- Home
- Poker
- FullTilt Poker Tips
- Pro Tip #125: Don’t Read this Tip
Pro Tip #125: Don’t Read this Tip
- By Phil Ivey
- Published 07/4/2008
- FullTilt Poker Tips
- Unrated
Phil Ivey
Phil won
his first World Series of Poker title at the age of 23 when he beat Phil
Hellmuth and Amarillo Slim in the Pot-Limit Omaha event. Two years later in
2002, he won three more WSOP titles. Phil also won two Bellagio tournaments,
one World Poker Open tournament, two Commerce tournaments, and has made his
share of World Poker Tour final tables.
- Considered the best poker player in the world
- 5 WSOP Bracelets before his 30th birthday
- 1 WPT Championship
When it comes to advice
about poker, my attitude is very simple: seek it out, absorb it, but while
you're at the table, forget it.
I'm a firm believer in
learning the game by playing the game. I'm not saying there aren't a lot of
great resources around to help players improve their games or that poker literature
and tutorials don't have their place. They do. However, the problem I see with
people who rely on these kinds of aids is that they end up playing poker like
someone else or - even worse - like everyone else.
One of the things that
makes poker great is that it's a game where there's really no right or wrong
way to play. Every player has their own approach to the game and the key, in my
opinion, is to take the things you learn from other players and incorporate
them into a style of play that works for you.
There are some players who
take a very mathematical approach to the game, and for them, it works. They
study the odds and make decisions based on whether they think they're getting
the right price to commit their poker chips to a pot. It's a solid way to play, but
the fact is, it's not the right approach for everyone. What's more, even the
best of these players will tell you that math only takes you so far.
Calculating the odds can
certainly help you decide whether you're making a smart move, but it doesn't
take into account who you're playing against. There are many times when you can
do all of the math you want and your decision still comes down to intangibles
and a feeling about your opponent or the situation you're facing. Does this guy
have a hand? Can I push him off the pot? Am I getting myself into trouble here?
Even if the odds say you should play, your gut may be telling you something
else, and that's something you can only develop by playing.
Relying too much on other
peoples' advice can actually make it harder to develop this kind of reading
ability because it tends to clutter up your head. You get so focused on
thinking about odds, probabilities and strategies that you forget that you're
playing against someone else and that you have to try and figure out what he or
she is doing. Are they scared? Will they fold to pressure? Are they a maniac?
In my opinion, these are the important things to keep in mind during a hand.
It's been said before, but
it bears repeating. Poker isn't about the cards; it's about the players and the
situations. Winning players understand that sometimes you have to take chances.
Sometimes they work and other times they don't. Whether you win the hand or
not, you have to make the play that you believe is best.
At the end of a hand or a
session, go back and study the things you did well and be honest with yourself
about where you made mistakes. Don't, however, overanalyze how you could have
played a hand differently because this can negatively impact how you approach
your next hand or session. Identify your mistakes, learn from them, and move
on. Just because some play or move didn't work the way you wanted doesn't mean
you were wrong to try it. As I said before, there are just some things that you
have to learn by playing.
So here's my advice. Read
this tip. Read other tips and poker books. Talk to your friends. Absorb as much
information as you can. But at the end of the day you have to trust your
instincts and play your own game - not someone else's.
