Eheheh… What happens when you get a hot babe doing a strip for you???
She teases the hell out of you….
She try to tease you until you are “brainless”….
So what does this have to do with POKER?!
Well, imagine what could happen if you could tease your opponents?
No, I’m not talking about having a webcam and being dressed with lingerie… lol…no no no no….
I’m talking about the possibility of tease your opponents by showing one of your cards of your poker hand…
So whether your laying down your hand to a big bet, or if no one called your bet, if you really want to keep your poker opponents on their toes, you can use the Poker Room ‘Expose One Card’ feature.
So you can show either both your cards, or just one card.
For example, say you had top pair but a weak kicker and you couldn’t call a big bet you might show your high card to prove you weren’t on a complete bluff.
Conversely you might show your low card, to appear as if you were on a complete bluff.
Either way showing only one card generally leaves your opponent asking more questions for which you gave answers with the card that you did show.
I think this is a cool poker feature, and it’s available at Odds Poker…
Enjoy and happy poker time!
In today’s poker world, especially online, playing a traditional tight-aggressive style will rarely be enough to win.
Pre-flop action is far more aggressive than it once was, and today’s winning poker player has to get creative to win big pots.
One way to wina big pot off an aggressive opponent is to “set mine“, or to play medium and small pocket pairs mode often then traditional poker strategy would dictate.
We’ve all been there. You’re dealt a pair of fives and someone makes a big raise in front of you.
You know that calling a big raise and chasing two outs is not exactly a mathematically sound play, and you find yourself mucking your small pair to wait for a more favorable situation.
The next thing you know your third five comes on the flop and you’ve missed a set and a potential big pot.
The concept of set mining is essentially deciding to stay in a hand with your pocket pair in the hopes that you do hit that set.
The initial pot odds may not be the best to call a big raise, but when you do hit your set (roughtly one cut of eight times you hold a pocket pair) the payoff is usually huge.
When to set mine still requires some thought and strategy, it’s not going to be your best play all the time.
The best time to set mine and risk some of your chips chasing two outs is when you have a big stack compared to most players in the game.
The more chips you have, the more you can afford to gamble, and when you call a big raise and hit your set your opponents will not see it coming… especially if they have an over pair or they’ve hit top pair with two big cards.
Some of you may play so tight that you fold smaller pairs in the early positions because you don’t want to have to deal any raise that another player may put in there after you.
Raising the action with your smaller pocket pair will often allow you to control the pre-flop action, and will even win you the odd uncontested pot.
If you limp in with your pocket pair and face late-position raise, you have to option of calling or three-betting if you think that the late-position raise is just a real-estate bluff.
The thing to keep in mind about set mining is that if you do miss hitting your set, your mentality should be that you’re going to be willing to get out of the hand… especially if any aces or kings come on the flop and an opponent bets into you.
When you have won a hand, sometimes players are left wondering if they should have stayed in the hand against you.
If your at your home poker game or in a poker card club sometimes a player will ask to see what cards would’ve come if they hadn’t folded, this is called Rabbit Hunting.
While this is frowned upon in casino’s and tournaments, in most informal games it is allowed.
At Odds Poker Room you can use this power, if you have the winning hand.
So if you win a hand unopposed, you can choose to rabbit and see what cards would have come.
This can be a great way to show your opponents your bluff, and to show them they really had you beat.
Of course you might just end up showing your opponent that they made the right call with the lay down.
As you can see this can be a powerful weapon while playing poker online…
For example you can extend your bluff!
By showing your hand when you bluff…
The opponents mite think you will always buff and that you are show off player!!!
Either way the power is in your hands, Happy Rabbit Hunting!
Play Heads-Up
Seize The Showdown
If you want to win poker tournaments you’ve got to be a skilled heads-up poker player.
It hurts more to make it all the way to heads-up and finish second, than it does to be the first player out of a tournament.
Remember, a second-place finish in a World Series of Poker event pays less and doesn’t come with the infamy of winning a WSOP bracelet.
With the advent of online poker rooms such as the OddsPoker Room, you can now practice your heads-up play whenever you want without grinding through an entire tournament and hoping luck occasionally finds you.
All poker rooms offer one-on-one heads-up tourneys or multi-table heads-up tourneys in which you can test your heads-up skills.
When you finally get down to just yourself and one other player in a poker tournament, it’s time to change gears.
Heads-up play should be played differently than how you would play a table with three or more players.
The worst thing you can do is continue playing the same way, especially if you were playing tight.
Tight play should be abandoned when you reach heads-up.
Winning while playing heads-up is all about one thing… Aggression!
If you’re not aggressive you’ll need luck to win, and you’ll likely end up getting repeatedly crushed by your opponents.
Scared money never lasts because once your opponent picks up on your tame play, they’ll run over you with big bets.
Since there’s just the two of you, most flops will be a dud for both players.
You need to be aggressive because the only way to win a pot it to have the best hand or cause your opponent to fold.
Don’t give your opponent free cards and free looks at the flop.
Be aggressive and make them pay to play.
One thing a lot of beginner poker players don’t realize is that the value of your starters changes considerably in a heads-up situation.
This about how valuable a hand like Q-8 whould be on a full table…
It isn’t really a hand you would want to play very often.
However, in heads-up play the general consensus is that you want to play any hand that has a vaule of Q-7 or higher.
Experts (and a computer) have worked out that hands valued Q-7 or higher will win more than 50% of the time during heads-up play.
This leads to two other important aspects of heads-up play:
Trapping, and reading your opponent.
By varying your play you can trap your opponent when you have the nuts and bleed a ton of chips out of him.
By occasionally betting and raising with nothing, this will make it harder to read your play when you actually have a hand.
While making your own bluffs and traps, carefully observe your opponent for betting patterns, tells and other gateways.
- How often do they raise?
- Do they only raise preflop with certain cards?
- How often do they call your raise?
- Do they call your raise with draws or with made hands?
Answering these questions will help you make the right decision when it’s your turn to act.
One last tip on heads-up play:
Don’t be afraid to occasionally chase flush and straight draws if it won’t cost you too much.
If you hit these draws heads-up they’ll often pay off big and make you more money then you will lose when occasionally chasing.
So remember these poker tips about heads-up when you play online poker!
I also would like to remember you that OddsPoker is offering 7 x $200 Daily Freerolls!!!
Pick Your Pleasure
The game of poker has changed in many ways over the last few years.
In the past table selection was a simple skill for anyone to learn.
But in online poker, especially Texas Holdem, the game has become increasingly difficult to beat.
This makes table selection even more important than it’s ever been if you want to gain an edge on the competition.
Years ago, good table selection came down to finding action players who were willing to dump chips, and then playing tight style against them until they were cleaned out.
The modern game has so many aggressive players that this strategy no longer works, and a new approach to table selection is required to maximize your changes of winning.
What you are looking for in today’s games are the loose-passive players, otherwise known as calling machines.
These players have little skill and depend on the cards they are dealt to play the game.
They like to play as many hands as they can limp into and rarely display any moves or bluff at pots.
The best way to find these players is to watch for tables that have a high viewed-flop percentage.
More players in the pot means more calling machines playing any two cards in hopes of hitting a flop.
Multi-way hands also give you better pot odds when you have a big draw, and timely position bets will often take down small pots when your limping opponents miss.
Another Good way to find weak players is to have a time-zone sheet with you.
Lots of players like to come home from the bar and get on their computer to play poker in the wee hours of the morning after a night of partying.
You can track what time it is for any opponent by looking at where an opponent is from, and if the hours match up to 2 am or later, and that player is dumping chips, you will know it is likely because he or she has over-indulged prior to the session.
There are no bigger fish than drunken fish, and trying to find these players will almost always be profitable.
Another type of player that will often be easy to beat is a player with a short stack.
If a new player sits at your table and doesn’t buy-in for the maximum, or they have a stack with change, you know they are likely at the end if their bankroll and have everything with them at that table.
A player at the end of their roll is very likely to take unnecessary changes with their remaining chips to either try to double up, or they will just tilt it off because they have been loosing.
Choosing the right tables to play on will always be one of the most important decisions you will make.
Take the extra time to find a good game to play in, otherwise you give away any edge you could have had on the game.
And remember, just because it’s a juicy game it doesn’t mean you will win every time, but it should increase your overall take in the long run.
Hope you enjoyed reading this article…
Just wanted to say one more thing, actually if more of offering one more thing…
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Cheers once again and happy poker adventures!!
Capitalizing On The Check-Raise
Poker Pro Series
The check-raise is one of the stronger moves a player can make in poker game.
The play sends an instant message to an opponent that you either have a strong hand or that you’re putting them to the test, and are forcing the action in an attempt to take the pot from them.
Properly utilized, the check-raise will be dependent on the situation in which you find yourself.
Sometimes it’s a play to steal the pot, while other times it will be used to defend a lead you may have.
On rare occasions you can even use the play to build the pot when you have a monster hand.
Check-raising to steal the pot is best attempted against an opponent who can easly be forced off a medium-to-weak-strength hand.
Check-raising novice or loose players when you have nothing will often get you in trouble because those players are much less likely to fold their hands.
They don’t give you credit for a hand, and you’ll be in a tough situation out of position after the next street.
Save the check-raise moves for players whom you expect to take a stab at the pot with weak holdings if no one has raised the action before them.
When you check-raise an opponent who is trying to make a move for the pot, you’ll almost always pick it up right there.
If you do get called, you can either fire another barrel at the pot or you can get off the hand and hopefully you’ll get a free card from your opponent if they also decide to check.
The type of opponent you’re in the hand with should help you determine whether or not to make another bet into your opponent after they called the first one.
Flopping the lead in a hand, when you’re out of position, is usually a situation where you should consider the check-raise.
Unless you have the nut hand, your hand will be vulnerable somehow.
To bet into your opponent or opponents will rarely be to your advantage.
Betting your hand for value in this situation creates a lot of question marks if you get called.
But a check-raise will tell you where you’re going to get your action from, and after your check-raise you’ll most likely win more than you would have if you decided to bet out your big hand right away.
This type of situation usually requires that you have a big lead, and that you make a big raise so that any drawing opponents will have to make a bad play to stay in the hand against you.
Make sure that possible straight and flush draws pay at least the size of the pot to draw another card.
Get your chips in there when you have the best of it, and don’t wait until they draw out to a bigger hand before you make your move.
When you are in an aggressive situation, like heads up or shorthanded games with aggressive players, check-raising to build a pot can be a tricky way to get an opponent to play when they normally may not have.
If the action has been going back and forth between you and another player, check-rasing would look more like a weak move than a strong one.
It looks like you’re just trying a re-steal, and players with big cards will give you action because they feel you’re just trying to push them around.
You’ll be able to value bet all the way to the river, getting called by an opponent who doesn’t believe that you would have check-raised with a big hand in that situation.
by Dean Stone
So don’t forget to apply what you learn, and win big time at Odds Maker Poker Room…
Playing aggressive isn’t just about throwing in big raises and making wild bets.
It means putting in those raises and bets with value when the situation is right.
What’s one attribute that most successful poker players possess?
Is it the ability to read people?
A knowledge of number?
A good grasp of the fundamentals of the game?
The best answer to that question is actually “aggression”.
If you want to be a winning poker player you must be aggressive.
A lot of bad poker players find it hard to be aggressive at the table, and their passive tendencies make them fish bait for the sharks.
Some people say you can’t teach a poker player to be aggressive because it’s a natural instinct.
However, if you sat down a fish with a pro and showed him how being aggressive helps him win, it would definitely help them see why it’s so important.
Before we get too far let’s explain the difference between playing aggressive and playing like a donk.
Playing aggressive isn’t just about throwing in big raises and making wild bets.
That’s plain stupid play, not aggressive play.
Being aggressive means putting in those raises and bets with value when the odds are in your favor, or you think you can bluff the pot, or you’ve picked up a tell from your opponent that you can exploit.
Playing like a donk is throwing in a huge bet with no reasoning to back that bet up.
This would include chasing improbable draws and trying to bluff at the wrong time.
Playing aggressive will give you an advantage over your opponent because it puts all the pressure on them.
They have to make all their decisions in reaction to your moves.
By putting this preasure on your opponent you open up more instances in which they might make a mistake and pay you off.
There are three things that playing aggressive will do to help your game…
-
Reduces the number of players – When you’re always betting and raising nobody can check or call a small bet to get a free or cheap card.
This should limit the number of players playing against you, unless you’re up against a bunch of donks.
The number of players you are up against makes a big difference no matter what cards you are holding.
You’ll hear some donks say that by betting and raising you’re keeping the pot from growing.
This is actually false, and it doesn’t matter how big the pot is if you allow players with crap cards to tag along to the river cheap, only for them to get lucky and beat you with a hand you could have made them fold by betting. -
Increases the pot size – Playing aggressive really does keep the pot growing.
If you’re repeatedly betting and raising it will make it harder for other players to know when you’re playing a strong hand and when you’re bluffing with garbage.
Since you’re hard to read you will receive more calls when you bet big instead of having everyone fold, leaving you only the blinds.
Think of it like this: “Two players calling a bet of $100 creates a bigger pot than four players calling a bet of $25″. -
You can win two ways – If you’re betting and raising you can win two different ways.
You can either win with the best hand or you can win by causing everyone else to fold.
If you’re not aggressive no one will ever fold to your bets and you’ll only win when you have the best hand.
That’s playing by luck instead of skill.
Remember the old adage – “luck fades, skills doesn’t”.
Today I bring you a great article about Poker Tournaments, this article gives you great tips and tricks about playing either live or online poker tournaments…
Checkout out these wise poker words
Beware The Bluster
When you first start playing poker it’s usually in a home-game setting where you can make mistakes with only your friends around to see.
Or you play online and never see the players that you’re playing against.It doesn’t matter so much that you’re inexperienced because you don’t have to sit there embarrassed when you make a mistake or played a hand terribly.
But in live poker tournaments things are diferent. You can see your opponents, and often those opponents display habits that can be intimidating.
If you’re familiar with these behaviors before you play your first tournament, you’ll feel more at ease and everyone else won’t seem more experienced than you.For some reason many players like to hone their chip-trick skills. They practive shuffling and flipping chips so it looks like they’re professional player that’s been playing for decades.
Most of these players don’t have anything special about their game, they just thought that chip tricks were cool and they dedicated some time to getting good at them.Another common factor that many new players find intimidating at their first live poker tournament is the dealers.
Many dealers will use poker lingo that you may not have heard before.
To question what they said would make you look like a real rookie, and it’s not something you want to do in front of the entire table.
If you don’t know what the dealer means, just discreetly ask one of the players sitting next to you as if you didn’t hear the dealer. At worst, only they will know that your’re a rookie.The most common intimidation factor you’ll encounter at the table is an opponent who is playing very aggressively.
This player seems like they raise everyone almost every time it’s their turn to act.
These players are willing to put the pressure on you, and you’ll have to eventually stand up to them.
Just wait until the river to raise them back, and you’ll get as much as possible from them.When you enter a live poker tournament you need to be thinking about intimidating you opponents, not being intimidated by them.
You need to concentrate on not giving away any tells as you play.
Play without emotions and don’t be afraid to make a bet or raise when it looks like you opponents may be weak.
If you’re scared you’ll neve play well, you’ll only get pushed around until you make a mistake that knocks you out of the tournament.You have to belive that even if you’re a novice, luck can play a big enough role in the poker tournament to provide you with some success.
Winning players belive that they can win, even if they’re new to poker and have a lot to learn.by Dean Stone
Find out more about poker tournaments and online poker at Oddsmaker Online Casino.
I came across this great poker article, writen by David Harrison.
I’m posting this here because it explains, in a clear way how to deal with all those rookies that enter the poker rooms…
So read a long…
enjoy…
One of the hardest things to deal with at the poker table is the play of a “maniac”.
A poker maniac will play any hand, and dump raise after raise on the table even when the cards call for a fold.
Going up against a maniac can be frustrating becayse they’re so dificult to read, and it can be impossible to know if they’re holding pocket Aces or 7-2.Poker maniacs usually fall into one of two categories.
They’re either a brilliant tactician who actually knows exactly what they’re doing and plays ultra-aggressive, but still very smart.
Then there’s the idiot maniac who flies by the seat of his pants and might as well be flipping a coin to make his decisions.
If you’re playing at low liimits, most of the maniacs you’ll come across will more likely fall into the idiot category.Many inexperienced poker players end up getting beat up by a maniac because they don’t know how to deal with them.
The wrong approach to take is to go after the maniac with their own game.
Unless you can be even more aggressive than the maniac, or get lucky over and over, butting heads with a maniac head-on isn’t smart poker because you’re not always playing with the odds in your favor.If your opponent is going into a hand with junk and you’re going after him with more junk, you’re not giving yourself any kind of advantage to stick it to him like you really want.
Don’t even bother attempting a bluff with a maniac.
If they’re willing to make or call a raise with a hand you don’t even feel comfortable checking with, then why would you expect them to run from whatever large bet you make?Toppling a maniac takes patience to wait for hands that you can bet with confidence, and we mean bet big.
To successfully battle a maniac you need to be very aggressive when you’ve got good cards.
You need to bleed out as many chips as you can when you make a hand, so throw in large bets and hope that the maniac continues to play crazy, either he calls you, or if you’re real lucky he will throw in a raise.
Even if you do somehow force the psycho into folding, at least the chips are going your way.The most important thing to remember when confronting a poker maniac is to avoid going on tilt at all costs.
Putting other players on tilt, and causing them to make bad plays and bad bets, is how the maniac makes money at the poker tables.
Maniacs are going to get lucky sometimes, and a lot of the time it seems like they get cards more than everyone else at the table, even though they probably aren’t.Even if a poker maniac flops a 7 and turns over a 2 when he’s holding 7-2 versus your pocket Aces (yes this actually happens!), you still have to keep your cool or you’d be better off handling over your entire stack without playing another hand.
Don’t chase down improbable draws just because you have a chance to bust a maniac if you hit it.Remember keep you cool, keep your head on straight, and use the poker maniac’s outlandish play again them.
Good Luck! © by David Harrison
Hope this information was of good value to you, and that you learn something about this type of poker player… the poker maniac type…
So, if you also want to know of a great place to get some fine poker experience, you should give a drop by the best and most innovative online poker room that offers great poker action to their players, checkout OddsMaker Online Poker Room!…














