Some
of the questions you should ask before sitting down to play are: Is
check-raising allowed? Is a flat bet imposed, or is there variable
betting? In seven-card stud, does the low card bring it in or the
high card? How many raises are allowed? Does the player who opens
the pot have to bet first next round?
Whatever the rules, you should be thoroughly familiar with them before
you sit down to play. Don't make the mistake a friend of mine made
the first time he ever played draw poker in Gardena. He is the only
man I know who made a royal flush but lost the hand. In Gardena you
need jacks or better to open, and a joker is used as a bug. That is,
the joker may be used with straights, flushes, and aces; it cannot
be used to make a pair except with aces.
My friend N.S. bought into a $2-$4 draw poker game for $40, and the
first hand he picked up was an ace-high straight: He was in third
position behind the dealer. The man under the gun checked, the second
man checked, and N.S. gleefully bet $2. Everyone behind him folded,
but then bang! The man in first position raised, and the man in second
position reraised. Stupefied, N.S. called the double raise, and the
first raiser called the reraise.
When it came time to draw cards, the first man stood pat. The second
man stood pat. N.S. was smart enough to realize his straight was beat,
if not by the man in first position, certainly by the man in second
position. So he cleverly discarded the ace of clubs to draw to a straight
flush in hearts - or any kind of flush, since with the joker he'd
have an A,Q high. Drawing to l0?J?Q?Jk, N.S. actually had four cards
that would make the straight flush - the 8?, 9?, K?, and A?. When
he looked at the card he'd drawn, there it was - the king of hearts!
He'd made a royal flush, the pure nuts of pure nuts.
The man in second position bet. N.S. raised. The man in first position
called. The man in second position reraised. N.S. reraised The man
in first position eventually folded his jack-high flush, but the reraising
continued until the entire $40 with which N.S. bought into the game
was in the pot. The second player turned over a full house - kings
full of 9s. With a broad smile N.S. revealed his royal flush. He was
about to gather in the pot when his opponent asked, "Where are
your openers?"
"Openers?" N.S. said. "I had a straight."
"But you drew one card," said his opponent. "You don't
have openers."
Remember that in Gardena card rooms you need jacks or better to open.
The joker can be used only with aces, straights, and flushes. Since
N.S. had thrown away his ace of clubs and had indeed drawn one card
to make the royal, he had no proof whatsoever that he had opened with
a legal opening hand. Of course, there's a posted rule in Gardena
card rooms to cover such situations: "When splitting openers,
player must declare same and protect split card by turning it face
up under a chip." N. S. had not informed himself of this rule,
his royal flush was declared dead, and the full house won the pot.
Beyond knowing the rules, it's important to use them to your advantage
- as the man in Gardena with the full house certainly did. However,
here we're not talking about exploiting technicalities but rather
adjusting your play to suit the rules of the game. Suppose, for example,
the game does not allow check-raising. Well, that rule takes away
a very effective tool, which presumably you can use better than other
players in the game. But it changes your playing strategy in that
it gives more power to the player in last position. Therefore, when
you are in last position, you must bet quite a lot more since you
are no longer putting yourself in jeopardy of a check-raise. You would
semi-bluff more on earlier rounds because the worst that could happen
would be that you'd get called-not raised. Even in first position
you must bet more often than you ordinarily would since you can't
check-raise. (However, against tough players it may be still better
to check and call, rather than bet out with a very good hand in first
position, because you may induce them to bet with a hand they would
have folded if you had bet.) |