Seating in Cash Games

Seating:
One Of The Easiest Paths To Poker Profit
By Mike Caro
Sometimes we get so involved in thinking about deeper and
deeper poker strategy that we forget to refresh our memories about some of the
most powerful, basic, and profitable concepts. One of those topics is poker
seating. I believe the concept is so important that almost any skillful player
who is neglecting this aspect of poker can expect to see profits increase by at
least half by faithfully acting on this powerful poker truth. Here's the script
for my audio lecture…
I teach that choosing the right seat in a poker game is one of
the most important factors in increasing your profit. I'm right.
You see, there's no such thing as a lucky seat in poker. Luck
is always apparent after the fact, looking in the rear-view mirror. But there's
no rational reason to suspect, in advance, whether you'll be lucky or unlucky.
It's all random. And that applies to poker seats as well as to poker people.
Looking back, there are hot seats and cold seats; lucky seats
and unlucky ones. But before that good luck or bad luck happened, there was no
logical reason to suspect that it would. The lucky seat could have turned out
unlucky and the unlucky seat could have turned out lucky.
Superstition:
So, when I talk about choosing the right seat, forget about
finding a lucky seat. That's just superstition. And I don't allow my students to
practice superstition at the poker table.
Well, if there's no way to determine which seat is lucky, why
bother thinking about selecting or changing seats at all? A seat is a seat,
right?
No, I didn't say that. I said you can't determine lucky seats,
but you can determine winning seats. You can determine profitable seats.
Here's the deal. In poker the action happens clockwise, coming
from your right, moving to you, and continuing to your left. Visualize the
action. Here it comes from your right. Now it's your turn. Now the action passes
to your left. That's poker.
And, you know what? When you get to act after someone else,
you have an advantage. We call this a positional advantage. It means you get to
see what another player decides to do first and then you act. It's always to
your advantage when your opponent acts before you do; it's always to your
disadvantage when you act before your opponent does.
That's important and I'll repeat it. You always have an
advantage when your opponent acts first; you always have a disadvantage when you
act first. This concept is so powerful that if you could put a weather satellite
up in space and point its camera down on a poker table, you'd see the money
mostly flowing 'round and 'round the table in a clockwise direction.
OK, so far, that's not a big revelation and just knowing it
isn't helpful. So, let's make it helpful. At first, you might think that a seat
doesn't matter, because positional advantage evens out. After all, for every
player who sits nearby to your right - giving you a positional advantage --
there's a player who sits nearby to your left - taking advantage of you. True,
so very true.
Which opponents belong where:
But here's the trick. There are certain types of players you
can profit from more than others by using your positional advantage. And those
players belong on your right. And there are certain players who harm you less
than others, because they don't make the most of their positional advantage. And
those players belong on your left.
Now, there's a lot more to seating in poker than that, and I
could write a huge book about just the nuances of attacking blinds, getting
walks when you're in the blind, sandbagging, and much, much more. And it all
fine-tunes our strategy for knowing what seats are best and how to get the most
out of the seat you're in relative to the types of opponents sitting nearby. But
we'll save that for another day and talk about the most profitable seating
consideration right now. This is where the gold is buried.
Your main consideration should be to place the loosest and
weakest players on your right, because those are the ones who supply the most
profit. Many players are always eager to call a single bet, but they think twice
about calling a raise. These are typical loose players who lose the most money
in poker games. And you'll get the biggest share of their losses if you sit
immediately to their left (so they're on your right), thus maximizing your
positional advantage.
Why it works:
Let's look at a ludicrously simple example to illustrate this
point. Someone has made the first bet. You've got a good hand and are playing an
aggressive style, which means you raise frequently to earn extra profit. Suppose
your loosest opponent is on your left, holding a weak hand, and acts after you.
You raise. Now your loose opponent thinks, "Well, I would have called just to
see if I could get lucky, but now I'm going to fold, because even I'm not stupid
enough to call a raise." So, assuming you're going to win this pot, how many
bets did you just gain from this loose opponent? None, right. He folded. But now
suppose he's on your right and you act after him. He calls, because it's just a
single bet and that's the kind of guy he is. Now you raise. It gets back to him
and he thinks, "Wow. I shouldn't have played this garbage, but it's just one
more bet to me now." So, he calls. Now, how many bets has he put in your pot?
Two. And that magic happens only because he was sitting on your right and not on
your left.
The one other seating consideration we're going to learn today
is that tight, un-aggressive players belong on your left. They'll still have a
positional advantage against you, but they won't profit from it very often,
because they don't play many pots. They simply won't interfere with your
strategy as often as other players, so you can afford to have them on your left.
So, today we've learned two important keys about seating in
poker. You want the loosest opponents on your right and the tightest ones on
your left. Of course, you won't always be able to select or change seats, but
you should keep this advice in mind and use it whenever you can. Again. Loose
players belong on your right. Tight players belong on your left.
Additional Articles:
-Beating Up on Weak Players
-Go Big or Go Home
-Conditional Probability
-Mixing It Up
-Sit-and-Go Strategy
-4 Quick Tips for Better Online Play
-The Truth About Tells
-Asian Poker Players
-Seating in Cash Games: A quick way to increase poker
profits
-Lessons From the FBI
-The Gordon Pair Principle
-Battling with 'The Mouth'
-Grinding Out the Borgata
-Standard Pre-Flop Raises in No Limit Tournaments |