No Limit Holdem For Advanced Players
出版社: Two Plus Two Publishing LLC
副标题: Empasis On Tough Games
出版年: 2017-5-31
页数: 291
定价: USD 24.85
装帧: Paperback
ISBN: 9781880685594
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Actual tournaments and feature many of the best known players in the world. Getting Started in Hold ’em by Ed Miller is the best first book on hold ’em. It prepares a new student perfectly for more advanced texts. Covering the rules of the game, limit, no limit,. Start reading No-Limit Hold 'em For Advanced Players on your Kindle in under a minute. Don't have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.
内容简介 ······
In 2003 poker was put on television and no-limit hold em quickly became the most popular form of poker played in casinos, public cardrooms, and on the Internet. At first, because of the newness of the game to most participants, they could be easily be beaten by players with only a moderate knowledge of sophisticated strategy. But today, this is no longer the case.
Even though n...
In 2003 poker was put on television and no-limit hold em quickly became the most popular form of poker played in casinos, public cardrooms, and on the Internet. At first, because of the newness of the game to most participants, they could be easily be beaten by players with only a moderate knowledge of sophisticated strategy. But today, this is no longer the case.
Even though no-limit hold em is not, from a Game Theory perspective, a solved game, many ideas and concepts which come from this branch of mathematics now play an important role in a strong, winning no-limit hold em strategy. But it s also important for the expert player to know when to leave what is known about optimal play and switch to exploitative strategies to maximize his profit. And this brings us to No-Limit Hold em for Advanced Players, Emphasis on Tough Games by Matthew Janda.
In this text, Janda spends much time discussing sophisticated strategies that should be employed against tough opposition, some of which has never been published before. He then supports his ideas with the modern advanced software programs of PokerSnowie and PioSOLVER. Topics covered include, but not limited to, Linear, Condensed, and Polarized Ranges, Raising First In As the Button, Understanding High Variance Plays, Turn Play and Overbets, Understanding Counter Strategies, Opening Frequencies Based on Stack Depth, Playing Short in Button vs Big Blind Situations, and Denying Your Opponents Equity While Realizing Ours.
作者简介 ······
Matthew Janda has had an interest in card games his entire life, and began playing poker with friends in high school before playing online cash games in college. While originally studying business economics at UCLA, a game theory course sparked his interest in poker theory and optimal play.
After Black Friday in 2011, Matt began transitioning from playing poker to pursuing medi...
Matthew Janda has had an interest in card games his entire life, and began playing poker with friends in high school before playing online cash games in college. While originally studying business economics at UCLA, a game theory course sparked his interest in poker theory and optimal play.
After Black Friday in 2011, Matt began transitioning from playing poker to pursuing medicine. He s now a 4th year podiatry student at Samuel Merritt University and studying to be a podiatric surgeon. While he has much less time for poker now than he did in the past, discussing poker theory remains his favorite hobby as it s too enjoyable to realistically call it a job. He currently makes theory oriented videos for CardRunners and teaches math and poker theory to players from all around the world.
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This is his second book for Two Plus Two Publishing LLC. His first book, Applications of No-Limit Hold em; a Guide to Understanding Theoretical Sound Poker, was well received and is considered one of the most important book in this field by many players.
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In his 1999 book 'The Theory of Poker'David Sklansky formed what is now known as 'The Fundamental Theorem of Poker'. In case you've been living under a rock for the past two decades, or you're a relative newcomer to the poker scene, or maybe you're so deep into the sophisticated GTO calculations that you couldn't be bothered to remember the fundamentals and you're in need of a refresher, the theory goes something like this:
Every time you play a hand differently from the way you would have played it if you could see all your opponents' cards, they gain; and every time you play your hand the same way you would have played it if you could see all their cards, they lose.”
In short, if you know what the villain is holding, playing optimal poker becomes a trivial affair - you just make a bet if you have the goods (unless there's more value in deception) or fold when you're behind (unless you have the odds to call). Unfortunately, in the post Black Friday reality of the online poker games, super-user accounts are a bit hard to come by and so we have to settle for the next best thing - developing our player profiling skills. Even though we can never know exactly what hole cards our opponents are holding, we can get pretty damn close in our estimations provided that we know what kind of player we’re dealing with in a specific spot. Like with every other poker skill, practice makes perfect and a very experienced player can often display an uncanny ability to decipher the narrow range of hands, that his opponent might be holding. If you've ever seen an old-school pro naming his opponent's exact hand you know exactly what I'm talking about.
This uncanny ability is simply a function of mastering the fundamentals of player profiling combined with a very long experience at the tables. While reading a poker article can't provide you with the latter we can certainly teach you something about the former. In this article, we'll give you a basic yet powerful system of player profiling based on three major poker player types.
Three Major Player Types
Let's get right to the point. There are only three major poker player types that are worth our consideration - good aggressive, bad aggressive and bad passive. These player types are fairly self-explanatory and stem from the fact that the only way to be successful at poker is by employing some sort of an aggressive strategy. Said aggressive strategy can also be implemented poorly leading the user to negative outcomes thus the distinction between good and bad aggressive players. A failure to implement an aggressive strategy always leads to negative outcomes.
This short list of three major player types might seem overly reductionist, because of the ubiquity of many different arbitrary player classifications that we can find in poker related books, articles, and videos. We've all heard about 'rocks', 'nits', 'TAGs', 'LAGs', 'maniacs', 'payoff wizards', 'calling stations' etc. We can come up with a virtually infinite number of these classifications and it's precisely the reason why we shouldn't. What about 'nits who love to check raise' or 'calling stations with polarized river raising range'? Or what's the difference between a 'calling station' a 'sticky bun' and a 'payoff wizard'? The truth of the matter is that once you've gained enough information about your opponent to know that he or she is, in fact, a 'calling station with polarized river raising range' you should no longer rely on simplified arbitrary labels - you should just play poker against that person with all the complexity you're capable of. Player profiling is a tool that's designed to get you through the 'uncertainty period' when you don't have a lot of information about the villain.
Focusing our attention on three major player types is a powerful player profiling strategy because it's applicable in almost any scenario. Whether you're playing live, HUD-less or on a site that allows for screen name changes, you can always gather enough information to assign your opponent to one of the three basic groups. This is not necessarily true for more elaborate classifications. It's easy to spot a 12/10 'nit' when you have access to a database containing thousands of hands but this is a scenario that becomes increasingly less common in the modern poker landscape, with poker rooms cracking down on various poker trackers, offering features like anonymous tables or the aforementioned screen name changes. There is, of course, a world of difference between a good aggressive player that's a 1bb/100 winner and the one that's crushing the games for 8bb/100. Similarly, a 30/12 modest loser and 45/4 target are likely both bad passive players.
Lastly, let's briefly discuss the dangers associated with making any kind of a value judgment in poker. Words like “good” or “bad” are deceptively dangerous in the poker context where the difference between a winner and loser can be a matter of a few percentage points. The volatility of the short-run perspective complicates things even further. A good aggressive player can turn out to be a bad aggressive player on a heater. Even a bad passive player can disguise himself as a bad aggressive or even a good aggressive player for a brief moment if they're dealt a few good hands in a row. Besides, calling someone good or bad at poker after just a few hands might seem like a sad joke when we're in the middle of a 100k hand's long break even stretch and we're starting to doubt our own abilities. This is another reason why a player profiling strategy centered around only three player types is superior to a more elaborate variation. It allows you to both make and change your value judgment very quickly. Wrongly labeling a bad aggressive player as a good aggressive player and correcting that mistake will often be a matter of a few orbits.
Tag’em and Bag’em
With theory out of the way, let's talk about more applicable advice that will allow you to utilize and profit from the player profiling strategy based on three major poker player types. Below you'll find some tips that will help you identify players from each of the three group. We'll also talk about some basic adjustments that you should make when playing against them.
If you have access to HUD stats pay close attention to the two most basic and useful ones - VPIP and PFR. Even in 2018 we still tend to underestimate the number of hands necessary for any kind of HUD stat to be representative, but bad passive players are usually so transparent that you can often spot them after just one or two orbits. 50/50, 40/30 or 10/10 VPIP/PFR stats after 10 or so hands can mean absolutely anything depending on how lucky certain player got at the beginning of their session, but almost no combination of cards dealt will force an aggressive player to go with 60/0 preflop style. The good aggressive player will usually settle their VPIP/PFR somewhere in the neighborhood of 20-30% with the gap between the two no larger than 4% (although some players can get away with 6-8% in certain environments). Bad aggressive players usually play more than 30% of their hands (sometimes much more than that) and a large percentage of those they choose to open with aggressive action. Other basic stats that you should be paying attention to are 3bet (passive players almost never go beyond the value range of 6% and you can't really find good aggressive players with outrageously high 3bet like 15-20% etc.), aggression factor/frequency, went to showdown (>30% is almost always a sign that you're playing against a bad passive player) etc. but once you gathered a sample size that merits looking at those in the first place (especially the showdown stats which - while immensely valuable - require literally thousands of hands to be worthwhile) you no longer need to rely on basic player profiling.
If you're playing in a HUD-less environment be it a live game, an online anonymous table or a poker room that doesn't allow the use of poker trackers, there are still plenty of other pieces of information that you can use to determine what kind of player you're dealing with. First of all, passive and aggressive recreational players rarely buy-in for a full amount while good aggressive players almost always do (a tiny percentage of them might choose to deceptively buy-in for a bit less in a new environment). Bad passive players (and occasionally bad aggressive players) also like to open-limp preflop from positions other than small blind. Good aggressive players usually favor bet sizes that make sense, operating somewhere in the neighborhood of 50-100% of the pot size, while bad passive and bad aggressive players are often all over the place with frequent min-raises and overbets. Bad passive players are also unlikely to raise with anything that isn't the absolute top of their range.
No Limit Hold'em For Advanced Players
In a live environment, players who look and act like they “belong” at the table (no matter if it's 0.5$/0.5$ home game or a 5$/10$ casino game) usually aren't passive, so if you see someone busting a few chip tricks while thinking about their decision on the turn you should think twice about calling their raise. Lastly, passive players are, well, passive and aggressive players are - you guessed it - aggressive. You might need a few hundred hands to spot a passive player using went to showdown stat but you need to pay attention to only one of those showdowns where the player in question called down two juicy value bets with a third pair, in order to profile him or her correctly. Same goes for bad aggressive players.
No Limit Hold'em For Advanced Players
How do you deal with bad passive, bad aggressive and good aggressive players? As we've already alluded to in the opening of this article, the more we know about our opponents the easier it is to play good poker against them. In case of confirmed bad passive players, you should avoid big bluffs, believe them when they show strength (particularly when they raise on the turn or river) and thin value bet them relentlessly. When you're playing against bad aggressive players make sure that your ranges are stronger than usual, particularly on the turn and river where you're likely to experience a lot of heat. You have no business floating a maniac with speculative hands with no showdown value but you're happy to call him or her down with your Broadway-heavy range that you'll often catch good top pair type hands with.
No Limit Hold Em For Advanced Players +pdf
This might sound overly simplistic and you can, of course, win money against some regulars but this should never be a priority. Winning money against regulars requires a lot of information that basic player profiling simply can't provide. If you identify someone as good, aggressive player, treat him or her with respect, play solid poker against them, make sure you're not being exploited by them but other than that focus on the other two player types because in the environment where you only have access to a very limited amount of information bad players will be the main source of your profits.