|
As a beginner, your Texas Hold'em poker journey should be exciting, but it can also be costly. Seasoned players are always looking for opportunities to make you go all-in when you shouldn't. All professional players understand that to profit in poker, you need to put as much effort into reducing losses as maximizing gains.
Now, let's take a look at some classic beginner mistakes.
1. **Playing Yourself**
Often, Texas Hold'em beginners overestimate their skill levels. This can be a good thing, but it can also come at a high cost. When you start playing yourself, you'll pay the price for your actions.
Playing yourself means trying to make unconventional, creative, and deceptive plays that, in the long run, aren't profitable when analyzed statistically.
For example, you might cleverly hide your strong hand, making it look like you're ready to fold at any moment. After your opponent makes a probing bet, you choose to call rather than raise, continuing to conceal your strength. When the turn card reveals, your opponent hits his gutshot straight draw. This is when you decide to make a strong move, executing a check-raise, but your opponent calls and hits his straight on the river, winning your entire stack. You then lament your misfortune to your friends.
A beginner often plays themselves by overestimating their ability to read their opponents and believing their opponent's all-in is a bluff. If you have no cards better than an 8, believing your opponent's "nothing" is better is a common mistake.
That's why there's a classic saying in Texas Hold'em: "When you're bluffing, most of the time your cards are really better than your opponent's."
2. **Chasing Flush Draws at Any Cost**
What makes beginners so obsessed with flush draws? It's nearly impossible to get a beginner to fold a flush draw, regardless of the size of the opponent's bet.
The vast majority of these beginners are familiar with pot odds and might even mention implied odds and pot-committed. Still, they'll call down huge bets even for a one-on-one flush draw.
They ignore the fact that an opponent already has a pair on the board and continue to call, disregarding the fact that even if they hit, they might lose to a full house.
In cash games, never go broke chasing a flush draw.
3. **Falling in Love with Your Cards**
The absolute number one bankruptcy recipe for Texas Hold'em novices is falling in love with their cards.
They ignore their opponent's actions, the board texture, and any other factors that clearly indicate they are beat. Most beginners cannot bring themselves to fold big pairs, even when it's obvious they are losing.
Many beginners fall for any decent flop with a pair, even if it's middle pair with no kicker. For example, hitting two pair on the flop in a game can easily lead beginners to make bad decisions.
Although these hands can be strong, you shouldn't be going all-in every time you get a big pair. Control yourself, and don't go broke with a single pair.
If you want to profit in poker, you must learn to fold strong hands and cut your losses before losing all your chips.
|
|