Ah, yes—the Texas hold ‘em
explosion. Seven years ago, when I first started playing,
the Texas hold ‘em community was comprised almost
entirely of the collection of retirees who haunted
the local 1-4-8-8 games, a sprinkling of mild mannered
pros who played for a living, and a healthy percentage
of truly degenerate gamblers who would now and then
stagger into the card room after a blistering run
at the craps table. There were no internet games.
There were no Jay-Cee charity tournaments. And there
was certainly no poker on television. Although the
games were typically full you didn’t hear much
about poker away from the casino, and whenever you
left the card room you got the feeling that you were
probably at least a par five away from anyone who
knew that ‘Big Slick’ didn’t refer
to the Valdez oil spill.
But that was then. As we sit here today, in the Year
of our Lord 2004, Texas hold ‘em seems to be
everywhere. It’s on TV, it’s in books,
and it’s being played for nickels and dimes
in dorm rooms and basements all across America. I
would say that this is a good thing, but that would
be a total understatement. For in fact the hold ‘em
explosion is a great thing, since it’s probably
the best game ever invented for players looking to
make serious money gambling.
Now don’t get me wrong—there are plenty
of other games in which the player can gain the advantage.
You can count cards in blackjack, for example, or
play full-pay video poker, or learn how to handicap
sports. But all these games have one formidable snag
attached to them; i.e., they all come with an enormous
variance. To the uninitiated, variance is a term we
use to reference the ‘swings’ associated
with gambling. In all the above mentioned games you
can unquestionably achieve an edge. Unfortunately,
however, it can often take a long time for that edge
to manifest itself.
To fully understand any gambling proposition, you
need to be acquainted with two terms: variance and
expectation. As we explained above, variance refers
to the swings. Expectation, on the other hand, refers
to your edge. Ideally you’d like to involve
yourself with games that have a high expectation and
a low variance. Why? Because games with this relationship
bring with them a very low risk of ruin. This means
you don’t need as large of a bankroll to ensure
survival, and you won’t need to play as much
to ensure yourself of a profit.
All gambling games come with variance—that’s
just the nature of the beast. If it wasn’t for
variance the losing players would never score the
occasional win, which means there would be no games.
But you, as an advantage gambler, would like the variance
to be relatively low, so as to minimize the risk of
long and costly losing streaks. To this end, there
is simply no better game out there than Texas hold
‘em. Why? Although the dynamics are complicated,
it has largely to do with the fact that certain hands
have only a very small chance of winning against certain
superior hands. Take for example AK vs. AT. For the
AT to win, it has to either catch a ten (of which
there are only three left in the deck), or some kind
of goofy straight or flush. If an ace drops the AT
is ‘outkicked’, since the AK’s side
card is higher than the AT’s side card. Thus,
the guy with AK in this spot is an enormous favorite.
If you manage to get money in the middle when you
have AK and the other guy has AT, and further manage
to get out when you have AT and the other guy has
AK, you can expect to win a lot of money with very
little relative risk.
It goes without saying then that this is precisely
what winning players do; they get their money in the
middle when they have a hand that ‘dominates’
their opponents holding, and cut their losses to a
minimum when the situation is reversed. Because of
this, the down swings that a winning Texas hold ‘em
player will experience are typically much shorter
than those experienced by other advantage gamblers.
Are there ‘bad runs’ in Texas hold ‘em?
Absolutely. But the length and cost of these runs
pale in comparison to what a pro sports bettor, or
blackjack player, can expect to suffer.
The fact that Texas hold ‘em offers such a
favorable relationship between expectation and variance
means that a player with a relatively short bankroll
can expect to do fairly well. Although most experts
disagree on precisely how much money you need to be
adequately bankrolled, most estimates come in at around
300 big bets. This means you need around $1800 dollars
to virtually ensure that you won’t go broke
playing $3-$6, or $6000 to insure the same at $10-20
(remember, this estimate only applies to winning players.
Losing players can expect to eventually go broke no
matter how large their bankroll). If you figure an
excellent players win rate at somewhere around one
big bet per hour, this means a very good player can
reasonably expect to double his bankroll after around
300 hrs. of play.
Sports bettors, even very good ones, are not immune
to losing months, or even losing seasons. And every
advantage video poker player can spin you a woesome
tale about going 100,000 hands or so without hitting
a royal flush. But Texas hold ‘em players, as
a rule, don’t hit these kinds of slumps very
often. With a fairly high win rate (relative to their
bankroll), and an acceptable level of variance, it’s
no wonder that so many advantage gamblers make Texas
hold ‘em their game of choice!
It’s just pure dumb luck that the game with
the most favorable expectation to variance ratio has
become the preferred game for card players everywhere.
How this happened I don’t know, but I for one
am not complaining! Simply put, hold ‘em is
THE GAME for players looking to win money playing
cards, and with the huge influx of terrible players
entering the fray the games have never been juicier.
If you’ve been thinking about taking up hold
‘em for a while, and are just now gearing up
for it, let me be the first to say you couldn’t
have picked a better game, or a better time, at which
to make the plunge. See you at the tables.
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