YOUR Advantage With Online Poker Table Notes
by Robert Myer
The importance of taking notes on your
opponents can't be stressed enough. The more you
play, the more you value the information that
you have collected on each player at your table.
It is quite an advantage to know that player
"A" likes to bluff a lot and that
player "B" only plays if he has a big
pair
Taking notes on the other players at your
table, online, is very easy. On some sites, they
even put a marker on the player if you have
written a note on him before.
When you start taking notes just watch the
opponents that stand out, like the over
aggressive player that raises every betting
round and ends up throwing his hand away at the
river.
It's best if you start developing some sort
of code system to classify each player. This can
be a set of numbers, a group of letters, or
anything that will remind you of the way he
plays.
Learn to classify players. This will help you
in remembering their play the next time you run
up against them. Think of them in terms of tight
or loose and passive or aggressive. I like to
assign numbers for tight or loose and letters
for passive or aggressive. For example a very
loose passive player might be coded as
"8" for his loose play and
"A" for his passive play.
Remember when you are watching the other
players to keep an eye out for the very tight
ones. These players are either too tight and
passive or they are just tight, and aggressive
when they have good cards. It is very easy to
over look them as they are not in many hands.
And the tight aggressive player is the most
dangerous at the table.
Look for special betting traits that you see.
Does this player always bet on the button if it
hasn't been bet before his turn? Does this
player like to raise from early position with
high cards? Does this player slow play high
pairs and sets? The list can go on, but you get
the idea.
Write all this information in your notes, it
will give you a tremendous advantage as time
goes on.
When you run into a player that you have a
note on, review the note. Watch him for a while
to see that he still plays the way your note
says he does. Many times a player will improve
his play with time and you should recognize this
and adjust your notes.
In the end it just comes down to having more
information about other players at your table.
How you use that knowledge is still the most
important thing.
Good Luck
About the Author
Authored by: Robert Myer