Return to site

Poker Geelong

broken image
Poker tournaments geelong

Check out our special promotions and exciting offers. From generous bonuses to exclusive tournaments with GIGANTIC prizes, you'll find everything you're looking for. The Poker Geelong House of Cards operates out of the Nimble Hits Indoor Sports Stadium, located at 96-102 Furner Avenue, Bell Park VIC 3215. For more information on upcoming tournaments, search for 'Poker Geelong House of Cards' on Facebook.

Poker Geelong
  • Geelong poker machine losses hit record lows this year as coronavirus restrictions stopped gamblers losing $82m in six months. But experts fear the reopening of gaming venues on Monday could see gamblers return to old habits and spend even more money than they did before lockdown.
  • This business servicing Greater Geelong is a local SME in the Gaming Venues category. The St George Workers Club is a local Geelong Club which started out in 1998 for Geelong workers who decided to get together each Friday night after work and have a place they could go and meet and unwind.

ITS SHOWTIME FOLKS

Â

Â

Poker

(TAKE NOTE THE JACKPOT RETURNS NEW SEASON 4th Jan 2021)

MUST FLOP A ROYAL FLUSH ON TO WIN 90% OF FINAL TABLE JACKPOT $19300Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â

Poker Chips Geelong

Poker Geelong

GET A ROYAL FLUSH TO THE RIVER WIN 20% OF CASH AMOUNT.

CONDITIONS APPLY WHERE A WPP GAME IS A NON POINTS GAME THE JACKPOT WILL NOT APPLY.

NUTS & PUGS Tournament Tips
#1 â€' Early in a tournament try and speculate as much as possible. This is the time of the tournament when the bad players are giving away their chips and you want to be the one trying to get them rather than letting someone else take them. By speculating that means calling raises or limping in with hands like pocket pairs, suited connectors, suited A-x and suited K-x.
#2 â€' Avoid playing big pots early. The only time you should play a big pot early in a tournament is when you know you have the best of it. Keep the pots small by making small bets and playing a bit more passively with your marginal holdings.
#3 â€' Don't let yourself get so short that a raise/shove from you has no meaning. Many players make the mistake of blinding/anteing down until they have 3-5 big blinds and then complain about how unlucky they are when their pocket aces are cracked by 9-7 off when they open shoved for four big blinds and the big stack called their measly little raise. By making sure your stack is large enough, you can get marginal hands to fold and when you do double up, you're not necessarily in the same position you were before... a short stack with one move.
#4 â€' Blinds go up, start opening up your game and attacking players who are survival minded. You can tell who these players are... the ones who fold their big blind every time or who fold any time they face adverse pressure. Identify these players and raise their blinds and re-raise them when they raise.
#5 â€' Play tight early, loose late. Position is such an important part of tournament poker; the later you act, the more information you have available to you; the more information you have, the better informed you are to make decisions. As such, you should play fewer hands in early position and more hands in later position.
#6 â€' Observe your opponents carefully. A key part to tournament poker is identifying a player’s tendencies.
•   When they raise from the button, is this a play they make all the time or never? If it's a common play, they are more than likely stealing and you can make a move on them. If it's not something they do often, they probably have a big hand and you should fold.
•   Do they only limp in with hands like small pairs and suited connectors but raise with bigger pairs and Ace King? Raise their limps big since you know their range and can make it difficult for them. Call their raises with speculative hands since you know that you can win a big pot if you hit.
Being able to identify how players play certain hands can be the single most important thing you do in a tournament

Poker Gee

Geelong

Check out our special promotions and exciting offers. From generous bonuses to exclusive tournaments with GIGANTIC prizes, you'll find everything you're looking for. The Poker Geelong House of Cards operates out of the Nimble Hits Indoor Sports Stadium, located at 96-102 Furner Avenue, Bell Park VIC 3215. For more information on upcoming tournaments, search for 'Poker Geelong House of Cards' on Facebook.

  • Geelong poker machine losses hit record lows this year as coronavirus restrictions stopped gamblers losing $82m in six months. But experts fear the reopening of gaming venues on Monday could see gamblers return to old habits and spend even more money than they did before lockdown.
  • This business servicing Greater Geelong is a local SME in the Gaming Venues category. The St George Workers Club is a local Geelong Club which started out in 1998 for Geelong workers who decided to get together each Friday night after work and have a place they could go and meet and unwind.

ITS SHOWTIME FOLKS

Â

Â

(TAKE NOTE THE JACKPOT RETURNS NEW SEASON 4th Jan 2021)

MUST FLOP A ROYAL FLUSH ON TO WIN 90% OF FINAL TABLE JACKPOT $19300Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â

Poker Chips Geelong

GET A ROYAL FLUSH TO THE RIVER WIN 20% OF CASH AMOUNT.

CONDITIONS APPLY WHERE A WPP GAME IS A NON POINTS GAME THE JACKPOT WILL NOT APPLY.

NUTS & PUGS Tournament Tips
#1 â€' Early in a tournament try and speculate as much as possible. This is the time of the tournament when the bad players are giving away their chips and you want to be the one trying to get them rather than letting someone else take them. By speculating that means calling raises or limping in with hands like pocket pairs, suited connectors, suited A-x and suited K-x.
#2 â€' Avoid playing big pots early. The only time you should play a big pot early in a tournament is when you know you have the best of it. Keep the pots small by making small bets and playing a bit more passively with your marginal holdings.
#3 â€' Don't let yourself get so short that a raise/shove from you has no meaning. Many players make the mistake of blinding/anteing down until they have 3-5 big blinds and then complain about how unlucky they are when their pocket aces are cracked by 9-7 off when they open shoved for four big blinds and the big stack called their measly little raise. By making sure your stack is large enough, you can get marginal hands to fold and when you do double up, you're not necessarily in the same position you were before... a short stack with one move.
#4 â€' Blinds go up, start opening up your game and attacking players who are survival minded. You can tell who these players are... the ones who fold their big blind every time or who fold any time they face adverse pressure. Identify these players and raise their blinds and re-raise them when they raise.
#5 â€' Play tight early, loose late. Position is such an important part of tournament poker; the later you act, the more information you have available to you; the more information you have, the better informed you are to make decisions. As such, you should play fewer hands in early position and more hands in later position.
#6 â€' Observe your opponents carefully. A key part to tournament poker is identifying a player’s tendencies.
•   When they raise from the button, is this a play they make all the time or never? If it's a common play, they are more than likely stealing and you can make a move on them. If it's not something they do often, they probably have a big hand and you should fold.
•   Do they only limp in with hands like small pairs and suited connectors but raise with bigger pairs and Ace King? Raise their limps big since you know their range and can make it difficult for them. Call their raises with speculative hands since you know that you can win a big pot if you hit.
Being able to identify how players play certain hands can be the single most important thing you do in a tournament

Poker Gee

***& REMEMBER EVERY CHIP IS LIKE A SOLDIER IN YOUR BATTLE OF WAR & EVERY CHIP YOU LOSE YOUR LOSING YOUR WAR





broken image