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It?s a Hold?em World Part I

It?s a Hold?em World Part I

When it comes to card games, Hold’em is king. I apologize to all of you Go-Fish sharks and master pineapplers, but when it comes down to gross games and money played, it is not even close — Texas Hold’em reigns supreme.

While the global numbers are nigh impossible to get at, Party Poker, one of the three major online poker sites, reports numbers like these: of the 8,619 cash game players online as of 1:00pm MST, January 21, 2008, 8,196 were playing Hold’em, with 6,454 participating in a No Limit game. More than 20,000 cash game players will log on and move money on Party Poker on the average Monday, with nearly 95% of them doing it in Hold’em rooms.

Why? Why does Hold’em so dominate the world of poker? The following two part series will explore both the history of Texas Hold’em and poker as a whole as well as the qualities of the game itself which have contributed to its meteoric rise.

As far as the history books are concerned, poker as we know it began sometime in the 1820s in New Orleans. Some sailors began to bet on who they thought possessed the best three card hand dealt from a deck of somewhere between 20 and 32 cards. There were no suits on the cards, and in their minds there was no such thing as a straight.

Then poker took to the river. Fueled mainly by the Mississippi River Boat, by 1850 poker had grown into a national game, the 52 card English deck had been introduced and the term “river boat gambler” had been coined. During the course of the American Civil War, the flush, the straight, the five card hand, stud and draw poker were all integrated into the way the games were played. As far as we can tell today, the most popular games of the pre-1900 period were a French cousin of poker called faro – kind of a cross between baccarat and craps – and five-card draw. Some of the early five-card draw champs remain notorious even today, most notably Wild Bill Hickok. Recently, Ole’ Bill was at the center of the first season of HBO’s acclaimed “Deadwood” series, where he once again met his demise at the poker table, famously holding two pair, Aces and Eights, forever known as “The Dead Man’s Hand.”

Then the joker came in 1875, lo-ball around 1900, and in 1925 Texas Hold’em was officially recognized by Dallas, Texas when community cards were introduced. In actuality, Texas Hold’em was born around a decade earlier in Robstown, Texas, a town of about 13,000 people that still stands today.

Not much is known about Poker history between 1920 and 1955, probably because it was considered a dirty form of entertainment and was marginalized by mainstream media. Then in 1955, a strapping young man courted by the Minneapolis Lakers who shattered his whole leg at once and would go on to change the face of poker forever.

Doyle Brunson was born in Texas in 1933 and had plans to be a basketball player until he broke his leg in 1954 performing some manual labor, an injury for which he still needs a crutch. Over the next 13 years, Doyle would travel the country playing in largely illegal games with his friends Amarillo Slim and Sailor Roberts until 1967, when Doyle Brunson came to Las Vegas.

Until 1967, Hold’em did not exist in Las Vegas. Brunson, a Texas boy who’d been playing Hold’em for fifteen years by 1967, first brought the game to the Golden Nugget Casino. Despite his growing reputation as a high-stakes gambler, Hold’em was relatively obscure in Vegas, so Doyle and friends mostly played stud. Only occasionally could they find enough interested strangers to get a Hold’em game going. But Doyle loved his home state’s game, and was confident that it would grow.

The first big turn came in 1969 when the Gambling Fraternity Convention, which would be renamed the World Series of Poker the following year, began playing Texas Hold’em for a number of its tournaments. In 1972, the now World Series of Poker Main Event became No Limit Texas Hold’em, and the growth has been exponential ever since. The first main event was a table of 8 players, where the winner was voted on by the players – now the tournament is regularly above 6,000 entrants.

The next major step up for Hold’em occurred again through Doyle Brunson: as Texas Dolly published a series of books, from Super/System to “How I made One Million Dollars Playing Poker” Doyle was legitimizing both the card player career and Texas Hold’em the game. By 1982, 104 players were buying into the main event. The figure grew consistently by 15-50 entrants each year until 1998, when the movie “Rounders” was released. The following year saw the field grow by 119 entrants to 512 total players.

By 2003, that number had grown to 839, an already impressive number more than 100 times the original field. Players like Phil Hellmuth and other so-called Hold’em specialists or gamblers who only played Texas Hold’em had risen up to claim international fame. It seemed as if the WSOP Main Event was on pace to hit 1,000 entrants in the next 5 years, a staggering number considering the ,000 price tag that came with a seat in the tournament – then came the NHL strike.

Outside of anything Doyle Brunson did, the NHL strike was the single most important event in the history of Hold’em. With the NHL on strike, ESPN2 had a huge slate of programming that needed to be filled. Enter Chris Moneymaker.

Moneymaker gained entry to the Main-Event through a satellite tournament as he had nowhere near enough money to his oh-so- appropriate name to pony up the ,000. 3 days, 1 unbelievable call on a Dutch Boyd bluff and a big bluff of his own on runner up Sammy Farha later, Chris Moneymaker had won .5 million and the coveted Main-Event bracelet. Much to the surprise of the ESPN network, when the numbers finally came in, the Nielson ratings for the 2003 WSOP had been higher than the previous year’s NHL showings. With that, No Limit Texas Hold’em became a nationwide craze.

Chris Moneymaker became the poster boy for the rags-to-riches, anyone-can-do-it poker star; the following year, a mind boggling 2,576 people paid the buy-in, only to be dwarfed by the following year’s 5,619 and 2006’s small city of 8,773.

More than just an explosion of WSOP entrants, there was an explosion of online gaming as well. In 1998, there was only one online gaming site, Planet Poker, played on regularly by less than 2,000 players per day. In 2000 and 2001, there was the rise and fall of Dutch Boyd’s infamous Poker Spot. It was not until Party Poker began its exhaustive television advertising campaign in 2003, capitalizing on Chris Moneymaker’s Cinderella story, that online gaming became the entity that it is today. With 20,000 players on a slow day, Party Poker and other major sites have become the largest arena for poker in the history of the world.

So why is Texas Hold’em so by far and away the poker game of choice? In part, because of the work of Doyle Brunson, in part because of the WSOP Main Event, online giants like Party Poker, even Chris Moneymaker and the NHL strike played a role. In part two of the series, we will investigate the inherent qualities of Texas Hold’em itself which have contributed to its rise.

This article was published courtesy of TightPoker.com.

Tight Poker (www.tightpoker.com) is the top site for Party Poker information and promos, as well as a popular resource center for Poker news, promotions, reviews of online poker sites, strategy articles and also home to an active forum for discussing poker news and strategy.

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Winning Texas Hold Em

Winning Texas Hold Em

For those of you hoping that winning texas hold em will be easy, well think again. There is no real winning, as the game never ends. Granted you can win a tournament, but once you win, well you have to play again to prove that your victory was genuine. Look at Phil Hellmuth, he’s won quite a few bracelets, and yet he continues to play. He wins some tournaments, loses others. He may win a tournament here and there, he may win some money here and there, but he never has truly won the war.

The game can’t end. It’s just a series of battles. You can win the hand, you can win the tournament, you can win the sit n go, but you have to keep playing.

The secrets to winning tournaments

If you want to win a tournament, you have to play smart. Unlike cash games, you cannot buy back in during a tournament. Well, in rebuy tournaments you can but that’ll cost you more money, and well, you’ll be at a disadvantage in chip stack size because your opponents now have more chips than you.

In a rebuy tournament you can play more aggressively in the beginning because the stacks won’t be much larger than yours if you buy back in during the first or second round. In a no rebuy tournament you have to play smart, and pick your spots.

Being that the size of the blinds is small relative to your stack in the beginning it may be tempting to play a lot of hands. In a no rebuy tournament this is a terrible idea. You want to save your chips for when the pots get bigger. If you’re playing every flop at 10 / 20 well, after about 10 hands you just lost 200 chips, and that’s if you fold every time someone at the table bets. If your starting stack was 2,500 chips, you just lost about 1/12 of your stack just trying to see flops.

In tournaments where the blinds increase every 10 – 15 minutes, those 200 chips come in handy. You just want to pick up a good hand here and there and take down a nice sized pot. Typically the “bad” players are trying to amount a good amount of chips in the beginning, or bust themselves out. Let them. Don’t get involved. They’ll be playing hands they shouldn’t and the odds just go right out the window. Who knows, they may pick up a lucky flop against your good hand, and being that you can’t believe anyone would possibly call with such a bad hand, you ignore and bet, losing your chips.

This is why I refuse to play a lot of hands in the beginning. I let the bad players go out then take the chips of the decent players. Decent and great players are more predictable than bad players. Bad players don’t know how to play, so remember that. If you spot a bad player wait until you have the nuts then take them out. If you don’t have the nuts they may outdraw you. Outs go out the window when you’re only playing a few hands. I know some may not agree with me on that, but I’ve seen bad players hit straight flushes and win hands when they didn’t even know what they were going for.

Around round 3 or 4 most of the ‘bad” players should be out so you can start playing a typical game of poker at this point. Pick your spots, bluff, and play the way you would against someone who knows what they’re doing.

If there’s still bad players in the game, well, my suggestion is to avoid them. In tournaments you can’t afford a bad beat, just plain and simple. This is why Hellmuth rants and raves so much on TV. He knows you can’t take a bad beat in a tournament, especially early, if you want to survive and win. Remember, avoid the bad players early and you’ll be winning texas hold em tournaments in no time.

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    Is Phil Hellmuth overrated?

    Question by genik1988: Is Phil Hellmuth overrated?
    Im watching poker after dark right now and have been watching Hellmuth play for a couple weeks on that show. It seems to me like hes a terrible player, so easy to bluff, gets mad easily and folds to any reraise unless he basically has the nuts (or close). I just saw this hand he had Aces and he limped, got raised to 800$(4 BB) and he reraises to 10 000$. Just a nonsense raise IMO, coulda had so much more…Other two hands in play were AJ so they were basically drawing dead unless they hit a straight or two jacks which is very unlikely.

    Best answer:

    Answer by The Big Slick
    Completely subjective. He is the best NLHE (no limit hold’em) tournament player in the world, this is NOT subjective, he has 11 bracelets, and all of them are in hold’em. He is NOT a cash game specialist. He plays extremely tight ABC poker, and when you mix that into players like Esfandiari on poker after dark, Antonio Esf. will tear him up because its not Phil’s main game and Antonio and the other high stakes cash game players play extremely creative poker because they’ve all played with each other so many times it makes it far easier to pin them on a hand, thus the need to constantly mix it up. Phil doesn’t win big pots in high stakes cash game because he plays the same style almost every time and people just get out of the way of him when he makes a ridiculous reraise like that or in many other situations, he 4bet a set against Mike Matusow who had a weak top pair. He makes irrational quick decisions to vent his frustration and ends up losing value on most of the hands that he does end up playing. The rest of the time he either gets outplayed or out flopped. Most players aren’t great in all around games, Phil Ivey’s 7 bracelets, none of them are in hold’em, for example, though he is still a great hold’em player. So yeah. No one ever said he was a fantastic cash game player, there’s nothing to be ‘over’rated about if he was never rated to begin with.

    What do you think? Answer below!

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