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2007/11/27

Online Poker Strategy

DANISH POKERSTAR REVEALS
HOW HE MAKES $850,000.00 A YEAR PLAYING ONLINE POKER!

Dear Fellow Poker Player,

My name is Kim Birch, also known as "KB" and the "Danish Dragon". Since 2001 I have been earning an annual six-figure income playing online no-limit Texas Hold'em Poker in both Cash games and online poker tournaments.

If you are tired of the BS and are ready to learn how to play online poker professionally, then stick around, because I'm about to reveal the truth on how to turn your online poker play into a successful business.

It's not a coincidence that you got to this page. You're here to change your online poker skills and get ready to take the next step in becoming a full-time, successful poker player!

I WILL TEACH YOU HOW TO

Win More Pots Day After Day And Skyrocket Your Earnings!

Never Lose to A Gambler With Lucky Cards Again!

Winning Texas NL Hold'em Poker Strategy for SNG's.

One Month From Today You Will Be Playing Online Poker
As A Business With The Skills Of A Poker Pro!

Learn How To Keep From Losing Your Shirt And Win Pots!

Learn Exactly When And How To Bluff In An Online Poker Game/Tournament.

Develop An Advanced Level Of Mastery Over Online NL
Texas Hold'em Poker.

Master heads-up play and earn easy money at the tables!

Advanced Poker Moves And Strategies That Will Help You
To Take The Money Even From Professional Players!

Learn how to read players in online poker just like an open book and steal their money while they ponder about what just happened!

Gain A Competitive Edge With My Insider Online Poker Knowledge!

And That is just a few of the secrets my online poker course will teach you!

Got Your Poker Face On?
I'm ready to shuffle

Most poker players never learn the REAL SECRETS and techniques for playing online no-limit Texas Hold'em Poker.

They may learn a few tricks or two on TV from the World Series of Poker... or maybe they think they know how to read a 'poker face' from their Saturday night home games with friends and neighbors... but there are literally HUNDREDS of winning secrets and methods that YOU can use to gain an advantage at the online tables..

And speaking about the World Series of Poker, did you know that more money and pots are shifting hands online before and after the big tournaments? This is where the real pros literally steal pocket-change from all the new poker players online dreaming about winning a seat to the World Series!

I Can Show You The Secrets To Winning But Do You Have The Discipline Needed To Be A Pro Online Poker Player?

The following example will reveal if you have the discipline needed

You hold pocket aces in late position, put in a raise at the first opportunity, and find yourself against a small enough field to feel like your aces have a chance.

The flop comes 8-4-2, a safe enough flop, you figure, since your foes are unlikely to be in there with 8-4, 8-2 or 4-2, and while small sets are a possibility, you judge that to be a remote possibility -- especially when it's checked around to you and then just one subsequent player calls your bet.

You put him on a good eight or an overpair; you're not scared, nor should you be.

But here comes the turn, an offsuit 7. He checks. You bet. He raises . Now you have that familiar sinking feeling: You've been trapped by a slow-played superior hand.

Could he really have been lucky enough to hit his set or second pair? Could he have been boneheaded enough to call your initial raise with two disconnected low cards? Maybe he played a 5-6, drew to an inside straight and got there. In any case, you are now in the midst of a familiar situation: You're stuck on the hand and there's no way out.

You're going to call his raise on the turn because, hey, you might pair up or ace up on the river to beat him -- unless your pair gives him a boat, or unless he's already on a made straight. In any case, you're committed... committed to losing two more big bets because you feel, fatalistically, that there's no way out.

Is This True?

Is it really true that you can't escape further damage? After all, why not fold? Why not save those two bets for a time when they'll do you more good.

Sure, you reckon, he might be bluffing. But for the sake of this example, let's assume that you know he's not. You've never seen him check-raise bluff, but you have seen him check-raise trap many times. Nor is he the kind of player who might put you on overcards and think that his ragged eight is the best hand.

No, he's just another straightforward, unimaginative player who just barely knows how to check-call the flop and check-raise the turn. For the sake of this example, let's assume that you're 100% certain he has you beat. Yet you call. Why is that?Could it be that you feel you're owed?

We all know how rarely pocket aces come around. When they come our way, we naturally anticipate winning with them. Why not? They're the best possible hand, and we're good people. We deserve to win. Thus burdened by this feeling of entitlement, we tend to underestimate the strength of our foe's hand, and overestimate the chances of beating him on the redraw.

Our thinking is skewed by the emotional attachment we have to those beautiful bullets. We want them to win. We need them to win. If they don't win, it's a tragedy and a shame, but not so big a tragedy and a shame as folding now. That would be just unfair...

You see this sad rationalization in at least one other circumstance: when a player holds pocket kings and there's an ace on the flop. He raised pre-flop, driving off (he assumes) all hands except premium ones. Well, what's a premium non-pair hand? A hand with an ace, of course. But when that ace hits the flop, our holder of king-king suddenly loses all perspective.He puts his foes on underpairs or draws, even when his foes start raising like flags. Why? Because pocket kings come along as rarely as pocket aces, and he feels like he's owed!

My friend, discipline in poker means more than having rigorous starting requirements. It also means getting away from hands when you're beat. If you can't fold aces when you know, with every fiber of your being, that they're just going to cost you bets upon bets, then you don't have discipline. If pocket kings leave you vulnerable to the stealth ace, you don't have common sense.

All you have is a feeling of entitlement, and this feeling, even if it's justified (which it's not), puts your focus on entitlement instead of perfect play. This can only hamper your perceptions, warp your decisions and degrade your results.

http://www.onlinepokeradvantage.com

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