Saturday, September 30, 2006
The Snake Charmer
Last night I was watching a program on TV about a snake charmer this guy who lives in Australia spends about 8 hours each day charming the pants off his snakes. These snakes are capable of killing a man with one bite, needless to say he ended up getting bitten as he was putting one of his snakes back in its box. The whole snake charming business seemed to me very much like No-Limit Hold em in so far as a slight lapse of concentration can mean the end of the game.
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
There's No Limit
I spent about 3 hours of the evening playing $.50 cent No Limit 6 person max cash tables, and ended the evening with $75 dollars in my account. Out of all the Hold'em games I think the my favourite has to be the short handed No Limit tables as the action is fast and for the good player there is the opportunity to make a lot of money in these types of games. However all that aside I have never really been any good at these type of games before.
I had something of an eureka last night as far as profitable play in the short handed tables is concerned and that was to respect your opponents preflop raises IE. fold all marginally playable hands such as small suited connectors and low pairs when under a raise. I think that the amount of poker tournaments I have played in recently have really helped me play a very tight but aggressive cash game. I think whilst I am still learning and improving my game the key is to play very tight and protect my bankroll which is in essence my poker scholarship fund.
Bankroll = $75
Monday, September 25, 2006
Take it to the Limit
Well after a full week of more or less none stop play I am down about $90. I do feel that a lot of this was due to mind set rather than being outplayed. As far as the tournaments are concerned I made 1st place whenever I gave my full concentration to the game.
Most of the single table online tournaments all seem to have a set pattern to them which is players seem to play very aggressively when the blinds are low then play very tight once the blinds have gone up. I think the correct strategy for the tournaments is the complete opposite. Why risk your entire stack at the beginning of a tournament when the blinds are low?
I spent a couple of hours playing limit cash games last night and I ended up making a modest profit, my limit game has definitly improved a great deal and I have no idea why.
Friday, September 22, 2006
Good Plans
I have spent the week mainly playing the $5 and $10 tables. Once I have got myself sorted I will post a running tally of my winnings and loses.
Saturday, September 16, 2006
Odd ramblings
I am currently thinking about re-evaluating my I plan to spend next week playing online Tournaments for money, I feel that I have a better understanding of the game than I ever, but I also think that a lot of the basic principles that Dan Harrington talks although I understand, I don't fully understand who to implement as yet. I feel these basic principles are the foundation of any good Poker Players game. I suppose the main area of my game that I feel is lacking at the moment are pot odds.
In the very beginning of his book Dan makes the comment:
There are a variety of mistakes one can make in Poker, but one of the most serious is to make a bet or a call which is not correct given the pot odds available to you, either because you haven't made the right deductions about your opponents cards, or because you have a generally correct idea about his cards, but you've ignored the pot odds entirely
In my opinion what separates the good players from the average players in No-Limit Hold em is the ability to accurately put your opponents on a certain range of hands compare this range of hands to your own, then manipulate the pot accordingly, and in order to do this you must be able to calculate outs and pot odds on the fly.
Although I am able to put my opponents on an accurate range of hands a lot of the time, I am still not comfortable calculating outs and pot odds on the fly and I feel that if I start playing in real Tournaments now then this area of my game could go neglected indefinitely, I think what we are talking about here is baby steps.
On a more interesting note a came across some Poker Videos on the net put together by an online player called TuffFish. The stuff on these videos is just pure gold here is the link to the first one, will post more later.
http://68.168.64.9/pokerhands/1st_video/1st_video_media/1st_video.wmv
Wednesday, September 13, 2006
The Continuation Bet
Most of last night I spent reading about continuation bets although I thought I already incorporated continuation bets in my game I have never really known what the correct bet size would be and when to make the bet and when not to make the bet, If I'm completely honest I would say that most of my continuation bets were bluffs as I was betting to much. Harrington describes the continuation bet in his book and I now see why these bets are so important, for example in the past because I was the aggressor preflop and the flop completely missed me I would sometimes just check and every now and again make a continuation bet of about what ever figure came into my head at the time, which is not the most mathematical approach to the game and certainly not good Poker, because of my reluctance to make a continuation bet when I missed the flop, when the flop did hit me I often found myself slow playing the hand, consequently I was allowing my opponents to draw out on me and also loosing the pots I could win when I made my continuation bet and everybody else folds because the flop misses them.
For me the most important aspect of the continuation bet is the having a better idea of where you stand as far as your opponents hand strength and whether or not they are on a draw, this then gives you valuable information on how to proceed with the hand. I remember reading in Doyle Brunsons "Super System" that you always want to be the aggressor this is because by being the aggressor you put your opponent on a back foot and he is always guessing about what strength of your hand is, I think this is where the continuation bet comes in. When you bet or raise before the flop and then bet again after the flop your opponent is never really sure if the flop hit you or not.
I find it funny how by reading Harrington's book it has allowed me to understand something that I a read earlier and previously not fully understood it all seems so obvious now. I suppose this is what happens when you take information from different sources I found this happened a lot when I was studying for IT Certifications, and I don't think it is because one book is better than the other or one author is better than the other I think it's because the greater understanding you have of a subject matter the easier it is to learn new information.
Monday, September 11, 2006
Poker Academy
The software was not cheap at $120 for the pro version but after having used Poker Academy for a couple of months I feel it has really helped me improve my game it is an invaluable tool in my progress. The bots are programmed so that they are able to learn your play and after a few hundred hands they get progressively smarter, whilst playing at the table on the right hand side of the screen you can view Stats such as Win Rate. Pot Odds and Hand Strength also the software comes with its own advisor that offers hand advise at each stage of the betting round.
The software is for Limit, No-Limit and Tournament Texas Holdem, My current plan is to implement the advice I am reading in the Harrington Books on using Poker Academy and once I am ready start playing the Small Stakes Online Tournaments.
I have read about two thirds of the first Harrington volume and I have already won two of the Poker Academy Tournaments that I was previously unable to beat, I really like the way things are going at the moment and feel that more and more things are starting to fit into place.
Friday, September 08, 2006
Harrington on Hold'em arrives
Well books have finally arrived and I must say that I am already very impressed with what I have read so far, I am only a few chapters into it and things that seemed very fuzzy before now seem very clear, will post a full review once I have finished reading.
The Plan is to read both books from start to finish then reread the books whilst taking notes, I am already thinking about purchasing VOL3 which from what I have read on the NET appears to be a workbook. As far a study is concerned I think the best approach is to bombared your brain with as many learning methods as possible this way stuff you miss whilst reading, you pick up when taking notes, what you miss when taking notes you pick whilst playing.
The more I play and study Poker the more I realize there is to learn. I have heard it said that Poker takes 5 minutes to learn how to play and a life time to master, never a truer word spoken sometimes feel like I have started some never ending Chinese puzzle, and get so frustrated in trying to make it things work and other times everything just flows sometimes this is down to the cards that are dealt but most the time this is just pure state of mind.
So how do we achieve this state of mind? Well I don't think it boils down to one single factor, in fact I think there are several different variables that go into a good state of mind at the poker tables including:
1.)Knowing your Game - The more you have learned about Poker from study before you hit the tables the easier it is to study the table.
2.)Getting Enough Sleep - This has probably been the biggest factor in the times that I have gone on tilt at the table.
3.)Eating Right - When you eat junk food you feel like crap and it has a strong bearing on mental capacity.
4.)Meditation - You may laugh but a lot of the top pros do it, regular meditation develops good concentration, and concentration lapses at the poker table can be very expensive.
Monday, September 04, 2006
Knowledge
As an example how many times in the past have you come across a problem and thought I can't solve it there is no solution to this problem, you have gone over and over the problem without success then all of a sudden you have had a eureka moment and the solution to the problem that you spent hours or days wrestling with suddenly seems easy if not obvious.
"Knowledge reveals itself to those that diligently pursue it."
After spending several months hoping between playing Limit and No Limit Hold 'em I have decided to play Tournament No Limit Hold 'em with a view to some time in the future playing the No Limit cash games. I looked around on Amazon at Tournament poker book reviews and decided to order Harrington on Hold 'em Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 these books had nearly 200, 5 star reviews! The books should arrive tomorrow or the day after and I am really looking forward to getting them.
Sunday, September 03, 2006
First Ever Post
The fact that people were earning a living playing poker sparked off an interest in me because at the time I was working for IBM, the contract I was on had gone up for renewal and been won by Fujitsu and I was facing a very uncertain future. I had just spent the last 2 years working towards an MCSE which I have now obtained. Whilst working toward my MCSE I had my whole life planned out I was going to spend another year working for IBM then start IT contracting and earn big money. However plans are always subject to change and this plan has changed. I think I have lied to myself for long enough and I am just not cut out for a career in sucking corporate cock, and lets face it folks 99.9% of the people that make it high up the corporate ladder do so not because of their ability to get the job done but their ability to talk a good talk. I don’t think that the time I spent working towards my Microsoft Certification was wasted as I firmly believe what you get by achieving your goals is not nearly as important as what you become, and what I became by achieving my goal was confident. Confident in my own ability to start a project and finish it.
A week or two after reading the gambling magazine my mother bought me a book called "Big Deal" by Anthony Holden, the book for those of you that have not read the book it is a year in the life of a professional poker player, and I can honestly say it's one of the best books I have ever read. I have no idea why my mother decided to buy me this particular book as I had at that point not mentioned my new found interest in poker to anyone. However this was the book that made me decide that my goal in life was no longer to work for some large corporation working someone else’s dream, I now have a dream of my own and that dream is to quit my day job and become a professional poker player.