|
Where to Play Online New Players! Tourney Mistakes Playing Blinds Playing Pairs Limit or No Limit? Online Poker Poker Diary Calculating Hand Odds Types of Poker Player Stack Management Heads-Up Poker Tells Risky Hands Learn Omaha Home |
Top Ten Tells
Wherever you play online, either at home or even in a club or casino, there is far more to playing the game than card values and ranking hands. Figuring in items such as position, how your opponents play, playing the right hands and self-discipline are highly important. But the key factor is a 'tell': an unconscious indication from an opponent that reveals to you the strength of their hand or how they are likely to act. And if you know the gesture another player makes before folding, it doesn't matter what cards you have - you can win a pot easily. And if you know that they hold the 'nuts', you can save a fortune! Tells come in numerous forms, so you must learn to read each player as well as remembering the general rules. These rules have been set in stone since Mike Caro published Caro's Book of Poker Tells, in which he covers most areas of interest as well as distinguishing between 'tells from those who are unaware' and 'tells from actors'. He also coined the general principle that, with players putting on an act, 'weak means strong and vice versa'- if a player acts weak, they have a strong hand and if they try to display strength, the opposite is true. This book is essential reading for any poker player and is still the main body of writing on the subject. Read and re-read it - most of today's serious players have done so. In addition to figuring out who the actors and the unaware are, modern poker players have to figure out who has read the book and will try to confuse observers with 'fake' or 'reverse' tells. So it's very important to take players on a case-by-case basis and try to understand from their actions how sophisticated they are. For example, a newcomer to the local £5 beginners' night game who bets any two cards and calls with any pair or gutshot is unlikely to be giving out reverse tells. But a pro, who sits looking nervous and seems to swallow a lot when in a hand with you, may well be selling a line. Once you have some idea of what level the other players are at, you can figure out what their possible tells mean. When most pros talk about making a difficult read, they usually mention sensing extreme weakness or strength as the key factor. As they are so good at taking in all the available information and deciding what it means they don't consciously need to look for it. For the beginner or average player, though, this sixth sense takes time to develop. To give you a head start, here are the top ten areas you can look at. Remember our words, however, and beware of anyone tricky enough to try and send you the wrong way!
Watching the eyes can be a major earner. Caro says glancing at someone or staring for an unusually long time can be a sign of a bluff. He adds that a player who looks away is a much greater threat than one who watches what is happening (as they don't want to discourage a bet), and that a quick glance at their chips after checking their cards or the board is a key sign that a player has something powerful.
For example, a player who put chips in a pot in several different ways might be subconsciously telling you something each time, whereas the way someone acts with them in response to you might also be key. One commonly known tell is the 'threat beat' where as soon as you look likely to bet your opponent picks up a huge pile of chips hoping to scare you off. Players who riffle their chips or do tricks with them are also giving away valuable information, even if it may only be that they have previous poker experience or want to gain some authority over the table.
If they're drinking, how much have they had and is this next one likely to take them over the edge? In the film Rounders, John Malkovich's character Teddy KGB was revealed as having a disastrous Oreos-related tell. While your local game sure isn't Hollywood, the props and comforting devices that people transfer emotions to are key to understanding their play. Similarly, many players eat at the table, and a player who looks at his cards and goes back to his meal isn't likely to be interested in anything else but his belly. Other players have chip markers or lucky charms which they toy with, or riffle their chips as a way of releasing tension. If you can figure out why they interact with their props at any given moment, it could well make you a fortune.
Similarly, the way in which a player says: 'Raise' or 'All-in' can be indicative of where they're at in the hand. In a game such as No Limit Holdem, where players often play a draw like a made hand, this can be vital information. And listen to any other comments they make, try to figure out what they want you to do - then do the opposite!
Observing heartbeat and blood pressure related tells can be key information for the pros. A player whose breathing has started to resemble that of an Olympic athlete is clearly not in a normal internal state; similarly, it is difficult to fake calmness when your neck vein is beating like a heavy-metal drummer and your brow is sweating like you've got a fever. Both of these tells can be reliable signs of a bluff and even concern some of the best players since they are often involuntary. At the European World Series of Poker in Vienna this year, winner Peter Roche was so concerned about the latter tell that he spent the whole final wearing a neck scarf.
Screen names or avatars are also an interesting factor online, since the global nature of Internet poker might throw you together with opponents for only short periods of time and you will have to make quick assessments. For example, people with gangster personas may either be there for business purposes or to pose; the supermodel picture may actually disguise a 25-stone truck driver from Skegness, and while 'PhillyHelmuth' probably isn't who the name suggests it is, 'Neverwin' certainly isn't a guy you want to play shorthanded $100-$200 Holdem with!
|