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THE IMPORTANCE
OF TABLE POSITION
IN TEXAS HOLDEM
Position is the most overlooked aspect of games like
Texas Hold'em by beginners. And that's a huge shame.
It costs these players a lot of pots.
Insider Tip
Your position at the table is based simply on your position in
relation to the
Dealer. The
Dealer is at the most advantageous
position, as he/she gets to see how all the other players at the table
react before making their own decision.
The chances of your hand being a winner increase as more and
more people fold their hand.
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Yes - if you have say KQs and are going up against 1 other player,
your chances are not bad - but if you're going up against 8 or 9
others who feel they too have a hand worth betting - your KQs is
not nearly so strong.
Now - if you are in an early position (meaning you are among the
first who has to bet) then you have no idea how many players will
be playing this hand when it's time to bet or fold your hole cards.
On the other hand - if you are in a late position (meaning you are
among the last to call) you not only have the knowledge of who
and how many players are in on this hand - but if anyone has
made aggressive bets. If you are in a late position and hold an OK
hand - say a small pair or a KJ - if everyone before you has folded -
you've got a strong hand - but if everyone before you has called or
Raised you know you've got a weak hand.
As you see - this has little to do with your hand - but more the
circumstances in which it is played.
The person to the left of the
Dealer is not only the
Small Blind (SB),
but must act first after the flop.
The person to the left of the
Small Blind is the
Big Blind (BB). This
person is already obligated to the game and is in another early
position.
The person to the left of the
Big Blind acts first before board cards
are dealt. This is often referred to as ?being
Under the Gun?. The
clockwise motion of play allows those who act later (in late
position) to be at an advantage. As a result, those in late position
can play weaker hands or ?gambling hands? with less fear of
financial obligation or loss.
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The blind positions . . . and the player
Under the Gun
needs to be very selective with their hands. They don't
have the privilege of watching other players
betting/raising before they must decide if they want to stay in
themselves.
Insider Tip
For example, lets say you're
Under the Gun (first to act). You have
Jack-Ten, unsuited. The player to bet after you
Raises, and
everyone but you folds. Now you're in a jam.
Chances are good that this player has a better hand than you, with
at least an ace or a pocket pair. Unfortunately, you've already bet,
because you had no idea or no way to tell what other players at the
table had in the pocket.
You will always . . . throughout the game, be acting
before this player. This positional advantage will
continue throughout this hand.
Insider Tip
On the other hand, being in the
Dealers position not only gives
you the benefits of observing how the other players are betting,
but it also gives you the ability to adjust the size of the pot.
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After all other players have bet, a
Raise by the player in the
Dealers
position could potentially double the size of the pot (assuming no
one folds). Since the players have already committed to one bet,
its easier to commit to a second (or a third or fourth!).
If you watched a poker table over a space of many
days, you would begin to notice that the winning hand
tends to move around the table in a clockwise position.
Long-term studies have shown that over time, the win tends to
move in that direction.
Insider Tip
Why? Because your knowledge of the hand increases your
chance of winning.
The blinds and player
Under the Gun have the least knowledge.
As the play moves around the table, each player gains more
knowledge about what the other players are doing. Are they in?
Are they hesitating? Are they raising? Are they folding? The last
player to bet has the maximum knowledge and therefore the best
position they are in what is sometimes called the cat-bird seat.
Knowing how money moves around a table can give you a sense
of the importance of position at the table.
One of the little-understood benefits of last position at
the table is that you get a lot of free cards as well.
Insider Tip
When you get a free card, you're taking a
Free Ride. If nobody bets
during a round, you get that opportunity at zero cost. That's what
a free card is. Fine. A governing concept of free cards is that you
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get lots more of them when you're last to act than when you're first
to act. Even better, when you're last to act, you get control over
whether or not you take a free card. You can accept the
opportunity, or you can bet and deny the same opportunity to
your opponents.
Befriend players to your left; declare war on players to your
right.