A day of poker can be seen as a long, drawn out battle. In that
battle are many short confrontations that set the tone for future
battles. After all the smaller battles have been completed, someone
will be broke and going home. Keeping a cool head throughout every
single individual battle is the only way to be victorious in the long
run. Once you lose your patience and focus, it's all but over.
What
I'm talking about is tilt, but really, it's more than that. Going on
tilt is the ultimate way to lose your money. Nobody I know will claim
they play better when they are on tilt. If they say so, use some of Joe
Navarro's insight to figure out if they're telling the truth. Going on
tilt affects your thought process, gets your adrenaline going and will
eventually force you to make a mistake, if you don't control it.
Just
as a quick example, you have just been two-outed on the river. The guy
across from you smirks, claps, jumps up and down; he just rubs it in
your face. The very next hand you have K-10 under the gun. That same
player reraises you, so you decide that you want revenge and push
all-in. He insta-calls and shows pocket kings, which of course hold up.
Now, if you weren't on tilt you would not have:
(1) Raised under the gun with K-10,
(2) Reraised him all-in with K-10,
(3) Let your emotions affect your decisions
Clearly, this is
an exaggeration, but I promise you that players whom you have played
with have felt angered by a beat you have put on them and have wanted to
get their chips back instead of finding a better source.
Admit
it. We've all done it. The guy at the table whom you just don't like has
taken a pot from you. Instead of looking at one of the weaker players
to steal and slowly grind back up, you go right back after your
"enemy." And, instead of winning the next pot, just give him more of
your lifeline.
Part of avoiding tilt comes from the experience. You've been there
before, the beat will happen, and when it does, you have to move on. If
you feel that you aren't ready to move on, don't play another hand.
Take a break. Walk away from the table or even get up to go. Nobody is
forcing you to play that next hand and of all people, you need to
convince yourself that you are in no shape to ante up.
If this
is a tournament, you need to think differently; you can't just leave,
but you can walk away. You risk missing an opportunity to pick up a big
hand, but even then, what's to say that the hand will hold up? Getting
blinded away is a better decision than playing while steaming.
So how do you keep a cool head?
One
strategy to use is to remember that each hand is only that, one hand.
After each hand, mentally, start over. Give yourself a check list. Count
your chips, take a deep breath, get dealt your cards, act on them.
When
it comes to a "rival" player, you need to take this out of the
equation. You do not have a rival player. The only time you need to
focus on defeating one player is when you are heads up. Besides that,
everyone else at your table is trying to take your money, and if you
aren't paying attention, they will.
Every player should be deemed
as the same. Yes, some will be more talented than others and there
will be some that you know you can take advantage of. Quite simply, that
is an informed decision. For that reason, you should pick on this
player if you know you have an advantage. If you don't feel that you
have an advantage and are going after a certain player out of spite, you
are making a mistake.
Don't let your emotions get the best of
you. If you really want to get back at your opponent, make sure you're
the one who takes home the most money. After all, isn't the best way to
get revenge to have someone else take care of your dirty work? Let the
action on the table dictate itself. If you happen to end up knocking
out your hated rival, great. If not, hopefully you enjoyed watching him
sulk as he walked away from the table.
POKERMANTIS.COM
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