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Scare Card
- A card that may well turn the best hand into trash. If you have
T♣
8♣
and the flop comes Q♦
J♦
9♠,
you almost assuredly have the best hand. However, a turn card of
T♦
would be very scary because it would almost guarantee that you are now
beaten.
Second Pair - A pair with the second
highest card on the flop. If you have
A♠
T♠,
and the flop comes K♦
T♥
6♣,
you have flopped second pair. See "top pair."
Sell - As in "sell a hand." In a
spread-limit game, this means betting less than the maximum when you
have a very strong hand, hoping players will call whereas they would not
have called a maximum bet.
Semi-Bluff - A powerful concept first
discussed by David Sklansky. It is a bet or raise that you hope will not
be called, but you have some outs if it is. A semi-bluff may be correct
when betting for value is not correct, a pure bluff is not correct, but
the combination of the two may be a positive expectation play. Example:
you have K♠
Q♠,
and the flop is T♥
5♠
J♣.
If you bet now, it's a semi-bluff. You probably don't have the best
hand, and you'd like to see your opponents fold immediately.
Nevertheless, if you do get callers, you could still improve to the best
hand.
Set - Three of a kind when you have
two of the rank in your hand, and there is one on the board.
Short Stack - A number of chips that
is not very many compared to the other players at the table. If you have
$10 in front of you, and everybody else at the table has over $100, you
are playing on a short stack.
Showdown - The point at which all
players remaining in the hand turn their cards over and determine who
has the best hand - i.e. after the fourth round of betting is completed.
Of course, if a final bet or raise is not called, there is no showdown.
Side Pot - A pot created in which a
player has no interest because he has run out of chips. Example: Al bets
$6, Beth calls the $6, and Carl calls, but he has only $2 left. An $8
side pot is created that either Al or Beth can win, but not Carl. Carl,
however, can still win all the money in the original or "center" pot.
Slow Play - To play a strong hand
weakly so more players will stay in the pot.
Small Blind - The smaller of two blind
bets typically used in a
Texas Holdem game. Normally, the small blind is
one-third to two-thirds of a first round bet. See also "big blind" and
"blind."
Smooth Call - To call. Smooth call
often implies slow playing a strong hand. Example: "I flopped the nut
flush but just smooth called when the guy in front of me bet - I didn't
want to scare anybody out."
Split Pot - A pot that is shared by
two or more players because they have equivalent hands.
Split Two Pair - A two pair hand in
which one of each of your cards' ranks appears on the board as well.
Example: you have T 9, the
flop is T 9 5, you have a
split two pair. This is in comparison to two pair where there is a pair
on the board. Example: you have T 9,
the flop is 9 5 5.
Spread-limit - A betting structure in
which a player may bet any amount in a range on every betting round. A
typical spread-limit structure is $2-$6, where a player may bet as
little as $2 or as much as $6 on every betting round.
Straddle - An optional extra blind
bet, typically made by the player one to the left of the big blind,
equal to twice the big blind. This is effectively a raise, and forces
any player who wants to play to pay two bets. Furthermore, the straddler
acts last before the flop, and may "re-raise."
String Bet - A bet (more typically a
raise) in which a player doesn't get all the chips required for the
raise into the pot in one motion. Unless he verbally declared the raise,
he can be forced to withdraw it and just call. This prevents the
unethical play of putting out enough chips to call, seeing what effect
that had, and then possibly raising.
Structured - Used to apply to a
certain betting structure in poker games. The typical definition of a
structured Texas Holdem game is a fixed amount for bets and raises before the
flop and on the flop, and then twice that amount on the turn and river.
Example: a $2-$4 structured
Texas Holdem game: bets and raises of $2 before
the flop and on the flop; $4 bets and raises on the turn and river.
Suited - A
Texas Holdem starting hand in
which the two cards are the same suit. Example: "I had to play
J 3 - it was suited."
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