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THE MATH OF AGGRESSION


How good is battleful play in online Texas Hold’em? Now, no dead reckoning here. I want the facts you say?

A very elaborate analyse executed by Carnegie-Melon University demonstrated the accurate value of aggressive play. For the sake of this example, they had their computer-simulated player come forth playing aggressively on every hand, disregardless of pocket pair caliber, versus a varied field of adversaries. There were two very distinguishable scenarios (and only two) where this was a successful strategy.

One – against a loose table, very offensive play was a winning strategy. In the case of our try out, betting pre-flop on every single hand summed up to average winnings. In a real internet game, card-playing like a madman on every street may diminish the power of this scheme because fellow players will get a line on your strategy - but we surmise, not by very much in online play.

Once again, the hugger-mugger is finding oneself the right table. Imagine the pleasure of sitting at a big table full of fresh players and yours is the biggest stack. Like ‘shooting fish in a barrel’ as they say. This is the kind of table you are looking for.

Two – against three or fewer competitors, this belligerent approach was as well a net moneymaker. As soon as you go to four players or better, the method started to hemorrhage serious money. All of our inquiry shows that bluffing out at full or near full tables is a waste of money, and this study endorses that. At the conclusion of this chapter we have included a complete chart on the pocket hands that successfully get hold of the pot based on number of players at the table.

You will see quite clearly that potent hands double in power and relatively powerless cards can become big winners. Narrow down the field and you are able to pump up the power of your cards.

A superior indicator of playing style is that the bankrolls of tight players tend to go down in small sums incrementally, and sporadically go up in mid and large numbers. Watching stacks can give you useful info about player styles.

Professional Tip

Loose Players Have Bigger Swings. Money tends to flow clockwise around the table because it is less demanding to read poker players to the right. When that genuinely loose player is about to take a negative swing, you would like to be at a positional advantage over him or her.

Even more, you want a maniac on your right. Maniacs wipe out players with okay and drawing hands. 20 year-old highschool students are more decipherable, and you benefit from being capable to act directly after them. Here’s a question then – would you want to sit down behind a great player or a poor player?

Sitting in late position (next in sequence) from a second-rate player does not give you much of a reward. You really need to know as much as possible about the most expert players, the one’s most expected to take your money. A loose player, someone who plays only for playfulness and does not actually understand the game, is like an old car. He or she will drift all over the road, their steering is shaky and they can’t be depended on to play according to their hands. Watch for and apprise loose players. They are great contributors. They tend to wager more than they win and build pots for the rest of us.

Although different competitors prefer different styles of play, the general consensus is that the perfect table is loose-passive . That means lots of callers and few raises, particularly before the flop. You will also prefer to play at tables where most, if not all of the rounders are worse than you. You will make most of your earnings from other player's errors.

Tight players on your left will more likely call a bet than re-raise even though they could have an adequate hand. You'll be able to more easily frighten them into thinking you have got the nuts and buy more free cards in spite of the fact that they have got a positional advantage on you.

Research demonstrates that lots of pre-flop raising cuts down your potential profit. It also becomes costlier to see the flop overall, which negatively touches on your bankroll all those times when the flop does not hit you.

It is always better to have 6 players calling one bet than three poker players calling two bets. Even while the pot size in both events is the same, in the first situation you will make a profit of 5:1, whereas in the raising situation you will merely arrive at a profit of 2:1. Simply put, the more players there are putting money into the pot, the more net profit there will be when you bring home the bacon.

Professional Tip

A tipsier game, where less players are calling before the flop and remaining until the showdown, can also reduce your overall revenue. But some players choose a tight-passive table, since tight-passive opponents are kinda foreseeable. A tight-passive table gives a rounder the chance to buy more pots, because you can frequently make other players fold with a well-timed raise.


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The Math of Aggression
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