Tells from the BeyondBy Tommy AngeloI get my best reads by raising. For instance, if I have king-queen of hearts and make the second nut flush, on the river, backdoor, heads-up, (with an unpaired board), and the other guy bets out, and I raise, and he reraises, and I rereraise, and he rerereraises, well, right about here I start to think he just might possibly definitely probably could conceivably for sure have the nuts, maybe. This gift for pinpoint accuracy didn't just happen. A careful thought process guides me. For this hand, it might go like this:
This goes back to something a wise no-limit player (Walt Z) once said to me: "If you are about to call a big bet on the river, always try to put your opponent on a hand you can beat." This reasoning applies to limit poker as well, in a limited way. (Incidentally, when I pay off in a situation like this and wind up staring at the nuts, I like to fudge the math so that being a dolt doesn't make me feel like a bozo. If I am 99.9% sure I'm beat, and the pot is laying, say, 15-to-1 on the final call, then I am really only taking about 7% the worst of it on that bet!) Reading at the Table Okay, so maybe I'm not that good at reading hands after all. That's why I needed to find another way to get a jump on things. Everyone constantly reads people. Kids do it, grown-ups do it, heck, even dogs do it. We can't help it. The ability to read others is hardwired into us. Like when you're a week late paying rent, and your landlord cheerfully asks if you got that new job yet. That's an easy one: worry. Or when a cab driver asks you about the names of side streets. That's a setup for a takedown. Or when you've got a huge pile of chips on the table, and a friend on the rail magically appears next to you in the bathroom, nervously spewing small talk. This means he is afraid of missing a chance to pop the "Can you lend me?" question before you finish peeing. By keeping my sensory systems supple while at the poker table, peripheral information can be accumulated and assimilated, then utilized to categorize the tendencies of my opponents. Or I could just watch the game. But how boring! I'd rather learn of the things that players like to eat, or drink, or watch, or read, or listen to. Then use that information against them in the game. If that doesn't work, at least we'll have a nice conversation. This is what I have learned so far: What they watch:
What they eat:
What they drink:
What they read:
What they listen to:
And remember: Never criticize people until after you've walked a mile in their shoes. That way, you are a mile away, and you've got their shoes.
This article was published at an earlier date on PokerPages.com and is being rerun due to popular demand.
![]() About the Author: Tommy Angelo has written a book called "Elements of Poker" in which he shares hundreds of his very best ideas in a manner intended to amuse, inform, inspire, and enlighten. You can read many excerpts from EOP at Tommy's website: www.tommyangelo.com. And you can order personally inscribed copies there. Elements of Poker is also available at amazon.com.
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