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Monday, February 12, 2007

study your opponents

Another thing we suggest is to watch the players you are playing against. Do they bet high off the flop and you later find out they have nothing. Do they only bet once every 15 hands, showing they only play the best hands? You can learn a lot from watching how your opponents bet. When someone takes a long time, they usually don't have the best hand. If you just bet something and they are real slow in calling but then eventually do call, then the next time, you raise your bet. They probably are chasing something. If a player bets a lot real quickly, get out. They probably are not bluffing. The bluffing I have seen has players taking a while to bet, then thinking they will bluff and then eventually bluffing. That isn't always the case, but in the long run, it is.

Watch the big stack when he bets. When someone wins a big hand and they get a lot of money in their account, they get cocky. They will more likely try to place a larger bet to bluff because they have the money. Never try to bluff the big stack. They will almost always call.

Pay attention also to the little stack. If someone is down to $3 or 4 left on the table, the will go all in when they get a real good hand. They will probably fold all their marginal hands, just trying to double or triple up.

Coming up soon new videos from the Million Dollar Game in London .

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