PROFESSIONAL
GAMBLERS: 7 CARD STUD POKER - WHY YOU
SHOULDN'T CHASE STRAIGHTS
In
a few hours I will be heading out for a night of Poker,
which comprises 4-5 of my nights each week. My favorite
is High/Low 7 Card Stud, but tonight is strictly the
7 Card Stud people and THEY are good. You don't make
mistakes with these people.
Talk
is minimal, tells are invisible, mistakes are costly
and mercy is absent. Talk too much, they'll pick up
a tell. Look the wrong way and they get a read on
you, make a dumb move and it'll cost you. Newcomers
to the game would be better in a tank with sharks.
These guys would eat the sharks!
The
point I'm making is that if you really want to be
a great poker player, or even a successful one at
kicking off some decent profits, the key is being
perfect in every phase of the game.
Today
I'm going to dwell on one tiny thing: STRAIGHTS. I
don't win with straights because I don't go for straights.
Obviously if one is dealt to me in the first 5 cards,
I'm not throwing it back. But chasing a straight,
even open ended, is a waste of time and money - mostly
money.
A
straight is only a freckle more powerful than 2 pair
and needs 5 cards in order to be made. Two pair needs
only four cards. Trips are even more powerful than
two pair and require only three cards of the same
value, of course. But measured against the difficulty
of trying to fill a straight is the all important
facet of EXPENSE.
Just
think for a second how long you have to stay in a
hand in order to get your straight. It doesn't just
happen all the time in the first five cards you are
dealt. Yet once you cross over to sixth street, and
definitely on seventh street, the betting increases
by leaps and bounds.
The
person chasing the dream of catching a 5 or a 10 to
complete his slightly meager valued straight is caught
between players looking for, or worse, HAVING their
Full House, Flush or Higher Straight. The catch might
be made but the hand may not be strong enough to off-set
others who end up stronger.
The
amount of money a poker player uses in CHASING hands
eventually comes back to eat into overall profits.
I'm not saying to drop every hand unless you are dealt
trips or three cards to a Royal. Just for smiles,
put away the chasing of straights for the next three
poker sessions you find yourself involved in. Watch
and see if it doesn't leave you with more money to
use, going after better valued hands.
And
with that said, I will now spray on my shark repellent
and enter the room, set aside for all aspiring poker
players, who hope to get out of that rat trap in about
7 hours with more money than they went in with.
You
can be sure that IF I win tonight, it won't be because
I caught a gut straight or two but because I had enough
chips in front of me to go for broke with three lovely
cowboys wired. Chasing straights will lead you STRAIGHT
to a quick dent in your session money! Don't do it.