![]() |
home / contact us / |
![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
The Poker Professionals Association
Research Chapter 20 Tournaments Tournaments are now everywhere and can be played 24/7 on the internet plus daily at casinos around the world. So it appears obvious to the aspiring poker pros that tournaments are the best place to make a great living at poker. Well, it depends. Much of it depends on your personality and your capacity for pain and disappointment. If you don't mind losing 99% of the time you play and only winning a tournament about one in a one hundred times (or less) that doesn't affect the way you play, then tournaments for a living is probably for you. If, on the other hand you like to win more than half the time you play, then cash games or internet play is for you. An interesting fact is that most professional poker player, even the famous ones you see on TV, actually make their primary income from cash games, not tournaments. We are of course assuming here that
you are not one of the top 100 poker players in the world and thus would
do great at both. For your convenience in relationship to the current topic, and as a continous reference, the poker point system is attached below. __________________________________ POKER PRO POINT SYSTEM With the point system we assign each card a specific relative value or points. As expected, the Ace receives the highest value; however, you will note that cards rankings from 8 down receive no value, unless paired, connected or suited. For learning purposes, we are using Texas Hold'em Poker game primarily because it is currently the leading money game both for tournaments and live play and it the easiest to use to demonstrate the point system, as only two cards are dealt each player initially. Naturally we will cover the use of the Point System in other primary poker games in later research chapters. Individual Card Point Values:
Pairs receive an extra value of 8 points. Suited cards receive an extra value of 3 points. Connected cards receive an extra value of 2 points. Suited cards are written with a small "s" as: KJ's Connected cards refers to directly adjacent cards such as: KQ or AK or KQ or QJ, not KJ or AQ. Examples of values of first two cards dealt in Texas Hold'em:
It is interesting to note the value difference of 3 points between AQ's and AQ. This demonstrates the importance of suiting and is helpful in evaluating the correct value of a AQ starting hand. Suited it is definitely playable while unsuited it can be a marginal hand often played for more than it's worth.
|
|