The
first thing to consider about the betting limits is whether you can
afford them. Even if you think you have much the best of it, you should
not play in a game whose limits are so high in relation to your bankroll
that you cannot play your hands correctly because you don't want to
risk going broke. At the same time, when you think you have the best
of it, you should play at the highest limits you can afford whenever
possible.
The excellent nonprofessional player Jay Heimowitz, from Monticello,
New York, tells the story of how he started playing in a 25-50-cent
poker game in the early 1960s. "I noticed I was winning about
$20 a week, and that $20 a week was the difference between my wife
Carol and I going out to dinner," Heimowitzsays. "Then I
got the brainstorm that if I played in a $1 limit game, maybe I'd
win $40 a week, and we could go out to dinner twice." Today Heimowitz,
a successful Budweiser beer distributor, plays no-limit hold 'em for
tens of thousands of dollars against the very best hold 'em players
in the world, but the point of his story is that, everything else
being equal, when you have the best of it, the higher you play, the
more you will average winning.
Assuming you are playing at a limit that suits you, the important
question is the ratio of bet sizes from early rounds to late rounds.
If the betting limits increase drastically from the early rounds to
the later rounds, you must play quite a bit differently than if the
limits remain fairly steady. In mathematical terms, the greater the
escalation of the limits, the higher your implied odds on early rounds.
Thus, you tend to play looser early in games where you may win bigger
bets later. When we say looser, we mean you take chances with hands
that have some chance of improving to big hands. You do not play mediocre
hands that can only improve to fairly good hands. In other words,
if you cannot be reasonably sure that a hand will be the best hand,
even if it improves, that hand is not playable. However, a hand like
a high inside straight draw, which you would not play if the bets
remained fairly steady, may be worth playing if you figure to win
a big bet later on when you hit.
Of course, the games with the greatest escalation in limits from early
to late rounds are pot-limit and no-limit. No-limit poker does not
technically have an escalating limit since anyone may bet any amount
right from the start, but usually the bets become increasingly larger
as the hand progresses. Thus, as we saw in Page Seven, in pot-limit
and no-limit games implied odds - not the odds a player is getting
from the pot -- often become the primary consideration in betting
or calling a bet.
When a game has fairly steady betting limits - most commonly limits
like $2-$4, $5-$10, $10-$20, which increase only two fold from the
first round to the last - you must start off with a good hand and
throw away hands that require you to get lucky. You have to pay too
high a price to stay in, in proportion to what you might win the few
times you hit. It is especially important to get rid of such hands
in games where there is a great deal of raising on the first round.
Frequently you find people putting in two and three raises before
the flop in limit hold 'em games. In games like these, it is important
to play high pairs and high cards and to stay away from hands like
For those starting hands to be played profitably you need a game with
low early betting and high later betting. That is, you need a game
where it doesn't cost you much to draw to a big hand that can make
you a lot of money in the later betting rounds. |