Video Poker Play Online Poker - Bonus Fulltilt Poker 100% jusqu'a 600$
Poker Gratuit

Menu
Accueil
Article
Video
Complete Episode
Bonus
Tips - Strategies
News
Forum
Contact
Articles
Recherche



News
 · Full Tilt Poker - Rush Poker
 · PokerStars - Kill ElkY Battleship 2010
 · PokerStars - Demi-finales NRJ Poker Le Duel – 100 000 € à gagner
 · Full Tilt Poker - Semaine $25 Millions Double Garantie
 · European Poker Tour - Qualifications EPT Deauville 2010
 · PokerStars - 600$ Bonus de Premier Depot de 100 %
 · Titan Poker – Bonus Bad Beat
 · PokerStars - Bonus de Dépôt – Bonus de Recharge du Nouvel An
 · FullTiltPoker - Big Little Tournament
 · Full Tilt Poker - Biggest Bonus Ever
 · PokerStars - Canal+ Poker Tour - Stars of Poker
 · FullTiltPoker - WPT - Qualifications World Poker Tour
 · PokerStars - Team Pro Tuesday - Les Mardis du Team Pro

Partenaires
. Sports Pronostics
. Blog Poker

Les Meilleurs Sites du Poker
Articles : New - Top - All
Strategies Tips - UK - How to Win a H.O.R.S.E Tournament Part I
Strategies Tips - UK - How to Win a H.O.R.S.E Tournament Part I
   Categorie : Tips - Strategies -> Tips - Strategies - UK
   Lectures : 3362
   Note : Non évalué [ Evaluer ]
   En Savoir Plus :
   Tips - FullTiltPoker - Andy Bloch -

Poker Tips - How to Win a H.O.R.S.E Tournament Part I

If you want to win a HORSE tournament, you have to be good at all five games. You don't have to be the best player at any one game, but you can't be the worst. If you're really bad at one of the games, it's going to hurt you. People often ask me which of the HORSE games I'm best at and I always give them the same answer it depends upon who I'm playing against. Whatever my opponent's worst game is, that's my best game.

In a HORSE tournament, it's really important that you remember to switch gears from one game to the next. It can be easy to forget if you're not careful, especially in the Stud portion of the games. When switching from Hold 'em to Omaha, you get dealt a different number of cards. You automatically know that's it's a different game because you're holding two more cards in your hand. That's not so obvious in the Stud games because all three versions start off the same. The only giveaway that you're playing Razz as opposed to Stud Hi or Stud Hi/Lo is that in Razz, the high card is the bring-in instead of the low card. Otherwise, all of the Stud games have the same basic structure, so it's really easy for players to forget to switch gears.

In every HORSE tournament, there's invariably going to be a couple of hands where somebody forgets which game they're playing. Part of the skill required to win a HORSE tournament is not making that mistake yourself, and realizing when one of your opponents has forgotten which game they're playing so you can take full advantage of the situation. When you remember to switch gears from one game to the next, you're going to have a big advantage over opponents who are slower to remember and a huge advantage over those players who never remember to change their games.

It is especially important to change gears when the game switches from Stud to Stud Hi/Lo. A lot of weak players think they can get away with playing any high hand in Stud Hi/Lo, and that's a huge mistake. They might not have been dealt a single quality hand for the entire round of Stud and then, as soon as the game switches to Stud Hi/Lo, they finally pick up a good high hand that they decide to play because they're still in the Stud Hi mindset. Don't let yourself fall into that trap.

A lot of the really good high hands in Stud aren't playable at all in Stud Hi/Lo, but weak players will often play them anyway. You might play a hand like J-10-9 in Stud because of the ante, but it's a terrible hand in Stud Hi/Lo. You're looking to make a straight, but the odds of that happening aren't very good. Even if you do make a straight, you'll often have to split the pot with the low who might be free-rolling you to make a flush. If you make two pair, it will be vulnerable to a low that makes a bigger two pair, trips, a straight or a flush. It's the same with a hand like split 9s. When you're playing Stud Hi/Lo, the high hand values go way down so you only want to play premium high hands. That means Aces and perhaps Kings, unless you're in position and you can get heads-up with a player who's only going for the low.

A lot of weak players also make mistakes when the game switches to Hold'em because they fail to get out of the Stud mindset and into the Hold 'em mindset. There are certain plays that you make in Hold 'em that you don't make in Stud. For example, in Stud you're far less likely to defend the bring-in than you are to defend the big blind in Hold 'em. In Hold 'em I almost always call in the big blind if there's just one raise, but I would never call a raise after bringing it in in Stud unless I had a decent hand, such as a pair or a three-flush, or a three-card low draw in Stud Hi/Lo.

Your willingness to defend your forced bet should change from game to game. In Razz you're almost never calling when you're the bring-in. When the game changes to Stud, you can start calling a little bit. When it switches to Stud Hi/Lo, you're going to be calling a lot more because a low up-card is more useful in Hi/Lo. Then, when it gets to Hold 'em and Omaha, you're nearly always going to be calling a single raise from the big blind.

As basic as this might appear, simply remembering which game you're playing and adjusting your play accordingly is an extremely important concept if you want to succeed in a HORSE tournament.

For more on tips on how to become a winning HORSE player, read next week's email where I'll discuss why it's important to fully understand how the different blind and ante structures in each affect your game.

Read Too : Poker Tips - How to Win a H.O.R.S.E Tournament Part II


Tips and strategy from professional poker player : Andy Bloch

From : www.FullTiltPoker.com


  

Videos Relatives+ Tips
World Series of Poker - WSOP Final Table Dennis Phillips Top Tips For The Bubble
World Series of Poker - WSOP Final Table Dennis Phillips Top Tips On Stamina
WSOP 2008 Steve Ambrose Qualifying Tips
European Poker Tour - EPT II Copenhagen 2006 - How To Play Texas HoldEm
Latin American Poker Tour - LAPT San Jose - Isabelle Mercier top 5 travel tips
WSOP 2008 Hevad Khan Top Tips For WSOP Qualification
WCOOP 2009 - Shaun Deeb Top Tips on the WCOOP
Videos : New - Top - All
Cash Poker - The Ultimate Gamble Season I Episode 05 Pt.4
Cash Poker - The Ultimate Gamble Season I Episode 05 Pt.3
Cash Poker - The Ultimate Gamble Season I Episode 05 Pt.2
Cash Poker - The Ultimate Gamble Season I Episode 05 Pt.1
Cash Poker - The Ultimate Gamble Season I Episode 04 Pt.4
Cash Poker - The Ultimate Gamble Season I Episode 04 Pt.3
Cash Poker - The Ultimate Gamble Season I Episode 04 Pt.2
Random Videos : New - Top - All
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament - Season 3 - Episode 02 Pt.3 Elimination Match
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament - Season 3 - Episode 02 Pt.3 Elimination Match
European Poker Tour - EPT I Dublin 2004 - Final Table - Ram Vaswani wins big pot vs Alan Vinson
European Poker Tour - EPT I Dublin 2004 - Final Table - Ram Vaswani wins big pot vs Alan Vinson
World Poker Tour - Saison IV - WPT Legends of Poker 2005 Pt04
World Poker Tour - Saison IV - WPT Legends of Poker 2005 Pt04
European Poker Tour - EPT I Deauville 2005 - Final Table - Mark Ristine Loosens Up
European Poker Tour - EPT I Deauville 2005 - Final Table - Mark Ristine Loosens Up
PokerStars - German Stars of Poker 2009 pt02
PokerStars - German Stars of Poker 2009 pt02
World Series of Poker - WSOP 2009 - Event 08 - $2.500 No Limit 2-7 Draw Lowball Live Pt 28
World Series of Poker - WSOP 2009 - Event 08 - $2.500 No Limit 2-7 Draw Lowball Live Pt 28
United States Poker Championship - USPC 2006 Ep09 pt1
United States Poker Championship - USPC 2006 Ep09 pt1
Articles : New - Top - All
Play Online Poker And Learn From The Pro
Play Online Poker
. Play Online Poker






Aussie Millions Cash Game Invitational 2007 Episode 02 Pt.2
Full Tilt Poker - Card Runners - Brian Townsend - His thought process while playing two $0.25-$0.50 NL tables
Poker After Dark Season 2 - Episode 29 - WPT All-Stars Pt.3
Full Tilt Poker - Million Dollar Cash Game - Gus Hansen Vs Erik Seidel - $197.000 Cash Pot
>> Top Videos


Contact