Hiding Tells
by Raegan on March 17th, 2011
Do you ever get that itch? The itch to bet, to head to the nearest casino, to find a good stakes casino game of Hold’em, to sit at a Black jack table for hours on end. I like that itch. And I really like to scratch it.
I also like to watch people today bet. No 2 poker faces seem identical. When I bet I like to consider I put on a poker face that is impassable. But I know I have specific personal habits. For one, the only time I smoke cigarettes is when I bet on poker or Pontoon. And then I chain smoke. But I smoke regardless of whether I am succeeding or losing, no matter if I have a great hand or bad.
I once played within a weekly poker game. The casino game was always five card draw. There was a guy who played with us every single week who constantly wore a hat. When he was given a beneficial hand, subconsciously, he would start touching and betting with his hat. Pointless to say, he in no way won.
The greatest poker player I ever saw was a player who made much more movements and gestures at a poker table than anyone I had ever seen. He was impressive in the way he dressed. Often an expensive suit and tie, shoes shined and nails manicured. He was fastidious in this manner. And he was often brushing his pant leg or holding his hands or putting his chips in neat little piles.
I use to analyze him for hours on end. I’d attempt to see if I could spot his tell. Selecting fuzz off his vest- did this mean he was bluffing? Arranging his chips within a short pile – did this mean he had a beneficial hand?
Years later I ran into him in a bar in New York and we had a beverage. I asked him if he have been aware of all those activities he manufactured or if they have been unconscious. He informed me that each single thing he did at a poker table was deliberate. He said that everyone is generally checking out everyone else’s poker face. They’re attempting to notice the the tell.
So his program was to give them lots to feel about. His reasoning was if they were thinking about him picking a piece of lint off his shirt and what it meant they sure were not pondering about their cards.
His program was diversion. And it worked for him. In no way give up a technique that works for you.
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