Posts Tagged ‘learn to play poker online’

A big welcome to Justin (Gloves), NoPayPOKER’s newest poker writer. He is a full time online poker pro and also enjoys the free online poker games at NoPay. He has generously offered to write online poker training lessons for us in order to help any all of you (who want to be helped icon wink From the Ground Up A Beginners Guide to Building a Solid Poker Game   Part 1 play better, more successful poker online. See his About Me section below for more info.

So, Gloves, over to you: Shark1 From the Ground Up A Beginners Guide to Building a Solid Poker Game   Part 1

Let’s be honest. There are some players here on NPP who just enjoy pressing the allin button and having their fingers crossed while the board runs out. There are some who are here to sit in chat and make friends without playing a serious game of poker.

There are some who really don’t care about improving, about playing solidly, who just want a casual game – and while they may not be here just to gamble they think “This feels right, so I’m gonna do it! I don’t care if it’s wrong, it’s good enough for me!”. There are plenty of guys just like this – NPP is a free online poker site after all – and while I hold nothing against these people and wish them all the best, if you’re one of them, this series really won’t be for you.

However, if you are:

> A beginning player who doesn’t know where to go next to improve.
> A casual player with some interest in becoming better at poker, making more profit each month, and maybe eventually dipping into real money poker.
> Or a serious recreational player looking to plug leaks and learn to beat NPP and microstakes real money games solidly.

Then hopefully this series will motivate you to work hard and improve your game while giving you the tools to do it.

I will assume that you guys know the basic structure and rules of a NLHE game – if you don’t, I believe DM Vadnais has written an excellent series for true poker beginners which goes over the rules, hand rankings, and various odds and ends you need to know to understand the mechanics of what’s “going on” at the tables (even if you don’t understand why!).

About Me
I suppose since this is my first article, I should give a bit of background on myself. My name’s Justin; I’ve been playing poker of various formats for a few years now. I started out grinding low stakes SNGs (18 man turbos, to be exact) on stars, did some dabbling in MTTs (successful) and cash games (not so much…) before I finally found my niche in  husngs (1vs1 games). I currently am a poker pro – playing poker is my sole source of income – and I hope to continue this throughout college (yes, I’m that young) and maybe beyond.

I’m currently grinding $60 hyperturbo HUSnGs with plans to move up to $100′s soon (and maybe eventually beyond). Basically I’m the prototypical “young internet grinder” who can make a decent hourly at midstakes HU games and is excited to write about poker to an audience interested in learning and improving their games.

While I’ve written a few strategy pieces on my NPP blog (and will continue to cover more advanced concepts and musings there), I’ve never had the opportunity to really write poker articles to a larger audience – so please bear with me especially for the first few of these!

If there are any questions, comments, or suggestions, don’t hesitate to post either on the article or on my blog, to send me a NPP message, or email me at duncelanas@hotmail.com . I’ll address every comment I get to the best of my ability (and the ones I receive privately will remain that way), so fire away! I know asking questions of players better than myself helped me when I was a beginner (and even more so now that I’m more advanced), so you guys shouldn’t be afraid to ask ANYTHING! There really are no bad questions. 

With all that out of the way, let’s get on to some poker talk. 

What is the key to being a good poker player? Stop and consider this for a moment. If you’re up for the exercise, grab a pad and jot down some thoughts as to what the answer might be.

This “golden question”, if you will, may seem like the end all be all in poker. I can hear some thoughts drifting through your minds: “I bet it’s “soulreading” our opponent’s hand!”;“Is there some secret strategy which makes players successful?”;”It’s pulling off that huge bluff, isn’t it?”.

The answer is none of these. The key to becoming a solid poker player is to make reasoned, logical decisions at every opportunity. In other words, to “use common sense at all times”. I know, seems like a real copout, doesn’t it? Common sense? “Psh!” you say…”I have plenty of common sense and I’m not winning much at all!”. But common sense, you’ll come to realize, just isn’t that common when it comes to poker. 

The failing most people have in this area is how they view poker.

> Many think of poker like some sort of slot machine, something along the lines of “I’m feeling lucky! Let’s gamble!”.
> Another common misstep is the “Oh, it’s just playmoney!” view.
> In reality, poker is a skill based game where making good decisions directly correlates to long term profits.

While the result of each hand, tournament, and session is heavily influenced by luck, in the long run skill wins out and the players playing a profitable style will…well…profit!

If you just start to think of poker in this way – if all you ever take from this entire series is that poker is a skill game and playing better will lead to direct profits – I will be happy (although not satisfied, cause I hope you get a lot more out of it than that!).

When you view poker in this way, you see that “common sense” really is the key to winning at poker.

Those big bluffs you see top pros make on tv? They all have incredibly solid (and often somewhat complex) reasoning behind them. The internet pros making tens to hundreds of thousands per year? They make their money by grinding out a high volume of hands playing a style more solid than their opponents’.

Even on NoPayPoker, it stands to reason that better poker players profit more than the worse ones. This is seemingly obvious, and yet is missed by so many people.

So how do you win at poker? By structuring your game around sound fundamentals and a solid foundation of poker knowledge (hence the title, From the Ground Up). 

DM Vadnais starts off his “Building a Bankroll” series (which targets the same audience as this does) with an article about how “patience” is the most important skill a poker player could have. While I disagree with him on a great deal of things in his writing (which is part of the reason I asked to write this series), I think he was really on the mark there.

My “key”, to use “common sense”, is really just a more general way to say that (although it expands much further than just “patience”).

How does “use common sense” equate to “be patient” in a poker game?

> Well in a standard NLHE (no-limit Hold’em) hand, each player gets 2 cards facedown before any betting (excluding the posting of blinds) takes place.
> Applying the “be patient” reasoning, we wind up with something like “We should wait for hands we can play profitably and then play those because we’ll profit.
> Since relatively few hands can be played profitably, we’ll be tight preflop.”
> Applying the “use common sense” reasoning, we wind up with “Well, poker is a game where we make money from our opponents.
> If we invest money with stronger hands than them, we’ll profit against them.

Therefore, we should only play stronger hands preflop so we can profit, and as such should generally play tight.”.

Where I feel the “common sense” concept outstrips the “patience” concept is in the fact that the “common sense” line of thought is much more logical in the reasoning it lends to your decisions.

It’s the difference between “this hand is profitable so we play it” and “this hand is profitable because…so we play it”, which I feel is ultimately quite significant when trying to build a game on solid foundations.

We want to know what we’re doing at all times – but more importantly WHY we’re doing it beyond just thinking “oh, I read this in an article”.

My blog posts on poker decision making goes into this in quite some detail, although they might be well over the head of some readers of this article (that’s fine, though, this series and my writings as a whole will hopefully help take your game from its current point to the point where you can understand my blog posts with ease). 

So we’ve established that the way to win at poker is to make profitable decisions based on our knowledge of poker.

The easiest application of this is playing tight (no trash hands!) preflop.

It’s logical to think that starting out with stronger hands than our opponents preflop will lead to us having better hands postflop and making money off our opponents, and the way to start with stronger hands than our opponents preflop is to play tight and fold our trash.

This extends to many other basic poker concepts, such as value-betting “we should bet when we’re ahead of our opponents to make money”, bluffing “we should bluff when we can’t win the pot unless our opponent folds and our opponent is likely to fold”, and beyond. But those are concepts which will be explored more in depth in future articles in this series. 

So that pretty much brings my first ever article to its conclusion! Feel free to: leave a comment here, leave a comment on my blog, send me a PM, talk to me in NPP chat, or send me an email at duncelanas@hotmail.com with any questions, comments, concerns, and suggestions.

Plan right now is to have at least 1 new article per week (possibly 2 on some weeks) somewhat indefinitely, so be sure to check back often! Hope you’ve enjoyed – I know I’ve enjoyed writing this – and see you all soon in my next article! Til then, good luck at the tables! 

-Gloves

More resources:

NoPayPOKER Lesson Series List Page – All our “formal” lessons, the DM Vadnais series and Gloves lessons as they come on.

Gloves NoPay Blog for more complex poker training and theory.

Sometimes navigating our free online poker instruction lessons can be a bit frustrating due to the way blogs arrange posts in the order of latest first – annoying when you want to go to part one of a free poker lessons series but go to the last part of it first!

So bookmark this page - It is a table of contents with links to all the lessons in the free online poker coaching learn how to play poker series from NoPayPOKER player and professional poker players and trainers D M Vadnais and Justin Skovholt.

Click on the underlined free online poker training chapter or article numbers below to go to them.

D M Vadnais Poker Lessons
D M Vadnais is a retired professional circuit player so he knows a thing or two about winning cash at poker so no matter what your level we are certain you can find plenty in here that will help you teach yourself poker free and improve your game and win you loads more chips.

And when you want to practice what you’ve learned and play free poker online practice games (as have fun and be able to win some real cash) check out the NoPay free poker games selection where you will find a great big mix of freeroll ring games, leagues and tournaments.

Poker 101 Course – free online poker for beginners

Chapter 1: WELCOME TO NOPAY POKER – IT’S FREE!
Chapter 2: THE RULES OF THE GAME OF POKER – IN SIMPLE FORM – Part 1
Chapter 3: THE RULES OF THE GAME OF POKER- IN SIMPLE FORM – Part 2
Chapter 4: Poker Parlance, terminology and nicknames
Chapter 5:The hierarchy of hands and what beats what
Chapter 6: Move on to Building a bankroll

Building a Bankroll Series – More advanced free poker strategy lessons

This series aims to take you from a a player who knows the basics and can play poker to an advanced intermediate level. If you can master and apply the free poker experience within this course you will be able to make money consistently at places like PartyPoker and Feltstars.

Article 1 of 11: The Overwhelming Importance of Patience
Article 2 of 11: Playable Pockets and Table Position
Article 3 of 11: Winning Big With Low Pocket Pairs
Article 4 of 11: Pot Odds, Implied Odds, and Rounding
Article 5 of 11: Goals, Bets, Blunders, and Calamities – Part 1
Article 6 of 11: Goals, Bets, Blunders, and Calamities – Part 2
Article 7 of 11: Shades of Gray – Paint Pockets and Big Slick
Article 8 of 11: Management – Your Money, Your Bankroll, and Your Stack
Article 9 of 11: A Lesson from Russia – The Gambler’s Mindset
Article 10 of 11:The Nutz, Zutz, Gutz, Butz and Tutz equals 100% – Part 1
Article 11 of 11:The Nutz, Zutz, Gutz, Butz and Tutz equals 100% – Part 2

Advanced Poker Strategies – Top of the line free poker training for intermediates and above

Adding gloss to Building a Bankroll – If you master these free poker lessons then WSOP beckons!

Article 1 of 7 – Bluffing: Conditional Mandates for Success
Article 2 of 7 – Aggression: An Absence of Reckless Abandon
Article 3 of 7 – Slow Play: Make a Habit of Accepting Donations
Article 4 of 7 – Folding: Laying Down a Once Powerful Hand
Article 5 of 7: Interwoven with Other Poker Considerations
Article 6 of 7 – Lady Luck: True or False – FLOCCINAUCINIHILIPILIFICATION
Article 7 of 7: The Game is played on a six inch table
Article 8 of 7: Mistakes, The Fast Track To WAFABA Membership
Article 9 of 7: Money – Final table, Final 4 and Heads up

World of Bricks and Mortar Poker Play

Free poker education for when you want to expand from online poker to “real world” cards games with real poker faces and all the banter you see on poker TV and WSOP then this is the course for you.

Article 1 of 10: A Prerequisite For Poker Venues Involving Real Money
Article 2 of 10: The Biggest Differences Between Online Poker Play and B&M Play
Article 3 of 10: The Three Separate Components of Poker Deceit
Article 4 of 10: The Pocket Cards That Consistently Yield The Most Profits
Article 5 of 10: Quality of Play and Paint Pockets
Article 6 of 10: Implied Odds On Offense, Pot Odds On Defense
Article 7 of 10: Continuation Bets, Added Skills, and Folding Quads
Article 8 of 10: Player Notes – The Path to Consistent Winning Play
Article 9 of 10: Notebook Entries – Control, Maintenance, and Utilization
Article 10 of 10: “How” and “Why” – Player Notes, and “You Know You Best”

Graduating from Free Online Poker to Playing Cash Poker Games Online

A series of 9 articles to be released monthly from April 2011.

Article 1 – Hope For the Best; Expect The Worst

Article 2 – Use Time As A Weapon; Vision As A Safeguard

Article 3 – Bankroll, cash, emotions, sex and risk management

Article 4 – Premium pockets part 1

Article 5 – Premium pockets part 2

Article 6 - Bad Plays, pot odds, implied odds and D Codes.

Article 7 – Bringing it it together, the Texas Holdem bible of cash website play

Justin Skovholt Poker Lessons (plays on NoPayPOKER as Gloves)

Full time pro online poker player and NoPayPOKER free online poker site writer Justin Skovholt presents lessons designed for all levels from beginners who know the basic workings of the game, upto advanced.

His blog on NoPay - No holes barred, no apologies, more complex and straight from the heart content – Here.

His lessons – designed for mere mortal consumption

Poker  From the Ground Up Foundations Series

Part 1 – Patience on steroids “Common Sense Poker

Part 2 – Hand Ranges, Playable Pockets, Table Position and Limping

Part 3 – Postflop Play scenarios. Optimal play against different player styles.

Part 4 – Basic Poker Math and Odds (pot odds, implied odds and reverse implied odds)

Part 5 – Differences between cash games and poker tournaments

Part 6 – Poker tournament theory and example ranges

And there is even more free online poker coaching to come, keep an eye on this page which will be have more free online poker training, tips and education added to it and also keep an eye on the NoPay blog in general for ad hoc free poker tips articles from our members and staff.

This poker article was the winner of the June 2010 NoPayPOKER article writing contest. Member Buried_Child gets $1,000 FreeD and a big pile of Bonus Chips.

There is a poker tournament variant called All-in or Fold. The rules are this: There is only one blind (called big blind). Each player starts with just one chip; it doesn’t matter how many, anyway, for these reasons: Your only options are: All-in, and Fold. If you are on the big blind you are automatically all-in. You receive change, however, if, say, you have 5 chips and someone moves all-in with 2 chips and you call him (which is an all-in, too). He will not win five chips from you; you will get a change of three chips.

If you are on the big blind you just ignore everything else that follows. (It happens only about 1/10 of the time, however, in a 10-player table. If you somehow want to become hooked.)

So it’s really a math game, and a position game too.

Why math game?

Because you will be relying entirely on preflop all-ins, and you have to commit to memory the probability of your winning, or at least have a gist of them. I can give some examples (You can generalize; the probability’s pretty much the same in a similar situation; for instance the first example will be ‘Two Overcards vs. Small Pair, or the first example will apply too if it were, say, A-10 over 5-5) and approximate probabilities:

A-K vs 8-8
55%-45% in favor of 8-8

A-K vs A-Q
75%-25% in favor of A-K

A-10 vs K-K
75%-25% in favor of K-K

A-K vs 7-6
65%-35% in favor of 7-6

A-10 vs K-Q; A-Q vs K-J
63%-37% in favor of A-10 and A-Q

A-A vs 8-8
80%-20% in favor of A-A

A-A vs A-K
93%-7% in favor of A-A

A-A vs K-Q
85%-15% in favor of A-A

But these do not imply that you should wait for A-A or K-K or A-K before you move all-in, of course.

Do it with two face cards, a pair, or A-x. Just make sure the big blind doesn’t reach you, for if that happens your decision’s beyond your will.

All-In or Fold is also a game of position. Oftentimes players in these tournaments play hands similar to the above, and throw away the rest. Consider these two examples: (1) You are in late position with 4-4 and there are two all-ins in front of you. You might be facing three or four overcards, or an overpair.

Fold. After all, if you are in late position, there will be many hands before you reach the big blind. (2) You have A-8 in early position. You are two hands away from being the big blind, so you move all-in, and players after you will interpret an early-position all-in as a sign of strength.

What you consider, then, is the strength of your hand and the surrounding action. With one-on-one, which happens mostly, the above probabilities still apply. But with three or more, hand strength matters more.

Big pairs are still big; medium pairs shrink in power (because you can’t see the Flop yet; usually we see the Flop with a medium pair to hit a Set). A-x becomes weaker; A-K and A-Q weaken down a little bit. However, make sure you play a hand while you’re still in control of your decision. When you get yourself blinded out, it’s for your tournament life, mostly.

How can a small stack react to the bullying of a big stack, and under what conditions? Here Player A has the smallest stack in the table, and B the biggest one. (B had at least six times the stack of A.) Player A could move all-in with what he had, but see how well he did it.

BLINDS 100k/200k

PREFLOP:

  • A has Ad-Qd raise to 550k
  • B is on big blind, has 7d-7c, calls for 350k (Pot 1.41m)

Why didn’t B try to push A all-in here? A might fold, and he may not want to blow up his big stack yet.

What if A has J-J or above? Then A would be harder to kick out of the pot. B could put A on big cards, and he will be right if he does.

Generally, small stacks could afford to play only big cards.

FLOP: 8d-3h-8c

  • B checks
  • A bets 650k

B checks, hoping to check-check it all the way with A. But A fires out 650k.

That move is aggressive; he can push B out. Why? His 7d-7c is not strong enough, expecially on a paired board.

It is good for A to bluff, and the pot will be a chunky addition to his small stack.

That may make B put A on a high pair or two big cards (like A-K), but he doesn’t know which, so he tries a raise:

B raises to 1.5m

Because B called from the big blind, A could put him on a wider range of hands.

One of them could be A-8 suited, or 9-8. But it could also be something else which didn’t help A, maybe K-J which A decided to limp in with.

The raise may signal an Eight, or an attempt to push B out. One of the two.

Now A can think of why B didn’t bet the flop. The check may be a trap, so he bets to see if it is. If B just called then an Ace or a Queen may fall, and that may be costly to B, A might think.

But B raised, so A figures out that B wants him out of the pot because B’s hand is not strong enough (If he guesses a small pair, like 7-7 or lower, he’s right.).

And because he is the short-stack, he has to be aggressive.

He has to take more risks and take more chips. He just hoped that B is semi-bluffing, and:

  • A moves all-in (Pot 8.085m)
  • B needs 3.675m to call

B is now on trouble here.
A’s three-bet represents a strong hand. Also, look at B’s: comments: “I really think you have A-K or A-Q…” He is right. He could have called, and cost him only a sixth of his stack.

Also, B can consider the stack condition of A. Would he raise with 8-7 or 9-8 with a small stack if he can wait for and then move all-in with A-K, A-Q or any pair?

B will be more inclined to believe it’s A-K or A-Q.

However, B adds: “I’ve been playing with you for a long time, and you’re a very solid player, I never see you not having a hand…and if you have a very big pair I’m in trouble. Nice bet sir.”

Yes, he has observed that A has been playing mostly with good hands. Was A aware of this?
He may be, and used it to his advantage. B thinks that it might be a big pair, too. What’s a three-bet plus all-in for, anyway? Or even 8-7 or 9-8.

B thinks: The raise is from a late position, and A might be trying to steal preflop with anything which may include the stray Eight, and his aggression looks like he hit the Flop. So it’s really a nice all-in, and B folds.

So a short-stack should play more aggressively.

If A didn’t do the move now when the proper conditions are there (a paired board which is less likely to hit B and more likely to scare him, too; a raise he interpreted as a weak semi-bluff; his player image), he might be blinded and anted off, and he will find it harder to stage a comeback in the tournament.

Phew, heavy stuff eh! If you are a poker beginner this may be a bit way out there for now but never fear! Join NoPayPOKER today. You can learn to play poker for free on the blog and then put your learning into practice with no money risk whatsoever on the NoPayPOKER free texas holdem online poker site

What do you do with a big hand preflop when you have a big stack, like K-K? And how does everyone else react? At the World Series of Poker, here is one such hand.

BLINDS 40,000/80,000

A has As-10c moves all-in (Pot 1.296m)
B has K-K reraises to 5m (Pot 6.296m)

B has two options here. He can just call and then wait for someone to move all-in after him, but that would make him do some thinking. Could it be A-A? Or Q-Q? If it was Q-Q there is a slight chance he might fold K-K, and regret it. But a big reraise can drive Q-Q or lower out, like what happened to another player:

C has Jd-Jc

(C’s comments on B’s hand were: “Why did you make it so much? … You like your hand that much?”) If C calls, it’s for all of his chips. C may think that B has A-K, but there are two all-ins in front of him, and one of them might be A-X (and with A-X he is still not safe) or a pair, but a suspiciously heavy raise to about 60 times the big blind is almost always a signal for A-A or K-K. So C could wait for a better opportunity than now.

C folds (Pot 2.39m)

C’s fold was brilliant, after the reraise, but it will still be brillinat even if B did not reraise. B might bet again on the Flop and C may not continue and just let go of the chips.

B’s reraise will work if he has A-A or K-K, but I doubt it if he will do the same with A-K or Q-Q, but it may have the same effect of making C fold. As for A, let us wish for his good health. B won the hand later.

So now you know! If you are not already a member of NoPayPOKER join today. You can learn to play poker online free on the blog and then put your learning into practice with no money risk whatsoever on the NoPayPOKER free poker site