Poker – Playing On The Turn Part3

The next time you play in your usual game, keep track of your play on the turn. Note whether you call or fold and whether your play turns out to be the right move. Count only those times when there's a bet on the turn and the winner (even if it's you) shows his hand on the river. Hands which don't go to the river, hands in which the winner is not called on the river, and hands in which everyone checks on the turn should not be part of this survey.
You should have four categories of entries in your notes:

1. You folded and it was the right decision (FY).
2. You folded and it was the wrong decision (FN).
3. You called and it was the right decision (CY).
4. You called and it was the wrong decision (CN).

You can prepare ahead of time by making the FY, FN, CY, and CN entries in your notebook, so you'll only have to make a mark under the right entry after each hand is over. If you have space and time, and can do it without drawing undue attention to yourself at the table, record why you made the wrong decision when you do. Analyze your mistakes-do you call or fold too often?-and if you can, correct them. Good luck.

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Poker – Playing On The Turn Part2

If you're drawing to a straight or a flush, and you make the hand on the turn, you should usually bet it right out into the players you were formerly checking to. Worried that you'll be giving away your hand? You are. That's not a problem, though.

The later it is in the hand, the more important it is that you win the pot right there. You don't need to disguise your hand anymore. The other players will either have the right odds to chase you down, or they won't. Make them pay no matter what they have.

Realize that if you check on the turn, especially if everyone else has already checked to you, you're giving your opponents not one, but two free cards. They get to check with you on the turn, and they get to see the river card without putting any more money in the pot. Again, if you can think of any good reason at all to bet on the turn, you should do so. Free cards are something that your opponents are supposed to give you, not something you give them.

An easy way to understand the above advice is to realize that you're going to check and call when you have outs and bet when you don't. A flush draw is a hand that has outs, so you should usually check and call. When you make the flush, you no longer have any more outs, and now you should be betting. Same way with a straight draw.

The above advice notwithstanding, the turn represents an excellent opportunity for you to vary your play. A great deal of the time, you'll be folding on the turn. It's a common play, and there's certainly no disgrace in folding. Even better is to check, act like you're going to fold, and then instead raise when the action gets back around to you.

If you can make that check-raise play as often as one-third of the time you have a playable hand, you'll be training your opponents to check behind you when you check, because they fear a check-raise. Then, those times when you check with a bad hand, you'll often get a free card, because everyone will also check, thinking they're depriving you of a chance to check-raise.

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