Monday, 13 February 2012

Book Review and game Impact

Well I have just finished the first book I mentioned in my last blog so I thought I would put my thoughts down below:

Decide to Play Great Poker: A Strategy Guide to NLHE by Annie Duke and John Vorhaus

I have to say first off I absolutely loved this book! It is easy to read, easy to use and unlike a lot of books I have read it isn't a set of hard and fast rules. The book goes through a poker hand from preflop to postflop play. It looks into each area in some detail.

The preflop section is good and well written, a lot of this is common sense but it needs to be there. They talk about starting hand selection, types of players you will come across, types of games (loose, tight etc.). It is useful but anyone with a bit of poker knowledge or experience will find this section just reinforces what you already know.

The book really comes into it's own once you get to part 2 and beyond. Here the book becomes a bit of a goldmine IMO. The postflop section is without a doubt the best that I have read in a poker book to date. The authors don't give you rules to follow but explain thinking through a hand, responding to your opponents bets and what they mean and what ranges you can put them on generally. What the book does is really make you think the hand through and help you make sense of what has gone on so you can arrive at the correct plays.
 
All in all it is a great book and well worth buying for the post flop section alone, the advice is equally good for tourneys or cash games. It is a bargain at £5 in the Amazon kindle shop if you have a kindle, but I can't recommend it highly enough.




Well there is my review hope it makes sense to you all. For me personally this book is exactly what I needed to read. I mentioned in my previous blog I was making too many snap decisions and not making sense of hands enough. Now I am taking a step back and really thinking things through and I feel much more confident in my game. Obviously it will take time to put it all in place but in the couple of sessions or so I have played since I feel I have progressed more than the previous year playing so I feel positive at the minute. I will see how it goes and hopefully my next blog will be as positive as this one!

Saturday, 4 February 2012

Taking Stock

I am writing this blog after what was the worst session of my life last Thursday, It has forced me to have a good look at my poker game. I will give a bit of background first, the trigger was against a player who until the hand in question occurred I had down as being a decent reg over around 1000 hands. I raised in the c/o with pocket 7's (standard) he flatted in the BB. flop came 2h 7h Kc, obviously i am thinking bingo here. I bet he calls and the 10c hits the turn. He donk leads this card, now quite a few draws are here so I want this pot over with so I shove it in. He calls and turns over Jh3h the 3rd heart hits the river and I lose a big pot to pretty poor play. This isn't the problem, I am happy with my play, I got it in good and he sucked out big deal. The problem was this happened to me:

This in itself wasn't the worst thing, what was bad was I went on to play for a further 2 hours and lost about 5 buy ins playing what was very possibly the worst poker of my life.

I have had a break and it is continuing for the weekend, this is to analyse my game and evaluate it honestly. What is coming out of this is a number of home truths that I have to sort out if I am ever going to become truly profitable at this wonderful game. My biggest issue though is quite fundamental, I just don't think before making decisions enough. I tend to make autopilot style decisions which are often ok but also a little thought could have brought a better outcome. I have a ton of information available with my HUD, my HEM and also the notes that I take pretty religiously. In the heat of battle though I tend to make snap decisions, I raise, I call, I fold within a couple of seconds. Yet if I am honest with myself, where you to ask me why I am making the play I am the answer would be it feels right 9/10 times. Now my aim when I begin playing again is to really think the hand through, think what hand my opponent may be carrying on with, think how strong I am do I really want a bloated pot with a middling hand etc and use the time I have available to make informed decisions as often as possible.

I am using my time off to have a read of some books that I feel will help me to improve. I have Jared Tendler's mental game of poker to read, and also Annie Duke's book Decide to play great poker. I have gone for these 2 as they are more about decision making and in Tendler's case mental game obviously. Basically my A game is ok, I can play profitably and win. I know my pot odds, my drawing odds, hand strengths etc all the basics. My big problems occur when I need to make a decission, I get check raised on a 2,5,9 rainbow flop and I have aces and all of a sudden I am like WTF i have the best hand and your raising me lets get it in. I don't stop and think what they do this with, I don't look at my HUD and think "he's got an aggression factor of 0.0000001 and he is check raising me on a dry flop, I should be cautious". I have loads of information at my fingertips and I just don't use it when it matters.

I feel that this is the direct result of the person I am in real life. For those that don't know, I am a industrial chemist by trade and had a degree in Forensic Science. This is great but I deal in absolutes, a reacts with b and gives c, in my working life this is great but for poker this is horrible. There are no absolutes, everything depends on the situation, who the opponent is, what the board looks like. For too long now I have been searching for a strategy to win at poker, I have read them all Fee's, Verneer, Harringtons books etc etc trying to find a way to play. Now for a beginner this is fine, hand charts stop you losing money and rules help but to be a really good player, I feel you need to shed these training wheels and ride alone eventually. I have started on this road I play each hand to its merits, not just because someone tells me I should raise this hand from the button. I have made a start but until I change the way I think (or don't think) during a hand I will always be break even which is what I am at the minute. All right I am a rakeback winner but I should be beating micro stakes poker by now, and if I think about things I will be.

So here are my new rules which I will be applying to my game:

1- Take time to think things through, don't make snap decisions.

2- Stop thinking about money, look at the decisions made and if they were right while reviewing sessions.

3- Don't let people's bad play tilt you, we want to make people make bad decisions, the outcome is inconsequential.

I hope this helps me to improve, I have been playing poker for over 2 years now and its about time I stopped the baby steps and started to progress. It will take a lot of effort but the basics are there I just need to think at a higher level than I do currently.

Thanks for reading and I hope some of this helps you, it certainly has helped me to get all this down!