lt;br&gt;the river? &lt;br&gt;Once again we&amp;#39;ll have to calculate the chances of a King or Eight &lt;br&gt;NOT appearing, so we can do it like the last problem (in this case, &lt;br&gt;{39/47} X {38/46}). Or, since we&amp;#39;ve already figured out our chances &lt;br&gt;in the previous two lessons, we can just invert the probabilities &lt;br&gt;and multiply them. You had a .170 chance on the turn, and a .174 &lt;br&gt;on the river. By inverting, I mean subtracting them from one. Now &lt;br&gt;we&amp;#39;ve got .830 and .826! Multiply and get .686! That&amp;#39;s our chance of &lt;br&gt;NOT hitting our card at all. So invert it again and get .314, or &lt;br&gt;31.4%. &lt;br&gt;Example #3 &amp;quot;Top two pair&amp;quot; &lt;br&gt;THE POCKET &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;THE FLOP&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You get dealt a King of Diamonds and a Nine of Hearts. The flop is &lt;br&gt;looking&amp;#39; pretty good for you with a King of Spades, a Nine of &lt;br&gt;Clubs, and a Four of Clubs. Top two pair! &lt;br&gt;Lesson 1: What are my chances of getting a full house on the &lt;br&gt;turn? &lt;br&gt;To get a full house, you need another King or Nine to pop up. &lt;br&gt;There is two of each left in the deck. So you&amp;#39;ve got 4 outs. After the &lt;br&gt;flop there&amp;#39;s always 47 cards unaccounted for. 4/47 is around .085 or &lt;br&gt;an 8.5% chance of you getting the Full House. &lt;br&gt;Lesson 2: What are my chances of getting a full house on the &lt;br&gt;river? &lt;br&gt;If it didn&amp;#39;t happen on the turn, your chances usually don&amp;#39;t change &lt;br&gt;all too much, but let&amp;#39;s check. You&amp;#39;ve still got 4 outs and now 46 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;unseen cards left. 4/46 is about .087 or around an 8.7% chance of &lt;br&gt;hitting it on the river. A .2% difference. &lt;br&gt;Lesson 3: How about the chances of getting the boat on the turn &lt;br&gt;OR the river? &lt;br&gt;Like the previous examples, to figure your chance of something &lt;br&gt;happening on multiple events, you need to calculate the chance of &lt;br&gt;it NOT happening first. On the turn it won&amp;#39;t happen 43/47 times. &lt;br&gt;On the river it won&amp;#39;t happen 42/46 times. 43/47 is .915, and 42/46 is &lt;br&gt;.913. Multiply them and get .835, or 83.5% chance of it not &lt;br&gt;happening. Invert that and you get a 16.5% of getting at least a full &lt;br&gt;house by the showdown. &lt;br&gt;Lesson 4: What do you mean by &amp;quot;at least&amp;quot; a Full House? &lt;br&gt;Since we figured the chances to NOT get dealt a full house, the &lt;br&gt;chances are built in if the turn and river are two Kings, two Nines, &lt;br&gt;or a King and a Nine. If you are dealt two cards both of either King &lt;br&gt;or Nine, it&amp;#39;ll be four-of-a-kind and not a King and Nine 33% of the &lt;br&gt;time. Think of it as being dealt one card then the other. What are &lt;br&gt;the chances of the first card matching the second? Whether it&amp;#39;sa &lt;br&gt;King or Nine, there will be only one unaccounted for, but two of &lt;br&gt;the other. That&amp;#39;s 1/3, or 33%. &lt;br&gt;Lesson 5: Then what are my chances of getting four-of-a-kind? &lt;br&gt;This one requires a little more thought. It doesn&amp;#39;t matter which &lt;br&gt;card we&amp;#39;re hoping for. We need to first get a full house on the turn. &lt;br&gt;According to lesson #1, the chance of that happening is .085. The &lt;br&gt;chance of getting the same card we got on the turn is 1/46. There&amp;#39;s &lt;br&gt;only one out, and the usual 46 unseen cards. 1/46 is around .022, or &lt;br&gt;2.2%. Multiply the two probabilities (.022 X .085) and get .002 or &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;one-fifth of a percent. It will be Kings half of the time and Nines &lt;br&gt;the other half &lt;br&gt;Is this making any sense? If you really want to be a master of &lt;br&gt;calculating odds, you need to see these calculations in action, over &lt;br&gt;and over. Like anything else, practice makes perfect. In online &lt;br&gt;games especially with very few if any tells (shown cards), &lt;br&gt;statistical knowledge becomes the main factor when choosing &lt;br&gt;whether to bet, call, or fold. &lt;br&gt;If you do have a hand that you know can&amp;rsquo;t lose &amp;ndash; you have the nut. &lt;br&gt;Bet like crazy. &lt;br&gt;While there is a lot more to Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em poker than this -this &lt;br&gt;should open your eyes to more things about the game of poker &lt;br&gt;than just the cards and their statistics. &lt;br&gt;Yes -You DO need to know your general chances of pulling what &lt;br&gt;types of hands -but if you learn to study your opponents, they &lt;br&gt;will tell you their hands and you&amp;#39;ll be able to beat them without &lt;br&gt;even knowing yours. &lt;br&gt;RETURN ON INVESTMENT (ROI) &lt;br&gt;When the stakes required to play a game of Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em &lt;br&gt;increase, there is not a proportional increase in the average &lt;br&gt;winnings or money flow because most players, especially at the &lt;br&gt;start of play, play tighter at higher stakes. &lt;br&gt;Here&amp;rsquo;s how that works. &lt;br&gt;Higher stakes cause players to be more cautious. Pots do not grow &lt;br&gt;proportionately as the stakes and blinds increase. Your return on &lt;br&gt;investment will therefore decrease as the minimum blind goes up. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Max Bet &lt;br&gt;Pot Size &lt;br&gt;$ 2 Max 28 - 37 &lt;br&gt;$ 4 Max 25 - 35 &lt;br&gt;$ 6 Max 20 - 22 &lt;br&gt;$ 10 Max 10 - 28 &lt;br&gt;$ 20 Max 6 - 7 &lt;br&gt;$ 50 Max 12 &lt;br&gt;$ 60 Max 7.6 &lt;br&gt;$ 100 Max 6.11 &lt;br&gt;$ 200 Max 5.5 &lt;br&gt;Most major online casinos release data on hands played (for a &lt;br&gt;price) on a regular basis. A recent study (June 2004) from one of &lt;br&gt;the largest online casinos, based on several million actual hands of &lt;br&gt;Poker played, revealed that the return on investment varies quite a &lt;br&gt;bit based on the maximum bet. &lt;br&gt;In the $2 games, the value of the winning pot varied from 28 to 37 &lt;br&gt;times the Big Blind (BB) &amp;ndash; the most you would have to invest to see &lt;br&gt;the flop (short of raises). The average pots were in the $60 range. &lt;br&gt;With the right cards, you could expect a return of 3000% on a &lt;br&gt;winning hand. &lt;br&gt;As you can see in the chart above, this ratio falls as the Blinds go &lt;br&gt;up. In the $200 game, with pots averaging $600-1200, the ratio &lt;br&gt;averages 5.5:1. Sure, greater overall winnings -but much greater &lt;br&gt;risk based on the investment you have to make to see the flop. &lt;br&gt;Also notice the volatility or variance of this ratio. On the high &lt;br&gt;stakes tables, play is very tight and often passive, so the ratio &lt;br&gt;remains very narrow &amp;ndash; pots are predictably 5-6 times the Big Blind. &lt;br&gt;At the smaller stakes tables, there is considerably more volatility, &lt;br&gt;indicative of a lot of looser players and more aggressive playing &lt;br&gt;styles. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;The $1/$2 tables are the loosest with pots ranging from 28-37 times &lt;br&gt;the Big Blind. &lt;br&gt;Are Low Stake Tables Faster? &lt;br&gt;Not necessarily. Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em is the king of fast play. Several &lt;br&gt;$1000 plus pots were played in less than a minute and ranged as &lt;br&gt;long as 6 minutes &amp;ndash; the same range for the small stake tables. Over &lt;br&gt;all, the average length of an online Poker game today is just over &lt;br&gt;one minute or 50-60 hands per hour. &lt;br&gt;In higher stakes games, one thing is quite clear. There are a higher &lt;br&gt;percentage of tighter and aggressive players at these tables than at &lt;br&gt;the small stake games. That means there are more sharks at the big &lt;br&gt;tables and a much better chance that you will be one of the fish. &lt;br&gt;The smart thing to do here is to say away from these kinds of &lt;br&gt;tables. &lt;br&gt;Given the fact that the return on investment is lower at the high &lt;br&gt;stake games, that the average level of play is much more &lt;br&gt;aggressive and that a much larger stake is required, there is very &lt;br&gt;little opportunity to be a consistent winner on tables with $50 and &lt;br&gt;up blinds. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;ldquo;All of the recent research points to $5/$10 Limit tables &lt;br&gt;as ideal combination of risk and reward.&amp;rdquo; &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;FACT! When the average loose gambler loses, he or she keeps on &lt;br&gt;playing in an attempt to recover the loss. This is irrational and &lt;br&gt;unplanned play and can be very expensive. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;On the other hand, when most innate gamblers win, they forget all &lt;br&gt;about their losses and conclude incorrectly that they have finally &lt;br&gt;learned how to win -or that their luck has finally changed. They &lt;br&gt;express what is an irrational optimism at this point &amp;ndash; a totally &lt;br&gt;unfounded and undeserved optimism that keeps them in the game &lt;br&gt;until they revert back to a losing streak. &lt;br&gt;Sharks exploit this irrational playing style in gamblers to generate &lt;br&gt;a continuous income. &lt;br&gt;OUTS ODDS CHART &lt;br&gt;Outs Holding &lt;br&gt;Hand Drawing To 2 to come 1 to come &lt;br&gt;21 98 % 83% &lt;br&gt;20 98 % 77% &lt;br&gt;15 &lt;br&gt;open &lt;br&gt;straight &lt;br&gt;flush draw &lt;br&gt;straight, flush, &lt;br&gt;straight flush 85% 48% &lt;br&gt;14 96% 44% &lt;br&gt;13 92% 39% &lt;br&gt;12 &lt;br&gt;gutshot &lt;br&gt;straight &lt;br&gt;flush draw &lt;br&gt;straight, flush, &lt;br&gt;straight flush 82% 35% &lt;br&gt;11 71% 31% &lt;br&gt;10 54% 28% &lt;br&gt;9 four flush flush 54% 24% &lt;br&gt;8 open &lt;br&gt;straight straight 46% 421% &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;7 &lt;br&gt;6 &lt;br&gt;5 &lt;br&gt;4 &lt;br&gt;3 &lt;br&gt;2 &lt;br&gt;1 &lt;br&gt;draw &lt;br&gt;gutshot &lt;br&gt;straight &lt;br&gt;pocket pair &lt;br&gt;3 of a kind &lt;br&gt;straight &lt;br&gt;3 of a kind &lt;br&gt;4 of a kind &lt;br&gt;39% &lt;br&gt;32% &lt;br&gt;26% &lt;br&gt;20% &lt;br&gt;14% &lt;br&gt;9% &lt;br&gt;4% &lt;br&gt;18% &lt;br&gt;15% &lt;br&gt;12$ &lt;br&gt;9% &lt;br&gt;7% &lt;br&gt;4% &lt;br&gt;2% &lt;br&gt;POCKET CARD ODDS &lt;br&gt;Suited Starters 680,351 23.56% 679,596 23.53% &lt;br&gt;Connected Starters 454,220 15.73% 453,064 15.69% &lt;br&gt;Suited Connected &lt;br&gt;Starters 114,304 3.96% 113,266 3.92% &lt;br&gt;Paired Starters &lt;br&gt;AA Dealt 13,010 0.45% &lt;br&gt;KK Dealt 13,182 0.46% &lt;br&gt;QQ Dealt 13,122 0.45% &lt;br&gt;JJ Dealt 13,069 0.45% &lt;br&gt;TT Dealt 12,886 0.45% &lt;br&gt;99 Dealt 13,092 0.45% &lt;br&gt;88 Dealt 13,046 0.45% &lt;br&gt;77 Dealt 13,111 0.45% &lt;br&gt;HoleCardsDealtDealtPercentExpectedPercent&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;66 Dealt 13,130 0.45% &lt;br&gt;55 Dealt 13,173 0.46% &lt;br&gt;44 Dealt 13,015 0.45% &lt;br&gt;33 Dealt 13,075 0.45% &lt;br&gt;22 Dealt 13,076 0.45% &lt;br&gt;All Paired Starters 169,987 5.89% 169,899 5.88% &lt;br&gt;AK Suited Starters 8,717 0.30% 8,713 0.30% &lt;br&gt;AK Offsuit Starters 26,051 0.90% 26,138 0.90% &lt;br&gt;All AK Starters 34,768 1.20% 34,851 1.21% &lt;br&gt;THE RULE OF FOUR &amp;ndash;TWO &lt;br&gt;The rule of four-two is an easier way to figure the odds for any &lt;br&gt;situation where you know your outs. It is not completely accurate &lt;br&gt;but it will give you a quick &amp;quot;ballpark&amp;quot; figure of your chances for &lt;br&gt;making a hand. &lt;br&gt;Here is how it works. &lt;br&gt;With two cards to come after the flop you multiply your number &lt;br&gt;of outs by four. With one card to come after the turn, you multiply &lt;br&gt;your number of outs by two. &lt;br&gt;This will give you a quick figure to work with. &lt;br&gt;If you have a four-card flush after the flop you have nine outs. &lt;br&gt;With two cards to come, you multiply the nine by four and you get &lt;br&gt;36 percent chance of making the flush. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 65 &lt;br&gt;The chart shows the true odds at 35 percent. With one card to &lt;br&gt;come you multiply nine by two and get 18 percent. The chart &lt;br&gt;shows that the true figure is 19.6. It is not completely accurate but &lt;br&gt;it is pretty close, and it is an easy calculation to do in your head &lt;br&gt;How to calculate hand odds (the longer way): &lt;br&gt;Once you know how to correctly count the number of outs you&lt;br&gt;have on a hand, you can use that to calculate what percent of the&lt;br&gt;time you will hit your hand by the river. Probability can be&lt;br&gt;calculated easily for a single event, like the flipping of the river&lt;br&gt;card from the turn. This would simply be: Total Outs / Remaining&lt;br&gt;Cards. For two cards however, like from the flop to the river, it&amp;#39;sa&lt;br&gt;bit more complicated. This is calculated by figuring the probability&lt;br&gt;of your cards not hitting twice in a row. This can be calculated as&lt;br&gt;shown below:&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Flop to River % = 1 -[ ((47 -Outs) / 47) * ((46 -Outs) / 46) ]&lt;br&gt;Turn to River % = (47 -Outs) / 46&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The number 47 represents the remaining cards left in the deck after&lt;br&gt;the flop (52 total cards, minus 2 in our hand and 3 on the flop = 47&lt;br&gt;remaining cards). Even though there might not technically be 47&lt;br&gt;cards remaining, we do calculations assuming we are the only&lt;br&gt;players in the game. To illustrate, here is a two overcard draw,&lt;br&gt;which has 3 outs for each overcard, giving a total of 6 outs for a&lt;br&gt;top pair draw:&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Two Overcard Draw = 1 -[ (47 -6) / 47 * (46 -6) / 46 ]&lt;br&gt;=1 -[ (41/47) * (40/46) ]&lt;br&gt;=1 -[ 0.87 * 0.87 ]&lt;br&gt;=1 -0.76&lt;br&gt;= 0.24&lt;br&gt;= 24% Chance to Draw Overcards from Flop to River&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;However, most of the time we want to see this in hand odds, &lt;br&gt;which will be explained after you read about pot odds. To change &lt;br&gt;a percent to odds, the formula is: &lt;br&gt;Odds = ( 1 / Percentage ) -1 &lt;br&gt;Thus, to change the 24% draw into an odd we can use, we do the &lt;br&gt;following: &lt;br&gt;Odds = ( 1 / 24% Two Overcard Draw ) -1 &lt;br&gt;= ( 1 / 0.24 ) -1 &lt;br&gt;= 4.17 -1 &lt;br&gt;= 3.17 or approx 3.2 &lt;br&gt;ANALYZING PROBABILITIES IN DEPTH &lt;br&gt;You may want to skip this section and go back to it later. Some &lt;br&gt;of this is pretty deep. But important! &lt;br&gt;Getting a handle on the probability of being dealt various poker &lt;br&gt;hands is one of the most important and valuable skills a player can &lt;br&gt;have. We present a number of different ways to do these &lt;br&gt;calculations, from a rough guesstimate system called the 2-4 Rule &lt;br&gt;to the actual combination math. &lt;br&gt;The first odds calculation that must be made is to determine the &lt;br&gt;total number of possible poker hands in a deck. &lt;br&gt;As we&amp;rsquo;ve shown, a poker hand consists of 5 cards drawn from a &lt;br&gt;deck of 52 cards. Therefore, the number of combinations is &lt;br&gt;COMBIN(52, 5) = 2,598,960. &lt;br&gt;If you use Microsoft Excel, you can duplicate these calculations &lt;br&gt;using the COMBIN factor. COMBIN returns the number of &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;combinations for a given number of items. To find the COMBIN &lt;br&gt;factor in Excel go to INSERT . . . FUNCTION . . . MATH &amp;amp; TRIG. &lt;br&gt;For each of the above &amp;quot;Number of Combinations&amp;quot; we divide by &lt;br&gt;this number to get the probability of being dealt any particular &lt;br&gt;hand. &lt;br&gt;For the calculations, we will first split out the &amp;quot;No Pair&amp;quot; hands &lt;br&gt;which include Royal Straight Flushes, Straight Flushes, Flushes, &lt;br&gt;Straights, and &amp;quot;Nothings&amp;quot;. Then, we will look at all combinations &lt;br&gt;that have at least 1 pair. &lt;br&gt;The cards in a hand without any pairs will have 5 different &lt;br&gt;denominations selected randomly from the 13 available (2, 3, &lt;br&gt;4...Ace). Also, each of the 5 denominations will select 1 suit from &lt;br&gt;the four available suits. Thus the total number of no-pair hands &lt;br&gt;will equal: &lt;br&gt;COMBIN(13, 5) * (COMBIN(4, 1))^5 = 1287 * 1024 = 1,317,888. &lt;br&gt;A Straight Flush is made up of 5 consecutive cards in the same suit &lt;br&gt;and may have a high card of 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, Jack, Queen, King, or &lt;br&gt;Ace for a total of 10 different ranks. Each of these may be in any of &lt;br&gt;4 suits. Thus there are 40 possible Straight Flushes. An Ace high &lt;br&gt;Straight Flush is a Royal Flush. Since there are only 4 different &lt;br&gt;suits there are only 4 possible Royal Straight Flushes. When we &lt;br&gt;subtract the 4 Royal Straight Flushes from the total of 40 Straight &lt;br&gt;Flushes we are left with 36 other Straight Flushes that are King &lt;br&gt;high or less. &lt;br&gt;A Flush consists of any 5 of the 13 cards from a particular suit. &lt;br&gt;There are 4 possible suits. The number of possible Flushes is: &lt;br&gt;COMBIN(13, 5) * 4 = 5,148. However, this includes the 40 possible &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Straight Flushes. When we subtract these out, we are left with: &lt;br&gt;5,148 -40 = 5,108 possible ordinary flushes. &lt;br&gt;A straight consists of 5 cards with consecutive denominations and &lt;br&gt;may have a high card of 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, Jack, Queen, King, or Ace &lt;br&gt;for a total of 10 different ranks. Each of these 5 cards may be in any &lt;br&gt;of the 4 suits. Thus there are 10 * 4^5 = 10,240 different possible &lt;br&gt;straights. However, this total includes the 40 possible Straight &lt;br&gt;Flushes. Thus we subtract 40, which leaves us with 10,200 possible &lt;br&gt;ordinary straights. &lt;br&gt;Finally, we come to the &amp;quot;nothing&amp;quot; hands which are basically all the &lt;br&gt;left over garbage. This is simply the total number of &amp;quot;No Pair&amp;quot;&lt;br&gt; hands minus all the good stuff. This gives us: 1,317,888 -4 -36 5,108 -10,200 = 1,302,540 &amp;quot;nothing&amp;quot; hands. &lt;br&gt;How about the odds of getting 1 pair or better? &lt;br&gt;A hand with just 1 pair has 4 different denominations selected &lt;br&gt;randomly from the 13 available denominations. 3 of these &lt;br&gt;denominations will select 1 card randomly from the 4 available &lt;br&gt;suits. The 4th denomination will select 2 cards from the available 4 &lt;br&gt;suits. Finally, the pair can be any one of the four available &lt;br&gt;denominations. Thus the calculation is: COMBIN(13, 4) * &lt;br&gt;(COMBIN(4, 1))^3 * COMBIN( 4, 2) * 4 = 1,098,240 possible hands &lt;br&gt;that have just one pair. &lt;br&gt;The calculation for a hand with two pairs is similar. We will have 3 &lt;br&gt;random denominations taken from the 13 available. Two of these &lt;br&gt;denominations will use 2 of the four available suits while the third &lt;br&gt;denomination selects 1 of the four available suits. The singleton &lt;br&gt;card may be any one of the three denominations. Thus, the &lt;br&gt;calculation becomes: COMBIN(13, 3) * (COMBIN(4, 2))^2 * &lt;br&gt;COMBIN(4, 1) * 3 = 123,552 possible hands with 2 pairs. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Three of a kind is calculated in a similar manner. There will be 3 &lt;br&gt;different denominations from the 13 possible denominations. One &lt;br&gt;denomination will select 3 of the 4 available suits while the other &lt;br&gt;two denominations select 1 card from each of the 4 possible suits. &lt;br&gt;Finally, the three of a kind can be in any of the three &lt;br&gt;denominations. The calculation becomes: COMBIN(13, 3) * &lt;br&gt;COMBIN(4, 3) * (COMBIN(4, 1))^2 * 3 = 54,912 possible hands with &lt;br&gt;3 of a kind. &lt;br&gt;The next calculation will be for a Full House. A Full House only &lt;br&gt;uses 2 of the 13 denominations. One of these will select 3 cards &lt;br&gt;from the 4 available while the other selects 2 cards from the 4 &lt;br&gt;available. Finally the denomination that has 3 cards can be either &lt;br&gt;one of the 2 denominations that we are using. This gives us: &lt;br&gt;COMBIN(13, 2) * COMBIN(4, 3) * COMBIN(4 , 2) * 2 = 3,744 &lt;br&gt;possible Full Houses. &lt;br&gt;The final calculation is for 4 of a kind. Again, we will select 2 &lt;br&gt;denominations from the 13 available. One of these will select 4 &lt;br&gt;cards from the 4 available (Obviously the only way to do this is to &lt;br&gt;take all four cards.) while the other denomination takes 1 of the &lt;br&gt;available 4 cards. The denomination that has 4 of a kind can be &lt;br&gt;either one of the 2 available denominations. &lt;br&gt;Thus, the calculation becomes: COMBIN(13, 2) * COMBIN( 4, 4) * &lt;br&gt;COMBIN( 4, 1) * 2 = 624 different ways of being dealt 4 of a kind. &lt;br&gt;Poker Odds From The Turn &lt;br&gt;Many players who really understand Hold&amp;#39;em odds still tend to &lt;br&gt;forget that the &amp;lsquo;turn&amp;rsquo; can change their odds dramatically. It&amp;#39;s true &lt;br&gt;that for a flush draw, the card odds are 1.9 to 1 from the flop to the &lt;br&gt;river. However, this is a theoretical situation where it assumes &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;there is no additional betting on the turn. Typically this is not &lt;br&gt;going to be the case so you will need to recalculate your card odds &lt;br&gt;and pot odds. &lt;br&gt;We will use the flush calculation example again and run through it &lt;br&gt;100 times assuming there was $20 in the pot on the flop with two &lt;br&gt;$5 bets. On the turn, this leaves $30 in the pot, plus a $10 bet from &lt;br&gt;your opponent to call. &lt;br&gt;Cost to Play = 100 hands * $10 to call on turn = -$1,000 &lt;br&gt;Pot Value = $30 + $10 bet + $10 call &lt;br&gt;Odds to Win = 4.1:1 or 19% (From the turn)&lt;br&gt;Total Hands Won = 100 * Odds to Win (19%) = 19 wins&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Net Profit = Net Cost to Play + (Total Times Won * Pot Value) &lt;br&gt;= -$1,000 + (19 * $50) &lt;br&gt;= -$1,000 + $900 &lt;br&gt;= -$100 Profit &lt;br&gt;Now, you can see that what was a very profitable draw on the flop &lt;br&gt;suddenly turned into a not so great draw on the turn. This is &lt;br&gt;because by not hitting your flush by the turn, it lowered your &lt;br&gt;chances of making a flush by the river. The odds thus increased to &lt;br&gt;4.1 to 1 instead of 1.9 to 1. So even though the pot odds remained &lt;br&gt;the same at 4:1, because the card odds went down, this flush draw &lt;br&gt;has now become unprofitable. &lt;br&gt;Realizing the dynamic changes in your odds is extremely &lt;br&gt;important so that you don&amp;#39;t go making incorrect draws based on &lt;br&gt;odds from the flop. Just remember that your odds essentially &lt;br&gt;double from the flop to the turn, so adjust your play accordingly. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Each entry in the following table is the result of 1,000,000 &lt;br&gt;simulated hands of Texas Hold &amp;#39;em played to the showdown and &lt;br&gt;represents the percentage of pots won (including partial pots in &lt;br&gt;the case of splits) by the indicated hand against the indicated &lt;br&gt;number of opponents holding random hands. &lt;br&gt;The study shows a very clear correlation between your odds of &lt;br&gt;success against the number of players. Notice the JJ, TT, 99 &lt;br&gt;anomaly where the power of these cards increase dramatically &lt;br&gt;over perceived better pocket cards -depending on how many &lt;br&gt;players are left. The hands indicated in BOLD can have impressive &lt;br&gt;results but require aggressive raising to force out weaker players. &lt;br&gt;Opponents: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 &lt;br&gt;Hand &lt;br&gt;AA &lt;br&gt;KK &lt;br&gt;QQ &lt;br&gt;Aks &lt;br&gt;AQs &lt;br&gt;JJ &lt;br&gt;KQs &lt;br&gt;AJs &lt;br&gt;KJs &lt;br&gt;ATs &lt;br&gt;AK &lt;br&gt;TT &lt;br&gt;QJs &lt;br&gt;KTs &lt;br&gt;QTs &lt;br&gt;JTs &lt;br&gt;99 &lt;br&gt;85.3 73.4 63.9 55.9 49.2 43.6 38.8 34.7 31.1 &lt;br&gt;82.4 68.9 58.2 49.8 43.0 37.5 32.9 29.2 26.1 &lt;br&gt;79.9 64.9 53.5 44.7 37.9 32.5 28.3 24.9 22.2 &lt;br&gt;67.0 50.7 41.4 35.4 31.1 27.7 25.0 22.7 20.7 &lt;br&gt;66.1 49.4 39.9 33.7 29.4 26.0 23.3 21.1 19.3 &lt;br&gt;77.5 61.2 49.2 40.3 33.6 28.5 24.6 21.6 19.3 &lt;br&gt;63.4 47.1 38.2 32.5 28.3 25.1 22.5 20.4 18.6 &lt;br&gt;65.4 48.2 38.5 32.2 27.8 24.5 22.0 19.9 18.1 &lt;br&gt;62.6 45.9 36.8 31.1 26.9 23.8 21.3 19.3 17.6 &lt;br&gt;64.7 47.1 37.2 31.0 26.7 23.5 21.0 18.9 17.3 &lt;br&gt;65.4 48.2 38.6 32.4 27.9 24.4 21.6 19.2 17.2 &lt;br&gt;75.1 57.7 45.2 36.4 30.0 25.3 21.8 19.2 17.2 &lt;br&gt;60.3 44.1 35.6 30.1 26.1 23.0 20.7 18.7 17.1 &lt;br&gt;61.9 44.9 35.7 29.9 25.8 22.8 20.4 18.5 16.9 &lt;br&gt;59.5 43.1 34.6 29.1 25.2 22.3 19.9 18.1 16.6 &lt;br&gt;57.5 41.9 33.8 28.5 24.7 21.9 19.7 17.9 16.5 &lt;br&gt;72.1 53.5 41.1 32.6 26.6 22.4 19.4 17.2 15.6 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;AQ 64.5 46.8 36.9 30.4 25.9 22.5 19.7 17.5 15.5 &lt;br&gt;A9s 63.0 44.8 34.6 28.4 24.2 21.1 18.8 16.9 15.4 &lt;br&gt;KQ 61.4 44.4 35.2 29.3 25.1 21.8 19.1 16.9 15.1 &lt;br&gt;T9s 54.3 38.9 31.0 26.0 22.5 19.8 17.8 16.2 14.9 &lt;br&gt;A8s 62.1 43.7 33.6 27.4 23.3 20.3 18.0 16.2 14.8 &lt;br&gt;K9s 60.0 42.4 32.9 27.2 23.2 20.3 18.1 16.3 14.8 &lt;br&gt;J9s 55.8 39.6 31.3 26.1 22.4 19.7 17.6 15.9 14.6 &lt;br&gt;A5s 59.9 41.4 31.8 26.0 22.2 19.6 17.5 15.9 14.5 &lt;br&gt;Q9s 57.9 40.7 31.9 26.4 22.5 19.7 17.6 15.9 14.5 &lt;br&gt;88 69.1 49.9 37.5 29.4 24.0 20.3 17.7 15.8 14.4 &lt;br&gt;AJ 63.6 45.6 35.4 28.9 24.4 21.0 18.3 16.1 14.3 &lt;br&gt;A7s 61.1 42.6 32.6 26.5 22.5 19.6 17.4 15.7 14.3 &lt;br&gt;A4s 58.9 40.4 30.9 25.3 21.6 19.0 17.0 15.5 14.2 &lt;br&gt;A6s 60.0 41.3 31.4 25.6 21.7 19.0 16.9 15.3 14.0 &lt;br&gt;A3s 58.0 39.4 30.0 24.6 21.0 18.5 16.6 15.1 13.9 &lt;br&gt;KJ 60.6 43.1 33.6 27.6 23.5 20.2 17.7 15.6 13.9 &lt;br&gt;QJ 58.2 41.4 32.6 26.9 22.9 19.8 17.3 15.3 13.7 &lt;br&gt;77 66.2 46.4 34.4 26.8 21.9 18.6 16.4 14.8 13.7 &lt;br&gt;T8s 52.6 36.9 29.0 24.0 20.6 18.1 16.2 14.8 13.6 &lt;br&gt;K8s 58.5 40.2 30.8 25.1 21.3 18.6 16.5 14.8 13.5 &lt;br&gt;AT 62.9 44.4 34.1 27.6 23.1 19.8 17.2 15.1 13.4 &lt;br&gt;A2s 57.0 38.5 29.2 23.9 20.4 18.0 16.1 14.6 13.4 &lt;br&gt;98s 51.1 36.0 28.5 23.6 20.2 17.8 15.9 14.5 13.4 &lt;br&gt;K7s 57.8 39.4 30.1 24.5 20.8 18.1 16.0 14.5 13.2 &lt;br&gt;Q8s 56.2 38.6 29.7 24.4 20.7 18.0 16.0 14.4 13.2 &lt;br&gt;J8s 54.2 37.5 29.1 24.0 20.5 17.9 15.9 14.4 13.2 &lt;br&gt;KT 59.9 42.0 32.5 26.5 22.3 19.2 16.7 14.7 13.1 &lt;br&gt;JT 55.4 39.0 30.7 25.3 21.5 18.6 16.3 14.5 13.1 &lt;br&gt;66 63.3 43.2 31.5 24.5 20.1 17.3 15.4 14.0 13.1 &lt;br&gt;QT 57.4 40.2 31.3 25.7 21.6 18.6 16.3 14.4 12.9 &lt;br&gt;K6s 56.8 38.4 29.1 23.7 20.1 17.5 15.6 14.0 12.8 &lt;br&gt;87s 48.2 33.9 26.6 22.0 18.9 16.7 15.0 13.7 12.7 &lt;br&gt;K5s 55.8 37.4 28.2 23.0 19.5 17.0 15.2 13.7 12.5 &lt;br&gt;97s 49.5 34.2 26.8 22.1 18.9 16.6 14.9 13.6 12.5 &lt;br&gt;T7s 51.0 34.9 27.0 22.2 19.0 16.6 14.8 13.5 12.4 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;K4s 54.7 36.4 27.4 22.3 19.0 16.6 14.8 13.4 12.3 &lt;br&gt;76s 45.7 32.0 25.1 20.8 18.0 15.9 14.4 13.2 12.3 &lt;br&gt;55 60.3 40.1 28.8 22.4 18.5 16.0 14.4 13.2 12.3 &lt;br&gt;K3s 53.8 35.5 26.7 21.7 18.4 16.2 14.5 13.1 12.1 &lt;br&gt;Q7s 54.5 36.7 27.9 22.7 19.2 16.7 14.8 13.3 12.1 &lt;br&gt;44 57.0 36.8 26.3 20.6 17.3 15.2 13.9 12.9 12.1 &lt;br&gt;J7s 52.4 35.4 27.1 22.2 18.9 16.4 14.6 13.2 12.0 &lt;br&gt;33 53.7 33.5 23.9 19.0 16.2 14.6 13.5 12.6 12.0 &lt;br&gt;22 50.3 30.7 22.0 17.8 15.5 14.2 13.3 12.5 12.0 &lt;br&gt;K2s 52.9 34.6 26.0 21.2 18.1 15.9 14.3 13.0 11.9 &lt;br&gt;86s 46.5 32.0 25.0 20.6 17.6 15.6 14.1 12.9 11.9 &lt;br&gt;65s 43.2 30.2 23.7 19.7 17.0 15.2 13.8 12.7 11.9 &lt;br&gt;Q6s 53.8 35.8 27.1 21.9 18.5 16.1 14.3 12.9 11.7 &lt;br&gt;54s 41.1 28.8 22.6 18.9 16.5 14.8 13.5 12.5 11.7 &lt;br&gt;Q5s 52.9 34.9 26.3 21.4 18.1 15.8 14.1 12.7 11.6 &lt;br&gt;96s 47.7 32.3 24.9 20.4 17.4 15.3 13.7 12.4 11.4 &lt;br&gt;75s 43.8 30.1 23.4 19.4 16.7 14.8 13.4 12.3 11.4 &lt;br&gt;Q4s 51.7 33.9 25.5 20.7 17.6 15.4 13.7 12.4 11.3 &lt;br&gt;T9 51.7 35.7 27.7 22.5 18.9 16.2 14.1 12.6 11.3 &lt;br&gt;A9 60.9 41.8 31.2 24.7 20.3 17.1 14.7 12.8 11.2 &lt;br&gt;T6s 49.2 32.8 25.1 20.5 17.4 15.2 13.6 12.3 11.2 &lt;br&gt;Q3s 50.7 33.0 24.7 20.1 17.0 14.9 13.3 12.1 11.1 &lt;br&gt;J6s 50.8 33.6 25.4 20.6 17.4 15.2 13.5 12.1 11.1 &lt;br&gt;64s 41.4 28.5 22.1 18.4 15.9 14.2 12.9 11.9 11.1 &lt;br&gt;Q2s 49.9 32.2 24.0 19.5 16.6 14.6 13.1 11.9 10.9 &lt;br&gt;85s 44.8 30.2 23.2 19.1 16.3 14.3 12.9 11.8 10.9 &lt;br&gt;K9 58.0 39.5 29.6 23.6 19.5 16.5 14.1 12.3 10.8 &lt;br&gt;J9 53.4 36.5 27.9 22.5 18.7 15.9 13.8 12.1 10.8 &lt;br&gt;J5s 50.0 32.8 24.7 20.0 17.0 14.7 13.1 11.8 10.8 &lt;br&gt;53s 39.3 27.1 21.1 17.5 15.2 13.7 12.5 11.6 10.8 &lt;br&gt;Q9 55.5 37.6 28.5 22.9 19.0 16.1 13.8 12.1 10.7 &lt;br&gt;A8 60.1 40.8 30.1 23.7 19.4 16.2 13.9 12.0 10.6 &lt;br&gt;J4s 49.0 31.8 24.0 19.4 16.4 14.3 12.8 11.5 10.6 &lt;br&gt;J3s 47.9 30.9 23.2 18.8 16.0 14.0 12.5 11.3 10.4 &lt;br&gt;74s 41.8 28.2 21.7 17.9 15.3 13.5 12.2 11.2 10.4 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;95s 45.9 30.4 23.2 18.8 16.0 13.9 12.4 11.3 10.3 &lt;br&gt;43s 38.0 26.2 20.3 16.9 14.7 13.1 12.0 11.1 10.3 &lt;br&gt;J2s 47.1 30.1 22.6 18.3 15.6 13.7 12.2 11.1 10.2 &lt;br&gt;T5s 47.2 30.8 23.3 18.9 16.0 13.9 12.4 11.2 10.2 &lt;br&gt;A7 59.1 39.4 28.9 22.6 18.4 15.4 13.2 11.4 10.1 &lt;br&gt;A5 57.7 38.2 27.9 22.0 18.0 15.2 13.1 11.5 10.1 &lt;br&gt;T4s 46.4 30.1 22.7 18.4 15.6 13.6 12.1 11.0 10.0 &lt;br&gt;63s 39.4 26.5 20.4 16.8 14.5 12.9 11.7 10.8 10.0 &lt;br&gt;T8 50.0 33.6 25.4 20.4 16.9 14.4 12.5 11.0 9.9 &lt;br&gt;98 48.4 32.9 25.1 20.1 16.6 14.2 12.3 10.9 9.9 &lt;br&gt;A4 56.4 36.9 26.9 21.1 17.3 14.7 12.6 11.0 9.8 &lt;br&gt;T3s 45.5 29.3 22.0 17.8 15.1 13.2 11.8 10.7 9.8 &lt;br&gt;84s 42.7 28.1 21.4 17.4 14.8 13.0 11.7 10.6 9.8 &lt;br&gt;52s 37.5 25.3 19.5 16.1 14.0 12.5 11.4 10.6 9.8 &lt;br&gt;T2s 44.7 28.5 21.4 17.4 14.8 13.0 11.6 10.5 9.7 &lt;br&gt;A6 57.8 38.0 27.6 21.5 17.5 14.7 12.6 10.9 9.6 &lt;br&gt;42s 36.3 24.6 18.8 15.7 13.7 12.3 11.2 10.4 9.6 &lt;br&gt;A3 55.6 35.9 26.1 20.4 16.7 14.2 12.2 10.7 9.5 &lt;br&gt;J8 51.7 34.2 25.6 20.4 16.8 14.1 12.2 10.7 9.5 &lt;br&gt;K8 56.3 37.2 27.3 21.4 17.4 14.6 12.5 10.8 9.4 &lt;br&gt;94s 43.8 28.4 21.3 17.3 14.6 12.7 11.3 10.3 9.4 &lt;br&gt;87 45.5 30.6 23.2 18.5 15.4 13.1 11.5 10.3 9.3 &lt;br&gt;73s 40.0 26.3 20.0 16.4 14.0 12.3 11.1 10.1 9.3 &lt;br&gt;Q8 53.8 35.4 26.2 20.6 16.9 14.1 12.1 10.5 9.2 &lt;br&gt;93s 43.2 27.8 20.8 16.8 14.3 12.5 11.1 10.1 9.2 &lt;br&gt;32s 35.1 23.6 18.0 14.9 13.0 11.7 10.7 9.9 9.2 &lt;br&gt;A2 54.6 35.0 25.2 19.6 16.1 13.6 11.7 10.2 9.1 &lt;br&gt;92s 42.3 27.0 20.2 16.4 13.9 12.2 10.9 9.9 9.1 &lt;br&gt;62s 37.5 24.8 18.8 15.4 13.3 11.8 10.7 9.8 9.1 &lt;br&gt;K7 55.4 36.1 26.3 20.5 16.7 13.9 11.8 10.2 9.0 &lt;br&gt;83s 40.8 26.3 19.8 16.0 13.6 11.9 10.7 9.7 8.9 &lt;br&gt;97 46.7 30.9 23.1 18.4 15.1 12.8 11.1 9.8 8.8 &lt;br&gt;82s 40.3 25.8 19.4 15.7 13.3 11.7 10.5 9.6 8.8 &lt;br&gt;76 42.7 28.5 21.5 17.1 14.2 12.2 10.8 9.6 8.8 &lt;br&gt;K6 54.3 35.0 25.3 19.7 16.0 13.3 11.3 9.8 8.6 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;T7 48.2 31.4 23.4 18.4 15.1 12.8 11.0 9.7 8.6 &lt;br&gt;72s 38.1 24.5 18.4 15.0 12.8 11.2 10.1 9.2 8.5 &lt;br&gt;65 40.1 26.7 20.0 15.9 13.3 11.5 10.2 9.2 8.5 &lt;br&gt;K5 53.3 34.0 24.5 19.0 15.4 12.9 11.0 9.5 8.3 &lt;br&gt;86 43.6 28.6 21.3 16.9 13.9 11.8 10.4 9.2 8.3 &lt;br&gt;54 37.9 25.2 18.8 15.0 12.6 11.0 9.8 8.9 8.2 &lt;br&gt;J7 49.9 32.1 23.5 18.3 14.9 12.4 10.6 9.2 8.1 &lt;br&gt;K4 52.1 32.8 23.4 18.1 14.7 12.3 10.5 9.1 8.0 &lt;br&gt;Q7 51.9 33.2 24.0 18.6 15.1 12.5 10.6 9.2 8.0 &lt;br&gt;75 40.8 26.5 19.7 15.5 12.8 11.0 9.7 8.7 7.9 &lt;br&gt;K3 51.2 31.9 22.7 17.6 14.2 11.9 10.2 8.9 7.8 &lt;br&gt;96 44.9 28.8 21.2 16.6 13.5 11.4 9.8 8.7 7.8 &lt;br&gt;K2 50.2 30.9 21.8 16.9 13.7 11.5 9.8 8.6 7.6 &lt;br&gt;Q6 51.1 32.3 23.2 17.9 14.4 12.0 10.1 8.8 7.6 &lt;br&gt;64 38.0 24.7 18.2 14.4 12.0 10.3 9.2 8.3 7.6 &lt;br&gt;Q5 50.2 31.3 22.3 17.3 13.9 11.6 9.8 8.5 7.4 &lt;br&gt;T6 46.3 29.2 21.2 16.5 13.4 11.2 9.5 8.3 7.3 &lt;br&gt;85 41.7 26.5 19.4 15.2 12.4 10.5 9.1 8.1 7.3 &lt;br&gt;53 35.8 23.3 17.1 13.6 11.4 9.9 8.8 8.0 7.3 &lt;br&gt;Q4 49.0 30.2 21.4 16.4 13.3 11.0 9.4 8.1 7.1 &lt;br&gt;J6 47.9 29.8 21.4 16.5 13.2 11.0 9.3 8.0 7.0 &lt;br&gt;Q3 47.9 29.2 20.7 15.9 12.8 10.7 9.1 7.9 6.9 &lt;br&gt;Q2 47.0 28.4 19.9 15.3 12.3 10.3 8.8 7.7 6.8 &lt;br&gt;74 38.6 24.5 17.9 13.9 11.4 9.7 8.5 7.6 6.8 &lt;br&gt;43 34.4 22.3 16.3 12.8 10.7 9.3 8.3 7.5 6.8 &lt;br&gt;J5 47.1 29.1 20.7 15.9 12.8 10.6 8.9 7.7 6.7 &lt;br&gt;95 42.9 26.7 19.2 14.8 12.0 10.0 8.5 7.4 6.6 &lt;br&gt;J4 46.1 28.1 19.9 15.3 12.3 10.2 8.6 7.5 6.5 &lt;br&gt;63 35.9 22.7 16.4 12.8 10.6 9.1 8.0 7.2 6.5 &lt;br&gt;T5 44.2 27.1 19.3 14.8 11.9 9.9 8.4 7.2 6.4 &lt;br&gt;J3 45.0 27.1 19.1 14.6 11.7 9.8 8.3 7.2 6.3 &lt;br&gt;J2 44.0 26.2 18.4 14.1 11.3 9.4 8.0 7.0 6.2 &lt;br&gt;T4 43.4 26.4 18.7 14.3 11.5 9.5 8.1 7.0 6.2 &lt;br&gt;52 33.9 21.3 15.3 12.0 10.0 8.6 7.6 6.8 6.2 &lt;br&gt;84 39.6 24.4 17.5 13.4 10.8 9.0 7.8 6.8 6.1 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;T3 42.4 25.5 18.0 13.7 11.0 9.1 7.8 6.8 6.0 &lt;br&gt;42 32.5 20.5 14.7 11.5 9.5 8.3 7.3 6.6 6.0 &lt;br&gt;T2 41.5 24.7 17.3 13.2 10.6 8.8 7.5 6.6 5.8 &lt;br&gt;73 36.6 22.4 16.0 12.3 9.9 8.4 7.2 6.4 5.7 &lt;br&gt;94 40.7 24.6 17.3 13.2 10.5 8.7 7.3 6.4 5.6 &lt;br&gt;32 31.2 19.5 13.9 10.8 8.9 7.7 6.8 6.1 5.6 &lt;br&gt;93 39.9 23.9 16.7 12.7 10.1 8.3 7.1 6.1 5.4 &lt;br&gt;62 34.0 20.7 14.6 11.2 9.1 7.8 6.8 6.0 5.4 &lt;br&gt;92 38.9 22.9 16.0 12.1 9.6 8.0 6.8 5.9 5.2 &lt;br&gt;83 37.5 22.4 15.7 11.9 9.5 7.9 6.7 5.8 5.1 &lt;br&gt;82 36.8 21.7 15.1 11.4 9.1 7.5 6.4 5.6 4.9 &lt;br&gt;72 34.6 20.4 14.2 10.7 8.6 7.2 6.1 5.4 4.8 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;AN INTRODUCTION &lt;br&gt;TO THE RULES &lt;br&gt;OF TEXAS HOLD&amp;rsquo;EM &lt;br&gt;So you&amp;#39;re new to Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em poker? Not a problem. &lt;br&gt;Texas Hold &amp;#39;em poker is by far the best game for a beginner to &lt;br&gt;learn. Instead of other poker games like Omaha High or 7 card &lt;br&gt;stud which entail a great many more possibilities for calculating &lt;br&gt;odds and perhaps even trying to count cards, Hold&amp;rsquo;em can be &lt;br&gt;learned in a few minutes by anyone, and you can be playing fairly &lt;br&gt;well with a few hours practice. In order to learn the game, &lt;br&gt;however, you must play and you must play fairly often. &lt;br&gt;All Online Poker Casinos today offer a wide variety of play money &lt;br&gt;tables for beginners to practice their skills until they&amp;#39;re ready to &lt;br&gt;move up to the fun at real money tables. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;A Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em poker game goes as follows: &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;1. The betting structure can vary, but most games start with two &lt;br&gt;players placing out a predetermined amount of money so there is &lt;br&gt;an initial amount to play for. This is called posting the blinds. These &lt;br&gt;players are the two to the left of the dealer. &lt;br&gt;2. The dealer shuffles up a complete deck of 52 playing cards. &lt;br&gt;3. Each player is dealt two cards face down. These are called your &lt;br&gt;hole or pocket cards. &lt;br&gt;4. Then there is a round of betting starting with the guy to the left &lt;br&gt;of the two who posted the blinds. This round is usually referred to &lt;br&gt;by the term pre-flop. &lt;br&gt;5. The amount betted depends on the table stakes, which are &lt;br&gt;posted before you join the table. &lt;br&gt;6. Much like most games of poker, players can check, raise, or fold. &lt;br&gt;7. After the betting round ends, the dealer discards the top card of &lt;br&gt;the deck. This is called a burn card. This is done to prevent &lt;br&gt;cheating. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;8. The dealer then flips the next three cards face up on the table. &lt;br&gt;These cards are called the flop. These are communal cards that &lt;br&gt;anyone can use in combination with their two pocket cards to form &lt;br&gt;a poker hand. &lt;br&gt;9. There is another round of betting starting with the player to the &lt;br&gt;left of the dealer. &lt;br&gt;10. After the betting concludes, the dealer burns another card and &lt;br&gt;flips one more onto the table. This is called the turn card. Players &lt;br&gt;can use this sixth card now to form a five-card poker hand. &lt;br&gt;11. The player to the left of the dealer begins another round of &lt;br&gt;betting. In many types of games, this is where the bet size doubles. &lt;br&gt;12. Finally, the dealer burns a card and places a final card face up &lt;br&gt;on the table. This is called the river. Players can now use any of the &lt;br&gt;five cards on the table or the two cards in their pocket to form a &lt;br&gt;five-card poker hand. &lt;br&gt;13. There is one final round of betting starting with the player to &lt;br&gt;the left of the dealer. &lt;br&gt;14. After that, all of the players remaining in the game begin to &lt;br&gt;reveal their hands. This begins with the player to the left of the last &lt;br&gt;player to call. It&amp;#39;s called the showdown. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;15. The player with the best hand wins! &lt;br&gt;LEARNING HOW TO PLAY &lt;br&gt;It&amp;#39;s difficult to learn to play Texas Hold &amp;#39;em in the traditional &lt;br&gt;setting of a casino&amp;#39;s poker room without losing to experienced &lt;br&gt;gamblers. Thankfully, you can practice all you want for free with &lt;br&gt;online poker rooms. &lt;br&gt;The only way to learn the game is to play. And pay attention. &lt;br&gt;Check out Online Casinos to get a feel for the action. Play all you &lt;br&gt;want for free, and start playing for real money when you feel &lt;br&gt;ready. They have both low limits (betting) for newer players as &lt;br&gt;well as high stakes tables. Since we mention betting, let&amp;rsquo;s look at &lt;br&gt;the basics. &lt;br&gt;THE BASICS OF BETTING? &lt;br&gt;A bet is a declaration that either -&lt;br&gt;a)&amp;quot;I have the best hand and I&amp;#39;ll wager money on it&amp;quot; &lt;br&gt;or &lt;br&gt;b)&amp;quot;You have a poor hand, and you will fold if you are &lt;br&gt;forced to wager on it&amp;quot;. &lt;br&gt;Typically, players are supposed to bet when they have a good hand. &lt;br&gt;Players who don&amp;#39;t have good hands are supposed to fold. &lt;br&gt;Of course, if this was the case, we all might as well wager on &lt;br&gt;flipped coins. Most players play contrary to this idea, attempting &lt;br&gt;to be clever or deceptive. Don&amp;#39;t fall into this trap when you are &lt;br&gt;just learning to play. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Keep it simple. Don&amp;rsquo;t be clever. Bet when you think you will win &lt;br&gt;and fold when you can&amp;rsquo;t. But there are going to be situations &lt;br&gt;where you should bet even if your cards aren&amp;rsquo;t the best. &lt;br&gt;Here are some situations you should start looking at to improve &lt;br&gt;your game. &lt;br&gt;BLIND STEALING &lt;br&gt;Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em is unique because the two blinds are &amp;lsquo;in&amp;rsquo; whether &lt;br&gt;they want to or not. &lt;br&gt;As a result of being forced to bet, they are also less committed than &lt;br&gt;a player who really believes they can win -but since they have to &lt;br&gt;bet, they would be fools not to stay in the game. &lt;br&gt;Now imagine you are the dealer, and only you and the two blinds &lt;br&gt;are still in. In this situation, if you raise against them, your raise is &lt;br&gt;called &amp;quot;blind-stealing&amp;quot;. Why? Your raise is forcing the blinds into a &lt;br&gt;situation where they may fold. &lt;br&gt;Remember, they are only in the hand because they have to be. &lt;br&gt;It&amp;rsquo;s easy to push players in this situation out of the game. It&amp;rsquo;s likely &lt;br&gt;that if you didn&amp;#39;t raise and just called, the blinds would probably &lt;br&gt;check. You can make money this way, especially if the blinds are &lt;br&gt;looser players. It&amp;rsquo;s also a way to get the hand over so you can go &lt;br&gt;on to the next game. &lt;br&gt;THE STEAL RAISE &lt;br&gt;The choice spot in a betting round is the &amp;lsquo;cat-bird seat&amp;rsquo;. You are the &lt;br&gt;last in sequence to bet so you get to see what the other players are &lt;br&gt;up to. If all the other players have checked to you, and you bet &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;(regardless of your hand), you can often force the other players to &lt;br&gt;fold. Taking the pot in this situation is called steal-raising. &lt;br&gt;Obviously, if you try this every time, the better players will be &lt;br&gt;onto you and see through your tactic. It&amp;rsquo;s a great idea to steal raise &lt;br&gt;when you have a good drawing hand such as a flush draw. &lt;br&gt;THE CHECK RAISE &lt;br&gt;Most Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em tables will permit raising after you have &lt;br&gt;checked. &lt;br&gt;Check raising is a technique to build the pot. If you have a &lt;br&gt;winning hand and you bet right away, you may chase away &lt;br&gt;players who could add to the pot. So let&amp;rsquo;s say you check. Another &lt;br&gt;player sees an advantage, assumes you are uncertain about your &lt;br&gt;hand and raises. Now you can raise their bet again. It&amp;rsquo;s unlikely at &lt;br&gt;this point that they will fold having committed to the round by &lt;br&gt;raising the bet. &lt;br&gt;THE OPENER &lt;br&gt;This is a very traditional bluffing move. The first person following &lt;br&gt;the blinds in the round raises aggressively, making all other &lt;br&gt;players call both the blind and the raise. The only reason a player &lt;br&gt;would do this so early in the game is to limit the number of &lt;br&gt;players. Usually you will see a number of players fold. The ones &lt;br&gt;left though will have great hands or will refuse to be intimidated &lt;br&gt;by this tactic. Some people call this move &amp;lsquo;betting for information&amp;rsquo;. &lt;br&gt;This only works with small groups of players. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;HOW TO WIN MONEY IN &lt;br&gt;TEXAS HOLD&amp;rsquo;EM BEFORE &lt;br&gt;THE FIRST CARD IS EVEN DEALT &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Decisions, decisions, decisions. Poker is a game of &lt;br&gt;constant decisions. They range from the critical to &lt;br&gt;the mundane and they occur at a dizzying pace; &lt;br&gt;often dozens of times per minute. Online card play &lt;br&gt;is especially fierce and the pressure can be intense. &lt;br&gt;Do I raise? Do I stay? Do I call? Do I fold? Even &lt;br&gt;when a loss attributed to a wrong decision is small, it eventually &lt;br&gt;adds up. Making the best decisions based on the information you &lt;br&gt;have at hand is the key to beating your opponents. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;A great example of a critical decision in Texas Hold&amp;#39;em that &lt;br&gt;happens on almost every hand is the problem associated with &lt;br&gt;defending a small blind. Suppose that while playing online in a &lt;br&gt;Texas Hold&amp;#39;em game, with $1 and $2 blinds, a player always &lt;br&gt;defends their small blind &amp;ndash; stays in even with a garbage hand &lt;br&gt;because they&amp;rsquo;ve already invested the $2. Based on the random &lt;br&gt;distribution of cards, you&amp;#39;re typically dealt such a throwaway &lt;br&gt;hand about one-third of the time. &lt;br&gt;At 50 -60 hands per hour -a typical pace in online card rooms the average player is dealt the small blind six times every 60 &lt;br&gt;minutes. If they always call, they wind up calling twice each hour &lt;br&gt;when they should be folding. That&amp;#39;s $6 per hour minimum. If you &lt;br&gt;play ten hours per week, at the end of the year you&amp;#39;ve given away &lt;br&gt;over three thousand dollars. Ouch. &lt;br&gt;That&amp;rsquo;s only one example of the kind of &amp;lsquo;big picture&amp;rsquo; thinking that &lt;br&gt;can make the difference between being a winner or a loser over the &lt;br&gt;long haul. &lt;br&gt;All the latest research (from the online casino&amp;rsquo;s themselves) &lt;br&gt;show quite clearly that over 50% of your winnings at the online &lt;br&gt;poker table will be determined BEFORE YOU ARE DEALT A &lt;br&gt;SINGLE CARD (some would suggest it&amp;rsquo;s even higher than 50%). &lt;br&gt;Here are the Ten key non-card based &amp;lsquo;decisions&amp;rsquo; you must make in &lt;br&gt;Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em poker to be successful. Few of these have anything &lt;br&gt;to do with the bricks and mortars version of the game. After the &lt;br&gt;summary, we will go into more detail. But even if you never read &lt;br&gt;the follow-up, if you adopt these simple basics your winnings will &lt;br&gt;increase dramatically. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;1. SELECT A CASINO. Rule number one. Be a member of no less &lt;br&gt;than six online casinos so you can rotate and move around from &lt;br&gt;casino to casino during play. Select only well-known casinos with &lt;br&gt;excellent reputations for paying quickly and maintaining industry-&lt;br&gt;accepted randomizing algorithms (more on this later). &lt;br&gt;2. SELECT A BETTING LIMIT. But only if it&amp;rsquo;s $1/2, $2/4 or $5/10 &lt;br&gt;blinds. This section will discuss the research, the math, and the &lt;br&gt;studies on human nature that prove conclusively that high-stake &lt;br&gt;limit tables are not the place to make money. They are however an &lt;br&gt;excellent place to lose large amounts of cash in a big hurry. The &lt;br&gt;return on investment (ROI) is best at medium limit tables. &lt;br&gt;3. SELECT YOUR STAKE. No decision here if your smart. You &lt;br&gt;must have 50 to 100 times the Big Blind. Any less and your chances &lt;br&gt;of making money nose dive. More will only improve your table &lt;br&gt;&amp;lsquo;cred&amp;rsquo; and help to intimidate weaker players. &lt;br&gt;4. SELECT A TABLE. Spend at least 15 minutes watching the play &lt;br&gt;at each table. Review your notes if recognized players are present. &lt;br&gt;Check out at least three tables before you start. Then select the &lt;br&gt;loosest table. To win at Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker you must play tight &lt;br&gt;in loose games and play in loose games only. If all the tables are &lt;br&gt;tight, run. Go back to Step 1. &lt;br&gt;5. SELECT A POSITION AT THE TABLE. Watch for the tightest &lt;br&gt;player at the table. Pick a spot to that players left. We have &lt;br&gt;dedicated an entire chapter later on to table position strategy. &lt;br&gt;6. TAKE NOTES ON PLAYERS. Record playing styles. Do they &lt;br&gt;raise before the flop? Do they fold before the flop? What&amp;rsquo;s the size &lt;br&gt;of their stake? Do they react quickly or slowly when their turn &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;comes up? What kind of cards did they play on? Everyone should &lt;br&gt;take player notes at casinos like Party Poker where they offer the &lt;br&gt;feature. Don&amp;#39;t know how to take notes? Just right-click on the &lt;br&gt;avatar (picture) of the target player and click &amp;quot;Player Notes&amp;quot;. That &lt;br&gt;feature is there for a very good reason &amp;ndash; use it. &lt;br&gt;7. TURN OFF CHAT. It&amp;rsquo;s distracting and rarely valuable. If you &lt;br&gt;want to chat, use MSN &amp;ndash; but never while you&amp;rsquo;re playing for &lt;br&gt;money. &lt;br&gt;8. TURN OFF TV&amp;rsquo;s, MUSIC, OTHER DISTRACTIONS. Now is &lt;br&gt;not the time to catch the score on your favorite game or consume a &lt;br&gt;bucket of chicken. If anyone&amp;rsquo;s going to be distracted, it should be &lt;br&gt;your opponents. Let them miss cues, watch their stack disappear &lt;br&gt;and wonder what happened. &lt;br&gt;9. PLAY TIGHT. Follow the Food Chain Theory. Learn the rules. &lt;br&gt;Understand the odds. Bet like a &amp;lsquo;shark&amp;rsquo;, not a &amp;lsquo;fish&amp;rsquo;. &lt;br&gt;10. PLAY FOR ONE HOUR &amp;ndash; then take a break, regardless of &lt;br&gt;whether you&amp;rsquo; re winning or losing. This will keep you sharper &lt;br&gt;than the other players who are hanging on for that one last win. &lt;br&gt;And there you are. Ten steps that will make you thousands, maybe &lt;br&gt;a lot more over time. Interested in understanding the machinery &lt;br&gt;behind these basic rules? Read on. &lt;br&gt;Never Start Short Stacked! &lt;br&gt;One of the keys to winning Poker is having enough chips. You &lt;br&gt;need to be able to weather a streak of bad cards and be there when &lt;br&gt;the cards finally turn in your favour. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;So what would we suggest for a minimum buy in? If you are &lt;br&gt;playing a $2 -$4 game, start with at least $400 to $800 (roughly 100 &lt;br&gt;times the big bet). The degree of variation accounts for your style &lt;br&gt;of play. A super aggressive player should bring more to the table &lt;br&gt;than a tighter player. &lt;br&gt;Bigger stacks tend to get bigger respect as well. Especially from &lt;br&gt;new players. So keeping a decent amount of chips in front of you &lt;br&gt;not only improves your chances of winning, it provides an &lt;br&gt;intimidation factor. However, you should always have enough &lt;br&gt;chips available in your bank to jump into a different game. If you &lt;br&gt;keep your whole bankroll in front of you, you can&amp;#39;t buy-in to &lt;br&gt;second game without cashing out of the first. &lt;br&gt;The Awesome Power of Short Playing Sessions &lt;br&gt;One big difference between the Internet and live bricks and mortar &lt;br&gt;play is that players are constantly moving in and out of games. &lt;br&gt;The accessibility of the Internet allows players to just sit down and &lt;br&gt;play a few hands, a few minutes, or maybe just an hour. In a live &lt;br&gt;game, you generally are playing with the same opponents for at &lt;br&gt;least a few hours and maybe even up to seven or eight hours. This &lt;br&gt;rarely occurs on the Internet. How does this affect strategy? &lt;br&gt;Your opponents will not have a very long time to evaluate your &lt;br&gt;play. This means that you should play more straightforward and &lt;br&gt;less deceptively than you would in a live game. One of the benefits &lt;br&gt;of playing deceptively or trying a bluff is the advertising value you &lt;br&gt;receive on future hands when your opponents think you are a &lt;br&gt;loose wild player. A loose table image can help you earn more &lt;br&gt;chips later when you hold strong hands that your opponents call &lt;br&gt;because they think you might be bluffing. On the Internet, you &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;may not be sitting with the same opponents long enough to benefit &lt;br&gt;from this image. &lt;br&gt;Against regular opponents, you still need to mix up your play on &lt;br&gt;the Internet, but overall, you should mix it up less than you would &lt;br&gt;in a live game. Against new opponents, the best strategy is to &lt;br&gt;simply play a straightforward tight game without worrying too &lt;br&gt;much about how your table image might affect future hands. &lt;br&gt;Some Useful Online Bluffing Tips &lt;br&gt;On the Internet, you are dealing with names and avatars, not faces. &lt;br&gt;Some of the most powerful cues used in poker are no longer &lt;br&gt;available to us. This psychological part of poker makes for a &lt;br&gt;different type of game on the Internet. For example, there seems to &lt;br&gt;be more bluffing on the Internet compared to live games. Players &lt;br&gt;feel far more anonymous on the Net and are therefore prone to &lt;br&gt;wilder, less cautious moves. &lt;br&gt;Another reason why players may tend to bluff more online than in &lt;br&gt;a casino is the ease in which you can bluff. Online you just have to &lt;br&gt;click your mouse. In a live game, you have to physically move &lt;br&gt;your chips and stare down your opponents at the table. Chips are &lt;br&gt;popular in casinos because they remove us emotionally from the &lt;br&gt;concept of real money. Studies have shown that players are more &lt;br&gt;reckless with chips than with real cash. Online, we are even more &lt;br&gt;removed from the idea that this is real money (they are virtual &lt;br&gt;chips) so the average bluffs are larger and more common. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;ldquo;Overall, if you look at the data, players tend to be &lt;br&gt;more deceptive online than in a live game.&amp;ldquo; &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;This impacts online strategies in two ways. First, you can&amp;rsquo;t assume &lt;br&gt;your opponents are bluffing all the time, but you will need to call &lt;br&gt;and raise a little more often against those opponents who are &lt;br&gt;trying to win every pot. &lt;br&gt;On the other hand, you should probably bluff a little less often &lt;br&gt;since your opponents will tend to call you a little more. They also &lt;br&gt;realize that players online bluff a lot, so they will tend to call more &lt;br&gt;even with weak hands. They will also find it easier to just click the &lt;br&gt;mouse to call compared to physically moving their chips in a live &lt;br&gt;game. &lt;br&gt;Remember! Early Decisions Matter Most &lt;br&gt;Early choices in Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em usually mean more than later ones &lt;br&gt;because of their impact on subsequent decisions. Whenever you &lt;br&gt;make an incorrect move up front, you run the risk of rendering &lt;br&gt;each subsequent decision incorrect as well. That&amp;#39;s why your choice &lt;br&gt;of starting hands is usually much more critical than how you play &lt;br&gt;on future betting rounds. &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Pre-flop: The person with the best two hole cards is most &lt;br&gt;likely to win at showdown. &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; After the flop: The player currently holding the best five-&lt;br&gt;card hand is most likely to win at showdown. &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; After the turn card is dealt: The player currently holding &lt;br&gt;the best five-card hand is most likely to win at showdown. &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; After the river card is dealt: The player currently holding &lt;br&gt;the best five-card hand has won at showdown. &lt;br&gt;What have we learned from this? The value of your present cards &lt;br&gt;is always much greater than the expected value. If your opponent &lt;br&gt;has you beat now and you know it, calling heavily for a card to &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;come is not tight play. Evaluating the hands of your opponents &lt;br&gt;will only help your game if it helps you to avoid unreasonable &lt;br&gt;risk. &lt;br&gt;Working The Lobby &lt;br&gt;Don&amp;rsquo;t rush through the lobby of your favorite online casino. &lt;br&gt;Spending some time there can be as important as the time you &lt;br&gt;spend playing the game itself. Take a walk around the room. &lt;br&gt;Check out the games and the limits being played. The online lobby &lt;br&gt;offers a wealth of valuable information that is only a click away: &lt;br&gt;info on the number of players seeing the flop, the average pot size, &lt;br&gt;number of hands played per hour, names of the players in each &lt;br&gt;game, who is on the waiting list, and how many games of a &lt;br&gt;particular limit are in play. &lt;br&gt;This information is essential to choosing the right game and limit. &lt;br&gt;Some folks prefer wild games. Some prefer more passive ones. &lt;br&gt;Some like full games; some like short-handed. Players who are &lt;br&gt;nearly equally competent in all games can choose between a dozen &lt;br&gt;or more games at the limit of their choice. &lt;br&gt;Game and table selection is a critical part of casino poker. &lt;br&gt;Fundamentally, it is even more important online. At first glance it &lt;br&gt;might seem that table selection is less important online because it &lt;br&gt;is extremely easy to move from one game to another. This is not &lt;br&gt;the case. The tools are available for players to be constantly aware &lt;br&gt;of where the good games are. Constant vigilance is a price of &lt;br&gt;winning online. &lt;br&gt;When signing up for games, never choose the &amp;quot;any game&amp;quot; at this &lt;br&gt;limit option. This takes away your ability to manipulate your &lt;br&gt;position on each sign-up list. For instance, if you&amp;rsquo;ve signed up for &lt;br&gt;any $15/30 Hold&amp;rsquo;em game, and your name comes to the top of the &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;list in a game filled with players you don&amp;rsquo;t want to play with, if &lt;br&gt;you pass this game, you are removed from all the $15/30 lists &lt;br&gt;automatically. Likewise, if you rise to the top of the list on a game &lt;br&gt;that doesn&amp;#39;t look good now, but has potential because of others &lt;br&gt;behind you on the waiting list, you may want to un-join that list &lt;br&gt;and then rejoin again at the bottom --perhaps when your name, &lt;br&gt;now sixth, rises to the top, the game will be good. If you&amp;rsquo;ve signed &lt;br&gt;up for &amp;quot;any game,&amp;quot; that option is not available to you. You simply &lt;br&gt;will be put at the bottom of every single list you are on! &lt;br&gt;At the most popular online card-rooms, you have greater options and a lot of information to use in choosing. Don&amp;rsquo;t restrict yourself. &lt;br&gt;Keep several card-rooms on your computer to choose from. Look &lt;br&gt;for the games that fit with your style. When your game style &lt;br&gt;evolves and improves, cruise the lobby for a better fishing hole. &lt;br&gt;Keep constantly vigilant. Field intelligence is the key to winning. &lt;br&gt;Look For Distracted Players &lt;br&gt;Many players assume that strategy for online and live games is the &lt;br&gt;same. After all, you still receive two down cards, five community &lt;br&gt;cards, and play against nine opponents. However, there are &lt;br&gt;several characteristics unique to Internet play that requires subtle &lt;br&gt;adjustments including playing shorter sessions, adjusting your &lt;br&gt;playing environment, and avoiding distractions at home. Let&amp;rsquo;s &lt;br&gt;discuss these unique characteristics in a little more detail and the &lt;br&gt;impact they may have on your strategy. &lt;br&gt;You&amp;rsquo;d be surprised how many players play two poker tables at &lt;br&gt;one time, read e-mail, watch television, or even talk on the &lt;br&gt;telephone while playing online poker. Those delays we all &lt;br&gt;experience waiting for someone to take their turn is often caused &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;by something other than a complex odds calculation. Based on all &lt;br&gt;of these distractions, some of your opponents may not be aware of &lt;br&gt;all the action that is taking place. This is yet another reason to use &lt;br&gt;less deception in your game, since some of your opponents will &lt;br&gt;not even see some of your plays so that you can gain some future &lt;br&gt;value out of them. &lt;br&gt;Since players move in and out of games a lot, can&amp;rsquo;t see your face, &lt;br&gt;and are distracted by many other things, they tend to notice less &lt;br&gt;that you are playing a tight game. In a live game, if you sit there a &lt;br&gt;couple of hours without playing a hand, don&amp;rsquo;t expect a lot of &lt;br&gt;action when you decide to bet or raise. On the Internet, you can &lt;br&gt;play a straightforward tight game for a long time and still get good &lt;br&gt;action when you bet since opponents either do not notice or have &lt;br&gt;not had enough time to realize that you are such a tight player. &lt;br&gt;On the other hand, if you don&amp;rsquo;t play many hands in a live game, &lt;br&gt;your chances for pulling off a successful bluff are high, while on &lt;br&gt;the Internet I doubt this gives you much of an advantage. A bluff &lt;br&gt;on the Internet is usually only profitable by the merits of the play &lt;br&gt;of the particular hand, not by table image. &lt;br&gt;So remember, table image is not as important online as in a live &lt;br&gt;game. Play a more straightforward game with fewer bluffs and &lt;br&gt;protect your hands against those opponents who try to win every &lt;br&gt;pot by bluffing too much. &lt;br&gt;Look Around For Awhile &lt;br&gt;Once you have a solid low limit game plan, this becomes &lt;br&gt;extremely important for becoming a profitable online player. What &lt;br&gt;good is being a good player if you only play against other &lt;br&gt;good players? Everyone will shuffle his or her money back and &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;forth and the house will rake it all. Fortunately there are many &lt;br&gt;easy games online. Find games with players playing &lt;br&gt;50%+ hands pre-flop, most sites keep statistics of this on their table &lt;br&gt;lists. Many sites also have note-keeping systems; you can flag a &lt;br&gt;player as a fish. Every time you see players making poor decisions, &lt;br&gt;mark them. If you spend enough time on a given site you&amp;rsquo;ll notice &lt;br&gt;many players have been marked as poor. Join the games with &lt;br&gt;these players. Look out for players with large (800$+) bankrolls &lt;br&gt;playing very low limit games (1-2$). These are usually tight &lt;br&gt;aggressive players. &lt;br&gt;Monitor Their Stack Sizes &lt;br&gt;Keep a very close eye on the exact size of the short stacks of the &lt;br&gt;other players. Paradise Poker has a very poor rule where a bet of &lt;br&gt;any size below a full bet does not constitute a raise. For instance, &lt;br&gt;playing $10/20, on the turn you check with the intention to check &lt;br&gt;raise. A player bets all-in for $19, and another calls. Your plan is &lt;br&gt;screwed. All you can do is call. On the other hand, if you know &lt;br&gt;that player has $21, you will be able to check raise. In bricks and &lt;br&gt;mortar casino poker, you very often can&amp;rsquo;t tell how many chips a &lt;br&gt;player has left. Online you know within $1. &lt;br&gt;Another thing to consider is be careful about completing bets. If &lt;br&gt;two people check, then somebody bets $19 all-in, you better have &lt;br&gt;a super-monster to make it $20. Those first two players can&amp;rsquo;t &lt;br&gt;check raise the $19, but they can check raise you when you make &lt;br&gt;it $20. Likewise, a player behind you can raise it to $40 if you &lt;br&gt;make it $20, but can only raise it to $20 if you just call. &lt;br&gt;While everyone has his or her favorite sites, it&amp;#39;s best to spread &lt;br&gt;yourself around. Having six different online poker accounts makes &lt;br&gt;it easy to find soft games at any given time. Don&amp;#39;t miss out on &lt;br&gt;profitable games because you have confined yourself to one site. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;There are plenty of soft games online, you just have to do a little &lt;br&gt;searching! &lt;br&gt;Stay Extra Cool When Playing Tournaments &lt;br&gt;Because of the nature of tournaments and the escalating betting &lt;br&gt;limits, your bankroll is the key to your ability to win. If you &lt;br&gt;become short-stacked, try to stay calm and play as tight as &lt;br&gt;possible. Only bet on high-ranking pairs (the Fish 40), and only &lt;br&gt;continue playing the hand if the flop has improved your hand. &lt;br&gt;Example: You are dealt Q, Q as your hole cards. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The flop comes with A, K, 3. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;If some one bets I would fold the hand immediately. &lt;br&gt;Why? Because you have not built on your pair and the betting is &lt;br&gt;going to get expensive. &lt;br&gt;Some players make it a habit of playing loose during the first &lt;br&gt;couple of rounds hoping that they can catch up later. There is no &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;logic for this kind of play in a tournament and can reduce your &lt;br&gt;stack and push you into panic mode. An example would be to go &lt;br&gt;all-in on a hand like J9 suited. Even if you see that you will &lt;br&gt;likely be short on coming blinds, this is a bad move. Wait. &lt;br&gt;Play Like A Rock &lt;br&gt;As long as you have chips in front of you, you have a chance of &lt;br&gt;winning. Wait, wait and wait longer if need be, but never panic. &lt;br&gt;You have time. In limit games, patience is supremely important. &lt;br&gt;You may go an hour or two before you get a playable hand. This is &lt;br&gt;normal. This will set up two things for you. Credibility and more &lt;br&gt;playing time. Why do you want credibility? One word, bluffing. &lt;br&gt;The more you fold or take pots with an extremely strong hand the &lt;br&gt;better you lay the groundwork for a bluffing situation. You will &lt;br&gt;become known as a rock (A rock is an extremely tight player). The &lt;br&gt;tighter the player, the harder it is to win against that player. In &lt;br&gt;poker perception is everything. Be patient, It Will Pay Off! &lt;br&gt;Turn Down The Music But Turn Up Your Sound &lt;br&gt;Researchers now that we learn faster and engage our brains better &lt;br&gt;when we use more of our senses. The online casinos supply plenty &lt;br&gt;of color but make sure you take advantage of the sound as well. &lt;br&gt;Turn up the sound effects. Sure, it may get annoying sometimes &lt;br&gt;listening to all those clinks, shuffles and chip sounds but they help &lt;br&gt;us tune into the game and out of those things going on around us. &lt;br&gt;You are much less prone to make mistakes when you can hear and &lt;br&gt;see what people are doing, as opposed to just seeing it. &lt;br&gt;Click between game tabs to refresh your table listings. This trick is &lt;br&gt;useful mainly for tournaments, which are notoriously quick to fill &lt;br&gt;up. Many times, you&amp;#39;ll see &amp;quot;Wtng for 5 players&amp;quot; as the table status, &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;but when you click on the game, it will have already started. This &lt;br&gt;is due to the table status not updating quickly, which you can force &lt;br&gt;by clicking between tabs. Of note however, is that Party Poker has &lt;br&gt;recently upped the refresh rate of the tables substantially, so this &lt;br&gt;isn&amp;#39;t a major issue like it used to be. &lt;br&gt;How To Get Hand Histories &lt;br&gt;Your opponent didn&amp;rsquo;t show don&amp;#39;t show their cards? Here&amp;rsquo;s a great &lt;br&gt;Party Poker trick. Click on the hand number at the top right of the &lt;br&gt;screen and request the hand history for that game via email. &lt;br&gt;Depending on how busy Party Poker is at the moment, you &lt;br&gt;should get an email with the history in a matter of minutes. &lt;br&gt;Scroll to the bottom of the history and you can instantly find out &lt;br&gt;what the other player was holding. You can do this in conjunction &lt;br&gt;with player notes to get a good idea of what a player is willing to &lt;br&gt;play with on a river. Showdown information is always the most &lt;br&gt;critical, as you can analyze their decision making process from the &lt;br&gt;ground up. &lt;br&gt;Get Caught Bluffing Once In A While &lt;br&gt;Once in a while this is not a bad idea. It is a way to vary your play &lt;br&gt;and not be too predictable. You win pots that you don&amp;#39;t deserve &lt;br&gt;when your bluff works. You lose a few chips when it doesn&amp;#39;t work &lt;br&gt;but it will get you calls from weaker hands down the line when &lt;br&gt;you have a strong hand and need the action. &lt;br&gt;Bluff With Caution In Low Limit Games &lt;br&gt;One should be extremely careful in efforts to bluff playing low limit &lt;br&gt;online poker. You will find many players will call you just to &amp;quot;keep &lt;br&gt;you honest&amp;quot; even if their hand doesn&amp;#39;t warrant a call. For the most &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;part, you should forget about it until you are already a very &lt;br&gt;successful low limit online player. When you do bluff it should be &lt;br&gt;done with careful attention to pot/implied odds: &amp;quot;I estimate I have &lt;br&gt;a 1 in 10 chance of winning this bluff, do I get better than 10-1 &lt;br&gt;return?&amp;quot; Since these estimations can be even harder to make &lt;br&gt;online since there are few tells to go by, it&amp;#39;s a difficult play. &lt;br&gt;Never Let Them See You Sweat &lt;br&gt;I think this is a significant tip because when you lose a big pot, it&amp;rsquo;s &lt;br&gt;easy to let your emotions show &amp;ndash; even online. Don&amp;rsquo;t let the cards &lt;br&gt;defeat you. And never boost the confidence of the other players by &lt;br&gt;letting it get to you. &lt;br&gt;If you want to keep your psychological edge; it helps to take away &lt;br&gt;theirs. Never give them a reason to be able to feed off of you, even &lt;br&gt;if you are losing (by the way everyone loses and has bad beats. No &lt;br&gt;one can win 100% of the time; never give them the edge, even if &lt;br&gt;you are fuming.) &lt;br&gt;Get Up And Stretch &lt;br&gt;Taking a small break will help you to focus. While you are on &lt;br&gt;break don&amp;rsquo;t think about the game. it will only hurt your session as &lt;br&gt;time goes on. &lt;br&gt;Stay Away From Alcohol &lt;br&gt;Do we need to even say this? Nothing can alter your thinking &lt;br&gt;more than alcohol. You need to be aware and focused at all times. I &lt;br&gt;have no idea how many online players are drinking or doing &lt;br&gt;something else while they are playing but I can tell you that focus &lt;br&gt;is everything. There is a lot going on in a game of online poker and &lt;br&gt;it&amp;rsquo;s happening at warp speed. You really need to stay clear. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;Keep Accurate Player Records &lt;br&gt;If you don&amp;#39;t keep records of your Texas Hold&amp;#39;em Poker playing, &lt;br&gt;start now. Make a form in MS Word or MS Excel that you are &lt;br&gt;comfortable with. Develop something you can use to track and &lt;br&gt;update notes while you play online. If you have the software, even &lt;br&gt;better, set up a database that you can search on and create reports. &lt;br&gt;If none of this works for you, at least get a fold-flat notebook that &lt;br&gt;you can use while you play. Accurate play records will tell you a &lt;br&gt;lot about yourself, your strategy and your opponents. &lt;br&gt;Everyone falls into a losing streak, it&amp;rsquo;s normal. What you want to &lt;br&gt;avoid is having this negatively affect your play and attitude. You&amp;rsquo;ll &lt;br&gt;be asking yourself -am I playing too tight? Should I change my &lt;br&gt;strategy? Am I playing too loose? Will I ever win again? &lt;br&gt;Look over your play records. You&amp;#39;ll find the answers there. A good &lt;br&gt;set of records is the best thing I know for a poker player&amp;#39;s peace of &lt;br&gt;mind and a good night&amp;#39;s sleep. &lt;br&gt;Your play records should include the date of each session, start &lt;br&gt;and stop times, hours played, wins or losses, running totals and an &lt;br&gt;hourly win rate. You&amp;#39;ll also want to have totals in terms of big bets. &lt;br&gt;If you play in Hold&amp;#39;em games of various limits then big bets per &lt;br&gt;hour is a better indicator of how you are doing than dollars per &lt;br&gt;hour. Your play records should have notes about your play, your &lt;br&gt;opponents, tells you&amp;#39;ve noticed and other information that might &lt;br&gt;be useful. At the very least, your play records should be good &lt;br&gt;reading later. &lt;br&gt;Texas Hold&amp;#39;em Poker is enjoyable. Winning is great. Keeping play &lt;br&gt;records is unexciting at best, but the information in good play &lt;br&gt;records is essential if you want to win. Without play records you &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage &lt;br&gt;won&amp;#39;t know if changes in your strategy have had a positive or a &lt;br&gt;negative effect. You won&amp;#39;t know if you&amp;#39;re getting better or worse or &lt;br&gt;why. In fact, if you don&amp;#39;t keep records, you don&amp;#39;t even know if &lt;br&gt;you&amp;#39;re winning or losing in the game and you certainly don&amp;#39;t know &lt;br&gt;how much. &lt;br&gt;Learn How To Know When You&amp;rsquo;re Done &lt;br&gt;This is really just a general poker tip, but it still nabs even the &lt;br&gt;poker pros at times. If you find that you are being outplayed, &lt;br&gt;outclassed or just unlucky at the table, it&amp;#39;s ok to leave. Don&amp;#39;t think &lt;br&gt;about getting your money back or getting revenge on the bastard &lt;br&gt;that rivered you for the 3rd time now. If you are losing money at &lt;br&gt;your table, you do NOT have good table image no matter what &lt;br&gt;you might think. Not only are you not in a good mood, which puts &lt;br&gt;you on tilt (admit it or not), but other players will be more likely to &lt;br&gt;make plays against you. This makes your game harder in more &lt;br&gt;ways than you want. With so many tables at Party Poker, just get &lt;br&gt;up and go, it&amp;#39;s that easy. &lt;br&gt;If the game gets short-handed (6 or less players) and you are not &lt;br&gt;familiar with short-handed play, get out. This is an easy way to &lt;br&gt;lose a lot of cash if you don&amp;#39;t know what you are doing. I see this &lt;br&gt;happen all the time, when a table breaks up and players are &lt;br&gt;stuck with two tight players and three fish who don&amp;#39;t realize &lt;br&gt;they are about to get run eaten alive. Don&amp;#39;t be &amp;lsquo;chum&amp;rsquo; when all it &lt;br&gt;takes is a single click to safer waters. &lt;br&gt;When you feel yourself slipping and playing too loose or having &lt;br&gt;trouble focusing on the game, gather your chips and go home. &lt;br&gt;It should not matter if you are up or down, leave the table. If you &lt;br&gt;are up, why risk your winnings? If you are down, why risk more &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 100 &lt;br&gt;of your bankroll? There is not a good reason. Get some sleep. &lt;br&gt;Playing when you cannot focus is a recipe for losing. &lt;br&gt;Don&amp;rsquo;t Let The Rake Beat You &lt;br&gt;Why do online casinos make so much money? Because they make &lt;br&gt;a profit from every single poker pot that is played &amp;ndash; often millions &lt;br&gt;of pots per month. The more games you play, the more the casinos &lt;br&gt;make. Their profit from each pot is called the rake. The rake is a &lt;br&gt;percentage or a flat fee that the casino charges you to play. No &lt;br&gt;matter how good a poker player you are, the house has an edge on &lt;br&gt;you. The rake is built in so that the house takes money from you in &lt;br&gt;small, unnoticed amounts. There are a few guidelines you can go &lt;br&gt;by to minimize this. &lt;br&gt;Some poker rooms will only rake the pot once it has reached a &lt;br&gt;certain amount, so you want to play opposite the style of the table &lt;br&gt;in these cases. &lt;br&gt;If the rake is a set percentage (usually 4% to 10%), the tactics for an &lt;br&gt;aggressive player won&amp;#39;t be as successful as if the rate was a flat fee. &lt;br&gt;Every failed attempt at blind-stealing, for example, is going to be &lt;br&gt;raked, and all bluffing is now 4%-10% less worth it. &lt;br&gt;You have to be a better player to overcome that percentage, and &lt;br&gt;once you get to that point, you shouldn&amp;#39;t be too preoccupied with &lt;br&gt;the rake. If you are a beginner, play tighter than usual. &lt;br&gt;Most online casinos charge a percentage of the winning pot. &lt;br&gt;Example: The winning pot is $125. The casino or the &amp;lsquo;house&amp;rsquo; takes &lt;br&gt;a minimum of $1 and 5% of the balance. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 101 &lt;br&gt;Total rake is $7 or 5.6%. That leaves 94.4% for the winners. &lt;br&gt;Compare that to 60% on most lottery games. The less the rake is &lt;br&gt;the more money you can win and the better your return on your &lt;br&gt;investment. &lt;br&gt;The size of the pot and the betting limit can have a huge effect on &lt;br&gt;your chances of winning. &lt;br&gt;Let&amp;rsquo;s apply the same rules to a game where the maximum bet is &lt;br&gt;only 2$. &lt;br&gt;Example: The winning pot is $22. The reason for the lower pot is &lt;br&gt;the low betting limit. Now let&amp;rsquo;s apply the same rake to the pot. &lt;br&gt;Minimum of $1 and 5% or $2.10. This doesn&amp;rsquo;t sound like a lot but &lt;br&gt;it&amp;rsquo;s actually 9.5%. The amount left to the winners in this game is &lt;br&gt;now 90.5%. &lt;br&gt;It may not seem like much, but the house can now pull from the &lt;br&gt;table an entire pot every 10 games. That&amp;rsquo;s a pot you can&amp;rsquo;t win so &lt;br&gt;your odds of winning are much lower. &lt;br&gt;The opposite of this effect is to play a very high maximum game &amp;ndash; &lt;br&gt;for example a $50 maximum bet. This could create a $1000 pot or &lt;br&gt;more. Sure, the percentage will now be even lower, but can you &lt;br&gt;afford to play these high stakes? &lt;br&gt;A rule of thumb is to have 100 times the maximum bet with you &lt;br&gt;when you start the game. A $50 maximum bet would mean having &lt;br&gt;$5000 with you when you start. A maximum bet of $5 would allow &lt;br&gt;you to play for $500. Quite a difference. &lt;br&gt;For most players, a $1-2 maximum bet is too low. The rake just &lt;br&gt;becomes too high as a percentage of each pot. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 102 &lt;br&gt;The ideal game range is the $5-10 maximum bet range. This &lt;br&gt;range will give you the best odds at winning and will not &lt;br&gt;require that you mortgage your house to get into a game. &lt;br&gt;What happens if I start playing a $5-10 maximum bet game with &lt;br&gt;only $100? &lt;br&gt;The problem is you may need several hands before you get the &lt;br&gt;right cards to win. With too small a bank, you may run out of &lt;br&gt;money before you get a betting hand. Years of experience have &lt;br&gt;shown that the 100x rule works. Having more certainly won&amp;rsquo;t hurt. &lt;br&gt;The 50x is a minimum requirement to play to win. &lt;br&gt;Playing Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Money Games For Free &lt;br&gt;Betting in Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em is dictated by the big and small blinds. &lt;br&gt;When it becomes your turn to place the blind (the initial bet) you &lt;br&gt;can pass. This means you can see two cards without any cost &lt;br&gt;unless you are down card from the dealer. &lt;br&gt;The only problem is you can&amp;rsquo;t come back into the game until the &lt;br&gt;deal passes you again. That mean in a game with 10 players you &lt;br&gt;have to sit out three hands per turn. &lt;br&gt;In a game with six players, you would only be able to play for free &lt;br&gt;in three out of the six games. &lt;br&gt;It may not sound like much fun &amp;ndash; but you can play for free and &lt;br&gt;it&amp;rsquo;s totally legal and within the rules. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 103 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;THE IMPORTANCE &lt;br&gt;OF TABLE POSITION &lt;br&gt;IN TEXAS HOLD&amp;rsquo;EM &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Position is the most overlooked aspect of games like &lt;br&gt;Texas Hold&amp;#39;em by beginners. And that&amp;#39;s a huge shame. &lt;br&gt;It costs these players a lot of pots. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;Your position at the table is based simply on your position in &lt;br&gt;relation to the dealer. The dealer is at the most advantageous &lt;br&gt;position, as he/she gets to see how all the other players at the table &lt;br&gt;react before making their own decision. &lt;br&gt;The chances of your hand being a winner increase as more and &lt;br&gt;more people fold their hand. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 104 &lt;br&gt;Yes -if you have say KQs and are going up against 1 other player, &lt;br&gt;your chances are not bad -but if you&amp;#39;re going up against 8 or 9 &lt;br&gt;others who feel they too have a hand worth betting -your KQs is &lt;br&gt;not nearly so strong. &lt;br&gt;Now -if you are in an early position (meaning you are among the &lt;br&gt;first who has to bet) then you have no idea how many players will &lt;br&gt;be playing this hand when it&amp;#39;s time to bet or fold your hole cards. &lt;br&gt;On the other hand -if you are in a late position (meaning you are &lt;br&gt;among the last to call) you not only have the knowledge of who &lt;br&gt;and how many players are in on this hand -but if anyone has &lt;br&gt;made aggressive bets. If you are in a late position and hold an OK &lt;br&gt;hand -say a small pair or a KJ -if everyone before you has folded you&amp;#39;ve got a strong hand -but if everyone before you has called or &lt;br&gt;raised &amp;ndash; you know you&amp;#39;ve got a weak hand. &lt;br&gt;As you see -this has little to do with your hand -but more the &lt;br&gt;circumstances in which it is played. &lt;br&gt;The person to the left of the dealer is not only the small blind (SB), &lt;br&gt;but must act first after the flop. &lt;br&gt;The person to the left of the small blind is the big blind (BB). This &lt;br&gt;person is already obligated to the game and is in another early &lt;br&gt;position. &lt;br&gt;The person to the left of the big blind acts first before board cards &lt;br&gt;are dealt. This is often referred to as &amp;quot;being under the gun&amp;quot;. The &lt;br&gt;clockwise motion of play allows those who act later (in late &lt;br&gt;position) to be at an advantage. As a result, those in late position &lt;br&gt;can play weaker hands or &amp;quot;gambling hands&amp;quot; with less fear of &lt;br&gt;financial obligation or loss. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 105 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The blind positions . . . and the player under the gun &lt;br&gt;needs to be very selective with their hands. They don&amp;#39;t &lt;br&gt;have the privilege of watching other players &lt;br&gt;betting/raising before they must decide if they want to stay in &lt;br&gt;themselves. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;For example, lets say you&amp;#39;re under the gun (first to act). You have &lt;br&gt;Jack-Ten, unsuited. The player to bet after you raises, and &lt;br&gt;everyone but you folds. Now you&amp;#39;re in a jam. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Chances are good that this player has a better hand than you, with &lt;br&gt;at least an ace or a pocket pair. Unfortunately, you&amp;#39;ve already bet, &lt;br&gt;because you had no idea or no way to tell what other players at the &lt;br&gt;table had in the pocket. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You will always . . . throughout the game, be acting &lt;br&gt;before this player. This positional advantage will &lt;br&gt;continue throughout this hand. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;On the other hand, being in the dealer&amp;rsquo;s position not only gives &lt;br&gt;you the benefits of observing how the other players are betting, &lt;br&gt;but it also gives you the ability to adjust the size of the pot. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 106 &lt;br&gt;After all other players have bet, a raise by the player in the dealer&amp;rsquo;s &lt;br&gt;position could potentially double the size of the pot (assuming no &lt;br&gt;one folds). Since the players have already committed to one bet, &lt;br&gt;it&amp;rsquo;s easier to commit to a second (or a third or fourth!). &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;If you watched a poker table over a space of many &lt;br&gt;days, you would begin to notice that the winning hand &lt;br&gt;tends to move around the table in a clockwise position. &lt;br&gt;Long-term studies have shown that over time, the win tends to &lt;br&gt;move in that direction. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;Why? Because your knowledge of the hand increases your &lt;br&gt;chance of winning. &lt;br&gt;The blinds and player &amp;lsquo;under the gun&amp;rsquo; have the least knowledge. &lt;br&gt;As the play moves around the table, each player gains more &lt;br&gt;knowledge about what the other players are doing. Are they in? &lt;br&gt;Are they hesitating? Are they raising? Are they folding? The last &lt;br&gt;player to bet has the maximum knowledge and therefore the best &lt;br&gt;position &amp;ndash; they are in what is sometimes called the &amp;lsquo;cat-bird seat&amp;rsquo;. &lt;br&gt;Knowing how money moves around a table can give you a sense &lt;br&gt;of the importance of position at the table. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;One of the little-understood benefits of last position at &lt;br&gt;the table is that you get a lot of free cards as well. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;When you get a free card, you&amp;#39;re taking a free ride. If nobody bets &lt;br&gt;during a round, you get that opportunity at zero cost. That&amp;#39;s what &lt;br&gt;a free card is. Fine. A governing concept of free cards is that you &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 107 &lt;br&gt;get lots more of them when you&amp;#39;re last to act than when you&amp;#39;re first &lt;br&gt;to act. Even better, when you&amp;#39;re last to act, you get control over &lt;br&gt;whether or not you take a free card. You can accept the &lt;br&gt;opportunity, or you can bet and deny the same opportunity to &lt;br&gt;your opponents. &lt;br&gt;Befriend players to your left; declare war on players to your &lt;br&gt;right. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 108 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;PLAYER PROFILING &lt;br&gt;OR WATCHING WHO &lt;br&gt;YOU PLAY WITH! &lt;br&gt;H ere&amp;#39;s some advice that will improve your game as much as &lt;br&gt;it&amp;#39;ll have a positive impact on your wallet or purse. If you &lt;br&gt;watched the movie, The Beautiful Mind, you&amp;rsquo;ll be familiar &lt;br&gt;with the Mathematician John Nash and his discovery of Game &lt;br&gt;Theory. Game Theory is a fascinating concept that turns game &lt;br&gt;relationships, opponents and players, into mathematical functions &lt;br&gt;that can be &amp;lsquo;crunched&amp;rsquo; and computed. Playing styles can be &lt;br&gt;analysed and defined. In fact, the best Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em computer &lt;br&gt;simulations focus on playing styles more than just odds to study &lt;br&gt;how the values of cards change depending on the betting style of &lt;br&gt;the other players. Playing style has a much larger influence on the &lt;br&gt;outcome of the game than most of us realized until the last few &lt;br&gt;years. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 109 &lt;br&gt;Based again on these computer studies, four basic types of playing &lt;br&gt;styles have been identified: &lt;br&gt;Loose-passive &lt;br&gt;Net Looser &lt;br&gt;Loose &amp;ndash; Aggressive &lt;br&gt;Low - Moderate Wins &lt;br&gt;Tight-Passive &lt;br&gt;Moderate Wins &lt;br&gt;Tight-Aggressive &lt;br&gt;Maximum Wins &lt;br&gt;Loose-passive: Often referred to as &amp;quot;calling stations&amp;quot;, these players &lt;br&gt;tend to call any bet as long as they have even the remotest chance &lt;br&gt;of winning the pot. Interestingly, loose-passive players often will &lt;br&gt;not raise when they have a good hand (that&amp;rsquo;s the passive side of &lt;br&gt;their unique personality). By the same token, they&amp;rsquo;ll also not fold &lt;br&gt;when they have a garbage hand. They tend to stay in the majority &lt;br&gt;of hands unless pushed hard to call. &lt;br&gt;Loose-aggressive: Loose-aggressive players will make often and &lt;br&gt;inappropriate raises. They will not always have the best hand &lt;br&gt;when they raise, and will even raise with garbage hands. Loose &lt;br&gt;players tend to bet irrationally &amp;ndash; first they raise, then they stay, &lt;br&gt;then they raise and then they fold. That uncertainty is a dead &lt;br&gt;giveaway. Due to their inconsistent and irrational play, looseaggressives are often called &amp;quot;maniacs&amp;quot;. Playing against maniacs &lt;br&gt;can be profitable, but they can also be expensive to play against, &lt;br&gt;due to the number of wild raises you&amp;#39;ll have to call. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 110 &lt;br&gt;Tight-passive: These players are known as &amp;quot;rocks&amp;quot;. Tight-passive &lt;br&gt;players play fewer hands than most and play them very &lt;br&gt;cautiously. This is the preferred style of &amp;lsquo;fish&amp;rsquo; play when starting &lt;br&gt;out according to the Cage Food Chain Theory of play. When a &lt;br&gt;tight-passive player does raise though -watch out, it&amp;rsquo;s more than &lt;br&gt;likely that they have the &amp;quot;nuts&amp;quot;. Playing tight-passive will keep &lt;br&gt;you from losing money, but it won&amp;#39;t make you rich either. &lt;br&gt;Tight-aggressive: Tight-aggressive players also play few of the &lt;br&gt;hands dealt to them, but will be much more varied in the way they &lt;br&gt;play. If a tight-aggressive player raises, you&amp;rsquo;ll never know if they &lt;br&gt;have a good hand or if they&amp;rsquo;re bluffing. And that&amp;rsquo;s exactly the &lt;br&gt;point. Tight-aggressive players are selectively aggressive. They &lt;br&gt;will bet very cautiously on good hands to try and trap players &lt;br&gt;with lesser hands into betting later and building the pot. They will &lt;br&gt;raise to create an expectation in other players that they have a &lt;br&gt;great hand in order to push weaker players out of the hand. And &lt;br&gt;this is very important, as you understand how reducing the &lt;br&gt;number of players in the hand can dramatically increase the power &lt;br&gt;of your hand. Tight-aggressive is the standard that you should &lt;br&gt;aspire to. &lt;br&gt;To practice your ability to &amp;lsquo;read&amp;rsquo; player types, find a mid-sized &lt;br&gt;game. This size of game allows you more of a choice of who to sit &lt;br&gt;by. Watch everyone play. Get a feel for who&amp;#39;s playing tight, who&amp;#39;s &lt;br&gt;aggressive, and who sucks. Note who check-raised, bluffed or &lt;br&gt;semi-bluffed. Count the number of times each player bets on the &lt;br&gt;pre-flop or folds. These are key indicators to player type. If you &lt;br&gt;can label each of the players in this way, you will have advanced &lt;br&gt;your ability to win by leaps and bounds. &lt;br&gt;The first thing you need to decide as you observe is whether these &lt;br&gt;players are clearly better than you. Always avoid games where &lt;br&gt;you see a lot of early pre and post flop raises, and avoid games &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 111 &lt;br&gt;where it looks like one or two strong players are cleaning up on &lt;br&gt;everyone else at the table. Very aggressive players will take over a &lt;br&gt;table and cause a lot of grief. Steer clear of these tables if you &lt;br&gt;consider yourself a fish or a barracuda. Even as a shark, usually &lt;br&gt;one or two aggressive players at a table is enough eliminate easy &lt;br&gt;wins. Increasing the overall tightness of a table only benefits the &lt;br&gt;house, which will make more money from the rake than you will &lt;br&gt;ever make from the pot. &lt;br&gt;The Mathematics of Aggression &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;How effective is aggressive play in online Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em? Now, &lt;br&gt;no guessing here. I want the facts. &lt;br&gt;A very detailed study carried out by Carnegie-Melon University &lt;br&gt;showed the precise value of aggressive play. For the sake of this &lt;br&gt;exercise, they had their computer-simulated player come out &lt;br&gt;playing aggressively on every hand, regardless of pocket pair &lt;br&gt;quality, against a varied field of opponents. There were two very &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 112 &lt;br&gt;distinct scenarios (and only two) where this was a winning &lt;br&gt;strategy. &lt;br&gt;One &amp;ndash; against a loose table, very aggressive play was a winning &lt;br&gt;strategy. In the case of our experiment, betting pre-flop on every &lt;br&gt;single hand added up to moderate winnings. In a real online &lt;br&gt;game, betting like a maniac on every hand may diminish the &lt;br&gt;power of this strategy because other players will pick up on your &lt;br&gt;strategy -but we suspect, not by much in online play. Again, the &lt;br&gt;secret is finding the right table. Imagine the joy of sitting down at a &lt;br&gt;large table full of new players and yours is the biggest stack. Like &lt;br&gt;&amp;lsquo;shooting fish in a barrel&amp;rsquo; as they say. This is the kind of table you &lt;br&gt;are searching for. &lt;br&gt;Two &amp;ndash; against three or less players, this aggressive approach was &lt;br&gt;also a net moneymaker. As soon as you go to four players or &lt;br&gt;better, the technique started to haemorrhage serious money. All &lt;br&gt;of our research shows that bluffing at full or near full tables is a &lt;br&gt;waste of money, and this study supports that. At the end of this &lt;br&gt;chapter we have included a complete chart on the pocket hands &lt;br&gt;that successfully take the pot based on number of players at the &lt;br&gt;table. You will see quite clearly that strong hands double in power &lt;br&gt;and relatively weak cards can become big winners. Narrow the &lt;br&gt;field and you can pump up the power of your cards. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;An excellent indicator of playing style is that the &lt;br&gt;bankrolls of tight players tend to go down in small &lt;br&gt;amounts incrementally, and periodically go up in mid &lt;br&gt;and large amounts. Watching stacks can give you valuable &lt;br&gt;information about player style. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 113 &lt;br&gt;Loose Players Have Bigger Swings. &lt;br&gt;Money tends to move clockwise around the table because it&amp;rsquo;s &lt;br&gt;easier to read players to the right. When that really loose player is &lt;br&gt;about to take a negative swing, you want to be at a positional &lt;br&gt;advantage over him or her. &lt;br&gt;Even more, you want a maniac on your right. Maniacs eliminate &lt;br&gt;players with okay and drawing hands. Twenty year-old high &lt;br&gt;school students are more readable, and you profit from being able &lt;br&gt;to act directly after them &lt;br&gt;Here&amp;rsquo;s a question then &amp;ndash; would you prefer to sit down card from &lt;br&gt;a great player or a poor player? &lt;br&gt;Sitting in late position (next in sequence) from a poor player does &lt;br&gt;not give you much of an advantage. You really need to know as &lt;br&gt;much as possible about the best players, the one&amp;rsquo;s most likely to &lt;br&gt;take your money. &lt;br&gt;A loose player, someone who plays only for fun and doesn&amp;rsquo;t really &lt;br&gt;understand the game, is like an old car. He or she will wander all &lt;br&gt;over the road, their steering is wobbly and they can&amp;rsquo;t be depended &lt;br&gt;on to play according to their cards. Watch for and appreciate loose &lt;br&gt;players. They are great contributors. They tend to bet more than &lt;br&gt;they win and build pots for the rest of us. &lt;br&gt;While different players prefer different styles of play, the general &lt;br&gt;consensus is that the ideal table is loose-passive . That means lots &lt;br&gt;of callers and few raises, especially before the flop. You will also &lt;br&gt;want to play at tables where most, if not all of the players are &lt;br&gt;worse than you. You will make most of your profit from other &lt;br&gt;player&amp;#39;s mistakes. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 114 &lt;br&gt;Tight players on your left will more likely call a bet than re-raise &lt;br&gt;even though they might have a decent hand. You can more easily &lt;br&gt;scare them into thinking you&amp;#39;ve got the nuts and buy more free &lt;br&gt;cards despite the fact that they&amp;#39;ve got a positional advantage on &lt;br&gt;you. &lt;br&gt;Research shows that lots of pre-flop raising reduces your potential &lt;br&gt;profit. It also becomes more expensive to see the flop overall, &lt;br&gt;which negatively affects your bankroll all those times when the &lt;br&gt;flop doesn&amp;#39;t hit you. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;It is always better to have six players calling one bet &lt;br&gt;than three players calling two bets. Even though the &lt;br&gt;pot size in both cases is the same, in the first situation you will &lt;br&gt;make a profit of 5:1, whereas in the raising situation you will &lt;br&gt;only make a profit of 2:1. Simply put, the more players there are &lt;br&gt;putting money into the pot, the more profit there will be when &lt;br&gt;you win. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;A tighter game, where fewer players are calling before the flop and &lt;br&gt;staying until the showdown, can also reduce your overall profit. &lt;br&gt;But some players prefer a tight-passive table, since tight-passive &lt;br&gt;opponents are rather predictable. A tight-passive table gives a &lt;br&gt;player the opportunity to steal more pots, since you can often &lt;br&gt;make other players fold with a well-timed raise. &lt;br&gt;Fishing For Loose Players &lt;br&gt;If you sit at a table of ten and at least half of the players are better &lt;br&gt;than you, you will lose. If one or two of the players are better than &lt;br&gt;you, you have a fair chance of taking some money home but this is &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 115 &lt;br&gt;still not an ideal situation. Your profit is going to be determined &lt;br&gt;more by the composition of the table than the types of cards you &lt;br&gt;are dealt. You can&amp;rsquo;t control the cards &amp;ndash; you can pick your table &lt;br&gt;and move if it gets ugly. &lt;br&gt;How do you know? &lt;br&gt;As we have been preaching, the great advantage of online poker is &lt;br&gt;that it allows you to observe the table before you play. Once you &lt;br&gt;have chosen what appears to be a fairly loose table, you begin to &lt;br&gt;carefully observe. The best recommendation I can give you is, if &lt;br&gt;you want to be a winner, spend at least 15 minutes. Many would &lt;br&gt;suggest spending at least 30 minutes -before beginning play. &lt;br&gt;This may seems like a lot of time to invest &amp;ndash; but once you begin to &lt;br&gt;play, you will have a clear idea of who you need to beat and who &lt;br&gt;you need to milk to win. &lt;br&gt;The Cage Table Rating System &lt;br&gt;Here&amp;rsquo;s a simple rating system we use to evaluate how &amp;lsquo;winnable&amp;rsquo; a &lt;br&gt;table is. &lt;br&gt;We assign each player a number from 1-10. &lt;br&gt;Ten (10) is the loosest player &amp;ndash; a beginner, someone who bets &lt;br&gt;wildly and show poor cards at the showdown. &lt;br&gt;One (1) is for the tightest player. Someone who plays and wins &lt;br&gt;consistently, can&amp;rsquo;t be bluffed, has accumulated substantial &lt;br&gt;winnings, makes reasonable decisions, doesn&amp;rsquo;t play every hand. &lt;br&gt;Assign each player at the table a number from 1-10. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 116 &lt;br&gt;If you are not sure from observation what their score is, score them &lt;br&gt;higher than you would guess. They are probably better players. &lt;br&gt;On apiece of paper or in your head, mark the table with these &lt;br&gt;numbers. &lt;br&gt;When you get a chance to, always play down card from the two &lt;br&gt;best players on the table. This is a winning position. &lt;br&gt;Now add up the numbers and divide by the total players. &lt;br&gt;1+3+7+4+5+1+1+10+9 = 4.5 &lt;br&gt;If the average of the table is 6 or better, don&amp;rsquo;t play. There are too &lt;br&gt;many good players for you to be a consistent winner. Even an &lt;br&gt;average of 5 can reduce your chances. What you are looking for is &lt;br&gt;a table where most of the players are looser than you. The lower &lt;br&gt;the number the better. &lt;br&gt;The Casino Giveth Sometimes &lt;br&gt;Players who never fold on the first two cards even when it costs &lt;br&gt;them, are loose. A higher percentage means a much looser game. &lt;br&gt;Most online poker rooms, such as Ultimate Bet, list the percentage &lt;br&gt;of players who are seeing the flop. Players who fold often on the &lt;br&gt;first two cards tend to be tighter players. &lt;br&gt;All online poker rooms also list the average pot size. You do not &lt;br&gt;necessarily want to play at the table with the highest average pot &lt;br&gt;size, since this may indicate a lot of raises going into the pot. &lt;br&gt;For loose-passive games, choose a table with a relatively high &lt;br&gt;flop percentage and a reasonably average pot size. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 117 &lt;br&gt;Another factor to consider is the number of players at the table. &lt;br&gt;Most online tables are ten-handed, which means you&amp;#39;ll have to &lt;br&gt;play relatively tight. You should take position into account and &lt;br&gt;call before the flop with premium cards or good drawing hands. &lt;br&gt;More players means more competition, so you&amp;#39;ll have to show &lt;br&gt;down better hands. &lt;br&gt;At a six-handed table, you can play considerably looser than you &lt;br&gt;can at a ten-handed table. The side effect of this is that you&amp;#39;ll &lt;br&gt;experience more variance (the swings in your bankroll will be &lt;br&gt;greater). Some players prefer short-handed tables because you get &lt;br&gt;to see the flop more often, and thus have more chances at winning &lt;br&gt;the pot. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Aggression in poker has far more power at a shorthanded table. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;It will take some experience to learn what type of table is best for &lt;br&gt;you. While you can&amp;#39;t go wrong with a loose-passive table full of &lt;br&gt;mediocre players, you may find that a loose-aggressive or tight-&lt;br&gt;passive table suits you best. If you find yourself at a table where &lt;br&gt;you are struggling to make a profit, don&amp;#39;t hesitate to leave and join &lt;br&gt;another table. &lt;br&gt;Raises in Loose Games &lt;br&gt;All new poker players will generally start out in loose, low limit &lt;br&gt;games. While most experienced players prefer the sort of loose-&lt;br&gt;passive play present at a low limit table, others may have difficulty &lt;br&gt;playing against opponents who repeatedly &amp;quot;suck out&amp;quot; and win &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 118 &lt;br&gt;with garbage hands and bad plays. A common complaint among &lt;br&gt;low limit players is that opponents will not always fold to &lt;br&gt;appropriate raises, and occasionally, mediocre low limit players &lt;br&gt;will make incorrect raises. Knowing when to raise, and how to &lt;br&gt;interpret an opponent&amp;rsquo;s raise is covered below. The following &lt;br&gt;information assumes that you have made an appropriate table &lt;br&gt;selection, and are not playing at a table that is overly aggressive or &lt;br&gt;tight. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;If you&amp;#39;ve got a great starting hand, especially a high &lt;br&gt;pair (JJ or higher), don&amp;#39;t hesitate to raise and re-raise &lt;br&gt;before the flop. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;One of the most common complaints among low-limit players is &lt;br&gt;that opponents often suck out with inferior hands against a solid &lt;br&gt;hand such as AA. The best way to win with these hands is to play &lt;br&gt;them fast and aggressively. &lt;br&gt;Raise before the flop, and keep on betting after the flop. Unless the &lt;br&gt;game is ridiculously loose (and your opponents are ridiculously &lt;br&gt;bad), almost all of your opponents will fold to your aggressive &lt;br&gt;betting. You won&amp;#39;t always win with AA or KK, but if you play &lt;br&gt;them aggressively, the majority of the time you will. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 119 &lt;br&gt;Again, the research shows that aggressive play will drive down &lt;br&gt;the number of players in the hand and increase your odds of &lt;br&gt;winning. &lt;br&gt;Since many low limit players will play incorrectly and call bets &lt;br&gt;and raises with just about any half-decent hand, you need to make &lt;br&gt;sure that you are raising when you think you have the best hand. &lt;br&gt;If you do have what you believe is the best hand at that point, then &lt;br&gt;you need to raise to get other players out of the pot, who may &lt;br&gt;draw out on you with a garbage hand. If you are repeatedly &lt;br&gt;winning and showing down the best hands, then other players &lt;br&gt;will start to respect your raises and get out of your way. &lt;br&gt;If you&amp;#39;ve flopped a decent hand (top pair with good kicker, two &lt;br&gt;pair, etc.) and are betting on it, don&amp;#39;t be scared off if someone &lt;br&gt;raises it to two bets. &lt;br&gt;Although you could very well be beaten, experience shows that &lt;br&gt;bad players will sometimes raise with any decent pair, a draw or &lt;br&gt;even overcards. Call the bet, and be prepared to call to the river &lt;br&gt;unless the board looks scary or the action gets too intense. If you &lt;br&gt;fold every time you get raised with a decent hand, then you&amp;#39;ll lose &lt;br&gt;out on some pots that you would have won, had you shown the &lt;br&gt;hand down. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Utilize pot odds to determine whether the payoff is big &lt;br&gt;enough to justify putting in more bets. Then observe &lt;br&gt;opponent play to see if the raise is valid. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;On the other hand, if an opponent re-raises it to three bets, be very &lt;br&gt;concerned. Generally, a mediocre low limit player will not re-raise &lt;br&gt;unless they have a great hand. Take time to study the board to &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 120 &lt;br&gt;determine what your opponent might have. You might be tempted &lt;br&gt;to follow the above advice and call him to the river, hoping that he &lt;br&gt;is bluffing. But time and time again, they will turn up a superior &lt;br&gt;hand. Don&amp;#39;t re-raise unless you have the nuts, and if you don&amp;#39;t &lt;br&gt;have the absolute nuts, be prepared to call to the river. &lt;br&gt;Playing Tighter &lt;br&gt;If everyone at the Texas Hold&amp;#39;em Poker table plays loose then no &lt;br&gt;one can win. &lt;br&gt;The players will trade pots back and forth while the casino slowly &lt;br&gt;rakes all their money. The better Hold&amp;#39;em players will lose less, &lt;br&gt;but in the long run, no one can win. &lt;br&gt;&amp;ldquo;No one can win if everyone plays tight. Only the house wins.&amp;rdquo; &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;The tight players will trade smaller pots back and forth while the &lt;br&gt;casino rakes all their money. The better Hold&amp;#39;em players will lose &lt;br&gt;less, but no one can win. &lt;br&gt;If everyone at the Texas Hold&amp;#39;em Poker table plays the same, no &lt;br&gt;one can win. Learning Hold&amp;#39;em only by simply playing Hold&amp;#39;em is &lt;br&gt;player&amp;#39;s folly. If you learn to play Texas Hold&amp;#39;em poker like &lt;br&gt;everyone else plays, you cannot have a long run edge. &lt;br&gt;To win at Texas Hold&amp;#39;em Poker you must play tight in loose &lt;br&gt;games and play in loose games only. &lt;br&gt;There is no other way. You have no edge in a tight Hold&amp;#39;em game &lt;br&gt;and you only have an edge in a loose game if you play tight. It &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 121 &lt;br&gt;might be possible to play loose and win in the long run if all the &lt;br&gt;other players are complete idiots, but nature does not provide &lt;br&gt;enough complete idiots who play Hold&amp;#39;em poker. &lt;br&gt;As players come and go during a Hold&amp;#39;em poker session the game &lt;br&gt;will sometimes get tighter. You&amp;#39;ll see more players folding on the &lt;br&gt;first round. The pots will be smaller. If your Hold&amp;rsquo;em game gets &lt;br&gt;too tight, find a better game or don&amp;#39;t play at all. &lt;br&gt;You want to be the only tight player in a loose Hold&amp;rsquo;em poker &lt;br&gt;game, but often there are one or more other tight players at the &lt;br&gt;table. Sometimes loose players tighten up their play for whatever &lt;br&gt;reason, but that&amp;#39;s usually temporary. You&amp;#39;ll have to take all of this &lt;br&gt;into consideration when evaluating a Hold&amp;rsquo;em poker game. &lt;br&gt;There&amp;#39;s no exact way to measure it, but you can develop a feel for &lt;br&gt;it. &lt;br&gt;The Law Of Big Numbers &lt;br&gt;Most of us are impressed with big numbers &amp;ndash; like the size of Bill &lt;br&gt;Gate&amp;rsquo;s fortune. But what about small numbers that give you a &lt;br&gt;huge advantage? &lt;br&gt;Let&amp;rsquo;s say that you improve your odds of winning by 5%? So &lt;br&gt;instead of winning 10 in every 100 pots (on average) you could &lt;br&gt;increase that to 15. Doesn&amp;rsquo;t sound like much does it? &lt;br&gt;Ten in 100 pots for 10 players really means you are getting back &lt;br&gt;the money you bet less the house rake. Start with $100. Play 100 &lt;br&gt;hands of Poker. The rake is $1 per pot. That&amp;rsquo;s $100 the house takes &lt;br&gt;from all the winnings leaving you $90 at the end of the night. The &lt;br&gt;played all night and lost $10. Write that off to entertainment. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 122 &lt;br&gt;With 15 pots &amp;ndash; that little 5% advantage means a lot. &lt;br&gt;You are now up, just based on average play, $115 for the night. &lt;br&gt;Small numbers make huge differences. Play three times a week for &lt;br&gt;a year and you are up $18,000 based on your 5% advantage. &lt;br&gt;Never Sequence Bet &lt;br&gt;A sequence bet is a bet based on the idea that &amp;ldquo;Well, I&amp;rsquo;ve put in so &lt;br&gt;much money on this lousy hand, I might as well see it through.&amp;rdquo; &lt;br&gt;Never change future strategy based on a past hands. So you got &lt;br&gt;lucky and drew on an inside straight? You should have folded. &lt;br&gt;Not only will that luck not return, it will make you a looser player. &lt;br&gt;We will tend to use the experience to modify future play. &lt;br&gt;Show the avatars (people in chairs), but don&amp;#39;t stereotype them. &lt;br&gt;This is probably the most debatable tip I&amp;#39;m guessing, because if &lt;br&gt;you&amp;#39;ve turned them off, you probably really don&amp;#39;t like the avatars &lt;br&gt;to begin with. And if you do like avatars, well, they&amp;#39;re probably on &lt;br&gt;already. I just want to get my two cents in about this Party Poker &lt;br&gt;tip by saying that even though avatars are computer graphics, it&amp;#39;s &lt;br&gt;again human nature to easily identify faces. That means we can &lt;br&gt;more easily associate a personality to a face, so it makes it easier to &lt;br&gt;remember how someone is playing when we can attach a face to a &lt;br&gt;playing style. &lt;br&gt;That being said, I&amp;#39;m sure there is some negative influence of these &lt;br&gt;faces as well, because we probably tend to associate a certain &lt;br&gt;avatar with a playing style. For instance, I&amp;#39;ll admit that I used to &lt;br&gt;mentally associate one of the avatar pictures with bluffing. I think &lt;br&gt;this was caused by a long string of coincidences, when different &lt;br&gt;players using that avatar would constantly bluff, so I just starting &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 123 &lt;br&gt;linking that specific avatar with bluffing. Don&amp;#39;t let this happen to &lt;br&gt;you. &lt;br&gt;If you are a 2 or a 3 &amp;ndash; how do you get to be a 7 or an 8? &lt;br&gt;Playing Poker Solitaire &lt;br&gt;Human psychology is very interesting. Research has shown that &lt;br&gt;the average gambler tends to underestimate the cards of their &lt;br&gt;opponents and overvalue their own. One of the best ways to &lt;br&gt;understand this tendency is to play Solitaire Poker. &lt;br&gt;Play out 6-10 hands of Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em, evaluate your card odds for &lt;br&gt;the flop, and then look at the other down cards. You will be &lt;br&gt;surprised at the number of opportunities to win you will see in the &lt;br&gt;competition&amp;rsquo;s hands. &lt;br&gt;Be hard on your hand. Sure you could draw a card that will help &lt;br&gt;you but so can all of the other remaining players. &lt;br&gt;One of the best exercises in an actual game is to try and guess the &lt;br&gt;other players two down cards based on their playing style and &lt;br&gt;betting. The better you become at this, the better your game will &lt;br&gt;become. In the end, isn&amp;rsquo;t this really the point of the game? &lt;br&gt;Reading Your Opponents &lt;br&gt;Online Poker eliminates visual and verbal clues &amp;lsquo;tells&amp;rsquo;) from the &lt;br&gt;game. You can&amp;rsquo;t see the faces of the other players (their real faces, &lt;br&gt;in any case). This limits your ability to read the other players. The &lt;br&gt;rules in online poker compensate for this by giving us a wealth of &lt;br&gt;information in other ways. &lt;br&gt;-How the other players react to the bets? &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 124 &lt;br&gt;-How quickly do they respond? &lt;br&gt;-What&amp;rsquo;s their betting style? &lt;br&gt;-How often do they raise and when? &lt;br&gt;-Are they consistent &amp;ndash; stay, raise, raise? &lt;br&gt;-Or raise, stay, raise, fold? &lt;br&gt;Wait a Full Table Rotation Before Posting the BB &lt;br&gt;Online &amp;lsquo;Tells&amp;rsquo; -The in-turn buttons lead to the most obvious tell &lt;br&gt;unique to online poker. If the blinking light representing a player &lt;br&gt;acts immediately, it&amp;rsquo;s likely this person has clicked the box of an &lt;br&gt;in-turn action. It is usually easy to determine when a player has a &lt;br&gt;no-brainer hand. The immediate &amp;quot;check&amp;quot; is often incredibly &lt;br&gt;revealing. If you are first to act, and for some reason take a &lt;br&gt;moment before checking, and your three opponents immediately &lt;br&gt;check behind you like rifle fire, this is a tell as big as Texas. They &lt;br&gt;haven&amp;#39;t got a thing. &lt;br&gt;Another common situation . . . the first player takes a moment, and &lt;br&gt;then finally checks. You have the &amp;quot;bet/raise in turn&amp;quot; button &lt;br&gt;checked, so your bet appears, but instantly the player next to you &lt;br&gt;raises. Uh-oh, he had the bet/raise button checked too, and didn&amp;rsquo;t &lt;br&gt;care what you or the first player did. That tells a lot more than a &lt;br&gt;just normal raise would --an awful lot more. &lt;br&gt;Besides the speed of action resulting from using the buttons, other &lt;br&gt;online tells can be discerned from how slow a player commonly &lt;br&gt;acts on their hand. Players who are consistently super-slow (rude &lt;br&gt;human speed bumps) are likely not paying attention to the game, &lt;br&gt;either because they are playing two games and are not competent &lt;br&gt;at it, or because they are doing other work at home. Either way, if &lt;br&gt;all of a sudden this person plays a hand crisply and promptly and &lt;br&gt;aggressively... well, they just woke up because they&amp;rsquo;ve got &lt;br&gt;something. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 125 &lt;br&gt;The Stall&amp;quot; is a common tell among average or slightly below &lt;br&gt;average players. When the last card in Hold&amp;#39;em or Omaha makes a &lt;br&gt;coordinated board (making a nut hand like a flush), the mediocre &lt;br&gt;player pauses as if thinking, and then finally bets. This pause &lt;br&gt;almost always means &amp;quot;powerhouse&amp;quot; or at least that the bettor &lt;br&gt;thinks he has a killer hand. Some would call it reverse psychology, &lt;br&gt;but more often than not, it&amp;rsquo;s true. &lt;br&gt;PRE-FLOP STRATEGY &lt;br&gt;Before you start betting like a madman when you get two eights &lt;br&gt;in the pocket, you need to carefully consider all factors involved &lt;br&gt;in solid pre-flop strategy. &lt;br&gt;The factors to consider are the number of players, how &lt;br&gt;aggressive/passive the players at the table are, your bankroll, your &lt;br&gt;position, and how much risk you are willing to entail. &lt;br&gt;THE RIGHT NUMBER OF PLAYERS &lt;br&gt;With 10 people in the game, it&amp;#39;s much more likely that someone &lt;br&gt;else has a strong hand in the pocket than in a short-handed game. &lt;br&gt;Also, you&amp;#39;ll need to be more cautious in larger games, as the &lt;br&gt;chances of someone&amp;#39;s pre-flop hand fitting the flop will be much &lt;br&gt;better. More competition means stiffer competition. &lt;br&gt;HOW AGGRESSIVE ARE THE OTHER PLAYERS &lt;br&gt;Assuming you&amp;#39;ve been playing with a few people for several &lt;br&gt;hands, and you noticed some jackass is raising every hand pre-&lt;br&gt;flop, you&amp;#39;ll want to play tighter. Let the guy win the blinds (big &lt;br&gt;deal) and nail him to the wall when you have a solid hand in the &lt;br&gt;pocket pre-flop &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 126 &lt;br&gt;Your Bankroll &lt;br&gt;If you have $2 left, you&amp;#39;ll want to play extremely carefully and &lt;br&gt;select one hand to bet on, hoping to get as many players involved &lt;br&gt;as possible for a larger pot. You&amp;#39;ll want to be all-in before the flop &lt;br&gt;is dealt. On the flip side, if you have $1000 at a $1/$2 table, you can &lt;br&gt;take the high-risk, high-payout bets. If you are worried about &lt;br&gt;losing your money, you should stop playing poker, switch tables &lt;br&gt;or take a break. Second reason to buy more than is necessary, is for &lt;br&gt;intimidation factor. Opinions may differ, but faced off against a &lt;br&gt;big stack, my feelings are that a good amount of players (but not &lt;br&gt;all) show a bit more respect (read: fear) and will play accordingly which is to your benefit. Now, don&amp;#39;t read this as buying in for &lt;br&gt;$1,000 in a $1/2 game, because then people will think you are just &lt;br&gt;nuts, but $400. Now we&amp;#39;re talking. &lt;br&gt;Buy-in More Than Necessary At The Poker Table &lt;br&gt;If you&amp;#39;ve been doing your homework, you&amp;#39;ll know that you should &lt;br&gt;always sit in with at minimum 50 times the big blind at any poker &lt;br&gt;table. In the realities of online poker, this should be more along the &lt;br&gt;lines of at least 100 times the BB. You should think about doing &lt;br&gt;this too. Why? First, don&amp;#39;t ever be in the position of holding the &lt;br&gt;nuts and not having enough money to raise the pot. I&amp;#39;ve seen this &lt;br&gt;happen too many times, where a guy will have flopped a full &lt;br&gt;house in a $3/6 game, but only have $12 in his bankroll. He could &lt;br&gt;have made a killing if it weren&amp;#39;t for the fact he was playing with a &lt;br&gt;small stack. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 127 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;CHEATING, BLUFFING &lt;br&gt;AND SEMI-BLUFFING &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;quot;Trust everybody, but cut the cards.&amp;quot; -Finley Peter Dunne &lt;br&gt;No, we are not going to teach you how to cheat. Our topic is &lt;br&gt;spotting cheaters. And of course, our focus will largely be on &lt;br&gt;online cheating. &lt;br&gt;Online poker rooms are probably the safest place to play at right &lt;br&gt;now. Did your mother ever tell you to &amp;quot;never trust a stranger&amp;quot;? &lt;br&gt;Well, playing online limits the number of sneaky people you could &lt;br&gt;potentially be dealing with. The dealer is a program. Programs &lt;br&gt;don&amp;#39;t cheat. You don&amp;#39;t have to worry about any sort of illegal card &lt;br&gt;handling. There are no &amp;quot;cards&amp;quot; online. &lt;br&gt;Some people worry about hackers. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 128 &lt;br&gt;It&amp;#39;s been many, many years since the last major instance of hacking &lt;br&gt;affected anyone wagering money in an online Hold &amp;#39;em game. &lt;br&gt;Since then we&amp;#39;ve had breakthroughs like the SSLv3/TLSv1 &lt;br&gt;encryption algorithms and multi-layered random number &lt;br&gt;sequencers. Not only do we have these very technical advances, &lt;br&gt;but all the ones you would expect in a real casino. &lt;br&gt;The most common form of online cheating is player collusion. &lt;br&gt;That&amp;#39;s when two or more players reveal to each other what cards &lt;br&gt;they hold. This form is more difficult to pull off in a live game, but &lt;br&gt;playing online gives players the chance to have a fellow player on &lt;br&gt;the phone with them, or sitting next to them at another computer. &lt;br&gt;Fortunately most of these players are the ones who have no idea &lt;br&gt;how to use that advantage. These two must coordinate well &lt;br&gt;together, which takes practice. Online poker rooms not only look &lt;br&gt;for telltale signs of collusion, but check to see if two players always &lt;br&gt;play at the same table together. They would have to use &amp;quot;hit and &lt;br&gt;run&amp;quot; tactics when using this form of cheating. Colluding players &lt;br&gt;would have to hit up a high-limit table, then flee to another online &lt;br&gt;poker room with their winnings and never look back. &lt;br&gt;It is barely worth it to try collusion. But just in case, here are some &lt;br&gt;things to look for &amp;ndash; &lt;br&gt;1. A team of players who try to &amp;quot;steamroll&amp;quot; other players out of the &lt;br&gt;game. This means re-raising each other to make non-colluding &lt;br&gt;players call multiple bets at once. &lt;br&gt;2. Players who never play fast pre-flop. That&amp;#39;s the time to talk &lt;br&gt;about what they hold. Watch whoever is under the gun and be &lt;br&gt;mindful of reaction time. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 129 &lt;br&gt;3. A group of players who hike up bets by re-raising with someone &lt;br&gt;in between them. This gets the maximum amount of bets out of a &lt;br&gt;third party. The alarm should really go off if one of those re-raising &lt;br&gt;players has a poor hand, or if one of them folds with one bet to go &lt;br&gt;despite a massive pot. There&amp;#39;s a time to bluff and a time to fold and &lt;br&gt;most people have an idea when that is, so be on the lookout for &lt;br&gt;players who exercise horrible judgement like that. Identify that &lt;br&gt;person as a potential goldmine for yourself or a potential cheater. &lt;br&gt;Once again, it&amp;#39;s VERY rare for someone to even attempt these sort &lt;br&gt;of things. Still, never accuse anyone of cheating. Either contact the &lt;br&gt;poker room&amp;#39;s administrators or just get up and leave &lt;br&gt;BLUFFING &lt;br&gt;&amp;quot;You can fool some of the people all the time, and all of the people some of &lt;br&gt;the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all the time.&amp;quot; &lt;br&gt;Abraham Lincoln &lt;br&gt;A Key Element In Poker Is Deception. &lt;br&gt;Bluffing is the quintessential trick in poker. Of course, the &lt;br&gt;reasoning for a bluff is to deceive the other players into thinking &lt;br&gt;you have a better hand when you actually do not. For a bluff to &lt;br&gt;work, you need the other players to think you actually have that &lt;br&gt;better hand. &lt;br&gt;Many beginning poker players love this idea of bluffing and often &lt;br&gt;misuse it. The value of the bluff increases under certain general &lt;br&gt;circumstances that often have a lot to do with information you &lt;br&gt;assume about the other players. This vagueness makes it difficult &lt;br&gt;to give definitive reasons or places to bluff. Some less generalized &lt;br&gt;times to bluff and some advice are given below. The bottom of the &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 130 &lt;br&gt;page gives some more ideas and perspectives on deception in &lt;br&gt;poker. &lt;br&gt;Some typical reasons to bluff . . . &lt;br&gt;A. When there aren&amp;#39;t many other players in a pot. &lt;br&gt;Simply put, it&amp;#39;s easier to trick a couple people than a crowd. &lt;br&gt;With fewer hands out there, chances are better that no one has &lt;br&gt;made a reasonable hand. This is fairly common though, so many &lt;br&gt;players won&amp;#39;t believe you. Some will stay in the hand just to &amp;quot;keep &lt;br&gt;you honest&amp;quot;, so sometimes this needs to be a persistent bluff over a &lt;br&gt;period of two or three betting rounds. That can be costly if they &lt;br&gt;don&amp;#39;t fall for it. You need to know the players before you use this &lt;br&gt;type of bluff. &lt;br&gt;B. When you&amp;#39;re up against fairly tight players.&lt;br&gt;Those that tend to fold easily are the biggest targets of a bluff.&lt;br&gt;Bets will be put out just as a form of information gathering on this &lt;br&gt;player&amp;#39;s hand. If you bluff early (pre-flop, flop) against a very tight &lt;br&gt;player and they don&amp;#39;t buckle, you should think twice about trying &lt;br&gt;it again on a future round. They have something. Your job is to &lt;br&gt;determine whether they have a made or drawing hand. Once &lt;br&gt;again, you need to know the players. &lt;br&gt;C. On the river. &lt;br&gt;Especially if apparent drawing hands missed. That&amp;#39;s when players &lt;br&gt;react to rule #1 &amp;quot;the moment you know you can&amp;#39;t win, throw in &lt;br&gt;your cards&amp;quot;. It is often a good idea to bluff with a weak hand, like &lt;br&gt;ace-high or lowest pair with these kinds of bluffs, because some &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 131 &lt;br&gt;players will stay in just because of pot odds. If you do that, it is &lt;br&gt;actually semi-bluffing. &lt;br&gt;D. You&amp;#39;re in late position and everyone else checked. &lt;br&gt;This one you&amp;#39;ll have to gauge for yourself. It will most likely force &lt;br&gt;some players out, but not all. This is a pretty common bluff once &lt;br&gt;again, and many players will stay in just because of bet odds, &lt;br&gt;and/or to once again &amp;quot;keep you honest&amp;quot;. This is another example of &lt;br&gt;a bluff that needs to be more persistent over a couple betting &lt;br&gt;rounds. &lt;br&gt;E. You bet pre-flop and missed. &lt;br&gt;That&amp;#39;s because they don&amp;#39;t know you missed! This can be &lt;br&gt;dangerous, and you really have to evaluate to board before you get &lt;br&gt;into this one. Sometimes it&amp;#39;s good to bluff when AK misses, &lt;br&gt;sometimes when 99 misses. You have to really feel this one out. &lt;br&gt;F. You have given other players &amp;quot;the fear&amp;quot;. &lt;br&gt;It&amp;#39;s about how other players perceive you. If you just won a hand &lt;br&gt;through good play, the players who say &amp;quot;nice hand&amp;quot; are the ones &lt;br&gt;who now respect you. They will more likely fold to your bluff if &lt;br&gt;you play it right. The trick is to play the hand exactly the same &lt;br&gt;way you played the other winning hand. Give it the &amp;quot;here we go &lt;br&gt;again&amp;quot; act. &lt;br&gt;G. When the flop isn&amp;#39;t so great. &lt;br&gt;Some players will fold automatically if all they have is an over &lt;br&gt;card. With a rainbow flop of 2, 6, 9, not many players will have &lt;br&gt;much. This is another example of a bluff that can go horribly awry. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 132 &lt;br&gt;I wouldn&amp;#39;t be too persistent in this case, unless only more low &lt;br&gt;cards pop up. Once again, know your players. &lt;br&gt;H. Pre-flop on the button, and everyone else has folded. &lt;br&gt;This is usually best used with tight players to your left. It&amp;rsquo;s good &lt;br&gt;because it can change from a bluff to a deceptively good hand with &lt;br&gt;luck and the right flop. &lt;br&gt;I. When there is a pair on the board. &lt;br&gt;This is especially useful when the pair is 88 or lower. Chances are &lt;br&gt;that these cards might have been folded or are still in the deck. &lt;br&gt;This is one situation where you want to evaluate the hand very &lt;br&gt;carefully if they do call though. This is a great situation to read the &lt;br&gt;tells of the players who are NOT involved in the game. It&amp;#39;s much &lt;br&gt;easier to give away the fact that you HAD a card than if you &lt;br&gt;HAVE it. &lt;br&gt;Keep in mind that these are pretty common reasons to bluff. Many &lt;br&gt;players know these reasons. Most of the time it just won&amp;#39;t work. &lt;br&gt;The main thing is always to know your players and to not do it so &lt;br&gt;often that it never works. &lt;br&gt;SEMI BLUFFING &lt;br&gt;Semi-bluffing is a sort of bluff where you have a poor hand or a &lt;br&gt;drawing hand that can possibly improve. &lt;br&gt;Against players with nothing it functions a lot like a bluff. Against &lt;br&gt;players with something it functions as a form of aggression. It is a &lt;br&gt;powerful tool, as it can lead to a deceptively powerful hand if the &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 133 &lt;br&gt;cards come to you. It can also be a source of great loss if overused &lt;br&gt;or misused. &lt;br&gt;Semi-bluffing in Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em is used best in bluffing situations. &lt;br&gt;Its usefulness comes from the fact that players who recognize a &lt;br&gt;bluff won&amp;#39;t necessarily recognize when you make your draw. It is &lt;br&gt;more useful (and preferable) against a lot of players, as opposed to &lt;br&gt;outright bluffing, since the odds tend to be better. Other than that, &lt;br&gt;you&amp;#39;ll want to use semi-bluffing in late position, usually on the flop &lt;br&gt;or turn, against mediocre flops, and against poor players. &lt;br&gt;Let&amp;#39;s look at two examples of semi-bluffing from a perspective of &lt;br&gt;odds and from a perspective of bluffing: &lt;br&gt;1. You have a Jack of Hearts, and a Ten of Hearts. &lt;br&gt;THE POCKET &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The pre-flop betting round concludes with six players investing &lt;br&gt;two bets each. The flop is Ace of Hearts, Queen of Spades, Seven of &lt;br&gt;Hearts. &lt;br&gt;You are in a middle position, and decide to semi-bluff. Why? &lt;br&gt;You&amp;#39;ve got draws, that&amp;#39;s why! Any Heart or King will give you a &lt;br&gt;hand. Whenever you have multiple draws like that, start thinking &lt;br&gt;of what would be ideal. If a Heart pops up you have to worry &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 134 &lt;br&gt;about a higher flush draw, so you probably want the King of &lt;br&gt;Hearts, as he is the most likely to be in someone&amp;#39;s hand. A Queen &lt;br&gt;of Hearts would be dangerous for you, since you&amp;#39;d be looking at a &lt;br&gt;royal flush draw vs. a potentially made full house. &lt;br&gt;Ideally you want a non-Heart King and the straight. That would be &lt;br&gt;the nuts. &lt;br&gt;For simplicity&amp;#39;s sake let&amp;#39;s say that in your evaluation, either a flush &lt;br&gt;or straight will give you a winning hand. &lt;br&gt;You have twelve outs (don&amp;#39;t count the King of Hearts twice). That&amp;#39;s &lt;br&gt;a little better than a 25% chance of hitting a winning card on the &lt;br&gt;turn. Even re-raising or check-raising would be a good idea in this &lt;br&gt;position based purely on odds. Even if you miss on the turn, it &lt;br&gt;would be in your interests (based on players reactions) to continue &lt;br&gt;to bet it right out. &lt;br&gt;2. You have a pair of sixes in the pocket. &lt;br&gt;THE POCKET &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Pre-flop eliminates all but you and another player who was in &lt;br&gt;early position before you. &lt;br&gt;You get a rainbow flop of Four, Five, Ten. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 135 &lt;br&gt;Semi-bluff! &lt;br&gt;In this case you have to think of it more as a bluff. If this only &lt;br&gt;player played a hand in early position, they probably have some &lt;br&gt;over-cards in this case. You want the pot right then and there. &lt;br&gt;Most players will bluff back at you in this case with just an Ace in &lt;br&gt;the pocket. Stick to your resolve. Bluff. &lt;br&gt;Your chances of getting that six are pretty slim, and not worth &lt;br&gt;the odds. &lt;br&gt;You only have to worry about your opponent having over-pairs &lt;br&gt;and matching the Ten. So you really have to evaluate the player, as &lt;br&gt;opposed to the math in this case. &lt;br&gt;Try To Be On The Aggressive. &lt;br&gt;You need information about your opponents hand. Betting is a real &lt;br&gt;good way to get information. Also, a casual semi-bluffing check-&lt;br&gt;raise can be all you need to scare another player if you think they&amp;#39;ll &lt;br&gt;bluff at the pot. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 136 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;How To Tell If You &lt;br&gt;Have A Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em &lt;br&gt;Nut Hand &lt;br&gt;W ant to have a Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em hand that no one can beat? &lt;br&gt;With a little practice, you can learn to read the table and &lt;br&gt;determine the hole cards necessary to make the nut &lt;br&gt;hand. Most of the time no one actually has the nuts, but when &lt;br&gt;someone raises, take time to study the table carefully. Do they &lt;br&gt;have what it takes? It pays to know the difference between a &lt;br&gt;probable winner and the absolute nuts. &lt;br&gt;A nut set is three of a kind with a pair in the hole equal to the &lt;br&gt;highest card on the board and no possibility of a straight or a &lt;br&gt;flush. The smallest possible nut set on the river is a set of queens &lt;br&gt;(see example) &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 137 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This set of queens is the nuts. There is no possibility of a higher &lt;br&gt;set, a straight or a flush. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;In this hand, one or more players could have 10,9 in the hole and &lt;br&gt;this top set of queens could then be sandwiched between nut &lt;br&gt;straights. Even 7,5 in the hole would make a straight. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 138 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The nut hole cards are king-anything of spades. Any two spades &lt;br&gt;in the hole would beat this set of aces. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Three-of-a-kind with a pair on the board is trips not a set. Trips &lt;br&gt;cannot be the nuts. Kings, fives or threes in the hole would beat &lt;br&gt;these trip jacks. &lt;br&gt;Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Nut Hands -Four Of A Kind &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 139 &lt;br&gt;You have the nut four of a kind if you have at least one of the &lt;br&gt;four cards in the hole and there is no higher pair on the board &lt;br&gt;and no possibility of a straight flush. &lt;br&gt;You have the nuts if the four of a kind is on the board and you &lt;br&gt;have the nut kicker in the hole. If the four of a kind is Kings or less, &lt;br&gt;the nut kicker is an ace. If the four of a kind is aces, the nut kicker &lt;br&gt;is a King. At the showdown you will split the pot with any other &lt;br&gt;players who also have the nut kicker. &lt;br&gt;If the four of a kind and the nut kicker are on the board, you will &lt;br&gt;split the pot with all the players who are in the hand at the &lt;br&gt;showdown. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This is a nut hand. There is no higher pair on the board and no &lt;br&gt;possibility of a straight flush. Hope like mad you get some action &lt;br&gt;from pocket aces, pocket deuces or a heart flush. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 140 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The four eights are on the board, but the ace kicker in the hole &lt;br&gt;makes this hand the nuts. If any other players have an ace in the &lt;br&gt;hole, the pot will be split. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Four threes and the top kicker are on the board. All the players &lt;br&gt;who are in the hand at the showdown will split the pot. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 141 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;These quad fives could lose to a higher four of a kind. The nut hole &lt;br&gt;cards are pocket sevens &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The jack-ten of spades in the hole would make a royal flush. &lt;br&gt;Three-of-a-kind with a pair on the board is trips not a set. Trips &lt;br&gt;cannot be the nuts. Kings, fives or threes in the hole would beat &lt;br&gt;these trip jacks. &lt;br&gt;Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Nut Hands -Flushes &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 142 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The nut flush is an ace high flush with the highest &lt;br&gt;possible flush card in the hole, no pair or better on the &lt;br&gt;board and no possibility of a straight flush. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;Sometimes, there is a flush on the board and it might be the best &lt;br&gt;hand, but there cannot be a nut flush on the board. &lt;br&gt;In Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker there can be only one nut flush. If the &lt;br&gt;winning hand is a flush, it wins the entire pot. &lt;br&gt;Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Nut Hands-Full Houses &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You have the nut full house in Texas Hold&amp;#39;em Poker &lt;br&gt;when there is only one pair on the board that is higher &lt;br&gt;than the other upcards and equal to your high hole card and the &lt;br&gt;next highest upcard is equal to your other hole card and there is &lt;br&gt;no possibility of a straight flush. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;You have the nut full house in Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker when there &lt;br&gt;are two pairs on the board that are higher than the fifth upcard &lt;br&gt;and each pair is equal to one of your hole cards and there is no &lt;br&gt;possibility of a straight flush. &lt;br&gt;There cannot be a nut full house on the board. If there&amp;#39;s a full &lt;br&gt;house on the board, the nut hand is four of a kind. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You cannot have a nut full house with a pocket pair. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 143 &lt;br&gt;The Pre-Flop Winning Odds System &lt;br&gt;These charts are based on 400,000,000 Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker &lt;br&gt;hands dealt to 10 players. &lt;br&gt;This is my favourite table. It sits by my mouse during every online &lt;br&gt;game I play. And here&amp;rsquo;s why. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;HOW TO BET PRE-FLOP &lt;br&gt;Example -You are dealt two queens. Time comes to match or raise &lt;br&gt;a bet. The chance of winning the hand is 22% (see chart). The pot is &lt;br&gt;$50. Based on a 22% chance of winning, your pot odds would &lt;br&gt;indicate a safe bet of $10 at the pre-flop (22% x $50). Then &lt;br&gt;somebody goes crazy and starts betting. Do you know what kind &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 144 &lt;br&gt;of a player they are? Do they have a pair of 9&amp;rsquo;s? Over 50% of the &lt;br&gt;pots are won by a pair of 9&amp;rsquo;s or better. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Tight players never deviate from these rules unless they are &lt;br&gt;playing with a very weak table. &lt;br&gt;When you start out, if you follow these guidelines you will lose &lt;br&gt;less while you are learning and you will start to win more &lt;br&gt;consistently. &lt;br&gt;Another example &amp;ndash; &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You are dealt a pair of aces in the pocket. &lt;br&gt;The odds of winning with 2 aces is 31% -the best odds in the &lt;br&gt;game. Pre-flop you have a massive advantage. The only choice at &lt;br&gt;this point what should the maximum bet be. &lt;br&gt;Estimate the total of the pot at the end of the betting round and bet &lt;br&gt;no more than 31%. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 145 &lt;br&gt;If you estimate the pot to be $150 the maximum bet you should &lt;br&gt;take is 31% of $150 = $31. &lt;br&gt;Question &amp;ndash; If the bet to stay in is much lower, should you raise? &lt;br&gt;For example if the bet to you is $20 do you raise? &lt;br&gt;There are two considerations here. With an average hand, you may &lt;br&gt;want to see players leave the game and improve your odds of &lt;br&gt;winning. Raising to the maximum could have that effect. &lt;br&gt;On the other hand, having the nuts means you want to build the &lt;br&gt;pot at the early stages. Anything can still happen &amp;ndash; you don&amp;rsquo;t have &lt;br&gt;a lock on the win remember. You only have a 31% chance of &lt;br&gt;winning. &lt;br&gt;Our advice &amp;ndash; win as much as you can when you have the right &lt;br&gt;cards. In this example, raise the bet to $30 if you have a lot of weak &lt;br&gt;players and see who stays in. Bet slightly less -$15 &amp;ndash;$20 if the table &lt;br&gt;is stronger. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Example &amp;ndash; You draw a 2 and a 7. &lt;br&gt;This is the worst pocket hand you can be dealt based on the odds &lt;br&gt;of winning. It should be clear why. &lt;br&gt;You have no higher cards to build on. You have no flush &lt;br&gt;potential and no chance of developing a straight. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 146 &lt;br&gt;You have a 4% chance of winning the pot (see the charts at the end &lt;br&gt;of this book). Should you stay in? &lt;br&gt;Only if the cost to stay in the game and see the flop is less than &lt;br&gt;4% of the total pre-flop pot. &lt;br&gt;Estimate the pot at $100 that would mean a maximum bet of $4. &lt;br&gt;Based on a game where the blind is $5/$10 you would need at least &lt;br&gt;a 10% chance of winning. Get out fast. &lt;br&gt;What if you fold and see a 2 and a 7 in the flop &amp;ndash; two pairs? This &lt;br&gt;can happen and you may be beating yourself up over it. But if you &lt;br&gt;let a bad example of odds modify your play and betting, over the &lt;br&gt;long haul you will be suckered in by long shots and your style of &lt;br&gt;play will suffer. The odds are the odds. &lt;br&gt;As you can see from these examples, a simple rule is -the larger &lt;br&gt;the pot, the better the cards you would need at the pre-flop to &lt;br&gt;stay in the game. &lt;br&gt;REASONS NOT TO BLUFF &lt;br&gt;Bluffing should probably not be an automatic reaction. Many times &lt;br&gt;it takes a feel for a table to make you want to bluff. When doing it &lt;br&gt;keep in mind that everyone else is also looking for an opportunity &lt;br&gt;to bluff. Maybe you spot them bluffing in a common situation or &lt;br&gt;they spot you. It only works when you get away with it, so you &lt;br&gt;must use it sparingly. &lt;br&gt;Here are some times when you outright should not bluff. &lt;br&gt;A. When players expect you to. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 147 &lt;br&gt;Don&amp;#39;t be the fish. Revealing your playing style can be bluffing in &lt;br&gt;telltale situations against players who know them. That&amp;#39;sa &lt;br&gt;common money-maker for the other players. Always consider this &lt;br&gt;rule before attempting a bluff. &lt;br&gt;B. When you&amp;#39;ve been caught bluffing recently. &lt;br&gt;You&amp;#39;ve been labelled as a poor bluffer already. Ride it out. Let &lt;br&gt;them forget that hand. Start rebuilding a reputation as a straight &lt;br&gt;player so you can eventually try a bluff again later (and hopefully &lt;br&gt;not screw it up again) &lt;br&gt;C. Against a dangerous flop. &lt;br&gt;If the flop has an Ace, chances are that someone has a pair of aces. &lt;br&gt;Aces tend to make it beyond pre-flop. Also, players tend to &lt;br&gt;continue to play their Aces. Don&amp;#39;t bluff against Aces. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You also wouldn&amp;#39;t want to bluff against a flop like K,Q,9. Chances &lt;br&gt;are someone has something they&amp;#39;ll stick with. &lt;br&gt;D. Against lots of players. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 148 &lt;br&gt;Chances are that someone has something that they&amp;#39;ll stick with. By &lt;br&gt;bluffing in this situation, you just become an agent of that player. &lt;br&gt;From an odds perspective, this is never worth it. &lt;br&gt;E. Against bad players. &lt;br&gt;As much as they love to bluff, they love to catch someone in a &lt;br&gt;bluff. They&amp;#39;re much more likely to &amp;quot;keep you honest&amp;quot; because they &lt;br&gt;don&amp;#39;t realize what a money-loser that is. It&amp;#39;s much more profitable &lt;br&gt;to play straight up in these games. Bluffing is only effective from a &lt;br&gt;&amp;quot;fear&amp;quot; perspective in this case. &lt;br&gt;F. You just lost a big hand. &lt;br&gt;Not only might you be on a bad run, but other players will expect &lt;br&gt;you to be on a bad run, and will more readily call you. &lt;br&gt;G. You are in a blind position. &lt;br&gt;You really have to evaluate the flop, but generally other players &lt;br&gt;will think you have a poor hand and expect you to bluff. &lt;br&gt;Using Odds During a Bluff &lt;br&gt;It&amp;#39;s always good to look at poker from a mathematical &lt;br&gt;perspective, and that even applies to bluffing. &lt;br&gt;You can determine finite amounts and percentages that can tell &lt;br&gt;you if it is a financially feasibly good time to bluff. This is &lt;br&gt;particularly useful when there are only one or two players and the &lt;br&gt;pot is rather large. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 149 &lt;br&gt;It&amp;#39;s good to do these calculations with potential straights or flushes &lt;br&gt;that appeared on the river, that you were going for but you didn&amp;#39;t &lt;br&gt;make. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;It&amp;#39;s nice with a flop that starts with Heart, Heart, Spade, and ends &lt;br&gt;with Spade, Spade. You had two Hearts. Or a flop like Five, Seven, &lt;br&gt;Eight, and ends with Ten, Jack. You had a Six. It&amp;#39;s also good &lt;br&gt;because they might have been on the same draw, which leads &lt;br&gt;them to believe (also from on odds perspective) that you were not &lt;br&gt;on that draw. &lt;br&gt;Let&amp;#39;s say that one of the above cases occurred in a $5/$10 game and &lt;br&gt;on the river there is $140 in the pot. Your only opponent checks to &lt;br&gt;you. &lt;br&gt;If you check, you know you&amp;#39;ve lost. &lt;br&gt;So you bluff. The reasoning is that if you invest another $10, you&amp;#39;re &lt;br&gt;getting 14 to 1 odds. As a percent that&amp;#39;s around 7%. If they fold &lt;br&gt;more than 7% of the time, you make money in the long poker &lt;br&gt;game of life. If not, it&amp;#39;s a losing venture. &lt;br&gt;You still have to evaluate the player, but from a purely &lt;br&gt;mathematical standpoint, you get the picture. You can also &lt;br&gt;evaluate it by reasoning that they missed their draw more than 7% &lt;br&gt;of the time and will fold. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 150 &lt;br&gt;If two players were involved in the pot, it cuts the odds in half. &lt;br&gt;With three, it becomes 1/3rd of 7%, etc. You can see why you want &lt;br&gt;to bluff against fewer players. &lt;br&gt;This can be unreliable though, as some players will stay in purely &lt;br&gt;based on pot odds. So when bluffing you cannot ever use just &lt;br&gt;odds. Get a feel for your opponents, and act accordingly. &lt;br&gt;HOW TO KNOW WHEN THEY&amp;rsquo;RE BLUFFING? &lt;br&gt;This isn&amp;#39;t about reading tells. This is about the situations where &lt;br&gt;bluffing is plausible, and when other players will do it. You can &lt;br&gt;generally look at the reasons YOU should bluff and apply them to &lt;br&gt;other players. Of course, you also have to know the player, and &lt;br&gt;evaluate it from there, but here are some ideas. &lt;br&gt;A. They are betting aggressively despite a poor flop. &lt;br&gt;If they bet pre-flop from a poor position, and the flop is something &lt;br&gt;like 4, 5, 5, they are probably just trying to keep momentum going &lt;br&gt;and bluff their way out of this hand. They probably have &lt;br&gt;genuinely zero drawing chances with over-cards or maybe an &lt;br&gt;over-pair, but a re-raise could have them rethink that strategy. It &lt;br&gt;might also give you a betting round or two to try and make YOUR &lt;br&gt;hand. &lt;br&gt;B. Pot Odds are in their favor. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 151 &lt;br&gt;If everyone folds on the turn with a big pot, like when an obvious &lt;br&gt;draw was missed, expect a bluff. It&amp;#39;s almost certain that anyone &lt;br&gt;will bluff against a big pot. With the pot odds the way they are, &lt;br&gt;you probably want to stay in those hands also. &lt;br&gt;C. It&amp;#39;s between you and them. &lt;br&gt;The most common time to bluff is when you CAN pull it off. It&amp;#39;s &lt;br&gt;very easy to trick just one person. Use your skills at evaluating the &lt;br&gt;previous rounds and the board to determine what they might &lt;br&gt;have. &lt;br&gt;D. The flop doesn&amp;#39;t have any draws. &lt;br&gt;Sometimes someone will bet in this case to eliminate the ability to &lt;br&gt;acquire a draw, sometimes because they have a good hand. You &lt;br&gt;really have to know the player in this case. &lt;br&gt;E. They bet on the Flop, checked on the turn. &lt;br&gt;If there was a draw, and it didn&amp;#39;t hit, they are probably just buying &lt;br&gt;a free card. Bet back against them and take the initiative. &lt;br&gt;F. Bet on the flop, bet on the turn, checked on the river. &lt;br&gt;Same as before, but they bought another turn. Might as well bet &lt;br&gt;back at them. &lt;br&gt;G. They bet and tell you to &amp;quot;save your money&amp;quot;. &lt;br&gt;If they really wanted you to save your money, they wouldn&amp;#39;t have &lt;br&gt;bet. Sometimes players say that just to create the opposite image, &lt;br&gt;so look out. Few are that crafty though, so tell your opposition that &lt;br&gt;he&amp;#39;s bluffing and re-raise. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 152 &lt;br&gt;HOW TO ATTACK A WEAK PLAYER &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The most successful players are not always the tightest &lt;br&gt;. . . and you can&amp;#39;t win anything when you fold. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;Pros add to their hourly win rate by finding times to play hands &lt;br&gt;that are small losers in the hands of lesser players. They do this &lt;br&gt;both by playing those hands especially well and by playing them &lt;br&gt;when a bad player is already in. That&amp;rsquo;s why knowing your table &lt;br&gt;is so important. &lt;br&gt;The secret to beating online poker can be where you get a lot of &lt;br&gt;tight passive players sitting on their hands while a successful &lt;br&gt;player (or two or three) eats an awful player (or two) alive. &lt;br&gt;Most people play backwards. They play loose and see a lot of &lt;br&gt;flops in the early rounds, then absurdly tighten up later. Unless &lt;br&gt;you are one of those rare players who simply can&amp;#39;t play without a &lt;br&gt;big stack, don&amp;#39;t fritter away your chips in the early rounds on &lt;br&gt;marginal junk. Those chips can be very useful once the important &lt;br&gt;rounds begin. &lt;br&gt;Sitting around waiting for good cards to play against the tight &lt;br&gt;players is fairly pointless. There is zero point to playing in a game &lt;br&gt;with decent players. &lt;br&gt;The only reason to be in this game is to play with the fish. &lt;br&gt;BAD HANDS THAT LOOK GOOD &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 153 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This hand makes me think of the data a major Casino put out &lt;br&gt;about the actual results of all Hold&amp;rsquo;em hands for the first six &lt;br&gt;million games played on their site. &lt;br&gt;The hands that lost the most money were not the &amp;quot;worst&amp;quot; hands &lt;br&gt;possible. The biggest money loser (not coincidentally) is 32s. It lost &lt;br&gt;more than 32s or 72s. Then also, A2s lost more than 32s. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Most players overvalue garbage cards. It&amp;rsquo;s the kiss of &lt;br&gt;death. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Hands that should do better than other hands (32s should do &lt;br&gt;better than 32o) end up doing markedly worse because people &lt;br&gt;play them and think they &amp;quot;have&amp;quot; something. &lt;br&gt;23 is the single most costly Hold&amp;rsquo;em holding in the hands of 90% &lt;br&gt;of the players . . . and it holds that distinction by far. 234 is a big &lt;br&gt;improvement, adding the 7 helps, and adding a suit does too, but &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 154 &lt;br&gt;anyone who thinks this is a &amp;quot;good&amp;quot; hand is surely going to lose a &lt;br&gt;lot of money with it. &lt;br&gt;Again, this scenario is about the best possible for the hand (besides &lt;br&gt;a free ride in the blind of course), but the hand is still highly &lt;br&gt;speculative and will be a money loser for non-good players. &lt;br&gt;Contrast this to A347 and even a non-good player will have a &lt;br&gt;profitable hand on the button. &lt;br&gt;The pursuit of available information, even if it takes a bit of work, &lt;br&gt;is largely what separates winning (and breakeven) players from &lt;br&gt;losing players. &lt;br&gt;Certainly most players lose, but the combination of the winning &lt;br&gt;players and the smallish losers is in the ballpark of half the &lt;br&gt;players. &amp;quot;Bigtime losers&amp;quot; is a smaller percentage --especially &lt;br&gt;among players who play more than five sessions in their life. Also, &lt;br&gt;the whole concept of &amp;quot;bigtime losers&amp;quot; is fallacious because while &lt;br&gt;plenty of players lose 100% of what they deposit that 100% is often &lt;br&gt;$100. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 155 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;LIMIT TEXAS HOLD&amp;rsquo;EM &lt;br&gt;TOURNAMENT GUIDE &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;M uch of the popularity of Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em recently is based &lt;br&gt;on televised Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Tournaments. If you&amp;rsquo;ve &lt;br&gt;followed the Cage Food Chain Theory of regular game &lt;br&gt;play, you will be happy to know that Tournament play progresses &lt;br&gt;in a very familiar fashion &amp;ndash; from &amp;lsquo;fish&amp;rsquo; to &amp;lsquo;barracuda&amp;rsquo; to &amp;lsquo;shark&amp;rsquo; as &lt;br&gt;the betting limits increase. &lt;br&gt;In the beginning, the rule is to play very conservatively. Play very &lt;br&gt;tight Fish level rules. Some players become very reckless in the &lt;br&gt;beginning of tournaments, feeling they need to build their stack. &lt;br&gt;This is completely wrong. A very conservative style will keep you &lt;br&gt;alive longer. &lt;br&gt;Playing Limit Tournaments &lt;br&gt;First off, all advice on tournament play here should be taken with &lt;br&gt;a grain of salt. I don&amp;#39;t claim to be some tournament guru, because &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 156 &lt;br&gt;if I were, I&amp;#39;d probably be somewhere making much more money. &lt;br&gt;However, I do seem to be placing in the money in half of the &lt;br&gt;single-table tournaments I play, so maybe there&amp;#39;s something to be &lt;br&gt;said for that. &lt;br&gt;The next chapter is for you if you&amp;#39;ve already played a few &lt;br&gt;tournaments and want to figure out why you are ending up short &lt;br&gt;stacked into the mid levels (3-5) and then end up getting ran over &lt;br&gt;by the loose betters who seem to hold nothing. If you&amp;#39;re a maniac &lt;br&gt;and find yourself loosing more often than not, you may find this &lt;br&gt;section useful too. &lt;br&gt;Remember &amp;ndash; players are eliminated when they run out of chips. &lt;br&gt;That&amp;rsquo;s the key survival technique at this stage. Make it to the six-&lt;br&gt;player level by holding on to the chips you have. &lt;br&gt;At mid-point in the game, once the table is reduced to six players, &lt;br&gt;revert to a Barracuda strategy. Follow the pre-flop strategy &lt;br&gt;carefully. &lt;br&gt;Once you are down to three players, Shark strategy is the rule of &lt;br&gt;the day. Aggressive play is an absolute requirement to win in &lt;br&gt;tournaments. &lt;br&gt;The most important thing to understand about tourney play online &lt;br&gt;is that it is fast.I&amp;#39;m not talking about the speed at which players &lt;br&gt;play, but I&amp;#39;m referring to the blinds structure. You only have 10 &lt;br&gt;hands before the blinds go up a level. The limit levels look like &lt;br&gt;this: &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Level 1: 15 / 30 &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Level 2: 30 / 60 &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Level 3: 50 / 100 &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 157 &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Level 4: 100 / 200 &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Level 5: 200 / 400 &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Level 6: 300 / 600 &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Level 7: 400 / 800 &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Level 8: 500 / 1000 &lt;br&gt;&amp;bull; Level 9: 600 / 1200 &lt;br&gt;What this means is that when the deal has gone around the table &lt;br&gt;four times, you&amp;#39;re already betting a significant percentage of your &lt;br&gt;starting bankroll (800 chips to start). Let&amp;#39;s say you played ultra-&lt;br&gt;tight to level 4, that is like playing a $1/2 game with $7, not really &lt;br&gt;fun! But critical to successful play in tournaments. &lt;br&gt;Level One to Two &lt;br&gt;There are a lot of theories floating around regarding a play &lt;br&gt;strategy for the early rounds. Some experts claim the secret is to &lt;br&gt;play loose and hope for a monster pot at some point to shore up &lt;br&gt;your stack. (You won&amp;rsquo;t find the word &amp;lsquo;hope&amp;rsquo; in our Poker &lt;br&gt;dictionary at the end of this book &amp;ndash; so I can&amp;rsquo;t really help you there.) &lt;br&gt;All the latest research we have looked at supports playing super &lt;br&gt;tight, staying under the radar and saving all the money you can for &lt;br&gt;the later levels when it really matters. The idea behind the first &lt;br&gt;strategy of seeing as many flops as possible, is based on the sad &lt;br&gt;truth that tournaments go by very quickly. We&amp;rsquo;ve all seen the guy &lt;br&gt;who manages to win chips early on with garbage hands based on &lt;br&gt;the fact that the rest of the players are playing very tightly. He &lt;br&gt;obviously ends up in a much better position into the later levels. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 158 &lt;br&gt;In the long run, this person will lose, but in the short run, it can be &lt;br&gt;frustrating to see such loose play rewarded. Don&amp;rsquo;t let these short-&lt;br&gt;term gains affect your style of play. Stay tight. Keep to your plan. &lt;br&gt;The Cage Food Chain School of strategy says play tight in the &lt;br&gt;early rounds. With 7 or 8 callers in a pot, many of whom are &lt;br&gt;novice players and will draw on you, it&amp;#39;s very difficult to win &lt;br&gt;pots in the early rounds with mediocre hands. The top pocket &lt;br&gt;cards are what you need to win. Facing a straight or flush draw, &lt;br&gt;you can almost be sure someone is going to chase after you. Bets &lt;br&gt;to get people out and careful checks on the river will pay off. &lt;br&gt;Note: Bluffing at this stage in the game is nearly impossible. &lt;br&gt;Don&amp;rsquo;t waste your time. &lt;br&gt;The most important thing you should be doing in the first two &lt;br&gt;rounds is taking notes on your opponents. Note what hands &lt;br&gt;people pre-flop raise with, what hands they play, do they re-raise &lt;br&gt;flush/straight draws, anything that will help you out later. If you &lt;br&gt;do this often enough, you&amp;#39;ll find that you&amp;#39;ll naturally form your &lt;br&gt;own player profiles and realize how you should play this &lt;br&gt;individual. &lt;br&gt;If they&amp;#39;re tight, then they can be bluffed. If they&amp;#39;re a bluffer or liar, &lt;br&gt;you&amp;#39;ll want to call down questionable bets or re-raise them if you &lt;br&gt;have anything. Common sense stuff, but most people just hunker &lt;br&gt;down and play their hand. Don&amp;#39;t do this! Pay close attention to &lt;br&gt;everyone&amp;#39;s betting habits when you&amp;#39;re not in a hand. Be intense &lt;br&gt;about your poker, don&amp;#39;t watch TV on your off hands. &lt;br&gt;Level Three and Four &lt;br&gt;The big change once the game hits level 3/4 is that bluffing now &lt;br&gt;becomes an option. As the stakes become higher, you&amp;#39;ll find your &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 159 &lt;br&gt;opponents less willing to draw on you unless they truly are weak &lt;br&gt;players. &lt;br&gt;This is a double-edged sword as aggressive players will become &lt;br&gt;much more dangerous into these rounds. This is why player &lt;br&gt;observation is absolutely key. Against a tight table, with a major &lt;br&gt;threat on board (possible straight, flush, trips), betting out under &lt;br&gt;the gun or near last position are very possible options. Betting out &lt;br&gt;early usually signifies some kind of strength when tight players do &lt;br&gt;it, so if you have a tight table image (established in the early &lt;br&gt;rounds), most players will respect that and fold. &lt;br&gt;Remember looking at the pros and cons of bluffing online? In a &lt;br&gt;tournament game, your big advantage is a captive table. (Sure, &lt;br&gt;players are leaving but at least new players aren&amp;rsquo;t coming in.) &lt;br&gt;There is an opportunity here to &amp;lsquo;train&amp;rsquo; the other players and set &lt;br&gt;them up. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;For instance, if the board shows Q/Q/6 and you come out betting, &lt;br&gt;most people will figure you for a four of a kind. &lt;br&gt;Tight players won&amp;#39;t want to draw in this situation and fold. If they &lt;br&gt;call, you should figure them for a four of a kind, pocket pair and of &lt;br&gt;course, the possibility of Queens. &lt;br&gt;A raise should easily make you realize know they have it (or are &lt;br&gt;out-playing you), which in any case should be an easy fold. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 160 &lt;br&gt;The turn is very difficult to play after someone has called your &lt;br&gt;bluff. &lt;br&gt;You will have to assess it on a case-by-case situation. Another &lt;br&gt;tough decision. If you feel the other person is drawing or has a &lt;br&gt;weaker kicker on his four, then you will want to bet and hope he &lt;br&gt;folds. If it took him a medium amount of time to call your flop, &lt;br&gt;he&amp;#39;s probably got a four of a kind, because he&amp;#39;s trying to make a &lt;br&gt;decision on if you have a queen or not. &lt;br&gt;If it took him a long time, you can expect him to have pocket pair &lt;br&gt;(again, has to think about if you have queens or not) or he has &lt;br&gt;Queens and he wants to suck you in. If you do end up betting the &lt;br&gt;turn and don&amp;#39;t get re-raised, you pretty much have to check down &lt;br&gt;the river as you can no longer get him out by then obviously. &lt;br&gt;While on the subject of trips, I have to say that it&amp;#39;s better to bluff on &lt;br&gt;smaller trip threats. For example: 2/2/J vs J/J/2. Someone is far &lt;br&gt;more likely to be holding a Jack as opposed to a 2, simply because &lt;br&gt;average-strong players will rarely hold a 2 except for A2s, K2s, &lt;br&gt;Q2s. In the SB or BB, this is a good bluff as others will be more apt &lt;br&gt;to believe you are holding a 2. If you bluffed on the button, most &lt;br&gt;people will put you on the Jack for the very same reasoning above. &lt;br&gt;So in short, bluffs high trips in late position. Bluff the turn if &lt;br&gt;needed, but almost never the river because by then they&amp;#39;ll usually &lt;br&gt;call. &lt;br&gt;Now that bluffing has somewhat been covered, realize that other &lt;br&gt;players will also try to make moves (be aggressive) in these levels. &lt;br&gt;You&amp;#39;ll tend to see mid-pairs betting out, or flush draws bet out &lt;br&gt;even. This makes it a perfect time to trap people yourself if you &lt;br&gt;hold a strong hand. Top pairs will usually be reluctant to slow &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 161 &lt;br&gt;play in these levels, as they don&amp;#39;t want anyone drawing on them. &lt;br&gt;So if the board doesn&amp;#39;t have any kind of possible straight/flush &lt;br&gt;threat that can develop, you may just check/call the flop then &lt;br&gt;check-raise the turn. It&amp;#39;ll help your image if you win, as others &lt;br&gt;won&amp;#39;t be able to bet all over you later in the game, which is &lt;br&gt;important. &lt;br&gt;In late position, if the board is non-threatening, you may even &lt;br&gt;check it down to give others a free card and hope someone pairs &lt;br&gt;on the turn. Being check raised on the turn after checks on the flop &lt;br&gt;is a really scary scenario for most players. Ideas of two pair and &lt;br&gt;trips usually develop in this situation, as many people &lt;br&gt;automatically don&amp;#39;t even begin to think of someone checking over &lt;br&gt;pair on the flop. &lt;br&gt;When you are short-stacked and make a play, players are more &lt;br&gt;apt to call you down on your slow play. They will view your &lt;br&gt;play as a desperation move and are far less likely to believe you. &lt;br&gt;The rest of the general strategy for these levels is to just play tight, &lt;br&gt;make a few moves when you can, but otherwise hunker down and &lt;br&gt;take cover. &lt;br&gt;Level Four and Up &lt;br&gt;Now comes the fun part! &lt;br&gt;Now that the limit is 200/400 (blinds 100/200), you need to change &lt;br&gt;gears very fast. Half, if not more of the table should be gone now &lt;br&gt;and more will follow quickly. In a short-handed game, semi-strong &lt;br&gt;hands become strong and strong hands become monsters. A9s for &lt;br&gt;example, a playable hand with 10 people becomes very playable &lt;br&gt;with 4 people. K9o, weak in a 10-person game, is very playable &lt;br&gt;with 4 people. The same rules of poker in regard to position still &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 162 &lt;br&gt;apply though! The earlier you play, the stronger your hands needs &lt;br&gt;to be. The later you play, the less strong it needs to be, as you don&amp;#39;t &lt;br&gt;need to worry about it being raised. &lt;br&gt;However, you should be the one doing the raising! &lt;br&gt;At this point in the game, you do NOT want to go to showdown &lt;br&gt;with your opponent and should be happy with winning the pot. &lt;br&gt;Blind stealing becomes critical at this point, because each set of SB &lt;br&gt;and BB is worth so much. Strong hands need to be raised and &lt;br&gt;weak hands need to be folded quickly. You need to be able to &lt;br&gt;switch quickly between aggressive and non-aggressive betting. Be &lt;br&gt;the aggressor. Bet the flop when it comes down if you raised pre-&lt;br&gt;flop. &lt;br&gt;Remember, it&amp;#39;s not about what you have, but what your &lt;br&gt;opponent doesn&amp;#39;t have! &lt;br&gt;You hold AQ and the flop comes KT7. You&amp;#39;re in last position, but &lt;br&gt;the BB, who bet pre-flop, comes out and immediately bets out 400 &lt;br&gt;on the flop. Do you call? It&amp;#39;s a very tough decision because you &lt;br&gt;have to try to figure out what he has. If he&amp;#39;s got Kings, you&amp;#39;re all &lt;br&gt;but dead as you have a gutshot or overpair Ace draw. Even if he &lt;br&gt;has nothing, is this maniac going to bet 400 on the turn and then &lt;br&gt;another 400 on the river? Are you willing to pay 1200 to see this &lt;br&gt;down? &lt;br&gt;You don&amp;#39;t want to be in this position! You want to be the one &lt;br&gt;putting OTHERS to this decision! &lt;br&gt;In the above scenario, you may have held A9o and raised the &lt;br&gt;caller. When the flop came, you bet out your high card ace-scary &lt;br&gt;as it is. Guess what? He ends up folding and you won with the &lt;br&gt;weaker hand. That is why taking the charge is vital at the later &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 163 &lt;br&gt;levels, because it turns info a mind game instead of a card game. &lt;br&gt;All he has to do is think you are stronger is that he is too weak and &lt;br&gt;you&amp;#39;ve already won. It doesn&amp;#39;t matter what you hold. &lt;br&gt;You&amp;#39;ll find in the lower buy-in tournies that the solid, tight players &lt;br&gt;make it to the later levels, but most of them will hesitate and fold &lt;br&gt;their way into oblivion to the crazy better. You need to out-&lt;br&gt;aggressive the maniacs at this point in the tournament. Sure, when &lt;br&gt;you&amp;#39;re aggressive and in charge, at some point someone will make &lt;br&gt;a move against you, whether it be a raise, check-raise, trap or &lt;br&gt;they&amp;#39;re stealing back against you. Don&amp;#39;t be overly aggressive and &lt;br&gt;raise like a maniac on everything that comes your way. You cannot &lt;br&gt;simply raise your way out of every situation. &lt;br&gt;Just remember that while tight players can make moves against &lt;br&gt;you, as long as you can make more moves against them, you will &lt;br&gt;win. And when you are the aggressor, you WILL make more &lt;br&gt;moves against tight players. That&amp;#39;s because you always have more &lt;br&gt;info than your opponent. When they raise into you, you know they &lt;br&gt;have something. When you bet into them, they aren&amp;#39;t sure what &lt;br&gt;you have. &lt;br&gt;Eventually, even they will trap themselves when you DO have &lt;br&gt;something and they bet a weaker kicker or pair into yours and you &lt;br&gt;can come right back at them. &lt;br&gt;I know someone out there is saying: Yeah, this is great and all, but &lt;br&gt;what about when the tight player is on to you and just re-raises &lt;br&gt;everything you have? I can almost guarantee you that it does not &lt;br&gt;happen at the lower levels. Once it has become a mental game, &lt;br&gt;poor/average players are no longer thinking very logically, but &lt;br&gt;with emotions. They will be scared and in most cases do not have &lt;br&gt;the courage to stand up and challenge you with blanks in their &lt;br&gt;guns. If they do indeed just go on tilt and hit bet/raise for every &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 164 &lt;br&gt;hand they have, you just need grit it and play right back at them. &lt;br&gt;Re-raise strong hands pre-flop, call with weak hands. Re-raise &lt;br&gt;pairs aggressively, call with A/K high, fold low high cards. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Make more money when you win. Lose less money &lt;br&gt;when you lose. &lt;br&gt;Insider Tip &lt;br&gt;You need to be able to take off like a rocket and stop on a dime in &lt;br&gt;terms of your betting. Be the aggressor. Bet the flop when it comes &lt;br&gt;down if you raised pre-flop. Remember, it&amp;#39;s not about what you &lt;br&gt;have, but what your opponent doesn&amp;#39;t have! &lt;br&gt;Imagine this: You hold AQ and the flop comes KT7. &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You&amp;#39;re in last position, but the BB, who bet pre-flop, comes out and &lt;br&gt;immediately bets out 400 on the flop. &lt;br&gt;Do you call? &lt;br&gt;It&amp;#39;s a very tough decision because you have to try to figure out &lt;br&gt;what he has. If he&amp;#39;s got Kings, you&amp;#39;re all but dead as you have a &lt;br&gt;gutshot or overpair Ace draw. Even if he has nothing, is this &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 165 &lt;br&gt;maniac going to bet 400 on the turn and then another 400 on the &lt;br&gt;river? Are you willing to pay 1200 to see this down? &lt;br&gt;You don&amp;#39;t want to be in this position! You want to be the one &lt;br&gt;putting OTHERS to this decision! In the above scenario, you may &lt;br&gt;have held A9o and raised the caller. When the flop came, you bet &lt;br&gt;out your high card ace-scary as it is. Guess what? He ends up &lt;br&gt;folding and you won with the weaker hand. That is why taking the &lt;br&gt;charge is vital at the later levels, because it turns info a mind game &lt;br&gt;instead of a card game. All he has to do is think you are stronger is &lt;br&gt;that he is too weak and you&amp;#39;ve already won. It doesn&amp;#39;t matter what &lt;br&gt;you hold. &lt;br&gt;You&amp;#39;ll find in the lower buy-in tournies that the solid, tight players &lt;br&gt;make it to the later levels, but most of them will hesitate and fold &lt;br&gt;their way into oblivion to the crazy better. To give you an idea of &lt;br&gt;what your goals should be in the tournament, you should analyze &lt;br&gt;the following: &lt;br&gt;Jane has been a tight player for the first half an hour. She has taken &lt;br&gt;a few pots and folded most of her hands. Now the that limits are &lt;br&gt;up, the three other players have noticed Jane raise pre-flop nearly &lt;br&gt;half the hands she&amp;#39;s in. Knowing she&amp;#39;s a tight player, a few &lt;br&gt;hesitantly call her raises. It doesn&amp;rsquo;t slow her down. Most of the &lt;br&gt;time her opponents fold and Jane ends up taking down most of the &lt;br&gt;pots. Finally, Fred, another tight player, gets his pair of aces, and &lt;br&gt;when Jane pre-flop raises, Fred re-raises her immediately. Jane &lt;br&gt;folds and Fred takes the pot. The next hand, Jane comes out and &lt;br&gt;aggressively pre-flop raises. Fred, not believing any of it, comes &lt;br&gt;back and re-raises. Jane re-raises him right back. Fred hesitates and &lt;br&gt;then folds his hand. &lt;br&gt;The moral of the story there is that you want to be Jane. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 166 &lt;br&gt;Sure, when you&amp;#39;re aggressive and in charge, at some point &lt;br&gt;someone will make a move against you, whether it be a raise, &lt;br&gt;check-raise, or they&amp;#39;re stealing back against you. Don&amp;#39;t be overly &lt;br&gt;aggressive and raise like a maniac on everything that comes your &lt;br&gt;way. You cannot simply raise your way out of every situation. Just &lt;br&gt;remember that while tight players can make moves against you, as &lt;br&gt;long as you can make more moves against them, you will win. &lt;br&gt;And when you are the aggressor, you WILL make more moves &lt;br&gt;against tight players. That&amp;#39;s because you always have more info &lt;br&gt;than your opponent. When they raise into you, you know they &lt;br&gt;have something. When you bet into them, they aren&amp;#39;t sure what &lt;br&gt;you have. Eventually, even they will trap themselves when you &lt;br&gt;DO have something and they bet a weaker kicker or pair into &lt;br&gt;yours and you can come right back at them. &lt;br&gt;I know someone out there is saying: Yeah, this is great and all, but &lt;br&gt;what about when the tight player is on to you and just re-raises &lt;br&gt;everything you have? I can almost guarantee you that it does not &lt;br&gt;happen at the lower levels. Once it has become a mental game, &lt;br&gt;poor/average players are no longer thinking very logically, but &lt;br&gt;with emotions. They will be scared and in most cases do not have &lt;br&gt;the courage to stand up and duke it with you on garbage. If they &lt;br&gt;do indeed just go on tilt and hit bet/raise for every hand they have, &lt;br&gt;you just need to take a deep breath and play right back at them. &lt;br&gt;Re-raise strong hands pre-flop, call with weak hands. Re-raise &lt;br&gt;pairs aggressively, call with A/K high, fold low high cards. &lt;br&gt;Make more money when you win. Lose less money when you &lt;br&gt;lose. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 167 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Poker Hand Number of Combinations Probability &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 168 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;HOW TO PICK AN ONLINE CASINO &lt;br&gt;AND A BREIF HISTORY OF &lt;br&gt;ONLINE POKER &lt;br&gt;Online gambling is increasing at a staggering rate worldwide. &lt;br&gt;Total revenues for online gambling worldwide in 2003 were an &lt;br&gt;estimated $5 Billion &amp;ndash; over 4.3% of all worldwide ecommerce. &lt;br&gt;The world&amp;#39;s first virtual online casino, Internet Casinos, Inc. &lt;br&gt;commenced operation on August 18, 1995 with 18 different casino &lt;br&gt;games and is now publicly traded on NASDAQ. Most of these &lt;br&gt;online gambling companies are located outside of the U.S. to avoid &lt;br&gt;government prosecution. ICI operates out of the Turks and &lt;br&gt;Cayucos Islands and WagerNet is based in Belize. Site users can &lt;br&gt;either send cash through one of the companies offering secure &lt;br&gt;payment systems for the Internet or open an offshore account, a &lt;br&gt;requirement for Americans to use ICI&amp;#39;s site. A number of foreign &lt;br&gt;governments have entered the business of online casinos holding &lt;br&gt;their sites out to people worldwide. For instance, the government &lt;br&gt;of Liechtenstein is operating an online international lottery in six &lt;br&gt;different languages, including Chinese. According to Rolling Good &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 169 &lt;br&gt;Times Online gambling magazine, there are over 1300 gambling-&lt;br&gt;related sites on the net and more are up and running every day. &lt;br&gt;The economics of the industry are amazing. While it may cost up &lt;br&gt;to $300 million to build a new bricks and mortar resort casino, &lt;br&gt;most virtual casinos can be developed for between $1-2 million &lt;br&gt;and will employ only 10 &amp;ndash; 20 people as opposed to thousands for a &lt;br&gt;traditional casino. The industry averages about a twenty-five (25%) &lt;br&gt;profit margin, versus the typical U.S. casino, which ranges between &lt;br&gt;eight percent (8%) to sixteen (16%) of each dollar wagered. &lt;br&gt;Interactive Gaming &amp;amp; Communications International handled $48 &lt;br&gt;million dollars in its first year of operations and has made a &lt;br&gt;staggering profit ever since. &lt;br&gt;In sum, an estimated twenty million people are currently on line &lt;br&gt;with a projected 160 million online by the year 2020. The major &lt;br&gt;online casinos register over 7,000,000 visits per month. &lt;br&gt;According to surveys conducted by the US government, the &lt;br&gt;majority of gamblers, 83%, play online, however, only a third of &lt;br&gt;that group plays for real money. In other words, the major &lt;br&gt;attraction for online players are casinos that offer free games. In &lt;br&gt;all, 28% of those who gamble do so online for real money. &lt;br&gt;According to a recent study 73% percent of those who play for real &lt;br&gt;money both online and offline lost money in the past month, while &lt;br&gt;80% of land-based-only players lost money. Online gamblers, &lt;br&gt;however, lose more money per game. Those who gamble for real &lt;br&gt;money both online and offline lost in the past month more than &lt;br&gt;double what those who gamble exclusively off line lost. Further, &lt;br&gt;there are more than four-times more high rollers (percentage wise) &lt;br&gt;among the online players than there are among land-based-only &lt;br&gt;players. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 170 &lt;br&gt;If you&amp;rsquo;re wondering how safe your money is at an online casino, &lt;br&gt;there are a number of things to consider. Over the past few years &lt;br&gt;there have been a number of cases of winners at online poker &lt;br&gt;casinos being denied payment. Remember, as online gambling is &lt;br&gt;not allowed in the U.S., you have no legal recourse to recover &lt;br&gt;funds. Our advice is to stay with well-established online casinos &lt;br&gt;with an extensive track record and a reputation for paying out &lt;br&gt;winners. We list ten of the largest, best known in this section. All &lt;br&gt;have excellent track records, use well-established software to &lt;br&gt;deliver the gaming experience and offer a wide range of tables to &lt;br&gt;select from. &lt;br&gt;You will be tempted sometimes by very generous offers of large &lt;br&gt;player bonuses from online casinos you&amp;rsquo;ve never heard of. Think &lt;br&gt;about it &amp;ndash; if you started a new casino in a very crowded market, &lt;br&gt;how would you get the attention of potential new players? Our &lt;br&gt;suggestion is to avoid these casinos. What good would it do to win &lt;br&gt;$10,000 and then find you can never claim the money? There are &lt;br&gt;numerous &amp;lsquo;systems&amp;rsquo; being promoted that suggest you can use &lt;br&gt;these bonuses to multiply your winnings &amp;ndash; even play for free. &lt;br&gt;That&amp;rsquo;s nonsense. Bonuses, if they are based on the number of &lt;br&gt;hands, will be returned to the house through the rake. Pick your &lt;br&gt;casino based on play quality and the volume of table options. &lt;br&gt;That&amp;rsquo;s the real key to winning. &lt;br&gt;I often get questions about how fair certain casinos are. One author &lt;br&gt;has written a book claiming that there are dealing errors in one &lt;br&gt;large casino that give players in the know a decided advantage. &lt;br&gt;This writer does not understand the technology behind the card &lt;br&gt;dealing process at reputable online casinos. Electronic games of all &lt;br&gt;types use random number generator (RNG) software algorithm to &lt;br&gt;determine card outcome, the RNG algorithm is called into play &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 171 &lt;br&gt;hundreds of times per second. The RNG has approximately &lt;br&gt;16,000,000,000,000,000,000 possible outcomes and, depending of &lt;br&gt;course on the type of game, there will be billions and billions of &lt;br&gt;outcomes that map into any set of cards. This ensures that all game &lt;br&gt;outcomes are completely random. There are no &amp;lsquo;hiccups&amp;rsquo; in the &lt;br&gt;process you can use to beat the virtual dealer. The science of &lt;br&gt;random number generation is well established and impossible to &lt;br&gt;beat. &lt;br&gt;Here are a number of factors you can use to choose the best online &lt;br&gt;poker room. &lt;br&gt;Security and Privacy &lt;br&gt;You want as much reassurance that your credit info is safe, your &lt;br&gt;identity and contact info won&amp;#39;t be sold and that game conditions &lt;br&gt;are as safe and as fair as possible (e.g. that the software isn&amp;#39;t &lt;br&gt;vulnerable to manipulation; players aren&amp;#39;t colluding because a &lt;br&gt;system of checks is in place; etc.). Secure servers are a necessity. &lt;br&gt;Sites should elaborate on the encryption system that they use. All &lt;br&gt;good sites should address the above issues to your satisfaction. Do &lt;br&gt;they discuss issues like their card-shuffling algorithm? Also, what &lt;br&gt;kind of RNG (random number generator) do they use? The best &lt;br&gt;ones increase the level of unpredictability in the cards being &lt;br&gt;played. What other safeguards do they have in place to prevent &lt;br&gt;game-rigging, collusion, hacker intrusions, etc.? You should &lt;br&gt;always read a site&amp;#39;s privacy policy, including the small print. &lt;br&gt;Action &lt;br&gt;How many players log on to the games? Can you get action in the &lt;br&gt;poker game of your choice anytime, day or night? Do they have &lt;br&gt;diverse offerings with enough players to keep tables full? The &lt;br&gt;larger the pool, the more action you&amp;#39;ll see in both game play and &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 172 &lt;br&gt;cash winnings. We visit the sites at different times to see what the &lt;br&gt;overall action is like as well as the variety of players in all games &lt;br&gt;offered. &lt;br&gt;Gameplay &lt;br&gt;If your money and personal info are secure but the ease of game &lt;br&gt;play and visuals suck, then chances are you&amp;#39;re not going to come &lt;br&gt;back. We look at the variety of poker games offered and keep a &lt;br&gt;close eye on how well a site creates a good poker environment. How easy is it to play? Converse with other players (or mute &lt;br&gt;them, if you wish)? Are the graphics and sounds fun? Interesting? &lt;br&gt;Can I play even if my system doesn&amp;#39;t support the absolutely latest &lt;br&gt;graphics, etc.? Is all the information needed to play easy-to-access &lt;br&gt;and clearly stated? Some sites definitely have more appealing &lt;br&gt;gameplay than others. &lt;br&gt;Connectivity &lt;br&gt;How often does the game crash due to server issues at the online &lt;br&gt;poker room&amp;#39;s end? How bad are the delays in transfer of info? &lt;br&gt;What about disconnection&amp;#39;s? Are they repeated? Anything that &lt;br&gt;disrupts game play on a regular basis is going to be an annoyance &lt;br&gt;and a major problem (at the worst if the stakes are high and you&amp;#39;re &lt;br&gt;on a streak). We realize problems can occur at the player&amp;#39;s end &lt;br&gt;(with their computer and their particular ISP) but there&amp;#39;s no &lt;br&gt;denying some sites are more reliable and offer less &amp;quot;downtime&amp;quot;&lt;br&gt; and other such irritations than others. &lt;br&gt;Cashouts &lt;br&gt;How much money have players won at their poker games? How &lt;br&gt;easy is it to cash out your winnings? Do they credit your credit &lt;br&gt;card? What charges are applied? How long does it take to receive &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 173 &lt;br&gt;winnings? You shouldn&amp;#39;t have to be a rocket scientist to figure out &lt;br&gt;how to cash out what you&amp;#39;ve won and whether extra charges, &lt;br&gt;delays, etc. are worth it. Or have the patience of a saint. And we &lt;br&gt;like features such as e-mail confirmations of the withdrawal &lt;br&gt;transactions verifying request, dates, and amounts. &lt;br&gt;Free Play &lt;br&gt;Testing out poker game play, environment, percentage, etc. helps &lt;br&gt;to familiarize yourself with what to do in the event of server &lt;br&gt;crashes, how well you&amp;#39;ve understood the written rules of play at &lt;br&gt;the particular online poker room, and the mixed quality of other &lt;br&gt;players you may encounter. &lt;br&gt;This is an important feature of any good poker site &amp;ndash; playing &lt;br&gt;first for free -although we recognize that people play very &lt;br&gt;differently when they&amp;#39;ve got real money on the line. &lt;br&gt;Some sites make it easier than others to identify how to get in on &lt;br&gt;the free play action without submitting heaps of personal &lt;br&gt;information in advance. &lt;br&gt;Other Features &lt;br&gt;Some sites will let you choose a character image which becomes &lt;br&gt;identified with you. Others will track your game play statistics for &lt;br&gt;you. Some provide no charges for certain kinds of cash outs. Some &lt;br&gt;track the top players. Some allow you to beta-test new games or &lt;br&gt;poker tournaments in development. Others offer good poker &lt;br&gt;resources in terms of celebrity columns, advice, links, etc. We like &lt;br&gt;both access to quality information that&amp;#39;s useful to us in playing &lt;br&gt;poker as well as convenience. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 174 &lt;br&gt;Online casinos offer players bonus incentives to come play at their &lt;br&gt;casinos. These are know as casino bonuses, casino promotion, free &lt;br&gt;chip offers, and although there are several other terms used to &lt;br&gt;describe the free money given to players by the casinos the bottom &lt;br&gt;line is that it&amp;#39;s free money. Outlined below are a few descriptions &lt;br&gt;of the different types of bonuses offered by online casinos. &lt;br&gt;No Deposit Casino Bonuses &lt;br&gt;This type of bonus is offered to players just for trying and &lt;br&gt;downloading and trying the casinos software out. In general this &lt;br&gt;type of casino bonus is in the range of $10 and $22. &lt;br&gt;Online Casino Match Bonuses &lt;br&gt;With a casino match bonus the casino gives players additional cash &lt;br&gt;to play at the casino upon making a first deposit. If a player &lt;br&gt;deposits $50 in a 100% match bonus situation the player would get &lt;br&gt;an additional $50 to play with at the casino. &lt;br&gt;Alternative Banking Bonuses &lt;br&gt;Since online gambling transactions made by players may &lt;br&gt;encounter some rejections by credit card companies many casinos &lt;br&gt;have resorted to alternative payment solutions. These include &lt;br&gt;NETeller, FirePay, PrePaidATM and others. Some casinos offer &lt;br&gt;players additional bonuses on top of their existing no deposit &lt;br&gt;bonuses and match bonuses for deposits made through these &lt;br&gt;alternative-banking methods. &lt;br&gt;PokiBot Poker &lt;br&gt;There are no money games at this site, only free Texas Hold&amp;#39;em &lt;br&gt;Poker. There&amp;#39;s no download, just sign in and play. You&amp;#39;ll play &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 175 &lt;br&gt;Hold&amp;#39;em poker with artificially intelligent programs -robots that &lt;br&gt;learn. The robots are tough players. Your icon will be a fish. You &lt;br&gt;owe it to yourself to spend some time playing these bots. It&amp;#39;s a very &lt;br&gt;interesting game of Texas Hold&amp;#39;em Poker. You can learn a lot from &lt;br&gt;a bot. &lt;br&gt;The websites listed here invite players to try their poker games &lt;br&gt;absolutely free. If you want to play poker online for money, you &lt;br&gt;should be sure it is legal to do so from your location. &lt;br&gt;Take advantage of the free poker at these sites and practice, &lt;br&gt;practice, practice! &lt;br&gt;The Betting Rules for Pot-Limit Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em &lt;br&gt;Minimum eligible raise: The raise amount must be at least as &lt;br&gt;much as the previous bet or raise in the same round. As an &lt;br&gt;example, if the first player to act bets $100 then the second player &lt;br&gt;must raise a minimum of $100 (total bet of $200). &lt;br&gt;Maximum eligible raise: The size of the pot: The size of the pot is &lt;br&gt;defined as the total of the active Pot (which can be either the main &lt;br&gt;pot or the side pot depending on whether anyone has gone &amp;ldquo;allin&amp;rdquo;) plus all bets on the table plus the amount the active player &lt;br&gt;must first call before raising. &lt;br&gt;As an example, if the active pot is $200 and the first player to act in &lt;br&gt;the round bets $150 and the next player calls $150, the third player &lt;br&gt;has a maximum eligible total bet of $800. The $800 total is made up &lt;br&gt;of the $150 call and $650 raise. &lt;br&gt;The $650 max raise portion is equal to the pot of $200 + first &lt;br&gt;player&amp;#39;s $150 + second player&amp;#39;s $150 + his own call of $150. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 176 &lt;br&gt;Pot-Limit and No-Limit Games will be raked according to the &lt;br&gt;chart below: &lt;br&gt;WHICH CASINO DO YOU TRUST? &lt;br&gt;You can&amp;rsquo;t go wrong if you select a poker site that has been in &lt;br&gt;business for several years, uses established and accredited gaming &lt;br&gt;software interfaces and has a record of paying big winners in a &lt;br&gt;timely manner. We are not affiliated with any casino or group of &lt;br&gt;casinos but being objective can be difficult. There are thousands of &lt;br&gt;casinos with mew ones opening every day. Great player interfaces &lt;br&gt;are a real attraction for players but in the end, if the casino doesn&amp;rsquo;t &lt;br&gt;offer a multitude of tables and traffic and doesn&amp;rsquo;t pay off bets &lt;br&gt;quickly, what&amp;rsquo;s the point? &lt;br&gt;Here is a list of casinos that have been in business for several &lt;br&gt;years and are recognized widely as being fair and professional. &lt;br&gt;Party Poker &lt;br&gt;Party Poker is now the world&amp;rsquo;s largest online poker room. We have &lt;br&gt;seen over 40,000 players online playing recently and the number is &lt;br&gt;growing every day. The daily average of real money players is &lt;br&gt;around 10,000. Party is presented by the same people that brought &lt;br&gt;you CardPlayer Cruises, including Mike Sexton. They have a big &lt;br&gt;multi-table tournament every year called the Party Poker Million. &lt;br&gt;The rake at this site is stock standard -5 per cent capped at $3 for &lt;br&gt;medium limit games. For lower limit games, a max of $1 for $1/$2 &lt;br&gt;games and 50 cents for $0.5/$1 games is taken out of the pot. On &lt;br&gt;high limit games Party Poker offers good value with significantly &lt;br&gt;less than 5 per cent taken out of each pot. One feature missing that &lt;br&gt;we would like to see is the % pre-flop. The site does present the &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 177 &lt;br&gt;average pot for the last 20 hands. The Customer Service at this site &lt;br&gt;is first class and very professional. &lt;br&gt;Paradise Poker &lt;br&gt;Billed accurately as the &amp;quot;World&amp;#39;s Premier Online Card room&amp;quot;, &lt;br&gt;Paradise offers the standard variety of games, including several &lt;br&gt;tournaments. The site features lots of action every day of the week. &lt;br&gt;Paradise has an excellent game interface with little extras that &lt;br&gt;make things interesting. If you are concerned about security &lt;br&gt;and credibility, Paradise posts card-shuffling reviews by Pricewaterhouse Coopers (the world&amp;#39;s largest professional services &lt;br&gt;firm) on their site. &lt;br&gt;Ultimate Bet &lt;br&gt;UltimateBet features up to 7500 players playing during peak times, &lt;br&gt;about 4000 structured games. Percentage pre-flop&amp;rsquo;s can be found &lt;br&gt;above 45% on regular occasions, which leads to good average pots. &lt;br&gt;The games at Ultimate Bet can be quite profitable to the skilled &lt;br&gt;player, particularly in games with $2/$5 and $1/$3 limits. Ultimate &lt;br&gt;Bet has the backing of a number of big players including: Phil &lt;br&gt;Hellmuth, Annie Duke, and Russ Hamilton. &lt;br&gt;Planet Poker &lt;br&gt;Planet Poker is one of the oldest online poker establishments &lt;br&gt;(1998) and is endorsed by Mike Caro, a leading poker &lt;br&gt;authority. Planet Poker is a medium to large poker site in terms of &lt;br&gt;traffic (he site can have up to 500 people online at peak times). &lt;br&gt;There is never trouble getting a game in your limit in Hold&amp;#39;em. The &lt;br&gt;rake is 5% capped at $3, but the actual rake taken for various limits &lt;br&gt;and pots sizes varies due to rounding but is quite fair. Recent &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 178 &lt;br&gt;software upgrades have made Planet Poker software much faster, &lt;br&gt;more reliable and more pleasant to the eye than it use to be. &lt;br&gt;Jackpot Palace Casino &lt;br&gt;Jackpot Palace Casino uses software designed by Boss Media, the &lt;br&gt;leading Internet casino software developer and provider. Boss &lt;br&gt;Media started in spring 1997, since then the company has grown &lt;br&gt;considerably, and by the end of 2003, the Group had just over 120 &lt;br&gt;employees. The company&amp;#39;s head office is in V&amp;auml;xj&amp;ouml;, in southern &lt;br&gt;Sweden. &lt;br&gt;InterCasino Poker &lt;br&gt;InterCasino has been operating since 1996 and has been voted Best &lt;br&gt;Online Casino 2001 and 2002 by Top20 Casinos and Best Casino 2003. &lt;br&gt;by Gambling Online Magazine. InterCasino has some of the highest &lt;br&gt;limits on the net. Players can play real money games for $100/$200 &lt;br&gt;in any of the currencies. For the smaller limit players $1/$2 games &lt;br&gt;are the smallest that customers can play. &lt;br&gt;Rake percentages are tough to discern -about 25 cents on every $5 &lt;br&gt;until the pot reaches $60, which is not particularly attractive. The &lt;br&gt;site generally has from between 100 to 500 players playing and this &lt;br&gt;number is likely to grow as the site becomes better known. Game &lt;br&gt;play is excellent and the graphics are top-notch. This site is one of &lt;br&gt;the few sites that has voice options. Note: probably the fastest &lt;br&gt;games on the net. &lt;br&gt;OmniCasino &lt;br&gt;One of the best casinos on the net. Licensed since November, 1997 &lt;br&gt;in Curacao and audited by Pricewaterhouse. Gambling Online &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 179 &lt;br&gt;magazine voted OmniCasino as Top Casino 2003 Honorable Mention &lt;br&gt;and &amp;quot;Best Rewards&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Quickest Payouts&amp;quot; three years in a row from &lt;br&gt;2001-2--3. They also won Casino Player Magazine&amp;#39;s &amp;quot;Best Payout / &lt;br&gt;E-Cash Program&amp;quot; by readers themselves. One of the best features of &lt;br&gt;Omni Casino is their COMP Program -undeniably the best COMP &lt;br&gt;Program in the business. It was voted &amp;quot;Best Rewards Program&amp;quot; for &lt;br&gt;2003 by the readers of Gambling Online Magazine. &lt;br&gt;Poker Room &lt;br&gt;Poker Room.com is one of the few sites that doesn&amp;rsquo;t require you to &lt;br&gt;download their software. They use JAVA technology so you can &lt;br&gt;get playing right away. The software runs very smoothly although &lt;br&gt;JAVA style software does not have the gloss of its downloadable &lt;br&gt;counterpart. Extra features that Poker Room offer include expected &lt;br&gt;value statistics, whereby you can type in a starting hand and the &lt;br&gt;software calculates the historical expected value of that hand over &lt;br&gt;6 million real time playing hands. The top 50 all time winners are &lt;br&gt;given at the web site so you can avoid getting in a game with these &lt;br&gt;players. Percentage pre-flop games of above 40% are easy to find. &lt;br&gt;The site can have upwards 100 to 800 real money players online. &lt;br&gt;Tends to have many loose games. &lt;br&gt;Empire Poker &lt;br&gt;Another feature that is missing from this site is the % pre-flop. &lt;br&gt;However, the site does present the average pot for the last 20 &lt;br&gt;hands, which is useful. Typically the games are first class here, &lt;br&gt;with juicy average pots for all limits. For example it is common to &lt;br&gt;see average pots for $3/$6 games over $40 and for $5/10 games &lt;br&gt;over $70. The Customer Service at this site is first class and very &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 180 &lt;br&gt;POCKET CARD WINNING ODDS &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 181 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 182 &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;How To Think Like A &lt;br&gt;Winning Poker Player &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;S ocrates once said that the unexamined life is not worth &lt;br&gt;living. So let&amp;rsquo;s give some thought and examination to how &lt;br&gt;we as card players process information and respond to &lt;br&gt;decision-making pressures. These are important areas to consider &lt;br&gt;as we work to improve our poker success &amp;ndash; and be more successful &lt;br&gt;in life generally. &lt;br&gt;There is a science around the study of body language and human &lt;br&gt;communication called Neuro-Lingusitic Programming (NLP). NLP &lt;br&gt;is both an interesting and valuable area of study to understand. &lt;br&gt;What NLP has shown is that if we can &amp;lsquo;mirror&amp;rsquo; another person who &lt;br&gt;has achieved success in a certain area, we can dramatically speed &lt;br&gt;up our ability to learn the same skills. In a nutshell, if we act &lt;br&gt;exactly like a successful poker player, move, sit, walk, talk, learn to &lt;br&gt;adopt the same thinking styles &amp;ndash; we can leap ahead in learning. A &lt;br&gt;pro may have spent 20 years learning the secrets of the game but &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 183 &lt;br&gt;by mirroring their behavior and thought, we can learn to &amp;lsquo;become&amp;rsquo; &lt;br&gt;a pro in a much shorter period of time. &lt;br&gt;Now you&amp;rsquo;re probably pretty skeptical of this whole approach and I &lt;br&gt;don&amp;rsquo;t blame you. You&amp;rsquo;ve been taught in school that you need to &lt;br&gt;study for years and slowly work your way towards expertise to &lt;br&gt;gain what we would call &amp;lsquo;expert knowledge&amp;rsquo;. But if you saw the &lt;br&gt;examples of this process at work, as I have over the years, you &lt;br&gt;would have a whole new understanding of how to propel your &lt;br&gt;abilities to an amazing new level in a matter of days. &lt;br&gt;For the sake of this chapter, I am going to keep this simple. There &lt;br&gt;are dozens of books written on NLP and we are not going to be &lt;br&gt;able to cover all of that ground here. Let&amp;rsquo;s just take a quick look at &lt;br&gt;how great poker players think and try to understand how to be &lt;br&gt;more like them. &lt;br&gt;Pros step into the poker game with confidence. They have such a &lt;br&gt;wealth of playing experience that they can make tough betting &lt;br&gt;decisions in a very timely manner. That means that they give the &lt;br&gt;odds proper consideration, keep appraised of the other players, &lt;br&gt;and make their play. This is the persona you need to adopt when &lt;br&gt;you play. &lt;br&gt;To be a shark you need to act the part. &lt;br&gt;Sit up straight like a professional. Clean the area around your &lt;br&gt;computer desk and stay organized. Prepare. Have any note taking &lt;br&gt;material handy. Plan your game play on a tight schedule. Start at a &lt;br&gt;precise time; review the casinos and tables for a pre-determined &lt;br&gt;period of time before you play. Be observant. Start play when you &lt;br&gt;are certain you have the right table in your sites. Watch the other &lt;br&gt;players carefully and make notes. Never be sloppy about your &lt;br&gt;playing time. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 184 &lt;br&gt;Remember, you are a shark, play at the pace of a shark. You scull &lt;br&gt;through the water, your eyes alert. You make thoughtful and &lt;br&gt;purposeful moves. You appraise your environment. Occasionally, &lt;br&gt;when the time is right and your prey is unprepared, you strike &lt;br&gt;aggressively and purposefully. You raise and re-raise. You push &lt;br&gt;out weaker players. You gain respect from all of those around you. &lt;br&gt;Your opponents know only one thing about you &amp;ndash; that you have a &lt;br&gt;significant stack in front of you and you seem to know everyone&amp;rsquo;s &lt;br&gt;cards before they are shown. &lt;br&gt;You are never rattled even by a string of bad beats. They mean &lt;br&gt;nothing in the big picture to you. You play to win over the long &lt;br&gt;haul. Small bad breaks have no consequence for you. If you &lt;br&gt;become tired or you&amp;rsquo;re just not happy with the table, you leave. &lt;br&gt;And then after exactly one hour, you finish playing regardless of &lt;br&gt;your status and take a break. You then carefully polish your notes &lt;br&gt;regarding how you played and what you have learned &amp;ndash; and &lt;br&gt;record your wins and losses. That&amp;rsquo;s one of your secret weapons. &lt;br&gt;You must keep detailed financial records. A business cannot be &lt;br&gt;successful without detailed financials and neither can you. You &lt;br&gt;must know exactly how much you have won or loss every time &lt;br&gt;you play. Be precise. If you won $102.50, then make that your &lt;br&gt;answer if anyone asks. Or maybe you lost $45.75. Get in the habit &lt;br&gt;of being exacting. That&amp;rsquo;s the key to tight play. &lt;br&gt;I started playing weekly Poker games with a group of friends &lt;br&gt;about 10 years ago. I always enjoyed poker but never had the &lt;br&gt;opportunity to play more than a few times a year. I enjoyed the &lt;br&gt;group we played with, the food was good and it was great &lt;br&gt;entertainment for the price. When I lost I always justified the &lt;br&gt;money as part of the entertainment cost. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 185 &lt;br&gt;I was a typical weekend poker player. I had a few drinks, never &lt;br&gt;really studied the rules in too much detail &amp;ndash; and was never too &lt;br&gt;worried about the losses. What was $50 or $100 among friends? &lt;br&gt;Of course I never knew exactly how well I did although I had a &lt;br&gt;sense that I was losing more than most of the other players. I wrote &lt;br&gt;this off to the superior playing ability of a few of the other guys. &lt;br&gt;Then I read an article one day about gamblers. The study showed &lt;br&gt;that weekend players always remembered and talked about their &lt;br&gt;winnings -but rarely focused or discussed when they lost. &lt;br&gt;I always had a sense that was true. But why? &lt;br&gt;It&amp;rsquo;s called selective reasoning. Your brain is focusing on a few &lt;br&gt;positive experiences, which reinforces continued playing. And &lt;br&gt;blanks out on the negatives. Not a very reasonable approach to &lt;br&gt;real learning. &lt;br&gt;That&amp;rsquo;s why they say that &amp;lsquo;people who keep track, stay on the &lt;br&gt;track&amp;rsquo;. &lt;br&gt;People who track their expenses in detail typically spend less &lt;br&gt;money and save more. &lt;br&gt;People who track their winnings and losses on the stock market in &lt;br&gt;detail on a daily basis make more intelligent decisions and end &lt;br&gt;their trading days and months with bigger wins. &lt;br&gt;People who track calories and fat while on a diet lose more weight. &lt;br&gt;The more detailed the tracking, the greater the success of the diet. &lt;br&gt;How successful do you want to be at cards? If you want to make &lt;br&gt;money then start tracking your efforts, your wins, your losses. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 186 &lt;br&gt;Pros know exactly how much they won at a given table &amp;ndash; and they &lt;br&gt;know exactly how much they lost. &lt;br&gt;A sign of a pro? How much did you win on Wednesday night, you &lt;br&gt;ask? $128. Not over a hundred. Or about a hundred. They know to &lt;br&gt;the penny. Same if they lose. They will tell you they were up $545 &lt;br&gt;but finished up the night down $62. &lt;br&gt;You need to sound like a Pro to be a pro. &lt;br&gt;What does a Pro look like, sound like, talk like, play like? &lt;br&gt;A Pro plays the game with intention. They focus. They don&amp;rsquo;t play &lt;br&gt;Poker online while watching TV or eating or having a &lt;br&gt;conversation. &lt;br&gt;A Pro talks about the game with clarity. Knows exactly what you &lt;br&gt;won or lost &amp;ndash; or says nothing at all. Lack of clarity is a very bad &lt;br&gt;habit for success in anything. Sloppy language means a sloppy &lt;br&gt;approach. It&amp;rsquo;s not cool to be sloppy about technique or practice in &lt;br&gt;any field of endeavour. &lt;br&gt;A Pro takes notes during play and spends time following the game &lt;br&gt;to evaluate mistakes, to understand the game better, the review &lt;br&gt;what they have learned. Take clear and concise and useable notes. &lt;br&gt;A Pro studies the game, knows all the odds and the rules. They &lt;br&gt;practice using Poker software simulations. They play the game &lt;br&gt;with intention. And the review their play following the game by &lt;br&gt;keeping detailed notes on wins, losses, and the things they&amp;rsquo;ve &lt;br&gt;learned. &lt;br&gt;What&amp;rsquo;s the secret to being a great golfer? Study, practice, play, &lt;br&gt;evaluate. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 187 &lt;br&gt;What&amp;rsquo;s the secret to being a great musician? Study, practice, and &lt;br&gt;play. Evaluate. &lt;br&gt;What&amp;rsquo;s the secret to being a successful day trader? Study, practice, &lt;br&gt;play the market, evaluate. &lt;br&gt;See a pattern here? &lt;br&gt;Why does this process work? &lt;br&gt;I met a Sales person years ago that was one of the best in the &lt;br&gt;business. I spent the day with her to see how she worked. &lt;br&gt;First, she spent half an hour preparing to meet the customer. Most &lt;br&gt;sales people &amp;ndash; no, all the sale people I had ever known -just &lt;br&gt;grabbed their sales kit and charged in. Then she practiced her &lt;br&gt;presentation on one of her staff. Most people thought she was a &lt;br&gt;little unbalanced. Practice your presentation before hand? &lt;br&gt;Then she went in and met with the customer. &lt;br&gt;Finally, when we got back in the car, instead of driving off to &lt;br&gt;lunch, she thought about the meeting and made notes regarding &lt;br&gt;what she could have done better. &lt;br&gt;She was coaching herself. Think about it. She was doing what you &lt;br&gt;would hire a coach to do. &lt;br&gt;Why do most people need executive coaches, mentors, managers &lt;br&gt;and trainers? Because it increases their productivity. It&amp;rsquo;s a proven &lt;br&gt;technique. We have hundreds of years of data on this subject. &lt;br&gt;So Coach Yourself. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 188 &lt;br&gt;If you want to do something well, then be your own coach. &lt;br&gt;Do you see the value of this kind of thinking? It puts you in &amp;lsquo;the &lt;br&gt;zone&amp;rsquo;. Poker is a game of mental toughness. There are a hundred &lt;br&gt;factors that can come into play to rattle you, make you mad, take &lt;br&gt;away your confidence, push you to tilt. Pros don&amp;rsquo;t tilt. They are &lt;br&gt;above the concerns of each hand. Focusing on how you want to &lt;br&gt;play the game for a few minutes before each game can help to &lt;br&gt;improve your game significantly. Athletes use this process every &lt;br&gt;day to visualize their event, their performance and the end result. &lt;br&gt;They are not &amp;lsquo;wishing&amp;rsquo; their way to a great performance, they are &lt;br&gt;simply preparing their body and their mind to perform at peak &lt;br&gt;efficiency in exactly the way they have seen the best results. &lt;br&gt;Before a game close your eyes for a few minutes and relax. Breathe &lt;br&gt;deeply and slowly three times. Visualize your stack and the table. &lt;br&gt;See yourself acting calmly, intentionally. See the cards in front of &lt;br&gt;you. See yourself dealt a nut hand. Stay calm. Breathe deep again. &lt;br&gt;Play at the same pace you would if the cards were garbage. Keep &lt;br&gt;an even pace of play. &lt;br&gt;A great example of the opposite of positive visualization is the &lt;br&gt;kind of thinking we often see in players at bricks and mortar &lt;br&gt;gambling casinos. I spoke to one manager in a casino who said &lt;br&gt;most players said the same thing about their plans for playing. &amp;quot;I &lt;br&gt;brought $100 to lose, and that&amp;rsquo;s when I&amp;lsquo;ll quit.&amp;quot; He said he rarely &lt;br&gt;heard, &amp;quot;I&amp;rsquo;ve brought $100 dollars and I&amp;rsquo;m going to win.&amp;quot; &lt;br&gt;You are casino fodder before you ever get started with that &lt;br&gt;losing approach. If you surrender to the card gods even before &lt;br&gt;you start to play, your playing style will be affected and you will &lt;br&gt;have the outcome you prepared your brain for. To lose. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 189 &lt;br&gt;Prepare yourself to win. Visualize your success at the table. This &lt;br&gt;means more than just winning because sometimes the cards won&amp;rsquo;t &lt;br&gt;co-operate. That&amp;rsquo;s not important though because you are seeing &lt;br&gt;the big picture. You&amp;rsquo;re improving everyday. Your game is getting &lt;br&gt;better by the hour and you are winning more often. You are &lt;br&gt;definitely feeling more confident at the table as well. &lt;br&gt;And you thought playing online Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em poker was fun &lt;br&gt;before? To quote Al Jolsen -You ain&amp;rsquo;t seen nothin&amp;rsquo; yet. &lt;br&gt;Theo Cage 2004&lt;br&gt;&amp;rdquo;Best of luck at the virtual poker tables.&amp;rdquo;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Theo Cage is a writer and entrepreneur who lives in Canada with &lt;br&gt;his wife and two daughters. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 190 &lt;br&gt;TEXAS HOLD&amp;rsquo;EM ONLINE POKER DICTIONARY &lt;br&gt;3-Bet -The first re-raise (putting 3 bets in). &lt;br&gt;Absolute Nuts -The best possible hand, based on the board cards. &lt;br&gt;Sometimes simply called &amp;lsquo;the nuts&amp;rsquo;. &lt;br&gt;Action -the amount of money wagered by a player during a playing &lt;br&gt;session. In poker, the placing of money into the pot. &lt;br&gt;Active -one who is still in the pot. &lt;br&gt;All Blue (or All Pink) -A flush. &lt;br&gt;All-In -To push all of your remaining chips into the pot. &lt;br&gt;Anchor -the player sitting in the last position at a poker table before the &lt;br&gt;dealer. This is the person who makes the final decision, thereby anchoring &lt;br&gt;the game. &lt;br&gt;Ante -a term usually used in poker to refer to the first money wagered on &lt;br&gt;a hand, or the minimum amount that each player is required to put into &lt;br&gt;the pot before a new hand can begin. &lt;br&gt;American Airlines -A pair of Aces. &lt;br&gt;Angling -Taking action or talking when it is not your turn in order to &lt;br&gt;mislead your opponent. Some consider this to be cheating, others consider &lt;br&gt;these tactics to be a part of the game. &lt;br&gt;Animal -Nickname for a player that is loose-aggressive. Animals are &lt;br&gt;involved in too many hands and will almost always bet and raise when &lt;br&gt;given the opportunity, often with garbage hands. Also known as a &lt;br&gt;maniac. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 191 &lt;br&gt;Baby -A low-ranked card (usually 2 through 5). &lt;br&gt;Back Into -To make a hand that is different than the hand you were &lt;br&gt;originally trying for. &lt;br&gt;Backdoor &amp;ndash; An unfinished hand that requires help from both the turn and &lt;br&gt;river in order to win. Also known as a runner-runner hand.&lt;br&gt;Backdoor Flushes: Even worse then the gutshot is the backdoor flush.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This is when you need two perfect cards of the same suit to complete&lt;br&gt;your hand.&lt;br&gt;Bad Beat -To have a hand that is the clear mathematical favourite lose to&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;a heavy underdog (especially if that hand should not have been involved&lt;br&gt;in the pot).&lt;br&gt;Bankroll -the total amount of money a player has for a gaming session.&lt;br&gt;BB -An abbreviation for Big Blind.&lt;br&gt;Belly Buster -A draw to fill an inside straight, aka a &amp;quot;gutshot&amp;quot;.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Bet &amp;ndash; a wager or gamble&lt;br&gt;Betting Limits -the minimum and maximum that can be wagered on one&lt;br&gt;bet.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Big Blind -The position two to the left of the button, who is forced to pay&lt;br&gt;a full small bet prior to the hole cards being dealt in Hold&amp;#39;em.&lt;br&gt;Big Chick -In Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em, an Ace and a Queen (suited or unsuited) as&lt;br&gt;your hole cards.&lt;br&gt;Big Slick -An opener of A-K suited&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 192 &lt;br&gt;Blind Bet -a bet that certain poker players are required to make as a result&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;of their betting position.&lt;br&gt;Bluff -in poker, players bluff when raising a weak hand in the hope of&lt;br&gt;driving out players with a stronger hand.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Bump -to raise&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Burn Card -any card placed in the discard rack without being entered&lt;br&gt;into play. After the deck is shuffled and cut, one card is burned.&lt;br&gt;B&amp;amp;M -Brick and Mortar; a real-life casino (as opposed to an online&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;casino).&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Big Slick -In Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em, an Ace and a King (suited or unsuited) as&lt;br&gt;your hole cards.&lt;br&gt;Blank -A card that appears useless. Also known as a rag.&lt;br&gt;Board -The community cards.&lt;br&gt;Boat -Full house.&lt;br&gt;Bonus Whoring -Belonging to several online poker sites and always&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;taking advantage of each deposit bonus offered. See&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;a class=&quot;external&quot; href=&quot;http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.comhttp://www.BonusWhores.com&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;www.BonusWhores.com&lt;/a&gt; for updated info.&lt;br&gt;Bounty -A reward given in a tournament to someone who meets certain&lt;br&gt;criteria. Some examples of these criteria from Zoo tournaments are:&lt;br&gt;knocking a certain person out of the tournament, winning with a certain&lt;br&gt;hand, and finishing the tournament is a certain position.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;BR -An abbreviation for bankroll. &lt;br&gt;Broadway -An ace-high straight. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 193 &lt;br&gt;Bubble -Finishing a tournament in the spot nearest the money. Example: &lt;br&gt;In a 60-person tournament, if the top 8 spots pay, finishing 9th would be &lt;br&gt;finishing on the &amp;quot;bubble&amp;quot;. &lt;br&gt;Bullets -A pair of Aces.&lt;br&gt;Bump It -To raise.&lt;br&gt;Bust Out -To lose your buy in.&lt;br&gt;Button -The disk that represents the dealer in a given hand.&lt;br&gt;Buy In -The amount of money that is necessary to play a particular game,&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;or the amount of money that you to play a game.&lt;br&gt;Buy the Button -Betting or raising in order to make any players between&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;you and the button fold. If successful, you are now last to act on any&lt;br&gt;subsequent rounds of betting.&lt;br&gt;Buy the Pot -To bluff bet or raise in order to win the pot.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Chips -tokens used at gaming tables in lieu of cash.&lt;br&gt;Chop -To return the blinds to the players who posted them and move on&lt;br&gt;to the next hand if nobody calls the blind.&lt;br&gt;Chopping the Blinds -When 2 players agree to take back their blind bets&lt;br&gt;if there is no action ahead of them. Note that once you agree to chop the&lt;br&gt;blinds with your neighbour, you are expected to always chop the blinds&lt;br&gt;with them.&lt;br&gt;Chum &amp;ndash; bait that is used to attract hungry sharks and send them into a&lt;br&gt;feeding frenzy. Don&amp;rsquo;t be chum.&lt;br&gt;Cold -a player on a losing streak.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 194 &lt;br&gt;Cold Call -To call more than one bet at a time. Note that this is not the &lt;br&gt;same as calling a bet, then calling a subsequent raise since you are calling &lt;br&gt;2 single bets. &lt;br&gt;Complete Hand -a poker hand that is defined by all five cards. That is a &lt;br&gt;straight, flush, straight flush, or a full house. &lt;br&gt;Cut -the dealer divides the deck of cards into two parts and then inverts &lt;br&gt;them after they have been shuffled. &lt;br&gt;Color Down -Exchanging chips for those of a lower denomination. &lt;br&gt;Color Up -Exchanging chips for those of a higher denomination. &lt;br&gt;Come Hand -A drawing hand. Example: An open-ended straight is a &lt;br&gt;come hand. &lt;br&gt;Complete the Bet -When the small blind chooses to call by putting in the &lt;br&gt;chips necessary &lt;br&gt;Connectors -Consecutive suited or unsuited cards that assist in making a &lt;br&gt;straight. . &lt;br&gt;Counterfeit -When your hand loses value because a board card &lt;br&gt;duplicates it or a board card gives others a similar hand. Example: You &lt;br&gt;hold A-4 and the board is A-7-4. You have 2-pair, which is now ahead of &lt;br&gt;A-K. The turn is a 7. Your hand has just been counterfeited, since your 2pair is no longer as valuable as it was prior to the turn. &lt;br&gt;Cowboys -A pair of Kings. &lt;br&gt;Cripple (an opponent -To win a critical hand in a tournament, leaving &lt;br&gt;your opponent very short-stacked. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 195 &lt;br&gt;Cripple the Deck -Your hand contains most or all of the beneficial cards &lt;br&gt;that could be used in conjunction with the board. &lt;br&gt;Crying Call -To call with no cards to come, while expecting to lose. &lt;br&gt;Cutoff -The person to the right of the button. &lt;br&gt;Dark -Taking action, such as checking or betting, without seeing your &lt;br&gt;hole cards. This is also used when the person who is first to act takes &lt;br&gt;action prior to the next board card being revealed. &lt;br&gt;Dead Money -Money that has been put in the pot by people who are no &lt;br&gt;longer in contention to win the pot. &lt;br&gt;Dealer -a casino employee who deals the various games.&lt;br&gt;Drop Box -on a gaming table, the box that serves as a repository for cash,&lt;br&gt;markers, and chips.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Dominated Hand -A hand that contains 3 or fewer outs against another &lt;br&gt;hand. Example: AK dominates AQ, since AQ needs one of the remaining 3 &lt;br&gt;Queens in the deck in order to beat AK. I believe this term is credited to &lt;br&gt;Abdul Jalib. &lt;br&gt;Double Up -In no-limit, winning a heads-up pot when you have gone all&lt;br&gt;in (thus, doubling your chip total).&lt;br&gt;Ducks -A pair of Twos.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Dump -To fold a hand.&lt;br&gt;Edge -the casino&amp;#39;s advantage over the player in any game. Also known as&lt;br&gt;house edge.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;EMP -An abbreviation for &amp;quot;Early Middle Position&amp;quot;.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 196 &lt;br&gt;EP -An abbreviation for &amp;quot;Early Position&amp;quot;.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;EP cold -Called UTG&amp;#39;s raise.&lt;br&gt;Face Cards -the king, queen or jack of each suite.&lt;br&gt;Family Pot -A pot in which many players are involved in the hand.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Fast -Used to describe playing a hand aggressively&lt;br&gt;Fish -A poor poker player, relative to their competition.&lt;br&gt;Flash -To show one or more of your cards, usually when it is not&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;required.&lt;br&gt;Flat Call -To call one or more bets without raising, when you are quite&lt;br&gt;sure that you have the best hand. See also smooth call.&lt;br&gt;Floor -Shortened form of &amp;ldquo;Floor Person&amp;rdquo;; a casino employee who helps to&lt;br&gt;seat players and makes rules decisions when a dispute arises.&lt;br&gt;Flush -a hand consisting of five cards of one suit.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Fold -when a player declines a bet and drops out of the hand.&lt;br&gt;Four Of A Kind -four cards of the same rank. Also known as quads.&lt;br&gt;Full House -a hand consisting of a three of a kind and a pair&lt;br&gt;Forced Bet -A mandatory bet.&lt;br&gt;FPS -&amp;ldquo;Fancy Play Syndrome&amp;rdquo;. Playing tricky when you probably should&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;have played straight-forward. [personal note: I think this should also &lt;br&gt;stand for &amp;ldquo;F#cking Poor Strategy&amp;rdquo;] &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 197 &lt;br&gt;Free Card Play -Betting or raising in late position on the flop in the hopes &lt;br&gt;that the other players will check to you on the turn, give you the option of &lt;br&gt;seeing the river card for free. &lt;br&gt;Free Ride -A round in which no one bets. &lt;br&gt;Free Roll -Having a lock on half the pot, but also having a chance to win &lt;br&gt;the whole pot. Example: Player X holds Ks-Qc, and player Y holds Kd-Qd &lt;br&gt;and the flop comes Kc-7d-4d. Both players are tied for the high hand, but &lt;br&gt;Player Y is free rolling because he could win the entire pot if a diamond &lt;br&gt;comes. &lt;br&gt;Freeze Out -tournament that only ends when one person has won all of &lt;br&gt;the tournament chips. &lt;br&gt;GrannyMae -nickname for having Qs5s as your hole cards. This is &lt;br&gt;credited to long-time 2+2 forum poster GrannyMae. &lt;br&gt;Gutshots: A gutshot is a straight draw where only one card makes your &lt;br&gt;hand. &lt;br&gt;Gutshot Straight &amp;ndash; A straight that requires an inside card to complete. &lt;br&gt;Also known as a Belly Buster. &lt;br&gt;Hand History -Records of games played at online sites that show all of &lt;br&gt;Hit -When the flop cards are helpful to your hand. &lt;br&gt;HL -An abbreviation for &amp;ldquo;High-limit&amp;rdquo;. &lt;br&gt;Hold Up -When a hand that is leading manages to win the pot at &lt;br&gt;showdown. &lt;br&gt;Hole -Your unique cards that are hidden from everyone else. Also known &lt;br&gt;as pocket. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 198 &lt;br&gt;Hooks -A pair of Jacks. &lt;br&gt;Image -The perception that other people have of your playing style. &lt;br&gt;Inside Straight -A straight that requires an inside card to complete, as &lt;br&gt;opposed to an open-ended straight. Also known as a belly buster or &lt;br&gt;gutshot. &lt;br&gt;Jam -Lots of action, especially raising. &lt;br&gt;Kicker -A card used as a tie-breaker when 2 hand are nearly identical. For &lt;br&gt;example, if 2 hands contain a pair of Tens, the hand that has the highest &lt;br&gt;card in addition to the pair of Tens would win. This card is called the &lt;br&gt;kicker. Thus, a pair of Tens with an Ace kicker beats a pair of Tens with a &lt;br&gt;Queen kicker. &lt;br&gt;Kill (or Kill Game) -A hand that is played for double-stakes based on the &lt;br&gt;previous hand meeting certain criteria. &lt;br&gt;Kill Button -A button that is placed in front of the player who is &lt;br&gt;responsible for a kill game. &lt;br&gt;Knuckle -To check (as in knocking on the table).&lt;br&gt;Kojak -Having a King and a Jack as your hole cards.&lt;br&gt;LAG -An abbreviation for Loose Aggressive.&lt;br&gt;Lay Down -To fold a hand.&lt;br&gt;Limp In-To enter the round by calling a bet, rather than raising.&lt;br&gt;Long Odds -A low probability of a certain thing happening.&lt;br&gt;Maverick -starting hand of Q-J.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 199 &lt;br&gt;Maniac -Nickname for a player that is loose-aggressive. Maniacs are &lt;br&gt;involved in too many hands and will almost always bet and raise when &lt;br&gt;given the opportunity, often with garbage hands. Also known as an &lt;br&gt;animal. &lt;br&gt;Marry -To become too attached to a hand, usually seeing a showdown &lt;br&gt;when it was clear that you should have folded earlier. &lt;br&gt;ML -An abbreviation for &amp;ldquo;Middle-limit&amp;rdquo;. &lt;br&gt;Monster -A superior hand that is unlikely to lose. &lt;br&gt;NL -An abbreviation for &amp;ldquo;No limit&amp;rdquo;. &lt;br&gt;Nut -The best possible type of hand, such as &amp;ldquo;nut flush&amp;rdquo; or &amp;ldquo;nut straight&amp;rdquo;; &lt;br&gt;this is not necessarily the absolute nuts. &lt;br&gt;Nuts -The best possible hand, based on the board cards. Sometimes called &lt;br&gt;the absolute nuts. &lt;br&gt;Offsuit -Cards that are not of the same suit.&lt;br&gt;Open Raise -Raising as the first one in the pot preflop (rather than simply&lt;br&gt;calling the bet).&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Option -The choice given to the player in the big blind, allowing them to&lt;br&gt;call or raise.&lt;br&gt;Orbit -One complete rotation around the table.&lt;br&gt;Outkicked -To lose to another hand with a better kicker than yours.&lt;br&gt;Outrun -To beat a hand that you were losing to on an earlier street.&lt;br&gt;Outs -Cards remaining in the deck that will help your hand win a pot.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 200 &lt;br&gt;Overcall -Calling a bet after at least one other person has already called.&lt;br&gt;Overcard -A pocket card that is higher than the highest board card.&lt;br&gt;Overpair -A pocket pair that is higher than the highest board card.&lt;br&gt;Paint -Another term for a face card.&lt;br&gt;Pass -to not bet, to fold.&lt;br&gt;Pay Off -To call a river bet when the prior action leads you to believe that&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;you are beat, but the pot is big enough to make the call reasonable.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Peel One Off -Deciding to see the turn or river when the odds don&amp;rsquo;t quite&lt;br&gt;justify a call.&lt;br&gt;PF -An abbreviation for &amp;ldquo;pre flop&amp;rdquo;.&lt;br&gt;Pocket -Your unique cards that are hidden from everyone else. Also&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;known as hole.&lt;br&gt;Pocket Rockets -Another term for 2 aces as your hole cards.&lt;br&gt;Pop -To bet or raise.&lt;br&gt;Post -To pay the blind(s) when not in the big blind position, often done&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;when first sitting at a table or when you sat out and missed your turn to &lt;br&gt;pay the blinds. &lt;br&gt;Poster -Someone who posted during the current hand. &lt;br&gt;Pot -the amount of money that accumulates in the middle of the table as &lt;br&gt;each player antes, bets, and raises. The pot goes to the winner of the hand. &lt;br&gt;Presto -Holding a pair of 5&amp;rsquo;s as your hole cards in Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 201 &lt;br&gt;Puck -button.&lt;br&gt;Push (a hand) -To play a hand aggressively.&lt;br&gt;Put -To suspect that someone has a certain hand.&lt;br&gt;Quads -Four of a kind.&lt;br&gt;Rag -A card that appears useless. Also known as a blank.&lt;br&gt;Ragged -A board containing cards that don&amp;rsquo;t appear helpful.&lt;br&gt;Railbird -Game observers. Railbirds should not comment on game play.&lt;br&gt;Rainbow -A board that contains all different suits, making it impossible&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;for a flush on the next card.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Raise -a player raises by matching the previous bet and then betting &lt;br&gt;more, to increase the stake for remaining players. &lt;br&gt;Rake -the money that the casino charges for each hand of poker. It is &lt;br&gt;usually a percentage (5-10%) or flat fee that is taken from the pot after &lt;br&gt;each round of betting. &lt;br&gt;Rainbow -Three of four cards of different suits &lt;br&gt;Rank -the worth of a set of cards. &lt;br&gt;Ring Game -A game that is played for actual stakes, as opposed to a &lt;br&gt;tournament game. Also known as a live game. &lt;br&gt;Rivered -Losing a hand on the river, while you were ahead and the clear &lt;br&gt;favorite on the turn. Can also be used to describe a hand being made &lt;br&gt;using the river card. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 202 &lt;br&gt;Rock -A tight player who is normally only involved in hands in which &lt;br&gt;he/she is the heavy favorite to win. A rock will generally only bet or raise &lt;br&gt;with top-notch hands. &lt;br&gt;Rock Garden -A game comprised of many rocks.&lt;br&gt;Rockets -Another term for 2 aces as your hole cards.&lt;br&gt;ROI -An abbreviation for &amp;quot;Return on Investment&amp;quot;.&lt;br&gt;Rounder -A professional poker player.&lt;br&gt;Rounders -A movie released in 1998 that portrays Matt Damon and&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Edward Norton as poker players.&lt;br&gt;Royal Flush -an ace-high straight flush; the best possible hand.&lt;br&gt;Runner-Runner -A come hand that requires help from both the turn and&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;river in order to win. Also known as a backdoor hand.&lt;br&gt;Running Bad -Losing for a period of time.&lt;br&gt;Sandbag -Another term for slow playing.&lt;br&gt;SB -An abbreviation for small blind.&lt;br&gt;Scare Card -A board card that can easily turn a winning hand into a&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;losing hand. The classic scare card example is when you hold KK and&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;board flops an Ace.&lt;br&gt;Scoop -Winning an entire pot, usually (but not necessarily) by having a&lt;br&gt;hand that is both the high and low hand in a split game.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Scooting -Giving someone a small amount of chips when you win a pot. &lt;br&gt;Also called horsing. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 203 &lt;br&gt;Sell a Hand -Playing a very strong hand weakly in order to disguise your &lt;br&gt;strength and keep other players from folding. Also known as slow &lt;br&gt;playing. &lt;br&gt;Semi-Bluff -A term coined by David Sklansky. To bet or raise with more &lt;br&gt;cards to come when you believe your hand is currently beaten, but has a &lt;br&gt;fair chance of improving into the best hand. &lt;br&gt;Session -A period of time spent playing in a poker game, normally &lt;br&gt;measured in hours. &lt;br&gt;Set -Three of a kind when you hold a pair in your hand and a third shows &lt;br&gt;on the board. &lt;br&gt;Short Stack -A relatively small amount of chips (as compared to the other &lt;br&gt;players at the table). Also used to identify the player who &lt;br&gt;Side Pot -The extra pot that is created when someone goes all-in. The &lt;br&gt;person who went all-in is only eligible for the main pot, not the side &lt;br&gt;pot(s). &lt;br&gt;Singleton -a card that is the only one of its rank. &lt;br&gt;Slow Down -To stop playing a hand as aggressively as it was played on &lt;br&gt;earlier streets. &lt;br&gt;Slow Play -Playing a very strong hand weakly in order to disguise your &lt;br&gt;strength and keep other players from folding. Also known as &lt;br&gt;sandbagging. &lt;br&gt;Small Bet -In a limit game, the smaller of the two bets in the betting &lt;br&gt;structure. Therefore, in a 10/20 game, each $10 bet is considered a small &lt;br&gt;bet. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 204 &lt;br&gt;Small Blind -The position one to the left of the button, who is forced to &lt;br&gt;pay a fraction (usually 1/2 or 2/3) of a small bet prior to the hole cards &lt;br&gt;being dealt in Hold&amp;#39;em. &lt;br&gt;Smooth Call -To call one or more bets without raising, when you are &lt;br&gt;quite sure that you have the best hand. See also flat call.&lt;br&gt;SNG -An abbreviation for a &amp;quot;Sit and Go&amp;quot; tournament, as opposed to a&lt;br&gt;scheduled tournament.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Spike -For the next board card to be a specific rank that you need to help&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;your hand.&lt;br&gt;Splash -Tossing your chips into the pot, rather than placing them on the&lt;br&gt;table in front of your cards. Splashing the pot is frowned upon.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Spread -For a casino or poker room to offer a certain poker game.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Stack -The amount of money you currently have at the table.&lt;br&gt;Steal -to win the pot by bluffing.&lt;br&gt;Steal the Blinds -Preflop open-betting from the cutoff or button in the&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;hopes that everyone following you will fold.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Steaming -Playing recklessly, usually as a result of a bad beat (real or&lt;br&gt;perceived). Also known as tilt or tilting.&lt;br&gt;Straight -in poker, a hand consisting of five cards of consecutive ranks.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Straight Flush -a hand consisting of five cards of consecutive ranks of the&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;same suit.&lt;br&gt;Straddle -An optional raise by the person to the immediate left of the big&lt;br&gt;blind, declared before the cards are dealt. Also known as a &amp;ldquo;live straddle&amp;rdquo;,&lt;br&gt;because that same person then has the option to re-raise.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 205 &lt;br&gt;String Bet -A raise that is not done in one single motion (this is not &lt;br&gt;allowed in any casino, to my knowledge). The purpose of string betting is &lt;br&gt;to call a bet, quickly gauge your opponents&amp;rsquo; reactions, then decide that &lt;br&gt;you&amp;rsquo;d like to raise instead &lt;br&gt;Stuck -Losing, often in regards to a certain amount of chips.&lt;br&gt;Suck Out -To win a hand with a hand that was a heavy underdog. This&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;implies that the winner should not have been in the hand, and was very&lt;br&gt;lucky to win the pot.&lt;br&gt;Sweat -Observing all or part of a session that one player is involved in,&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;with their consent.&lt;br&gt;TA -An abbreviation for Tight Aggressive.&lt;br&gt;Table Coach -The table know-it-all who likes to tell everyone how he or&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;she should be playing their cards.&lt;br&gt;Tap Out -Losing all of your money.&lt;br&gt;Tells -A &amp;quot;tell&amp;quot; in poker is when you pick up on the behaviour of another&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;player that gives you a strong sense of the strength or weakness of their&lt;br&gt;hand.&lt;br&gt;Three-Bet -The first re-raise (putting 3 bets in).&lt;br&gt;Three Of A Kind -three cards of the same rank.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Thrips &amp;ndash; Three of a kind.&lt;br&gt;Throwing a Party -When several loose or amateur players are making&lt;br&gt;significant monetary contributions to the pot.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Tilt -Playing recklessly, usually as a result of a bad beat (real or &lt;br&gt;perceived). Also known as steaming. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;Insiders Secrets To Texas Hold&amp;rsquo;em Poker Online by Theo Cage 206 &lt;br&gt;Trap -When one player is caught between 2 (or more) bettors / raisers, &lt;br&gt;and is unlikely to win the pot. &lt;br&gt;Two Pair -a hand consisting of two sets of pairs and a singleton. &lt;br&gt;Under the Gun -The first player to act in a given round of betting. &lt;br&gt;Underdog -A hand that is unlikely to win the pot. &lt;br&gt;Underpair -A pocket pair that is lower than the lowest board card. &lt;br&gt;Value Bet -A bet in which you wish for your opponent(s) to call. This &lt;br&gt;could be because you have the best or hand or because you have enough &lt;br&gt;outs in order make this bet profitable in the long run. &lt;br&gt;Walking Sticks -A pair of sevens. &lt;br&gt;Wheel -A5-high straight, also known as a bicycle. &lt;br&gt;Wired Pair -Holding a pair in the hole. &lt;br&gt;Whale -a high roller. &lt;br&gt;WPT -An abbreviation for the &amp;ldquo;World Poker Tour&amp;rdquo;. &lt;br&gt; &lt;br&gt;&lt;hr size=&quot;1&quot;&gt;&lt;br/&gt;</description></item><item><title>POKER GUIDES</title><link>http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/page/POKER+GUIDES</link><author>pokeroracle</author><guid isPermaLink="false">http://pokerplanet.wetpaint.com/page/POKER+GUIDES</guid><pubDate>Thu, 28 Sep 2006 07:18:42 CDT</pubDate><description>There is no abstract available for this page revision.&lt;hr size=&quot;1&quot;&gt;&lt;br/&gt;</description></item></channel></rss>