Poker Antes And Blinds

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Join PokerStars today - the world's largest online poker room & the biggest tournaments anywhere online. $600 deposit bonus for new players! Ante - one of the mandatory bets in the game of poker, which is placed by all players at the table before cards are dealt. Not all varieties of poker have ante’s. The size of ante, in general, is.

Blinds

An online Poker Clock and Blinds Calculator that works on your desktop computer as well as your iPad, iPhone or Android device. No downloads needed!eeded! All poker games however share. The player who remains at the end of the round who has the highest hand wins the pot; which is the blinds, antes and any.

In poker, a steal is a type of a bluff, a raise during the first betting round made with an inferior hand and meant to make other players fold superior hands because of shown strength. A steal is normally either an 'ante steal' or 'blind steal' (depending on whether the game being played uses antes or blinds).

Steals are done with hands less valuable than what might normally be considered a raising hand, normally a below average one, with the hope that the few players remaining will not have a hand worth calling the raise, thereby winning the antes or blinds without further action. This play is used either in late position after several people have folded, or when the game is short-handed. Steals happen more often in tournament situations due to the escalating ante/blind structure making the starting pot quite valuable.

While steals don't win much money per hand, they can accumulate to considerable profit if the players to the left of the stealer are tight enough not to contest enough steals. Of course, skilled players will recognize repeated steal plays and frequently reraise for defense.

Steals being made in late position when everyone folds to the stealer, or when the game is short-handed, are the most common steals, but a raise under other conditions can also act as a steal. An aggressive player, especially one with a large stack of chips, might reraise, also known as re-steal, someone he knows might be trying to steal. The objective here is twofold: the re-raiser hopes to pick up both the blinds and antes and the original raiser's chips when the raiser folds, and he also hopes to keep that player from constantly raising before she or he can act because that cuts down on the reraiser's own stealing opportunities.

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Antes

If one or more players have called a raise pre-flop, a player can re-raise as a bluff in what is called a squeeze play. The original raiser will often only continue with a truly premium holding as several other players have shown signs of strength, and he may well be playing out of position. The players that have just called the original raise are unlikely to have very strong hands as they have not re-raised.

See also[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Steal_(poker)&oldid=1004675962'

The Pokerbat is considering his options. First, make a special holiday weekend of crushing the online games. That’s option number 1. Course that is option one every day for the Bat, when the Bat logs on to play poker on a mac at home. The Bat likes that option, he likes the way it ends up, and he’ll enjoy the journey there–but the Bat don’t have to be at home to do that. They make computers portable these days and now that they have poker on a mac to go, the Bat ain’t going just sit at home and play, thank Peter, Paul, Mary and Puff the Magic Dragon for wireless cards.

Second, the Bat loads up his 1978 Cadillac–which looks a little something like the picture minus the paint job, new engine, new parts, shinyness, washed-ness, and the original seat materials, AND the the little doohicky on the front (Bat thinks one of the neighborhood kids is wearing that as a necklace)–and heads to St. Louis because that other Poker animal, the PokerMonkey, is raving about the structures, the casino, and some giant golden arches. That is option number 2.

Now, the Bat is fond of McDonalds but he doesn’t need to see a supersized McDonalds in the middle of Missouri to feel better about eating Big Macs, or fries, or milk shakes, or sundaes, or nuggets…

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Bat doesn’t have a weight problem, he has a wait problem, as in he can’t wait to eat. Since, the Bat has a local Mickey Ds, that option is off the table. And excuse the interlude, but the Bat is going to the drive through in the middle of this post. The Bat’s got a McFlurry itch that needs to be scratch, to the Bat’s caddy. You didn’t think it would be called the Batmobile did you?

And

Thirdly, go to Biloxi and play in that stranglehold of a structure they got at the B.R. The Bat says stranglehold because before you know it, those blinds and antes will sneak up on you like a Gay pro wrestler executing a sleeper hold. The Bat created a little nursey rhyme for players at that tournament to sing when the structure falls about like an old stadium full of TNT. Make sure you chant near your poker tournament director, if you don’t think luckboxes should be rewarded…

“It all goes to hell, and it all goes in, he who is luckiest wins, and he who ain’t, buys-in again.”

The Bat realizes that doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue but you have fun with it, especially as your chips go to the center of the table all willy-nilly.

What Is Blinds In Poker

Fourthly, the Bat loads up his Cadillac, with his poker on a mac computer and wireless card, and goes on a poker road trip/bender. Head to down to New Orleans for some cash games, take the winnings and hit the highway up to St. Louie, play some poker on the road while driving (will be safe going the speed limit), play in a poker tournament there and then head down to Baton Rouge try to find the poker “room” in the middle of that casino there, check out the hybrid poker club maybe, and then skedaddle over to Biloxi. That sentence is tiring and the Bat hasn’t even gotten to the good part.

Wsop Antes And Blinds

Sit at the cash tables and crush the donkeys coming in from the slaughter house upstairs. Sing to them the Bat’s song:
“It all goes to hell, and it all goes in, he who is luckiest wins, and he who ain’t buys-in again.” The Bat has trademarked that little ditty already so you site squatters with visions of money in your birdbrains settle down. That’s it. Tune in next week, same Bat blog, same Bat poster, for the results.