Rick
Braddy
Welcome to the fifth in my Texas
Holdem Poker Strategy Series, focusing on no limit Texas Holdem poker tournament
play and associated strategies. In this article, we’ll examine starting
hand decisions.
It may seem obvious, but deciding
which starting hands to play, and which ones to skip playing, is one of
the most important Texas Holdem poker decisions you'll make. Deciding which
starting hands to play begins by accounting for several factors:
* Starting Hand "groups" (Sklansky
made some good suggestions in his classic "Theory of Poker" book by David
Sklansky)
* Your table position
* Number of players at the table
* Chip position
Sklansky originally proposed some
Texas Holdem poker starting hand groups, which turned out to be very useful
as general guidelines. Below you'll find a "modified" (enhanced) version
of the Sklansky starting hands table. I adapted the original Sklansky tables,
which were "too tight" and rigid for my liking, into a more playable approach
that are used in the Poker Sidekick poker odds calculator. Here's the key
to these starting hands:
Groups 1 to 8: These are essentially
the same scale as Sklansky originally proposed, although some hands have
been shifted around to improve playability and there is no group 9.
Group 30: These are now "questionable"
hands, hands that should be played rarely, but can be reasonably played
occasdirsnally in order to mix things up and keep your opponents off balance.
Loose players will play these a bit more often, tight players will rarely
play them, experienced players will open with them only occasdirsnally and
randomly.
The table below is the exact set
of starting hands that Poker Sidekick uses when it calculates starting
poker hands. If you use Poker Sidekick, it will tell you which group each
starting hand is in (if you can't remember them), along with estimating
the "relative strength" of each starting hand. You can just print this
article and use it as a starting hand reference.
Group 1: AA, KK, AKs
Group 2: QQ, JJ, AK, AQs, AJs, KQs
Group 3: TT, AQ, ATs, KJs, QJs, JTs
Group 4: 99, 88, AJ, AT, KQ, KTs,
QTs, J9s, T9s, 98s
Group 5: 77, 66, A9s, A5s-A2s, K9s,
KJ, KT, QJ, QT, Q9s, JT, QJ, T8s, 97s, 87s, 76s, 65s
Group 6: 55, 44, 33, 22, K9, J9,
86s
Group 7: T9, 98, 85s
Group 8: Q9, J8, T8, 87, 76, 65
Group 30: A9s-A6s, A8-A2, K8-K2,
K8-K2s, J8s, J7s, T7, 96s, 75s, 74s, 64s, 54s, 53s, 43s, 42s, 32s, 32
All other hands not shown (virtually
unplayable).
So, those are the enhanced Sklasky
Texas Holdem poker starting hand tables.
The later your position at the table
(dealer is latest position, small blind is earliest), the more starting
hands you should play. If you're on the dealer button, with a full table,
play groups 1 thru 6. If you're in middle position, reduce play to groups
1 thru 3 (tight) and 4 (loose). In early position, reduce play to groups
1 (tight) or 1 thru 2 (loose). Of course, in the big blind, you get what
you get.
As the number of players drops into
the 5 to 7 range, I recommend tightening up overall and playing far fewer,
premium hands from the better positions (groups 1 - 2). This is a great
time to forget about chasing flush and straight draws, which puts you at
risk and wastes chips.
As the number of players drops to
4, it's time to open up and play far more hands (groups 1 - 5), but carefully.
At this stage, you're close to being in the money in a Texas Holdem poker
tournament, so be extra careful. I'll often just protect my blinds, steal
occasdirsnally, and try to let the smaller stacks get blinded or knocked
out (putting me into the money). If I'm one of the small stacks, well,
then I'm forced to pick the best hand I can get and go all-in and hope
to double-up.
When the play is down to 3, it's
time to avoid engaging with big stacks and hang on to see if we can land
2nd place, heads-up. I tend to tighten up a bit here, playing very similar
to when there's just 3 players (avoiding confrontation unless I'm holding
a pair or an Ace or a King, if possible).
Once you're heads-up, well, that's
a topic for a completely different article, but in general, it's time to
become extraordinarily aggressive, raise a lot, and become "pushy".
In tournaments, it's always important
to keep track of your chips stack size relative to the blinds and everyone
else's stacks. If you're short on chips, then play far fewer hands (tigher),
and when you do get a good hand, extract as many chips as you can with
it. If you're the big stack, well, you should avoid unnecessary confrontation,
but use your big stack position to push everyone around and steal blinds
occasdirsnally as well - without risking too many chips in the process (the
other players will be trying to use you to double-up, so be careful).
Well, that's a quick overview of
an improved set of starting hands and some general rules for adjusting
starting hand play based upon game conditions throughout the tournament.
Until next time, best of luck to
you at the Texas Holdem poker tables!
Rick
Rick Braddy is an avid writer, Texas
Holdem player and professional software developer and marketer for over
25 years. His websites and Texas Holdem software helps people become better
Texas Holdem
poker players. If you're a poker player, be sure to visit his Texas
Holdem websites today and learn how you can play better Texas Holdem
poker, too.
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