Holdem Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Holdem. Here they are! All 17 of them:

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Life is just a big game of Texas hold'em, unexpected things may arise that may suite you or destroy you. You gotta make the best of the cards your dealt, adjust accordingly, and always understand that you control your decisions.
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Mustafa Said
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Never be afraid to take a step back and reevaluate. Poker is war, free enterprise, survival of the fittest, adapt or die, kill or be killed. It’s beautiful. Embrace it.
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Hunter Cichy (Advanced Concepts in No-Limit Hold'em: A modern approach to poker analysis)
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Poker eminence Doyle Brunson called Hold'em β€œthe Cadillac of poker,” and I was only qualified to steer a Segway. In one of the fiction-writing manuals, it says that there are only two stories: a hero goes on a journey, and a stranger comes to town. I don't know. This being life, and not literature, we'll have to make do with this: A middle-aged man, already bowing and half broken under his psychic burdens, decides to take on the stress of being one of the most unqualified players in the history of the Big Game. A hapless loser goes on a journey, a strange man comes to gamble.
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Colson Whitehead (The Noble Hustle: Poker, Beef Jerky, and Death)
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THE PAYOFF IS EXTRAORDINARY I was giving a seminar in Detroit a couple of years ago when a young man, about thirty years old, came up to me at the break. He told me that he had first come to my seminar and heard my β€œ3 Percent Rule” about ten years ago. At that time, he had dropped out of college, was living at home, driving an old car, and earning about $20,000 a year as an office-to-office salesman. He decided after the seminar that he was going to apply the 3 Percent Rule to himself, and he did so immediately. He calculated 3 percent of his income of $20,000 would be $600. He began to buy sales books and read them every day. He invested in two audio-learning programs on sales and time management. He took one sales seminar. He invested the entire $600 in himself, in learning to become better. That year, his income went from $20,000 to $30,000, an increase of 50 percent. He said he could trace the increase with great accuracy to the things he had learned and applied from the books he had read and the audio programs he had listened to. So the following year, he invested 3 percent of $30,000, a total of $900, back into himself. That year, his income jumped from $30,000 to $50,000. He began to think, β€œIf my income goes up at 50 percent per year by investing 3 percent back into myself, what would happen if I invested 5 percent? KEEP RAISING THE BAR The next year, he invested 5 percent of his income, $2,500, into his learning program. He took more seminars, traveled cross-country to a conference, bought more audio- and video-learning programs, and even hired a part-time coach. And that year, his income doubled to $100,000. After that, like playing Texas Hold-Em, he decided to go β€œall in” and raise his investment into himself to 10 percent per year. He told me that he had been doing this every since. I asked him, β€œHow has investing 10 percent of your income back into yourself affected your income?” He smiled and said, β€œI passed a million dollars in personal income last year. And I still invest 10 percent of my income in myself every single year.” I said, β€œThat’s a lot of money. How do you manage to spend that much money on personal development?” He said, β€œIt’s hard! I have to start spending money on myself in January in order to invest it all by the end of the year. I have an image coach, a sales coach, and a speaking coach. I have a large library in my home with every book, audio program, and video program on sales and personal success I can find. I attend conferences, both nationally and internationally in my field. And my income keeps going up and up every year.
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Brian Tracy (No Excuses!: The Power of Self-Discipline)
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You invite a few players in to start a game of Texas Hold'em by telling them that the deck doesn't have any jacks or queens in it and that you won't tell the other people who come to play with them. How do you get people into the casino? You pay the brokers to bring them there.
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Michael Lewis
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The problem was, being willing to make a hard decision that risked so much was a lot like playing no-limit Texas Hold’em and going all in. It was an incredibly powerful move that worked every single time, except the last time. I
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Evan Currie (The Heart of Matter (Odyssey One, #2))
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β€” I’M PLAYING LOOSE β€” Game: Average 2 players before the flop Action: First to the pot, and raising Players: 9- to 10-handed
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Phil Gordon (Phil Gordon's Little Green Book: Lessons and Teachings in No Limit Texas Hold'em)
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The list of adjustments, especially in live poker, goes on and on. This is the great value of Cichy's book. By using optimal play as a foundation, he replaces guesswork with structure and offers a comprehensive guide to no-limit hold'em.
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Ben Saxton
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PokerStrategy.com
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Alton Hardin (Essential Poker Math: Fundamental No Limit Hold’em Mathematics You Need To Know)
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there is only one fundamental reason to choose to bet a hand: because it is more profitable on average than calling, checking, or folding (or betting another size).
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Will Tipton (Expert Heads Up No Limit Hold'em, Volume1: Optimal and Exploitative Strategies)
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Play stakes that would hurt if you lost everything, but will not break your bank. If the stakes do not have much value to you, you will not play the game with optimal strategy because you will not take the game seriously enough.
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Timothy Wolf (POKER: How to Play Poker like a Pro - No Limit Texas Hold'em Strategies, Tips and Tricks to Win Big)
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Deciding which hands are worth playing and which hands are not is the first and most consequential choice a player makes. And pros are just better at that choice, playing a mere 15% to 25% of the two-card starting combinations they are dealt in Texas Hold’em. Compare that to an amateur, who will stick with their starting cards over half the time. In the battle of whether to hold ’em or fold ’em, amateurs usually hold ’em. Professionals usually fold ’em.
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Annie Duke (Quit: The Power of Knowing When to Walk Away)
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And pros are just better at that choice, playing a mere 15% to 25% of the two-card starting combinations they are dealt in Texas Hold’em. Compare that to an amateur, who will stick with their starting cards over half the time.
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Annie Duke (Quit: The Power of Knowing When to Walk Away)
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Before the flop, then, successful play in Hold’em is pretty darn easy using the top-ten-hands strategy. In general, you raise or reraise every time you have a top ten hand, and you fold the rest of your hands. The exceptions are: when a mouse makes a raise or reraise (two bets or three bets), a lion makes it three bets (a reraise), or an elephant makes it three bets (since it is out of the ordinary for the elephant ever to bet his own hand). In these cases, you might want to back off if your top ten hand is 9-9, 8-8, 7-7, or A-Q.
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Phil Hellmuth (Play Poker Like the Pros: The greatest poker player in the world today reveals his million-dollar-winning strategies to the most popular tournament, home and online games (Harperresource Book))
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Chapter 3 The Rule of 2 and 4
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Chuck Clayton (Mastering Poker Math: Become a Feared Shark in Texas No-Limit Hold'em)
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A losing player does not need a bankroll; he needs a budget.
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Owen Gaines (Poker Math That Matters: Simplifying the Secrets of No-Limit Hold'em)
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Yes. I really love you, Becky, and when you love someone that much, the pain and the pleasure is that much more intense. But forgiveness is a given.
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Linda Warren (Texas Bluff (Texas Hold'em #5))