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Guardian Series: A hand that nearly made me cry

September 30, 2009 :: Posted by - :: Category - The Hendon Mob

Victoria Coren
It’s quite fun, this Guardian experiment. They’re having a games slot every day – bridge, chess, that sort of thing – and I’m doing the poker one. It’s aimed at the fairly new player, who might have watched a bit of poker on TV and just started playing with their friends and wants a few tips. So for the moment in the column I’m generally advocating caution and covering basics -…

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Texas Holdem – Learn How To Play Texas Hold Em

September 30, 2009 :: Posted by - :: Category - How To Play Texas Holdem
Vikram Kumar asked:

 

In this game, five additional cards are placed in the center of the table.  They are gradually turned up, one at a time.  All players consider these cards as part of their hand.  Every player can use any of the community cards as part of his or her hand, although you must include your pocket cards in your hand as well.  A poker hand is only five cards, regardless of the seven cards that are out there. So the two cards in your hand, the pocket cards, must be put into your Texas Holdem hand. You can choose three cards from the community cards to also add to your hand. 

 

The betting in Texas Hold em starts with the flop.  These are the first three cards that are turned up, one at a time, on the table.  Because everyone can use these cards in their hand, you have a good idea of trying to figure out what everyone has or what they are shooting for.  You have no idea, however, the pocket cards of the other players.  You should stay in the game for the flop but, if you do not have a pair by the time the third card is turned over, you should drop the game.  If the pair is in the flop, remember that everyone has these cards in their hand and, if someone has a similar card, they already have three of a kind.  If a pair is turned over in the flop and you do not have one of the pair cards in your pocket cards, it is time to drop. 

 

The next aspect of the Texas Hold em game is the turn.  This is the fourth card that is turned over.  Many players will leave the game after the turn, especially if several of them are betting and raising.  If you think you have a good hand and players are simply calling bets and not raising, or if several players have dropped, you should stay in the game.  If you have a straight or higher in Texas Hold em, you should not leave the game. 

 

How to play texas holdem

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Darvin Moon Joins ESPN Inside Deal

September 29, 2009 :: Posted by - :: Category - WSOP News

Darvin Moon, the chip leader of the 2009 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event entering the final table in November, joined the ESPN.com poker show “Inside Deal.” Also appearing was Absolute Poker pro Lacey Jones.

“Inside Deal” is released every Tuesday on ESPN.com and aired its ninth episode this week. The poker franchise began with discussion of the Caesars Cup, which saw Annette Obrestad lead the European team to victory over Daniel Negreanu’s Team Americas. “Inside Deal” host Bernard Lee explained, “The Americans were no slouches. They had 45 WSOP bracelets among them. Overall, Europe got the best of it, but there was some luck involved as well.” The Caesars Cup featured a series of heads-up and two-on-two matches, with the European team trouncing the American squad by a final score of 4-1.

2010 will mark the first WSOP that Obrestad will be of legal age to play on U.S. soil. She took down the 2007 WSOP Europe Main Event and became a formidable force in the poker world long before her 21st birthday. Lee explained, “I think it’s safe to say Annette Obrestad will be the most anticipated 21 year-old ever to enter the WSOP.” Other news reviewed by “Inside Deal” included Paul Zimbler playing poker for nearly 75 straight hours in the name of charity and November Nine member Jeff Shulman receiving coaching from Phil Hellmuth to improve his short-handed game.

Jones joined the show donning an Absolute Poker logo and explained that WSOP Europe sponsor Betfair matched Zimbler’s fundraising efforts dollar for dollar, with ?28,000 being doubled. On her team’s win in the Dream Team Poker Media Event held during the 2009 WSOP, Jones told “Inside Deal” hosts Lee and Laura Lane, “When you’re playing on a team, you have friends to root on. If maybe you didn’t go far, they do, so you’re sitting there cheering them on.” Jones ultimately took 11th in the event.

Jones was a participant in the Ladies Event held during the Borgata Poker Open, where Abraham Korotki, a male, took down the tournament. Jones commented, “I don’t mind that there was a guy at the table,” but didn’t approve of his demeanor. Jones added that a transsexual was in the event as well, who felt more comfortable playing in a Ladies’ event than an open event. On being one of the male-dominated game’s most recognized females, Jones commented, “There are things I can do to trap these guys and let them keep trying to steal my blinds. Eventually, I’ll pop them and take their chips.”

A reticent Moon joined the show wearing a New Orleans Saints baseball cap. Moon will be present for the coin toss of the November 30th Monday Night Football game between the Saints and New England Patriots. Moon, a logger by trade, revealed he has no e-mail address or credit card and his trip to the WSOP Main Event was just his second time ever being on an airplane. During the course of a normal day, Moon wakes up at 6:00am, eats breakfast, works until 4:00pm, and then participates in family activities.

On his odds to defeat the rest of the final table in the WSOP Main Event, which includes poker pros Phil Ivey, Jeff Shulman, and James Akenhead, Moon told “Inside Deal” viewers, “I don’t feel my odds are good to win because everyone there is better than I am. I have the least experience of anyone there.” Moon does not plan to take lessons prior to the WSOP Main Event finale and instead will stick with his tight strategy.

Moon is the lone representative of the November Nine to lack a sponsorship deal. On what he’s looking for in a potential agreement, Moon told Lane and Lee, “A lot of money for being at that final table and then when I leave Las Vegas, the sponsorship is over.” He revealed that no company has come forward with an offer matching that description.

Check out ESPN “Inside Deal” every Tuesday on ESPN.com.

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