Posted in Poker February 4th, 2010

Learning To Bet Aggressively in Texas Hold’em


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Experienced, successful hold\’em players can tell you that poker is a game of betting, not calling. The amount of pressure that you can constantly direct onto your opponents can frequently be measured in parallel with your general success in poker.

When your opponent bets into you, they force you to be the one who has to make a decision – do you feel you have the better hand or not? If you’re holding a margin hand then it\’s not easy to make that decision, which often means you’re forced to fold.

So it is almost always better to be the aggressor in a hand, unless of course you relaly have a very strong hand and you are trapping your opponent. The idea of being aggressive is to persuade your rival to guess incorrectly about what you’re holding. Whether you want them to fold or call is dependent on the situation, but what you always want is for him to make a mistake. By constantly betting and applying pressure you encourage your opponents to make errors.

In the low limit games, you want to be very selective about the hands you play and the position you play them from. If you are discriminating enough, you can frequently get away with re-raising your opponent and winning a nice pot without ever revealing your cards, based on your strict image.

Calling stations in poker are generally money-losing players, and regularly give up precious chips because of an irrepressible inquisitiveness. You do not want to be a calling station in poker, but you do want to recognize them in order to take money from them in the most effectual way possible. And that is plainly value betting your good quality hands in medium increments, to keep them in the pot.

The fundamental tenet here is that you want to be the aggressor in the game, but you want to do it against the correct opponents with the correct hands. If your Ace King misses the flop, you should probably still do a continuation bet to keep the pressure on, but after that, you should be using profiling information to decide what to do beyond that.

Download the free book Learn To Play Poker at LearnAboutPoker.com, then visit Billy Kernow’s site about the Best Online Poker Sites for tips and advice, and exclusive deposit bonuses.

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This entry was posted on Thursday, February 4th, 2010 at 8:53 pm and is filed under Poker. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

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