Posts Tagged ‘strong hand’

Strong Poker Hands

This category represents cards which have excellent possibilities of improving into winners, and in fact are favorites or near-favorites, but can in no way be considered lock hands. The starting hand A K in hold 'em, for example, is a strong hand with excellent winning potential. If all players stay in for the flop, though, the A K is subject to all sorts of flops which could make it an underdog.

Strong Hand Strategy
With strong hands, play aggressively. These types of hands have a good head start, but if you don't raise and force some players out, you take the risk of allowing mediocre hands to draw out and beat you. The more players in the pot, the higher the average winning hand will be and the higher the chance that a strong hand will turn into second best.

Let's illustrate this with an example. Suppose five players all have a chance at winning, and given your starting cards, you have three of those chances. Each of the remaining players has one chance each. Together, of those seven winning chances, you hold only three of them. This makes you an underdog to win the pot even though individually, you have the best chances of any one player. But if you were able to force out two of those opponents, of the five total chances of winning, you would now have shifted the odds in your favor, having three of the five total chances (instead of seven).

This simple example is not that far from the truth. The more weak hands you allow in to see a card, the greater the chances are that one of those weaker hands will improve and become a better hand than yours. By playing weakly with a strong hand, you increase the competition and decrease the chances of your strong hand finishing on top.

With strong hands, play aggressively right from the start. Either force out the marginal and weak hands or build up a pot which you're favored to win. With a strong but non-lock hand, you never should allow marginal or weak hands to play cheaply. If opponents want to see the show, they'll have to buy the tickets-at the price of your bets and raises.
If your previously strong hand appears now to be second best to a better hand, downgrade its relative value. It is no longer strong. The strong hand, by definition, means you're leading the pack. When that hand weakens to a trailing strength, you need to reevaluate it according to the new situation.

It is important to adjust strategies according to the situation. Poker is not a game of rigid corrects and incorrects. You must be able to think on your feet, using your skills and instincts in the context of smart poker play. To sum up: when you've got a good hand, you need to protect it by weeding out the competition so your hand has the best chance of taking the pot.

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Tags: poker, strong hand, winning hand

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