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All About Video Poker
Video poker is a casino game that has much in common with slot machines, but it is a slot machine game combined with the rules of five card draw poker in a very specific manner. Video poker is often considered by many experienced gamblers to be...

How To Play Let It Ride Poker
The chance to win big. The possibility of luck being on one's side. The sheer thrill of making a gamble. These are three things that a game of Let It Ride Poker can guarantee. Unlike casino games that seem to rely solely on good fortune,...

Poker Glossary
AGGRESSIVE ACTION: A wager that could enable a player to win a pot without a showdown; a bet or raise. ALL-IN: When you have put all of your playable money and chips into the pot during the course of a hand, you are said to be all-in. ANTE: A...

Video Poker - Choose the Best Machines
There are three basic types of video poker machines: * Jacks or Better * Deuces Wild * Jokers Wild To keep things basic, we recommend you play only the Jacks or Better machines. The payouts are usually better and the draw strategy is more...

Winning Poker Strategy: Perfecting Your Poker Bluff
Everyone does it but very few do it well. The poker bluff is a refined skill, something that can tilt a game in your favor if used sparingly and at the right time. In order to learn when is the right time to use your bluff we first have to...

 
Amateur vs. Professional Poker Players

I'm sick of these Amateurs! I hope *insert pro player's name here* wipes the floor with him!

That seems to be a common refrain in poker forums recently, in light of all the success the amateurs are enjoying. We ran a poll on my web site asking members to predict “Who will win WSOP 2004?" I think “a professional” beat “an amateur” by at least a 2:1 margin, and about 90% gave Chris Moneymaker hardly a snowball's chance at even making the final few tables.

So why the angst? Is it because of the World Poker Tour coverage on the Travel Channel where so many of the new players today saw and became infatuated with names like Phil Ivey and Howard Lederer and just can't stand watching their “horse” lose?

Lets consider the differences between the typical amateur and professional poker player at one of these expensive televised tournaments. First, the amateur holds a regular job, albeit generally well paying. Remember “the Dentist” in World Poker Tour coverage? We probably won't be seeing “The Plumber” or “The Garbage Man” dropping several thousand dollars on a poker tournament in the near future. The professional on the other hand considers poker his full time job.

The second difference between the amateur and professional is...is...hmm. What is the second difference? Is there another difference?

The professional players have excellent poker skills, starting hand selection, flop play, reading the other players, knowing when to bluff, when to call, when to get out of the way. But then again, so do the amateurs we see at the final table.

Of course there is “dead money” at these tournaments, but can anyone make a legitimate argument that all because someone fixes teeth during the day that he or she is a lesser poker player at night?

I'll be the first to admit that I prefer to see a “name” or two at the final table, but I also know that it is nigh impossible to make it to the final table of one of these things on sheer luck.

Time to give the amateurs some credit?


About the Author
Keith Freeman is the webmaster of www.poker-strategy.org" target="_blank">Poker-strategy.org , a professionally designed poker strategy page. He can be reached at coach@poker-strategy.org

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