Jan 29 2010

Should Poker Rooms Sponsor Players?

Category: Poker Blogmalcolm @ 9:51 am

The marketing side of poker is big business with the top players paid to wear branded logos for poker rooms. At tournaments like the World Series of Poker, representatives for the biggest poker rooms offer large sums for players to wear their badges. It was reported that Darvin Moon, the second place finisher in the 2009 WSOP main event, declined all offers for sponsorship and was apparently offered $500,000 by a poker room in a last ditch attempt to have him wear their brand for the live final table. Amazingly, Darvin declined the offer.

Are these types of sponsorships worth it? Many poker sites send players to large events and stipulate the players wear their branded T shirt and caps as part of the deal. They hope the players get on television but this may not happen and they may bust out early in the tournament. The site hopes that the player wins their seat through their site and goes on to earn a big score from the event. Other players then follow suit hoping for a similar outcome. Chris Moneymaker won his seat to the 2003 World Series of Poker through winning a series of satellites into the event. His total investment was said to be $40 to win $2.5 million. Pokerstars did very well in subsequent years sending hundreds of players to the event.

Competition is high for the poker rooms and many rooms sign up players to long term deals. Annette Obrestad works with Betfair who pays her buy-ins to large tournaments all around the world. You question whether this is value for money. Annette does get a lot of exposure but it is she that gets the exposure not the site she represents. Of course their badge is on display if she gets on television, but there is no verbal discussion of Betfair when the TV watches Annette. The site hopes people notice the badge, like Annette’s play, and visits the site she recommends by the logo she is wearing.

The problem for the poker rooms is that every site sponsors players and it is costing a lot of money to keep up. There is a trend towards sites rewarding their high raking regular players with live sponsorship deals to go to live events, thus holding onto their custom. It also shows other players that increasing their play with the site could be very beneficial to them.

James Akenhead signed up as a Full Tilt Red Pro after making the final table of the World Series of Poker and went on to play in the World Series of Poker Europe Main Event and win the Poker Million. He appeared in many magazines and interviews as a result of his achievements in 2009. In every picture or TV segment he was wearing the badge of Full Tilt. Whatever they paid/pay James for him to wear their logos paid off. There are, however, many Red Pros who are staked into events and earning great rakeback that you wonder whether they are value for that investment.

Poker rooms also run the risk that the player may get into trouble. If an incident occurs like Scotty Nguyen in the 2008 HORSE event at the WSOP then the poker rooms would not enjoy being associated with it. The motivation of the players for sponsorship is also a worry for the sites. Many of them are just looking for a way to be a poker professional, live comfortably and play in large events. A proportion of them will care about the site and how they represent it, but most would sign up with whoever offered them the deal. Darvin Moon should be praised for his refusal to sign up as a sponsored player. Why? Because he said he never played online poker and to wear a badge would mislead the public who did not know he was a live only player.

A great way to represent a poker room is to win a satellite and be sent to a large poker event. Bwin sent many players to the Aussie Millions and their players are genuinely representing the site and their progress can be followed by reading the bwin poker blog.

By Malcolm Clarke

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Jan 18 2010

Freshen Up Poker with a Change

Category: Poker Blogmalcolm @ 12:26 pm

If you are a regular online poker player you can often feel like the game gets very repetitive. You may sit every day on the online poker tables and watch the same poker software playing against the same players and the grind can seem very grinding indeed. Perhaps you need a change either focusing on poker tournaments instead of cash games or vice versa. Avoiding burn out and looking for the signs of burn out are important to becoming and remaining a winning poker player.

Running multiple cash game tables removes the feeling of being involved on every table. Feeling a part of the cash game keeps you interested but if you are moving to and from different tables quickly then you feel like you are almost above the action and only a small part of it. This can resonate into a player becoming bored very quickly, which can compound any losses and make players leave a session early.

You could change your poker room and try a new site to keep things feeling fresh. Something as simple as looking at a different table style on a different poker room with different usernames playing poker can cause you to instantly perk up and feel more enthusiastic about playing poker. Do you ever get bored of seeing the same view from your office window? Although the feeling of buoyancy if you moved positions in the office is temporary, the feelings are real and you can harness these positive feelings by enforcing change in your poker routine.

Shaun Deeb, the online poker tournament phenom who played around thirty poker tournaments per day on multiple tables is currently on a break from tournaments after admitting to be completely burned out by them. Playing thirty tables per day I am surprised he was not burned out sooner, yet it shows even the best players recognise the need to change or take a break. He will probably come back a more dangerous player and enjoy renewed sustained success as a result of this self imposed vacation.

The right time to make a change is when things are not going well for you. The best time to make a change is just before the run of bad poker which comes about either through luck or self-inflicted bad play. Recognise the signs that you are becoming fidgety or on edge with the poker room or games before it turns into losses.

Remember, however, that grinding online poker is not easy and you must endure it to some extent exactly like a person working a full time job needs to do. You should enjoy playing poker but sometimes you will want to do something else and this is the point where you must be professional and grind it out. The research you have done on fellow players and hand histories you have worked on are lost if you change sites so some degree of pain is tolerable in the poker grind. If you work a normal job then you will probably regularly feel this way but stick it out and keep trying hard to win.

Playing on a new poker room will reignite your interest in poker as every room as different poker tournaments to participate in with slightly different structures, prize pools and bonuses. Try bwin.com which is backed up by the large sports betting company. Aesthetically the dark style of poker software and table layouts they use will be enough to make you feel fresh even when you play a lot of online poker.

By Malcolm Clarke

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Jan 08 2010

Review of Collin Moshmans SNG Book

Category: Poker Blogmalcolm @ 6:02 pm

Two plus Two publishing have released many good poker books over the years and a semi recent release was to help the various Sit and go poker tournament specialists improve their one table poker tournament performances. The two plus two poker books are always presented with carefully chosen paragraphs and explained in a way that helps both the experienced and the amateur player learn what the book is intended to teach them. They are a personal favourite publisher of my growing poker library and thankfully this book matches the high standard set by their other poker books.

The book is titled Sit ‘n Go Strategy Expert Advice for beating one-table poker tournaments. It is divided into four specific sections allowing the reader, if they wish, to go straight to the section they wish to study. Those sections are low blind play, mid blind play, high blind play and career play. As the majority of poker articles relating to sit and go play are split up in this way the book does not try to re-invent the wheel when teaching players their version of online poker strategy for SNG’s which is a plus point of the publication in my opinion.

Splitting the play into sections helps understand how to win sit and go poker tournaments. The blinds play a major part of the game and the book rightly acknowledges this. You are given essential concepts for pre-flop and post flop in each section with lots of hand examples with each discussion discussed. They split the types of hands you can hold into various categories making it easy for you to classify your hand. You may have a monster, strong draw, hands where you were the pre-flop aggressor or marginal hands.

Most of the hand examples are excellent however one small criticism I have (I am hard to please!) is that sometimes when the hand is getting very tricky and a tough decision would be made on the turn they allow the example to have you hit your improvement card. It would be good for more tough spots to be discussed but the examples do clearly explain their concepts discussed in the theory text.

The sections on mid and high level blind play are excellent. They are substantial and you will find yourself studying the book over and over learning the concepts. This is definitely not a book where you will read through once and think “I know everything”. There is much to learn and it will take time. The good news is from what I can see nothing is missed out and a wannabe SNG star will love this book and constantly refer to it as a reference. It is almost a SNG bible.

Perhaps a small disappointment for readers looking to turn sit and go grinding into a semi-professional form of income is the section on career play. Whilst the title of the chapter is career play the discussion moves to discussing hand reading skills and whether or not you should show hands. This is more a discussion at general poker strategy that applies whether you want to make SNG poker a career or not. Discussing multi-tabling is also relevant to everyone and it is ever so slightly misleading to put this information in this chapter.

After a shaky start in that section they discuss poker software and what to use in terms of VPIP and so on which is good advice. They also discuss bankroll management and the need to be more cautious if poker is your main income stream. Variance is discussed in detail and after you read this section you are left with a clear understanding that poker involves luck and how even a good player has to be careful with their bankrolls to keep their head above water when the downswings occur. For someone who was not aware of these concepts it is vital reading and therefore it is excellent that information like this is included in the book.

Overall I think this is an excellent book. Of course no-one can guarantee you will win money but after reading the book you will hold more tools to help you win sit and go’s. I am happy to highly recommend this poker book to anyone interested in one table poker tournaments.

By Malcolm Clarke

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