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THE WORLD'S #1 POKER MANUAL - Card Games

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Poker Book, Techniques<br />

Consider Scotty Nichols, who tries hard to play a good game.... Sid deals draw poker. Scotty seems<br />

nervous, as if desperate to win a pot. He opens for $25 with a pair of aces. Sid raises to $50. Now<br />

Scotty is sucked in and calls. Nervous hunger seizes him. He rushes to the food table and rapidly<br />

piles many slabs of ham and cheese into a giant sandwich. In the meantime, Ted Fehr draws a<br />

card and carelessly flashes it--the ace of diamonds. Then the dealer, waving the deck around,<br />

exposes the bottom card for all to see--except Scotty, who is laying pickles on his sandwich. The<br />

bottom card? It is the ace of clubs.<br />

Now it is Scotty's turn to draw. Hurrying back to the table, he smiles at his sandwich. Then his<br />

teeth chomp into the pile of food. Beads of mustard ooze over the crust and drip onto his tight<br />

slacks. With mustard-covered fingers, Scotty picks up his cards. John Finn watches him play. Yes,<br />

the pair of aces are still there. But wait--he also has four spades. Scotty wonders what to do.<br />

Staring at his sandwich, he continues to eat.<br />

"Come on," Quintin grunts. "Speed up the game."<br />

"Got to go with my best hand," Scotty finally blurts. He draws three cards to his pair of aces and<br />

then jams the rest of the sandwich into his mouth. The first card off the deck is the king of<br />

spades . . . his flush card. So what--he still catches another king to give him two pair, aces and<br />

kings . . . a pretty good hand.<br />

That pretty good hand is enough to keep him in for a $50 bet plus a $50 raise. Quintin Merck wins<br />

with a queen high flush.<br />

"What rotten luck," Scotty whines as he grabs an overflowing handful of potato chips. His words<br />

are followed by a slobbering crunch.<br />

Rotten luck? If Scotty had stayed at the table, he would have seen the two flashed aces and drawn<br />

to his four flush to win the $600 pot. Instead he loses $150. That ham and cheese sandwich cost<br />

him $600!<br />

Also, John Finn uses the mustard stains on Scotty's cards to identify them in future hands.<br />

VIII<br />

Thought (17)<br />

Thought is the labor of good poker. Objectivity and steady concentration are needed to think properly.<br />

Thinking requires discipline. Analytical thinking is necessary to understand and predict the actions of<br />

opponents. Objective thinking is necessary to plan the proper action.<br />

http://www.neo-tech.com/poker/part2.html (10 of 16)9/17/2004 12:18:04 PM

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