“Mad Genius” ego damage and the nature of poker
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An unpredictable image can make a difference
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Bad poker science and a disagreement
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Big profit from poker equity
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Book (Caro on Gambling) 01. Plodders
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Brunson: Finding the right poker style for you
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Brunson: Letting opponents tie their own nooses
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Chip leverage: The poker myth that won’t die
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Don’t “go quiet” when you have psychological control
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Fast 2014-09-14: Belligerent poker opponents
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Great mistakes in poker tells
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How I got 8-5 to call on the river in hold ’em
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How intimidation works and fails in poker
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How to avoid the poker disaster of going quiet
Image, Manipulation, SPOTLIGHT
Letting poker opponents make their own nooses
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Lies told about psychology in poker
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The secret to mixed-doubles poker success

This entry is based on a column that first appeared in Card Player magazine. The original content covered two unrelated topics (this one and poker bankroll requirements).

I want to talk about mixed-doubles poker tournaments. These are the ones where you and a partner of the opposite sex play as a team. Often the tournaments are comprised of two forms of poker, like seven-card stud and hold ’em. One form is played for, say, 30 minutes and then the other is played for the same amount of time at approximately the same betting limits. Then the limits go up, just as they do in a regular tournament where the chips are controlled by a single player. One player is designated to play seven-card stud; the other to play hold ’em. Each of the partners (one man, one woman) is required to play the same game throughout the tournament.

More cautious

Fine. Well, sometimes I’m asked questions about strategy for this type of event. Should you be more aggressive in stud or in hold’em? Should the partner with smaller advantage be more cautious in early rounds? Is it easier to protect a small stack in stud or in hold’em? Good questions.

Well, I’ve resolved mixed-doubles tournaments once and for all. I’ve watched and analyzed, and it seems to me that whenever a team gets eliminated, the player who lost the chips is either apologizing or being scolded. So, I’ve uncovered – after many hours of computer analysis – the very best strategy for mixed-doubles poker tournaments. This is a tactic you, too, should use.

Got us broke

Ready? The secret is simply this: You should manipulate your chips so that your partner goes broke and not you. If you do this, you won’t have to apologize, and you won’t get scolded. You can exit the tournament, shrugging proudly, striding confidently, and speaking loudly: “I did my part. It was Tammy who got us broke. I leave her with enough chips to make two full bets, and she squanders all of them on a pair of queens.” Now you know what your strategy is – make sure your partner goes broke and not you. If you do that, you’ll feel like you succeeded. — MC

“Mad Genius” ego damage and the nature of poker
Biographical, Image, Motivation, Psychology
An unpredictable image can make a difference
ALL (newest first), General, Image, Manipulation, POKER, SPOTLIGHT, Strategy
Bad poker science and a disagreement
ALL (newest first), Image, Manipulation, POKER, Psychology, Strategy
Big profit from poker equity
Image, Manipulation, POKER, Strategy
Book (Caro on Gambling) 01. Plodders
Bankroll, Gambling, Image, Motivation
Brunson: Finding the right poker style for you
Entries by others, General, Image
Brunson: If you play tight, keep it secret
Entries by others, General, Image
Brunson: Letting opponents tie their own nooses
Entries by others, General, Image, Manipulation, Motivation, Strategy
Brunson: Pride and poverty
Entries by others, General, Image
Brunson: Proving your poker prowess takes time
Entries by others, Image, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: When calling doesn’t make sense
Entries by others, Hold 'em, Image
Chip leverage: The poker myth that won’t die
Image, POKER, Strategy, Tournaments
Don’t “go quiet” when you have psychological control
Image, Manipulation, Strategy
Fast 2014-09-14: Belligerent poker opponents
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Image, Manipulation, Psychology
Great mistakes in poker tells
Image, Tells
How I got 8-5 to call on the river in hold ’em
Hold 'em, Image, Manipulation, Psychology
How intimidation works and fails in poker
Image, Manipulation
How to avoid the poker disaster of going quiet
Image, Manipulation, SPOTLIGHT
Letting poker opponents make their own nooses
ALL (newest first), General, Image, Manipulation, POKER, Strategy
Lies told about psychology in poker
Image, Manipulation, SPOTLIGHT, Statistics
1 2 3 6

Everything is everywhere

Any Poker1 page takes you anyplace you want to go!

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Gambling  •  Hold 'em  •  Info  •  Life beyond poker

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Poker statistics  •  Poker strategy  •  Poker tells

Prediction*  •  Shopping  •  Zone 2*

↓ Tip collections ↓

All*  •  Gambling*  •  Life*  •  Poker*  •  Various*

↓ Contributor collections ↓

Brunson  •  Caro  •  McHaffie  •  Wiesenberg  •  Others*

↓ More collections ↓

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* Any collection followed by an asterisk ( * ) has no entries yet.

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Published by

Mike Caro

Visit Mike on   → Twitter   ♠ OR ♠    → FaceBook

Known as the “Mad Genius of Poker,” Mike Caro is generally regarded as today's foremost authority on poker strategy, psychology, and statistics. He is the founder of Mike Caro University of Poker, Gaming, and Life Strategy (MCU). See full bio → HERE.

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