Chapter 15 of The Theory of Poker by David Sklansky: Slowplaying

In chapter 15 of The Theory of Poker, David Sklansky explains the strategy of slowplaying—intentionally playing a very strong hand as if it were weak—to extract maximum profit later. He contrasts it with check-raising and outlines the strict conditions required for it to be correct. Slowplaying vs. Check-Raising Check-raising:You check intending to raise later on…

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Chapter 12 of The Theory of Poker by David Sklansky: Defense Against the Semi-Bluff

In chapter 12 of The Theory of Poker, David Sklansky explains how to defend against the semi-bluff, showing why it’s such a dangerous weapon and how smart players can respond with folding, raising, or (more rarely) calling. The Power and Problem of the Semi-Bluff Sklansky starts by contrasting simple situations (clear value bets or clear…

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Chapter 8 of The Theory of Poker by David Sklansky: The Value of Deception

In chapter 8 of The Theory of Poker, David Sklansky explains why deception is a core component of winning poker. Although strong hands naturally tempt players to raise immediately, doing so too predictably can reveal the strength of your hand, allowing opponents to avoid making mistakes. Because profit in poker comes from opponents’ errors, your…

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Chapter 7 of The Theory of Poker by David Sklansky: Implied Odds and Reverse Implied Odds

In chapter 7 of The Theory of Poker, David Sklansky introduces two key concepts—implied odds and reverse implied odds—which expand on pot odds by considering how future betting affects the true value of calling. The chapter explains when future bets work in your favor, making a marginal call profitable, and when future bets work against…

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