Texas Holdem Poker Intermediate Strategy

If you have been using the beginner strategy effectively and winning consistently when playing Texas Holdem Poker in online casinos it is time to move on to my:

 Intermediate Texas Holdem Poker strategy.

We will still be playing Texas Holdem Poker very tight.   We will be investing in hands where we stand a greater chance to win and fold those where we have little or no chance to win.

My intermediate Texas Holdem Poker strategy introduces additional powerful hands into your Texas Holdem Poker arsenal.

The hands that we will be adding to our playable Texas Holdem Poker hands are:

K-Js (the s means suited ex King of clubs and Jack of clubs), A-10s, A-Q, K-Q, 7-7, 6-6, 5-5, 4-4, 3-3, 2-2.

We are also playing the hands which we learned earlier.  Those are:

A-A, K-K, Q-Q, J-J, 10-10, 9-9, 8-8, A-Ks (the s means that both cards are the same suit – both clubs), A-Qs, K-Qs.

These additional starting hands will allow you to play more hands in Texas Holdem Poker.

You must resist the temptation to play starting hands outside of the best beginner and intermediate starting hands.

If you have one of the best hands, I recommend that you raise your opponents.  A raise does a couple of things for you.

  • tells you who else may have a strong hand (If they re-raise)

  • forces a player with a bad hand to fold

  • gets more money into the pot

Intermediate Strategy on the flop

When the flop hits you must assess:

  • Whether you have improved your hand or not.

  • Whether you have a hand that can win the game.

If you have improved your hand on the flop or still feel you have a good chance of winning, I recommend that you raise.

If you have not improved or don’t feel that your hand is good enough to win then I recommend folding.

Intermediate Strategy on the Turn and River

Playing on the Turn and River is similar.  Every time a card is dealt you should ask yourself:

  1. Did you make your hand? 

  2. Do you have a good chance of making your hand?

  3. Most importantly, is your hand good enough to win?

If it is I would raise.  If it is not then I recommend folding.

Summary of Texas Holdem Poker Intermediate strategy

Our Texas Holdem Poker intermediate strategy can be summed up in this manner:

  1. If you do not have one of the best starting hands – FOLD

  2. If you do have one of the best starting hands – bet or raise

  3. After the flop if you have not improved your hand – FOLD

  4. After the flop if you have improved your hand – raise

  5. If after the Turn and River you have not improved your hand – FOLD

  6. If after the Turn and River you have improved your hand – raise

This Texas Holdem Poker intermediate strategy is easy to learn and use.  Practice it and you will win with it.

Texas Holdem Poker Beginning Strategy

The Texas Holdem Poker Beginner Strategy that I recommend is playing only the best starting Texas Holdem Poker hands.

The hands that you should be playing as a beginning Texas Holdem Poker player are: A-A, K-K, Q-Q, J-J, 10-10, 9-9, 8-8, A-Ks (the s means that both cards are the same suit – both clubs), A-Qs, K-Qs.

Limit yourself to only these hands.  If you are dealt any cards outside of these hands then fold.

The goal is to have you win money.  The best way to do that is to win as much as possible on the hands that you have a chance to win and to minimize your losses on hands where you have little or no chance to win. In other words, fold the bad hands.

If you have one of the best hands, I recommend that you raise your opponents.  A raise does a couple of things for you.

  • tells you who else may have a strong hand (If they re-raise)

  • forces a player with a bad hand to fold

  • gets more money into the pot

  •  

Beginner Strategy on the Flop

When the flop hits you must assess: 

  • Whether you have improved your hand or not.

  • Whether you have a hand that can win the game.

If you have improved your hand on the flop or still feel you have a good chance of winning, I recommend that you raise.

If you have not improved or don’t feel that your hand is good enough to win then I recommend folding.

Beginner Strategy on the Turn and River

Playing on the Turn and River is similar.  Every time a card is dealt you should ask yourself: 

  1. Did you make your hand? 

  2. Do you have a good chance of making your hand?

  3. Most importantly, is your hand good enough to win?

 If it is I would raise.  If it is not then I recommend folding.

Summary of Texas Holdem Poker Beginner Strategy

Our Texas Holdem Poker beginner strategy can be summed up in this manner:

  1. If you do not have one of the best starting hands – FOLD

  2. If you do have one of the best starting hands – bet or raise

  3. After the flop if you have not improved your hand – FOLD

  4. After the flop if you have improved your hand – raise

  5. If after the Turn and River you have not improved your hand – FOLD

  6. If after the Turn and River you have improved your hand – raise

This Texas Holdem Poker beginner strategy is easy to learn and use.  Practice it and you will win with it.

Rank & Order of Poker Hands

The poker hand rankings is here detailed in a descending order:

Royal Flush

  • A descending row of the same suit starting from the ace.
  • Example- AKQJT all Diamonds.
  • There are 4 different ways to get poker hand rankings like this.

Straight Flush

  • A descending row of the same suit.
  • Example- T9876.
  • 36 different ways are possible for you to get a hand like this.

Four of a Kind

  • Four cards of different suits.
  • Example – 5555K.
  • 624 different ways to get a hand like this.

Full House

  • The hand is made of one three-of-a-kind and one pair.
  • Example – 88555.
  • 3,744 different ways to get a hand like this.

Flush

  • A hand of the same suit.
  • Example – Q9853, all Hearts
  • 5,108 different ways to get a hand like this.

Straight

  • A descending row of different suits.
  • KQJT9 of different suits.(K of hearts, Q of spades…)
  • 10,200 different ways to get poker hand rankings like this.

Three of a Kind

  • Three cards of the same value.
  • Example – J9993 Different suits.
  • 54,912 different ways to get a hand like this.

Two Pair

  • Two pairs of he same value.
  • Example – TT 55 2, Different suits.
  • 123,552 different ways to get a hand like this.

One Pair

  • One pair of cards with the same value.
  • Example – JJ 6 5 3
  • 1,098,240 different ways to get a hand like this.

Texas Holdem Rules

Texas Hold’em is one of the most dramatic and popular varieties of poker in the world, and it seems like everywhere you turn there is another show, another website, or another article dedicated to the subject. But, how do you play the game? How does it differ from classic poker games, such as Five Card Draw? And what exactly is a Flop, anyway? This article will walk you through a Texas Hold’em game from start to finish, you will learn Texas Hold’em poker rules, and by the end you will be ready to “Shuffle Up and Deal!”

A full Texas Hold’em table typically has nine or ten players; any less and the game may be referred to as short handed. To determine who begins the game a single card is dealt to each player; high card will be the first dealer. The dealer position is indicated by a white plastic chip referred to as the button, which is also what the dealer position is called, sometimes referred to as being on the button. After each round of play, sometimes called a hand, the dealer button rotates to the left, ensuring that everyone gets to play in this and all other positions.

Pre-flop

Before cards are dealt the forced bets must be paid, which are called the big blind and the little blind. The little blind is sometimes called the small blind as well. A bet is when money is put into the pot for the first time in a round. The amounts of the bets and blinds are predetermined, and the little blind is always half the big blind. The little blind position is always the seat to the left of the dealer, and the big blind is the seat to the left of the little blind.

The dealer will then deal two cards (referred to as pocket cards or hole cards) face down to each player, one at a time, starting with the player on his left. Once the cards are dealt, each player looks at their cards; on their action they must then decide if they wish to call the current bet (the big blind, which is the highest amount bet at this point) which means to match it, fold their hand with out betting if they don’t like their cards, or raise the bet by putting in more money. Each player, starting with the seat to the left of the big blind, makes their choice and acts. If a player raises the bet, each player must now call the new amount, including those who may have already acted. At any time a player may re-raise, meaning that they raise it again beyond the amount it was raised previously. If no player raises the big blind, then the player in that position may check, meaning they do not want to put more money in, or raise. It is important to note that if a players raises he may not raise again unless he was re-raised, as opposed to called. The round of betting stops when all players have either folded or called the last raise.

Flop

The dealer burns a card, which means they deal it to one side and it is not used in play, and then deals three cards face down. The dealer then turns the thee cards face up simultaneously; this is called the Flop. These are the first of five community cards that all players can use, along with their pocket cards, to make the best possible poker hand. The standard poker hand ranks are used. The player in the little blind position (once again, the first seat to the left of the dealer) is now UTG, or Under The Gun, meaning they are first to act now and on every subsequent round of betting. They must make a decision as in pre-flop play, with one change: they can choose to check if they don’t want to bet or fold. Many experts advise players to stop here if they do not improve their hand, as they have now seen five of the seven cards they will use. Once again, the betting round ends only when all players have folded or called the last bet or raise.

Turn

The dealer burns another card and then deals a fourth community card, called the Turn, face up. There is another round of betting, exactly as after the flop, with the small blind seat being UTG.

River

After a final burn card, the dealer turns over the fifth and last community card, called the River. There is one final round of betting. At this point (or before) if all but one player folds, the last player who didn’t fold wins the pot. This player may muck his hand, which means to toss it into the discard pile by the dealer without showing anyone what it was.

Showdoen

A showdown occurs when a player is called after the River, and could involve anywhere from two players to the entire table, depending on how many stayed in to this point. All players still in the hand show their cards, starting with the last person to bet. At any point after this player showed his cards other players in the showdown may muck their hand, essentially conceding the pot; just think of mucking as folding. They are admitting they have been beat without having to show their cards. This strategy (mucking) helps keep the other players from learning your playing style, such as if you bet heavy on two pairs or like to chase a flush.

The best five-card poker hand wins.

That is the essence of Texas Hold’em, but there are a number of other important points to understand.

Position

Where you sit at a Texas Hold’em table is a very important factor in how you play. The dealer position is considered the strongest on any given round, as being on the button means you act last in every post-flop round. Acting last means you act with the most information, which is essential to making the right decision whether to bet or raise, check, call or fold, and the game of poker is all about making the right decisions.

Being in early position means you are one of the first to act in a round of betting, and is considered weak due to the lack of information you have before you act. Middle position is less weak and falls between the early and the late position. The late position is the strongest, such as the dealer and the player to his right, who is referred to by some as the cutoff. The cutoff could take the choice away from the dealer by betting or raising big, bumping him out and becoming the latest player in the hand, and thus in the strongest position.

Winning a hand

Besides everyone but you folding, the only way to win a hand is in a showdown. The five best cards are used out of the five community cards and each player’s hole cards, which can lead to some interesting situations. For example, if the board, or table cards, is AAKK9 and no player has better than a pair of eights in their hand, the board is the best possible hand, and all players in the showdown will chop the pot, which means to divide it evenly among those players. The same holds true if two players tie a hand. In the event of a flush or a straight, the player holding the highest card in the series wins; if the board has the five highest, the pot is chopped.

One last note; Texas Hold’em can be played as Limit, No Limit, and Pot Limit. Limit Hold’em means that you can only bet up to a predetermined amount, typically equal to the big blind, and raise the same amount. Raises are typically limited to four or five “bets” total, meaning the big blind, the first raise, and then three or four more raises. Pot Limit Hold’em means you can raise up to the current amount in the pot, but no more. No Limit Texas Hold’em is the most dramatic of the three, where any player, at any time, can declare All In and bet everything he has. A player calling an All In move with too few chips creates a side pot, which he cannot win and is separate from the main pot, which he can.

The game of Texas Holdem becomes more popular every day, and one of the main reasons for that is the ease with which players can pick up on the rules. At least two players are required for the game to start, and the goal is to put together the best five-card combination using your two hole cards and five community cards. But Texas Holdem is often referred to as the game that takes a minute to learn and a lifetime to master. Online poker rooms are a great place to master your skills – and here we highlight some of the top poker rooms that boast reliable software, best bonus offers, high level of security, and convenient deposit/cashout options.