Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Learning how to Read Hands at the Poker Table

Learning to read other people's hands at the poker table is the most coveted skill that any poker player could ever wish for. Math is easy, I think it just there to learn, but reading people is a masterful skill. Reading people never works perfectly, because there is a rule that works for each person to tell if they are bluffing or they have a good hand. Everyone is different, and therefore you have to read all different. But there are a few guidelines that you can follow.

The first thing you should do when they join a poker table is to look around and make so many comments about the people you play poker with as you can. You've heard the saying "never judge a book by its cover," forget all about it in this matter. Get as many first impression you can. Who looks rich (rich people tend to play more loosely, as they can afford a loss)? Who looks depressed and desperate (these people probably should not be at poker because of gambling problems)? Who sounds smart? Who sounds stupid? Who looks weak? Who looks strong? Who looks like a first time poker player who happens to call everything? Be very attentive and unless people change their minds with their game, go with your instincts. Sometimes it's good to sit on a pair of hands in early to get a pair of reading about how people will play.

Two major poker tells that can tell you if anyone has a good hand or not, if your opponent looks at his chips, just after he looked at his hand, or if he leans closer to the poker table, anxiously waiting for the hand to start. If a player is leaning back, it usually means he has a bad hand. Listening to secure votes for good hands and uncertain voices for bad hands. Once players are eager to get the game to go faster when they are in hand, it usually means they have a pretty good deal that could possibly be beat, and they want the game to speed up a little bit, because they are extremely impatient and interested in getting the reader. Poker reader obviously does not work all the time, otherwise no one would ever lose. Be on the lookout for reverse psychology.

Speaking of psychology, has many professional Poker claimed that the most influential books in their poker career had nothing to do with poker, but with psychology. If you are totally serious about poker, you should probably consider reading books that have to do with psychology or maybe even take a psychology class at your local college. This will teach you how to read body language and behavior of liars or bluffing and people who are familiar with their hands.

Some other good "tells" to say that your opponent has a good hand if he behaves like he is uninterested in his hand, I he is breathing hard as they can not wait to collect your chips, or their hands shaking, in this case the nuts. If anyone has a band hand, they might try to stare you down, which either means they are trying to scare you into folding, or they are not quite sure what you have and they can easily beat. Some signs that scream to the person who tries to pull out at you is if they take long to call, have usuaprobably LLY calculate their odds, or whether they simply call your bet on the flop and turn.

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