Wednesday 7 December 2011

Mass tabling tips in no limit Texas Hold'em

It is often the case when looked at in terms of game theory that whenever you complicate a process that you then require a simpler strategy to execute that process. Multi and mass tabling online poker is one such situation where the process of playing poker can be made all the more complex. Heaven only knows that many poker players struggle as it is playing one table and over complicate that and so imagine what would happen if they tried to play 16 tables at the same time? 
 
One of the key areas that millions of players get wrong at sites like www.pokerstars.co.uk  when they try to add more poker tables is that they think that playing sixteen tables for example just means that you are playing poker sixteen times faster and seeing sixteen times the number of hands. This is true of course but once you have made these connections then you have largely finished. The underlying theory behind mass multi-tabling is that you are sacrificing accuracy for volume and hopefully volume will overcome the accuracy.  However you still have to reach a certain standard when you play more tables but it is a standard that many players fall short of.
When you complicate a process then you need to simplify many of the aspects of it to make the entire thing workable. So playing sixteen tables means that your thinking time is a lot less. This is can be fatal if you are for example involved in too many post flop situations in poker games that require too much thought. So you need to simplify the process and this means play more of a pre-flop game. This also means that you also need to almost make your game “automated”…..if that is the right term for it.

When I play more than ten tables then I am always looking to reduce the number of flops that I play. So this means that I am often three betting or folding and only calling or limping in if my hand is easily playable post flop like with small to medium pocket pairs for example. I know that whenever I call a raise and a call with a hand like 4c-4d then I am essentially playing fit or fold poker and that suits me fine because it is an easy way to play. I may not make as many ptbb/100 playing this way but I will make more $/hour by being able to play more tables.

Friday 2 December 2011

Building a big hand in PLO full ring

Someone asked me the other day if PLO poker games were a tougher game to play then NLHE.  I responded by saying that this all depended on whether or not you wanted to play full ring instead of six max. In full ring then a lot of the game comes down to hand construction. What do I mean by that? Well firstly a full ring PLO game is more orientated towards the nuts than any other form of poker that I know. So you absolutely need to adjust in this way otherwise you are going to be toast.
In no other form of poker is it correct to fold the current nuts on the flop but it can be in PLO. If you had say J-10-5-5 and the board came 9-8-7 with two suits and you didn’t have the flush draw then you are basically nearly always drawing with other players who have basically the same nut straight but who are free-rolling to a flush. Also you may be against someone holding a set as well and so any paired outs will decimate your straight.
In games like PLO/8 at www.pokerstars.co.uk  for example then you are often warned about the dangers of being quartered and this is often seen when you have hands with an A-2. A Hand like 8-8-A-2 with no flush draw is not shaping up too well on a K-7-3 board. You have the nut low draw but if someone else has the nut low then you have no fall back for high with nothing but a pair of eights and an ace overcard.

So in a multi-way pot then you are often drawing with one player who has another A-2 and losing to another player who has a better high than you at this time. But a hand like 8-8-A-2 is barely playable in PLO/8 because its high potential is minimal. I like hands likes A-2-Q-J where the ace is suited meaning that I have a nut low draw, wheel draw to the high, flush draw to the high and A-Q-J straight drawing potential to the high. This means that I can scope the pot or win three quarters of it.
In full ring PLO then you are essentially looking for the same or similar hand construction in principle where you are looking to scoop entire pots. This is why looking at how big of a hand you can make is critical in full ring because you need to be on the right side of a big pot.

Sunday 27 November 2011

What does poker software do for you

I am often asked as a full time player and poker writer just how effective poker software is and programs like PokerTracker and Holdem Manager for example. Well firstly it needs to be said that these items are designed to keep track of your opponents and so this means that using them for free poker games are not really what they are designed for. But to answer this question properly then you need to come at this from another angle and a look at what happens and what has happened in the world of financial day trading is instructive.

In that field then the leading traders all use software of some description. Whether it be Bloomberg terminals or live feed with software like Indexia or whatever, speed of access is pivotal to how you succeed in this field and also as a poker player. But what needs to be underlined here is that in no way does any type of software or coaching automatically make you a winner and I really don’t care who this upsets or what type of coach you have.

There are just too many aspects to being a successful poker player to mean that any piece of software can make you successful. On sites like www.pokerstars.co.uk then you will have the option to play against any number of over 100,000 players at any one time. So it is obviously to your advantage to know how the people who are sitting on your table are going to play and what mind set they have and ideas about the game.

However there are just too many skills that you need to exercise yourself and a successful online player in my opinion needs two factors working side by side. Firstly they need their very own experience and expertise and they then need to marry that with very good software which then acts in the capacity of a second pair of eyes and ears. In the accelerated pace of online poker then this is a very valuable thing to have at your disposal because it is simply impossible to keep track of dozens of players at the same time when you are multi-tabling.

Saturday 19 November 2011

Getting the education right

Having come into poker around 1994-1995 then I came into the game at a stage that was in its infancy. There were a few books around but nothing at the level that is around today. This means that you get your education off on the wrong foot in terms of preparing for the environment that is about to arrive some years later. There are many ways to play poker and the online poker sites these days even offer free poker.

However all this fades into insignificance compared to playing poker for real money. The more money that you play for then the more people do to get that money. So when poker become more serious then the measures that people took to get their hands on that money became more serious.

There were numerous players making $500k per year in around 2005-2007 from playing online (unfortunately I wasn’t one of them) but these people have all drifted by the wayside just a few years later. It is no surprise just how many people have resorted to cheating in that time. It kind of reminds me of an interview that I read given by a casino pit boss in Las Vegas who remarked how casinos didn’t hate card counters because they took money from the casinos.


The reason why they hated them was because they knew from past experience that when counters fail to make money then many often turn towards cheating as a way to keep their income level going. This happens in poker as well because many poker players who were considered good a few years ago have suffered as a result of the games becoming tougher to beat and especially online.


To get around this toughening process then you simply have to get your education right and this was something that I got wrong a few years ago. My own story regarding my poker education is one of a mish-mash of books, websites, coaching videos and 1-2-1 personal coaching mixed in with an awful lot of DIY……..clearly not the best way to learn a profession.


Carl “The Dean” Sampson plays poker at www.pokerstars.co.uk

Wednesday 9 November 2011

How good do you need to be?

In order to be a poker pro or to make significant money from the game then how good do you need to be? Well at the highest level or even at the middle stakes levels then poker is all about understanding what strategies your opponents are using and how to find a way to defeat those strategies in the poker games that you play in.
  
Let us say that your opponent likes to raise from position and then c-bet flops with most of their range heads up. Clearly then this is an exploitable strategy because of the simple betting sequence of raise-bet. If you always know that a sequence will go raise-call-bet then the bet becomes meaningless. In fact this is probably no more than a standard line taken by your opponent in a heads up situation.

So you do not need a very good hand to continue here as the hand comes down to a battle between your nothing against their likely nothing. So bluff raises and floats then become part of your range of possible moves to combat their lines. So clearly then the game of online poker becomes like a super advanced version of the game of rock, paper, scissors where selecting strategies not just to beat your opponent on this move but to beat their line of thinking and method of operation come to the fore.

In this context then poker becomes difficult to grasp for many people who have been brought up with hand charts and how to play certain hands in certain situations. So asking how to play a hand in a certain situation is really a case of asking the wrong type of question. Higher level poker is much more multi-layered than that and you are not even scratching the surface of playing poker when all you are asking is a question that is nothing more than on the first level of complexity so to speak. This is why many players struggle to jump from low stakes poker to higher stakes poker because it involves learning a whole new game.

Carl “The Dean” Sampson plays poker at www.pokerstars.co.uk

Monday 31 October 2011

Fold equity is the key in modern online poker

I spend a lot of time on poker forums these days and the discussions that I have with certain players are illuminating. However I do feel that there are certain problems with regards to some players and how they play poker games like NLHE. I have felt now for some considerable time that a short stack approach has far more viability than a big stack approach for many people. I think that this is especially the case with novices and even intermediate players.
If you play a short stack and you play that short stack well then your decision making process is far simpler and I will look at an example here to show you what I mean. I was looking at a cash game on www.pokerstars.co.uk recently when a player who I didn’t know was playing an 18bb stack after only buying in if I remember correctly for 20bb (may have been more).
It was folded around to the button who made it $3.50 (the stakes were NL100) and the small blind called. Now here is my take on this situation. Clearly the button doesn’t need to have a strong hand to raise from that position but when the small blind called then they too were representing a weak hand otherwise they would have raised. The big blind re-raised to $12 and the button called with the small blind folding. The flop came 10d-6d-4c and the big blind shoved what he had left and was called by the button who showed A-K. The big blind had Q-J and a jack came on the turn and he doubled up and immediately left the table.
Now here was a guy that played a short stack very well. He sensed weakness after buying in for the minimum when the button raised and the small blind called. This put $8.50 into the pot and with him only having $18 on the table then this represented a big increase in his stack. But I liked how he just didn’t sit there and wait for big hands to come along before he made his move. On this occasion then he ran into the button with a proper hand but the fact was that he played his short stack well during that hand and deserved the luck that came his way and you have to admire that in a poker player.

Friday 28 October 2011

Waking up the neighbours

Probably really showing my age now but I will be going to see Bryan Adams twice in three days in Nottingham on November 29th and my home town of Sheffield on 1st December. The “Waking up the Neighbours” Tour is great for any Adams fan but I haven’t seen him live since 1997 when I went with my then girlfriend after she had fallen down stairs and broke her leg and she hobbled into Sheffield Arena on crutches…..never forget that!
But the concert was amazing and even more so because he had two 100ft blow up nude women on stage with him……I have been to many concerts  in my time but the energy that he put into three solid hours made it an absolute five star performance that I will be interested to see if he matches.
So what has been happening with the poker? Well I have had a good spell since the last post but I have been playing STT’s for a change and I won nine out of thirty one and showed a $117 profit. I also just for the sheer hell of it tried to spin up $1 into as much as I could and turned it into $64 in the space of sixteen minutes……pretty cool. But the poker strategy this week has been pretty simple……have as much fun as possible before I kick on next week in what will be another serious week.
I go through bursts like this where I get motivated for a while and then stop.  I told myself some weeks ago that moving to www.pokerstars.co.uk was the best move but my main problem isn’t being able to beat the games at the levels that I play at but simply getting motivated to play. Trust me when I say that it isn’t like Las Vegas when you play on a computer. In fact many people often ask me if I have ever been to Las Vegas or played in the World Series of Poker and that is a resounding no to both.
I think that Las Vegas and the WSOP is for dreamers but me on the other hand, I just like to keep it simple and playing 3-4 events with big buy-ins and trying to wade through those big fields trying to catch lightening in a bottle isn’t really part of my game plan. So I am stuck in an online grind of my own making…….oh well.

Thursday 27 October 2011

Turning a new corner

This week has seen me move into a completely different phase with my poker and for the first time in six years then I no longer write for poker magazines. Since 2005 then I have written for a whole host of them including the WPT, Bluff Europe, Poker Pro Europe, Online Poker Pro, Top Pair, Player Ireland and the 2+2 online magazine. On top of this I have also written three books as well and so that represents an awful lot of written work. But these days then the entire world is going online and this is where the future is.
So I am not just playing poker online now but also increasing my online footprint with the intention of pushing my poker coaching. So today has been a huge day for me in so much that writing poker strategy for hand held poker magazines has come to an end. So what else has been happening? Well I played a session yesterday playing eight tables at NL50 and made around $170 or so.
The session went really well on the whole and I got ahead quite early when I open raised from the cut-off with J-J and was re-raised by the big blind. But the re-raise was quite small and it priced me in. I suspected that I was up against a bigger pair but with stacks of $130 at stakes of $0.25-$0.50 then I had to call when my raise to $1.75 was only re-raised to $4. The flop came J-7-4 with two suits and my opponent checked and I bet two thirds pot. They check-raised and I called. The turn card bricked out and they over bet the pot to which I shoved all in.
They must have been suspecting being behind at this stage but they called and showed A-A and I win a huge pot that really got me started. This is the good thing about playing multiple tables because someone somewhere nearly always makes a big mistake like this. On sites like www.pokerstars.co.uk then the action is nearly always huge and so table selection is never a problem. These are the types of session that I like because when you get ahead early then you feel good and this helps you to play proper poker. At the end of the day then poker is mental game and you need to be on top of you game to optimise your potential at it.

Friday 21 October 2011

A great way to start the blog rolling

Seeing as I am now writing a poker blog then I suppose that I best play some poker. Although I did actually on the 1st April 2010 (the date has no significance as I just like to start things on the 1st of the month) embark on a challenge where I started with $100 and tried to turn that into $10,000. I started at the $2 games at no limit cash games. Well to cut a long story short then I reached the $10k landmark on December 30th 2010. It hadn’t been easy and was probably the toughest thing that I have ever had to undertake in all my years as an online player.

These days though I play at www.pokerstars.co.uk simply because the site has far more action than anyone else. However what I did on the 1st January this year was make a decision to take the challenge onto $100,000 from the original $100. I am not playing $0.50-$1.00 games with $100 buy-ins and have just past the $40,000 mark and so have made $30,000 since January 1st.

I do have the bankroll to play far higher but NL100 is my niche really as the online games are proving far tougher than live games. I haven’t played live poker in ages and playing online and writing is taking up my time now. I could play full time but I did that once upon a time and it did my head in and sitting at the same chair for eight hours a day simply isn’t my idea of fun.

The long term effects of sitting at a computer all week are probably not known yet as widespread use has not been with us all that long. I have been successful on other fronts as well and went on a strict food and health regime in July and have lost 26lbs in weight and so I am very pleased about that and so it isn’t just the Texas Hold Em that is going well.

For new readers then I also write for three major poker magazines in Poker Pro Europe, Online Poker Pro and Player Ireland. The challenge isn’t all the poker that I have been playing though and I have had had a good year short stacking Pot Limit Omaha and No Limit Texas Hold Em games and made around $10,000 from that also. If I could write less and dedicate myself a little more then $100k isn’t out of the way for me as there is a lot of weak money at the lower levels. I try and stay clear of the good players these days.

Thursday 20 October 2011

Life is never dull…..or is it?

I wanted really to discuss my Texas Hold Em online poker and what my ideas and philosophies are in this blog but I also felt that discussing a little about my history would help readers to see me in the real light so to speak. After working as a croupier from 1990-1998 then I became a financial consultant for a while but hated that job and left. During the period from 1998-2002 then I played blackjack semi-professionally (don’t know if that is the right term) and I was asked to write a book about it which I later did. Blackjack although easier to get away with in the UK than the US also became played out with the arrival of the shuffling machines and the automated games.
But I had been playing online poker since 2000 when I was playing on a site called Planet Poker but the software was terrible and only about a couple of hundred people were online. Only yesterday I logged onto www.pokerstars.co.uk and there were nearly 200,000 people online and it wasn’t even peak time. But anyway I played limit hold’em back then. I wasn’t very good by today’s standards and I had read Sklansky’s books and a few by Ciaffone but that was enough to get me an edge up to and including $10-$20 limit games.
I made a decent living for a while but by 2005 then it was clear that the limit games were getting very tough and I had played relatively high stakes at $50-$100 for a while but I simply hated the financial swings at that level and moved back down. The game was the first to become theoretically solved and so by 2007 I had become extinct as it were as a limit player. In 2008 then this was my most eventful year to date as a poker player but it was also my least productive. I had switched to playing NLHE and was playing at levels as high as $25-$50 which looking back was clearly far too high.
I had managed to secure a financial backer and so the risk wasn’t mine. I suffered my worst ever dip as a full time player when I dropped twenty buy-ins at $5000 a throw. Being $100k in the whole was sobering but even now I don’t know how I clawed that back. I more or less got the money back with some high variance good fortune but the whole saga left mental scars and I found that I no longer wanted to play high stakes poker or had the stomach for it even if I had a backer.
So I eventually moved down to the level that I am now which is $0.50-1.00. I learned new skills and how to multi-table effectively and suddenly I was playing poker not like a “poker player” but far more automated that I had ever imagined. I had discovered that to make the most money in online poker for someone with limited poker ability but bags of heart and potential involved playing in an almost anti-poker style……..I hope you will find my exploits and diary informative and revealing.