Sam Farha Talks Strategy
Friday, September 19th, 2008In a video by Cardplayer Magazine Sam Farha talks about the game he loves… I love Sammy. He pushes the action in any game he plays and he’s a true playboy too. Excellent video!
In a video by Cardplayer Magazine Sam Farha talks about the game he loves… I love Sammy. He pushes the action in any game he plays and he’s a true playboy too. Excellent video!
I’m thinking of finally giving Pai Gow Poker a try. Started by checking Mollis’ Poker Blog’s introduction to Pai Gow Poker Strategy.
What I’m really remembering is: “Making your two-card hand relatively strong is more important than constructing a powerhouse hand behind.”.
Meh.
I had a long discussion with a friend of mine today about whether or not to always valuebet with specific hands on the river, against specific boards. I’m not even going to get in to the most vital hands we disagreed upon, but we did agree on certain factors you have to look in to before considering a valuebet on the river…
For the record, we’re talking No Limit Hold’em.
More factors to come, but feel free to join in and give opinions here… ![]()
Pocket aces are great. I play poker every single day, thousands of hands each week, and looking down at two Aces in the whole is still awesome. Yet, I’ve seen many people lose their complete stack in a single hand — the tightest players on any table will go broke with their aces, blinded for possible drawing hands that probably have them beat.
Here are my most favorite ways of seeing people lose with their Weapons Of Mass Destruction:
Aces are great — don’t spoil the fun yourself! ![]()
I just got out of bed after a long night at the casino, and I’m still somewhat shaking after playing in the most action-packed poker game I’ve ever been a part of… Not only did I end up a winner, I also ended being at least in the top-3 of the tightest players throughout the evening. That’s a record for me – seeing as I’m usually one to play quite aggressively from close to any position at certain points in a cash game…
Yesterday, that wasn’t necessary. The poker game was so über-live that I decided to play lock down poker, only get involved with wired pairs and AQ+ — and it worked out. Pushed every TT+ from any position strongly with pre-flop raises of 5BB (getting multiple callers each time) – and pretty much moving in on any flop that hit. The best pot of the night saw me holding AQ of spades, the flop coming AJ4 with two spades – me checking, one guy moving all in, other guy calling – me thinking it over and moving in over the top. Second caller calls my hand and shows…. A pair of jacks.
The first shover showed a lower flush draw – which was a sick play at the table….

Anyway, ended up close to tripling up in that hand, beating two hands that were in a pot they probably never should have entered.
Final result: buy-in * 7. Good night, but… not good for the heart. ![]()
Splitting pairs in blackjack gives you the chance to split a pair and play two separate hands with one new card for each.
The dealer will then deal you an additional card to each hand, and you will play each hand individually. It is important to know the different splitting pair types when you play blackjack. Not every pair should be spilt.
You should ALWAYS split a pair of Aces. Just over 30% of the cards in a single deck have a value of 10, so you have a good chance of hitting two more 10 cards and to improve both your hands into a blackjack. (Although the house may not pay out 3:2 on Blackjacks that come from split Aces).
Don’t split 10s you numpty. 20 is a winning hand. If you split 10s the dealer is morally obliged to slap you with a wet fish.
You should always split 8s. A total of 16 is not good enough to stand but you are likely to bust almost two thirds of the time if you hit. With a large proportion of the pack being 10s you have a good chance of ending up with two hands with a total of 18.
For other hands the decision should be made based on the dealer’s upcard.
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Dealer’s Up Card |
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2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
T |
A |
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Pairs |
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2 2 |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
H |
H |
H |
H |
|
3 3 |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
H |
H |
H |
H |
|
4 4 |
H |
H |
H |
P |
P |
H |
H |
H |
H |
H |
|
5 5 |
D |
D |
D |
D |
D |
D |
D |
D |
H |
H |
|
6 6 |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
H |
H |
H |
H |
H |
|
7 7 |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
H |
H |
H |
H |
|
8 8 |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
|
9 9 |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
S |
P |
P |
S |
S |
|
10’s |
S |
S |
S |
S |
S |
S |
S |
S |
S |
S |
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A’s |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
Action: H = Hit S = Stand D = Double P = Split
I would stress that like doubling up; splitting pairs can also affect the effectiveness of your betting strategy. This is especially true if you are using the Paroli or Martingale system. You should make the decisions about when you are going to split pairs and the effect it might have on your betting system and stick to them.
Luck Doesn’t Last
Don’t start betting your mortgage because you have won 16 hands in a row (although you might want to go out and buy a lottery ticket), you cannot predict a lucky streak so don’t change your betting system because you are feeling lucky. The minute you overbet you can guarantee you’ll loose. Conversely, don’t get the hump because you have lost 16 in a row. You are not unlucky; you are just fortune challenged at present.
Avoid Distractions
Don’t drink while playing. We all know alcohol makes you do silly things. Some casinos will offer winning players drinks. This is not to be nice. The naughty casino people know if you drink you start to make mistakes. If you are playing online don’t sit and watch TV or the children whilst playing. You should be concentrating on what you are doing. If you are tired stop playing. You will only start making mistakes. Get some sleep, some exercise or some food or all three.
Use the Basic Strategy
Always use the basic strategy. Always. It is maths and you can’t argue with it. (Well you can but the maths will win) Even those times that you are dealt a bad hand, for example you have a 16 and want to stand when the dealer is showing a ten. By not using the strategy you increase the houses edge and we don’t want that!
In the end playing Blackjack is like anything else. Be disciplined and it will pay off.