Texas Holdem Tournaments - Getting Ahead Before The Game
Online poker can be both fun and rewarding.
Perhaps you’re tempted to try a Texas Holdem (No Limit) Tournament. Here
are some tips from a true tournament champ. Warning! This guide isn’t for
beginners.
You may enjoy playing poker online,
but perhaps you want to improve your Texas Holdem tournament results. After
playing the game for many years, I’ve developed a strategy guide for anyone
looking to improve the chances of winning at the Texas Holdem (No Limit)
Tournament game. These suggestions apply mostly to large multi-tables games
with potentially hundreds or even thousands of players.
The Chance Factor for Texas Holdem
It is important for players to understand
that no matter how good you are, Texas Holdem does involve some element
of chance. The better you play and make good decisions, the more limited
the downside. The best players in the world usually end up on the final
table, but they too take bad beats. This proves it can happen to anyone.
The important thing to note when
you lose is not the fact that you lost any particular poker game or hand,
but to consider how you lost. If you were put out holding A5 having gone
all-in against AK pre-flop then it’s safe to say you probably won’t make
a final table.
On the other hand if you lost or
regularly lose having the best hand at the point of all-in and are outdrawn,
your chances of long-term success are considerably greater. There is no
way I can promise a magic cure for your Texas Holdem ills, I can only point
out a number of strategies you can employ to improve your chances.
At all times in an online poker game
you need to be as observant as you would in a live game. Tells do exist
when playing online poker they are just different in nature to a land based
Holdem game. With online games, there are some immediate tells that you
can point out, even before you begin the game.
Prior to the Tournament Start
With most Texas Holdem tournaments,
you start with around 1500 in chips. The field against you will range from
10 to thousands of players. Your first step is to look at the player names
on your table – those players who use their real name, those who use an
amusing name, and those who use a nonsensical name.
When looking at such names, I categorize
players in my mind in the following way (these categories change over time
as the poker play develops):
1) Those operating under their own
name are new players with a low level of skill. 2) Those using handles
such as Holdem King, or Suckout Boy are average to good players. 3) The
ones to watch are poker players with a name like gpgn5576tb.
I am cautious with players in the
third category as they usually choose such a name so they are harder to
be recognized. Such names are easily forgotten. I often find players like
this multi-tabling for hours on end and you can’t be sure if you remember
them from one day to the next.
Tournament Commences
It is important to watch the play
as it unfolds – learn the feel of the table by observation and memory.
In a very short space of time you should be able to classify players into
one of four groups and play those groups in accordance with your expectations.
Typically players fall into the following groups:
1) Loose Aggressive 2) Loose Passive
3) Tight Aggressive 4) Tight Passive
The most dangerous type of player,
particularly for those of you who may be new to the game is the Loose Aggressive
types who seem to bet anything and everything. These are the Gus Hanson
style of players who play lots of pots and do so as though they have great
hands. Clearly they don’t – statistically they will have the same hands
as you so the key to moving against these players is to wait for good cards
(JJ or higher), wait until they’ve dug a large enough hole by calling them
down and re-raise on the turn or river.
Loose Passive players are those that
are prepared to bet heavily and often but usually do so by calling whoever
is doing the betting. Often termed a “calling station”.
Tight Aggressive applies to the majority
of the poker playing population. These are people playing the cards they
hold, rather than the players opposing them and the situation they find
themselves in. It is very difficult for these players to win on a long
term basis because really good cards seldom come out, and when they do
people will run for cover perceiving you to be a ‘rock”.
Tight Passive Holdem players are
the worst of the bunch. They seldom play and when they do they can often
be pushed off the best hand by other players.
Each of these types of player requires
a different approach to play. Poker is an assessment of multiple situations,
each different, where the long term winner will be those who make the best
decisions. Each play is therefore less about your starting cards and more
about the type of player opposing you, the situation at that moment in
time, or the probability of “outs.”
So bear in mind that there mare many
things to be aware of when starting out. As we have seen in Texas Holdem
there are players of varied skill levels but also remember that chance
plays a part too. And sometimes, luck isn’t always on your side. However,
if you follow these guidelines you will minimize your mistakes and maximize
your possibility of winning.
Graham Easton is the author of this
article, webmaster at http://www.texashold-empoker.com,
and successful Tournament Texas Holdem player. He has a record of making
Heads up play in 5 of his last 20 major Online Poker Tournaments with individual
buy-ins less than $33.
Article Source:
Amazines.Com