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Posted by Cousins of Ron Mexico on 4th December 2009

red-chip-stackLet’s say you’ve just made it through a good size field to get to the money. Now let’s say you’re a medium stack. How should you play that stack? Under what circumstances should you click your chips to the middle of the table?

First thing’s first – congratulations. Making the money is a player’s goal every time he or she sits down and you’ve accomplished that goal. It’s just like in any sport where teams just want to make the playoffs. Once you’re in the playoffs, anything can happen. Heck, you could end up winning this thing. Someone has to, right?
Of course, only one person can win. Everyone else is just vying for the payouts below the grand prize. There’s nothing wrong with that. Anytime you cash in a tournament, it’s an accomplishment that you should be proud of. While someone has to win it, not everyone can. That doesn’t mean you can’t climb the payment ladder and watch as others drop out of the tournament.

Here are suggestions for managing your tournament life once you’ve hit the money.

1. Patience after the bubble – Once you hit the money short stacks seem to start moving. Some of those players have been waiting 10 minutes or longer to play a hand for fear of getting knocked out before the cash. That might not seem like a long time, but 10 minutes in online poker can be an eternity.

2. Play tight – This goes hand-in-hand with the first tip. (Obviously) The less chips you put in, the less chips you lose. The longer you have chips, the more people will get knocked out. At least that’s how it plays out in my mind.

3. Attack the small stacks – If there’s a little guy in the blinds, make him make a decision. I always feel better if I’m the one making the other player make a decision for his tournament life.

4. Careful of the big stack – It’s always a good idea not to mess with someone who has nothing to lose. Unless you are prepared to put your life on the line, you don’t want to bet into someone who can call without even noticing the change in his chip stack.

So keep these tips in mind. I’m not guaranteeing results, but they could help you move up a spot or two in the payment structure. Don’t act like you couldn’t use a couple extra bucks.

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Posted by Cousins of Ron Mexico on 23rd November 2009

Online poker is a beautiful game. You can sit in your living room and win or lose lots of money in a single evening. It’s all the fun of poker in a casino or with friends without the annoyance of having to taste fresh air at any point in time. Also, you can play in your underwear. Generally, casinos frown upon such behavior unless you’re Gabe Kaplan.

In addition to being able to spend hours in your underwear, you can also do whatever else you want. You can watch television, movies, surf the web, do homework, take pictures of hands and listen to music as loud as you want. While I may just be stating the obvious, this is all very important stuff.

Let’s face it, poker takes time. In the casino, you’re relegated to your mp3 player, reruns of SportsCenter and the jerk wanting everyone to believe he’s a pro despite the fact that he’s currently sitting at a $1-$2 limit hold’em table. (I’ll get into that in the future. You can believe that.) This is why keeping yourself properly entertained is so important.

If you want to make any money playing cards online, you’ve got to pay attention to the game, but also not let yourself get bored. Whether you’re sitting down to play cash or tournament style poker, you’re going to see a ton of hands. I’m not sure how many hands the average online player sees in an hour, but its way more than you should be playing. (I’ll get the CP research department on that.)

Because you’re seeing so many hands, you have to keep yourself entertained. In a casino, you can play one game at a time. At home, you can play as many as you can fit on your screen. In a perfect world, you would pick one game and concentrate on that, but in reality, you’d get bored.

Generally, I like to play tournaments. That means I’m in survival mode and I can’t see a flop every time, no matter how pretty that 6,9 suited looks. Whenever I’m playing, I have to have two games going. A great way to keep yourself from getting bored is to pick your main game and then enter into a small stakes Sit & Go or cash game. This way, I get to keep playing and I don’t start to get the itch to call a 3x raise in middle position because I’m holding a Queen. (But I could hit trips!)

In addition to keeping my screen blinking with multiple games, I make it a point to have the television on. Sports are great. Lots of commercials and stops in action. You don’t have to watch the entire time because the announcers will let you know when something important happened.

I wouldn’t recommend watching serialized dramas while playing cards if you’ve never seen the episode before. If you’re watching Dexter or LOST, you can’t be turning away to contemplate what to do with middle pair on the turn for a quarter of your chip stack. You’ll miss critical plot points! While you’re check raising with your pocket 3′s, they’re revealing the actual location of the island!

So keep all these things in mind the next time you sit down to play. When you’re playing online poker, you want to be distracted enough to not get bored and play recklessly, but not so distracted that you’re getting your blinds stolen for hours at a time. And for God’s sake, put on some pants.

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Posted by Cousins of Ron Mexico on 19th November 2009

cousins of ron mexicoThings are starting to get a lot busier at CarbonPoker lately. Our Bad Beat Jackpot is going off, tourneys are getting bigger each week and more players are coming through the door — we’re expanding. The blog is no different and we’re bringing a new member into the family: Cousins of Ron Mexico. He’s a noted online blogger and player at Carbon.

Hello, my name is Stephen. I’m an avid poker player and over the next 100 years I’m going to be sharing some of my poker-playing experiences with you. I know what you’re thinking – 100 years? That’s a really long time. Well, I’m such a dedicated player (and blogger) that I agreed to contribute to Carbon Poker over the next 100 years.

You may recognize my name from the first two Carbon Poker blogger tournaments. I won the first ever CPBT and finished second in the… second. It took a wick beat to bump me from a second straight victory, but I’m not hear to talk about that. Nobody likes to hear someone else’s bad beat stories, right?

Over the next 100 years, I’ll be talking poker strategy and just generally trying to get a discussion going about the best way to play. I don’t have a fool-proof system and don’t think that anyone does. Just because you play aces perfectly one hand doesn’t mean anything the next time you are fortunate enough to have them.

To me, poker is like tennis, but with a lot less movement. Except in tennis, you know exactly how many games you have to win to win the match. Poker can go on forever. So maybe its more like cricket? I’m not really familiar enough with that sport to know if that works. Maybe its more like baseball. No, wait. Its just like poker.

Its a beautiful game that can be infinitely frustrating and yet provide hours of boredom intertwined with moments of joy. No matter how good you get at poker, you’re always in danger of losing to someone who is just awful. That poker, she’s a cruel mistress. I’ll try to deal with that and in turn, help you guys deal with it. And maybe – just maybe – we’ll teach each other something along the way. Now get back to those virtual tables. There’s poker to be played.

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Posted by Cousins of Ron Mexico on 24th July 2009

bad beat cousins of ron mexicoCousins of Ron Mexico, winner of the first Blogger Poker Tourney a few weeks back, hits us up with a guest post that talks about claims of rigging in the online poker world. Got a guest post you want to share? Hit us up on Carbon Poker’s Twitter.

I’ve been playing poker online for a while. That was probably obvious. I’m the guy who won the first ever blogger poker tournament on CarbonPoker. Not just any donk off the street can accomplish something like that on his first go around.

In my many years of experience playing on the internet, I’ve tried all the sites. Some are better than others, with CarbonPoker being the best. (I’m not just saying that because it’s in the contract I signed without reading. Really.) No matter what site you’re on, there’s one constant. One platitude you’ll read in the chat box just about every time you sit down to play.

It comes after a bad beat, usually by the avatar that just lost a coinflip. The wording is oftentimes different, but the sentiment always the same – THIS SITE IS FIXED!

It’s usually phrased as a “[Site Name] Special.” Or “only on [Site Name].”

And this doesn’t just come Aces are cracked. You’ll read this after just about any superior starting hand goes down. Just the other night I was short-stacked and went all-in with Ah 10c. A big stack called and showed Ac Jc. After the 4th heart came on the flop the chat box read, “only on [Site Name] lol.”

I felt great. The site wanted me to win the tournament! I was destined to become rich! The cards were virtually stacked in my favor!

And I got knocked out about 10 minutes later.

The sad thing is that I think there might be people out there who believe what they type. People who put actual money on the internet and then assume when they lose to an underdog, that the site determined the winner. Why would you play? And what could a site possibly have to gain? It makes no sense.

Then again, what do I care? I’ve got CarbonPoker on my side.

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