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Poker Strategy #1: Play fewer hands

  • Writer: smithspokersg
    smithspokersg
  • Dec 14, 2016
  • 2 min read

It sucks to suck at things. And Texas Hold'em can be a frustrating game for beginners.


You lose to your friends in your home games. You lose the first few bucks you deposit online. Worse, you may not even understand why.


Are you just unlucky? Are you making huge mistakes? Are you missing one simple concept that could change things?


The truth: You're really not that far behind 95% of the poker players in the world. And you don't need to be the foremost expert on the game to become a winning poker player.


In fact, a relatively small amount of basic poker principles can produce massive improvements in your results almost immediately.


And the true first step to becoming a good poker player: simply figuring out how to stop sucking at it.


This is the first in a 10-part series explaining exactly how to do that on the most basic level, starting with the most important tip of all: playing fewer hands.


How Not to Suck at Poker Tip 1: Play Fewer Hands.


In Texas Hold'em, there are 169 different possible starting hands you can be dealt (this is ignoring specific suits).


Out of all these possible hands, there are only five hands that are considered "premium".


  1. AA

  2. KK

  3. QQ

  4. AK (Suited)

  5. JJ

Regardless of your position at the table, a premium hand should always be played if there is no raise ahead of you. If there is a raise ahead of you - especially if there are callers or re-raises - sometimes it can even be a mistake to play anything below Aces or Kings.


When you think about Texas Hold'em starting hands in this light, you'll realize that you should be folding around 80% more hands than you should be playing at any given Hold'em table.


Naturally, the hands you play, and how you play them, will change depending on thousands of different variables at the table.


But at the very core of the game, there are very few hands that are considered playable.


If there has been no player to open the pot (meaning no one has raised, or even limped ahead of you) you can play almost any hand with any sort of potential value.


Once someone has raised ahead of you, your hand selection should be narrowed down to only the hands that can give you the nuts, and help keep you out of any situation which has you dominated.


For example: you should never play KQ into a raise, as AA, KK, QQ, AK, and AQ all have you dominated.


Unless you have a very good reason to do so, as a beginner poker player you should stick to playing only the top 10 to 15 hands, period.


The more you play, and the better you become at the game, the more hands you can add to your playlist.


Until then, keep it simple, and always head to the flop with the best of it.


Top 15 Hold'em Starting Hands

  1. AA

  2. KK

  3. QQ

  4. AK (suited)

  5. JJ

  6. 1010

  7. AQ (suited)

  8. AJ (suited)

  9. AK (off suit)

  10. KQ (suited)

  11. A10 (suited)

  12. KJ (suited)

  13. AQ (off suit)

  14. 99

  15. JQ (suited)

Adapted from "PokerListings"

 
 
 

1 Comment


Tim Smith
Tim Smith
Nov 03

I’ve spent countless frustrating nights losing small amounts online, trying to figure out why I kept getting crushed by friends or random opponents. One thing that finally clicked for me was realizing just how many hands I was playing that I shouldn’t have—folding around 80% of my starting hands felt almost unnatural at first, but it immediately stopped me from bleeding chips. Learning to focus only on the top 10–15 hands like AA, KK, QQ, and AK suited completely changed my perspective on risk and position. Along the way, I came across resources like https://1winapk.pro/ where you can read detailed reviews of the 1win App and see how betting platforms structure their games, which helped me understand variance and bankroll…

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