Review of Limit Hold'em: Winning Short-Handed Strategies
- Title:
- Limit Hold'em: Winning Short-Handed Strategies
- Author:
- Terry Boyer and Lawrence Mak with Barry Tanenbaum
- Publisher:
- D&B Publishing
- Date:
- 2007
- ISBN:
- 978-1-904468-37-0
- Pages:
- 366
- Price:
- $24.95
January 10, 2008
Online poker has introduced many new developments to this beloved game.
One of these is the advent of intentionally short-handed tables. Because
efficient use of floor space and dealer time are not concerns for online
card rooms they can economically spread games where the maximum number of
participants is lower than the typical 8, 9, or 10 that we find in live
games. Despite the popularity of these games, few books have been devoted
to examining the special circumstances surrounding short-handed play.
One of the few to do so is Limit Hold'em: Winning Short-Handed
Strategies by Terry Boyer and Lawrence Mak, with assistance from
Barry Tanenbaum.
The book begins with several chapters that serve as an introduction to
the topics it will cover. The authors discuss differences between
online and live play, as well as general differences between short-handed
and full games. They also go into considerable detail about using
statistics and online player-modeling tools as playing aids.
After the introductory material, we get down to it.
Around half of the book steps through each hold'em betting round,
explaining how to play at each stage assuming the game is five or six
handed. Following this we have chapters that cover "super short-handed"
situations (less than five players). Finally, the book concludes with
several chapters on miscellaneous topics. These include bankroll
management, tilt, poker ethics, and personal development.
One of the things I really liked about the book was its use of supplemental
software to help profile online opponents. Instead of poker book hand
examples characterizing opponents as "loose/aggressive", "tight/passive",
or the like, the authors use metrics such as VPIP (voluntarily put money
in pot), PFR (pre-flop raise percentage), and AF (aggression factor, or
the number of both bets and raises divided by the number of calls). So,
in their hand examples they might characterize a player in a 6-handed
game as a 33%/10%/0.9, representing each of these factors. We can only
do this in situations where we have accurate statistics about our opponents,
such as with online poker, and even there we need to use special software
to help us with that. However, in those situations when we can make these
calculations, we gain a much better way of categorizing players than
anything else I've seen in print.
The chapters on each betting round contain mostly good advice. I'm sure
these techniques make the authors winners in the games they play. The
suggestions are thoughtful and aggressive, just what I expect you'd need
to beat short handed games. The supplemental material at the end of the
book is again, good advice, but all stuff that has been covered in more
detail in other places. I'm sure many people who read this book will
find this information to be valuable, but a lot of those who have extensive
poker libraries will find it repetitive. I certainly didn't have any
serious disagreements with most of what was written in those chapters.
I have to admit that I did have a problem with an overarching theme
of the book, though. The authors state that playing in a three handed
game is different than playing in a full game where everyone folds to
the player on the button. Does their rationale have anything to do with
the possibility that the folders in full game may have had especially
poor cards? No. Their claim is that the game is different because it
plays different. Since the game plays different, they focus on how their
opponents play and don't consider why it is that these situations play
different. Apparently, they don't think it's an important question.
Well, I do think it's an important question, and I believe that the
theory surrounding play in short handed games (and, in some sense, full
games) depends a great deal on how these two situations are different
if they are. In Limit Hold'em: Winning Short-Handed
Strategies, the authors relate to us the techniques they use to
beat the players they encounter in online short-handed limit hold'em games.
I feel confident that many will benefit from what the book has to say
on this topic. However, what if our opponents don't play this way?
Will these techniques still be effective? What happens if a full game
becomes, say, five handed? Will our opponents in this case play the same
way as those who sit down at an online short-handed table? What should
we do if they don't? This book addresses none of these issues.
Consequently, while I expect that these strategies will be valuable for
those who play in online short-handed games right now, I have much less
confidence that it will continue to be as valuable as time goes by, nor
am I so confident that the book will be as valuable to those who play
in other types of short handed games.
So, while I think this book is likely to be valuable to those looking to
improve their short-handed online play, and I while I think the way they
parameterize opponents is nothing short of outstanding, I don't think
the authors did such a good job of providing a strong foundation
justifying the way they play. As such, I fear that the fundamental
techniques described in this book will not have as wide an applicability
or as long a shelf life as one might hope. Despite this, I do expect
that those who presently play in the sorts of games specifically discussed
here will find much of what Limit Hold'em: Winning Short-Handed
Strategies quite beneficial.
Capsule:
I believe that Limit Hold'em: Winning Short-Handed Strategies
provides a valuable roadmap to beating today's online short-handed games.
The book also provides a unique way of parameterizing online opponents,
one that I found to be outstanding. At the same time, I found the book
lacking in its analysis of the fundamentals underlying short-handed play.
If one plays in the same sorts of games as the authors, I believe these
strategies will be very effective. If that's not the case, then I'm not
so sure how effective these strategies will be, and this book provides no
foundation to suggest the extent to which they would be effective. It's
a useful book. I don't think it's a great book.
Note: I received a free review copy of this book for review purposes.
I have no other interest, financial or otherwise, in the success of
this book.
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