7 Tips to Take Your Poker Game From “Meh” to Amazing

Are you struggling to turn a decent profit at the poker tables on a consistent basis? Are your results best described as “somewhere around break-even“?

First off, don’t worry because you are not alone. This describes the results of the majority of poker players.

Often, however, it is just a few small poker strategy adjustments that can take your game from mediocre to amazing — from break-even to crushing it.

In this article, I am going to provide you with seven subtle but highly effective poker tips to help you get better at poker.

  • #1 – Think about ranges, not hands
  • #2 – Ditch your favorite hand
  • #3 – Adopt a consistent strategy
  • #4 – Always have a reason
  • #5 – Know when to fold your aces
  • #6 – Realize tilt only hurts you
  • #7 – Don’t play bad games

Poker Tip #1 – Think About Ranges, Not Hands

It doesn’t matter what type of casino poker you play: one of the easiest ways to spot average and beginner poker players  is to look at how they think about what their opponent has.

  • Beginner poker players try and put somebody on a specific poker hand.
  • Advanced poker players think in terms of ranges. This type of thinking that can be extremely important when calculating pot odds.

A range is the entire spectrum of poker hands somebody can have in a specific situation. For example, player X can have a flush, top pair, middle pair, bottom pair, a draw, ace-high or a complete air-ball bluff.

Good players who have already gone through a few poker strategy articles understand that player X will show up with this entire range of hands with various frequencies. They don’t focus on identifying a single winning hand, but they try and figure out those frequencies and then make the best play.

Average players try to put an opponent on exactly AJ (or some other specific hand) because that’s “what their gut tells them.”

If there’s one thing you need to know when you learn the game, this is that poker strategy tips and ‘gut feeling’ don’t go well together. Basing your tournament strategy or cash game play on what you ‘feel’ is never a good idea.

In the first video of this beginner’s guide to poker tips for beginners, poker pro Jason Wheeler explains how uses every possible information available to understand his opponent’s cards and choose his play.

How NOT to Play Texas Hold’em | Beginners Guide | PokerNews

Poker Tip #2 – Ditch Your Favorite Hand

A lot of people have a favorite hand. I know that every time I get dealt the old 9X7X-suited my eyes light up and I want to play it so bad!

However, in reality, I know that 9X7X-suited is a mediocre hand.  Definitely not one of the best starting hands you can hey in a game of Texas hold’em.

It makes sense to play it in some spots — late position, for instance, in an unopened pot. But it should almost always be folded in early position.

If you currently have some favorite starting hands, that’s fine — most people do. But don’t give them preferential treatment and make bad plays with it.

Winning poker is about math and cold hard logic, not superstition.

Poker Tip #3 – Adopt a Consistent Strategy

Another big key to becoming a great poker player (and perhaps one of the most important poker tips on this strategy guide) is to consistently apply a winning strategy.

It is not okay suddenly to change things up (e.g. to open with 9X7X-suited from early position or turn yourself into a calling station) just because you are bored or tilted.

All of your learning, experience and study over the years has given you a body of knowledge telling you how to play Texas Hold ‘Em.

But your poker strategy only actually matters if you apply it at the poker tables all the time. Every hand counts and every session counts.

The best poker players, those ones who know how to win at poker, apply the same winning strategy over and over again, no matter how they feel or what their recent results have been.

Poker Tip #4 – Always Have a Reason

Big-time winning poker players will sometimes break from their standard, successful strategies, but always for obvious reasons.

An average player might start raising 9X7X-suited in early position because he is bored or wants to make something happen.

An elite poker player will raise with this hand in this position on occasion because he notices the table is playing passively and there are a couple of recreational players in the blinds.

There is a clear reason then to believe that raising 9X7X-suited in early position (typically a fold under normal circumstances) might be a profitable play in this situation.

If you can produce a well-reasoned argument why deviating from your regular strategy might be more profitable, then it is okay. It is the “because I feel like it” or “I am bored” reasoning that has to go.

Poker Tip #5 – Know When to Fold Your Aces

Another clear difference between average poker players and great poker players is the ability to fold an overpair.

Do you know that little sick feeling you get when you have AXAX and a tight opponent raises all-in on the turn? You make the so-called “crying call”, and he turns over the set yet again.

You need to start paying attention to that feeling a little bit more often.

Certain patterns are easily recognizable at the lower stakes — especially when you play online poker — where it is 100 per cent the correct play to fold your overpair.

Good players can let go of any emotional attachment to their pretty-looking hands. Average players get married to their aces or kings instead, and can’t let them go even when they know they are beat.

Poker Tip #6. Realize Tilt Only Hurts You

Tilt is a destroyer of bankrolls, dreams, and poker careers.

I can’t tell you how often I receive emails or comments from people who describe to me how they’ve tilted vast amounts of their bankroll away when things went badly at the poker tables.

The reality of poker is that sometimes things will go badly for you, and there is absolutely nothing that you can do about it.

This is what you sign up for every time you sit down to play card games.

There’s always the possibility you might run terribly. You might run lights out as well, though.

When you allow yourself to lose control of your emotions and throw your strategy out the window, the only person you are hurting is yourself.

All those hours you’ve spent trying to learn and improve your game were basically wasted because you decided to choose your emotions over reason when it mattered.

Respect the work that you have done. You owe it to yourself to maintain more composure and stop throwing away money when the cards go south.

Poker Tip #7 – Don’t Play Bad Games

One more way beginner poker players can sabotage their poker results is by stubbornly playing in games that are full of decent-to-good regulars.

If you can’t find somebody at the table who is playing very poorly, then you have to ask yourself why it is that you are even there.

If you only play poker for the mental challenge or recreation or pleasure, then this is fine. This poker tip doesn’t necessarily apply to you.

Poker Tip #7 – Don’t Play Bad Games

One more way beginner poker players can sabotage their poker results is by stubbornly playing in games that are full of decent-to-good regulars.

If you can’t find somebody at the table who is playing very poorly, then you have to ask yourself why it is that you are even there.

If you only play poker for the mental challenge or recreation or pleasure, then this is fine. This poker tip doesn’t necessarily apply to you.

 

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