Poker Tip
Erick Lindgren
May 16, 2005
All Talk and No Action,
A Two-Part Lesson from Erick Lindgren
You can learn a lot by listening. You can learn
almost as much by talking, if you ask the right
questions.
The following occurred at a tournament at Bellagio in
2004.
I draw a very good first table and recognize only two
faces. They are solid pros, neither of whom is very
aggressive. I know I can take control of the table and
quickly look around to find the best targets. I notice
an older gentleman in a cowboy hat who's involved in too
many pots and decide he's my mark. My plan is to bluff
him at first opportunity and do anything I can to get
under his skin. I want him to view me as a young
hot-shot, with the hopes that he'll bully me later when
I have the goods.
I chop away at some small pots and my $20K starting
stack is now $43K when Cowboy and I finally get to lock
horns. I've been raising a lot of hands and splashing my
chips around a bit. In this case, the blinds are
$200-$400, and I bring it in for $1,200 with pocket
jacks. I get three callers, including Cowboy, in the big
blind. The flop comes 7h 4c 4h and the small blind
checks. It's Cowboy's turn, and he pushes all in. He
looks proud, firing his $37K into a $5K pot.
I'm completely befuddled. What's going on? I can't
make any sense of it. There's a player to act behind me,
but he's only got $3K - he isn't going to matter at all
in this hand. My best bet here is to get Cowboy to talk.
"Why'd you bet so much?" I ask. He tells me to call and
find out.
I make a list of his possible hands: A-x hearts for
the nut flush draw. Pocket eights, maybe. Or a random
berzerko bet with a pair of sevens. After a minute or
two of deliberation, I call. He flips up T-7c for one
pair! He fails to improve and I now have $80K, and am
ready to roll.
It's important to know who your weaker players are.
Concentrate on playing against them and finding ways to
get them to make a big mistake. You can't count on the
pros to make those mistakes. In this particular case, I
knew he was getting tired, and through a few verbal
jabs, I was able to make myself his target.
Next week, a similar question with a very different
answer yields an equally large profit.
Erick Lindgren
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