Archive for the ‘Poker’ Category

Playing a Check Raise

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

The Check Raise is no doubt one of the most effective and strongest moves that you can take during a game of Texas Hold’em Poker. Some players look at it as a dishonest move and some card rooms may even have banned the check raise. No matter what, it is a very strong weapon that wins games.

Folding Hand PokerCheck-Raise is when you checked on what is to be laid on the poker table with the intention of pushing in more chips or raising when your opponent bets.

It is a very interesting strategy since you show some weakness to the other players by tapping on the table and checking but then you change gear and suddenly show some amount of strength. The nature of the tactic is basically why it is regarded as a very dishonest move. A check-raise is a good trap for an opponent.

A check-raise is very useful when you want to get some more money into the pot or bluffing other players out of the pot. The check raise also inject some good dynamics into your game and making you more unpredictable on the table.

A beginner will rarely use this so other players on the table will have an impression that you know how to play the game when you try to do a check raise. You can affect them mentally before they think of pushing off the pots.

The check raise is the strongest move you can take in a poker game. Remember that you need to be the first to act so you can do a check raise. You can’t call it a check raise if you are not the first. It will only be a raise in that scenario.

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Poker Aggression opens more opportunities to success on the table

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Phil Ivey, Aggressive GamblerWhen you are on the poker table, there is a higher chance of boosting those chips stack when you play aggressive. This means that you do more of raising and betting than just calling and checking.

Being aggressive does not mean just pouring it all out. It means calculated aggression on the table to make everything work to your advantage. When you have a better card, better poker skills, or better position, there is no reason why you will not play aggressive.

Let us say that you have an Ace-King and the flop gives you King-Ten-Seven. You have a top pair and an excellent kicker but you might remain a bit hesitant especially when the flop comes with suited cards and your hand might just be broken by the turn. You need to protect your hand and be aggressive. If your opponent bets on you then you have to raise. The goal is to give your opponent a hard time with wrong odds on the pot. Don’t give them the opportunity to improve their hand.

Use aggressive Play to Buy Position

When you have good cards on your hand you must act aggressively to push other players out of position. This means that you can by the position during the pre-flop betting where there will be players acting after your call. Limping in will not do any good.
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Different Poker Variations

Friday, May 15th, 2009

There are a number of variations to the popular card game poker:

Stud Horse Poker:
This variant, under Section 330 of the California statute wasStud Poker Photo banned in the 19th century. Almost 6 decades later, it was declared that Stud horse poker was identical to stud poker and therefore, the ban was removed.

Oxford stud
Under this variant of poker, ever player receives downcards, community cards and upcards. There are many variants to this particular variation as the type of cards dealt as well as the number dealt can be modified.

However, the problem with this combination is that the decision to be taken which requires the player holding the best upcards to show his bets first in the beginning of each round. On the other hand, in the case of community card games, every round is initiated by the same player every time. According to Oxford stud, each individual player’s upcards are used for the purpose of establishing the order of the game.

To iniate the game, every individual player receives two downcards and a single upcard. The player who holds the lowest upcard initiates the betting.

As the game goes on in clockwise direction, after the conclusion of the first round, two community cards are placed on the board.

The second round is initiated by that player who holds the highest showing hand which consists of his upcard along with the two previously placed community cards. After the conclusion of this round, every individual player receives an upcard.

The third round is again initiated by that player who holds the highest hand.

Another community card, the third, is placed onto the board, thus initiating the last round. The betting is commenced by the player who holds the highest poker hand.

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Another bad beat for Mike The Mouth

Friday, May 15th, 2009

This time, Allen Cunningham puts a pretty sick beat on Mr. Mike…

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Erik Seidel puts a beat on Mike Matusow

Monday, May 4th, 2009

Such a sick sick sick hand. Mike Matusow actually plays this very well, betting out on the flop, convincing a draw or a ten — and the running sevens KILL Mike and cost him probably a large part of his bankroll… I’m sure he was partly staked in the Full Tilt Million Dollar Cash Game, but still…

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Welcome to WeezyPoker!

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

Hi, and welcome to WeezyPoker – my poker home on the internet!

On this small and unambitious pokerblog of mine I’ll be posting poker strategy tips, poker news articles, poker videos and other kinds of personal poker stories… I’ll have some fun while I make these posts – and I honestly hope you’ll have a lot of fun reading the blog too!

Enjoy, and we’ll see you soon (I hope). ;-)