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Poker Articles
What's Important in Winning Poker - Part 1
by: Lou Krieger©
Reprinted with permission
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Ah, poker...it seems such a simple game. Just learn
the rules, apply yourself, and in a very few moments you too can
be a winning player. Anyone, it seems, can play it well —
though nothing, of course, is further from the truth. While the
rules of the game are easily learned, it takes considerably longer
to become a winning player. Still, anyone willing to put in the
time and make the effort can learn to play at a relatively high
level of skill.
More than a microcosm of all we admire about Capitalism
and democracy, poker is part of the very fabric we have spent 220
years weaving into the American Dream. After all, we succeed in
poker the way we succeed in life: by facing it squarely, getting
up earlier and working harder and smarter than the competition.
I believe in poker the way I believe in the American Dream. Poker
is good for you. It enriches the soul, sharpens the intellect, heals
the spirit, and played well — nourishes the wallet. Above
all else, it forces us to face reality deal squarely with it.
Oh, sure, we can ignore those realities. Lots of
players do. They are consistent losers, but rather than face the
deficiencies in their own game, they persist in placing the blame
on fate, on the dealer, on that particular deck of cards, or on
anything else — except themselves — that’s handy.
It was Jonathan Swift who said, some 250-odd years ago: “Satire
is a sort of glass wherein beholders do generally discover everybody’s
face but their own.” The same analogy holds true for losing
poker players. Because they deny reality and fail to analyze their
own play, they can see flaws in everyone’s game but their
own.
Perhaps British author and poker player Anthony
Holden said it best. In Big Deal: A Year As A Professional Poker
Player he writes: “Whether he likes it or not, a man’s
character is stripped bare at the poker table; if the other players
read him better than he does, he has only himself to blame. Unless
he is both able and prepared to see himself as others do, flaws
and all, he will be a loser in cards, as in life.”
How true. Unless you are prepared to examine both
your poker skills and the quality of your character — and
your opponents are surely doing this every time you play against
them — there is little else you’ll be able to do that
ensures winning. That’s your challenge. For today, tomorrow
and forever: For as long as you aspire to winning poker, you must
be willing to strip your own character bare, examine and analyze
it, repair it, and do it over and over again — as long as
it takes to become a winner — in cards and in life. If you
can stand up to this rigorous challenge, you too can become a winning
poker player.
In the next few issues we’ll explore what’s
really important in playing winning poker. That’s not to say
that other facets of the game can be ignored — far from it.
It’s just that these articles will deal with poker’s
critical elements. Many of you write to me with your questions,
and I answer each letter I receive. From your letters I’ve
learned that many readers, striving to become better players, eagerly
seek practical knowledge and advice that they can use when they
play.
It’s also apparent that some overall structure
seems to be missing from many players’ games. After all, some
elements are much more important than others, and strategic, mathematical,
and theoretical knowledge are just pieces of a larger pie. Usable
knowledge has to be organized so that is is accessible — and
readily available when needed. Just imagine a dictionary with all
the definitions arranged randomly. While it would contain all the
definitions it’s useless without structure. There’s
no scheme of things. The only way to look things up would involve
scanning each page until you eventually found what you needed.
Everything requires a foundation. Only with a foundation
firmly in place can you proceed to build on it, and that’s
the purpose of this series of articles: to put first things first.
To play winning poker you need a plan to learn
the game. Call it a game plan or a study plan. While the school
of hark knocks might have sufficed as the educational institution
of choice twenty or thirty years ago, most of today’s good
poker players have added a solid grounding in poker theory to their
over-the-table experiences. “What’s the best way to
learn poker theory?” you might logically ask. “It’s
not like there’s a college around the corner offering a major
in poker.” Until the late 1970s there wasn’t much reliable
information available to those aspiring to poker expertise. Much
early poker literature was fundamentally incorrect. But things are
different now, and there’s no shortage of learning materials
to choose from. Today’s problem is selecting the right materials,
and this requires sifting through stacks of books, computerized
poker software, and videos that have been produced over the past
fifteen years — each new product, of course, claiming primacy.
Next issue we’ll examine whether winning
strategies alone are enough to guarantee winning at poker, how the
information explosion has affected poker, and why certain things
are much more important to playing winning poker than others. Until
then, keep flopping aces.

Lou Krieger is the host of Royal Vegas Poker, and a well respected
author of the following recommended poker books. Please click on
a book to purchase it from our library.

Hold 'Em Excellence |

Winning Omaha 8 Poker |

The Poker Player's Bible |

Internet Poker:
How to Play and Beat Online Poker Games
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