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Poker is an extremely psychological game. At the poker table, you’re constantly watching your opponents, hoping to pick up signs that give away their hands. You’re observing patterns, trying to piece together bits of incomplete information that will help you determine your next poker move. The player to your right talks a lot when he’s in a hand. Is he bluffing when he does this, or is he sitting on the nuts? Perhaps he talks all the time not to bluff but just to try and confuse you. The player to your left just lost a huge pot to a bad beat and has opened the very next hand with a big raise. Is he trying to bluff, or did he wake up to a premium poker hand? A game like poker that relies so heavily on the psyche demands constant awareness from its players, as missing the tiniest bit of information can make or break you on any given hand. Phil Hellmuth Jr., one of the games most notorious and most successful poker players, has been known to have said “I look into people’s souls!” While this comment is a popular punch line amongst poker circles, it does have some truth to it. To win at live poker, you have to develop a strong ability to read your opponents and get inside their heads. When you have a good poker hand, your bluff must be refined so you can convince your opponent that you’re holding something he can beat; if he reads through the bluff and knows you’re sitting on a monster, he’ll simply throw his cards away and you won’t win anything. So how do we hone our bluffing skills and get our opponents to doubt their reads and misuse the information they pick up? One tool you can use is advertising a bluff. The term simply means turning your poker cards face-up on the table after you successfully carry out a bluff. Many poker books advise against ever showing your poker cards at the table, mainly because you are giving your opponents information that they would not otherwise have access to. Generally speaking, this is good advice; the less information you afford your opponents in poker, the better. However, there are certain situations that merit showing your cards and advertising your bluff is one of them. Advertising your bluff has two major benefits: influencing your table image and putting your poker opponent on tilt. Consider the following situation. You’ve been playing a $1-$2 no-limit hold’em cash game for the better part of three hours with the same poker players. You haven’t played many hands and the only hands you’ve shown to the table have been big pocket pairs or made flushes and straights. Consequently, you’re not getting much action, because everyone thinks you’re a tight poker player, content with waiting for the nuts. So how do we turn this situation into a favorable one? First, it’s time to change gears. Open up your starting hand requirements and bet more aggressively; your opponents will not immediately recognize the change, still having you pegged as a tight player.
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