Product Description
Cash in on the latest craze …
Whether a reader is participating in a fast-moving, low-buy-in tournament or a five-day main event, The Pocket Idiot’s Guide to Tournament Poker will help them make the best use of their breaks, study the blind levels ahead of time to prepare for play, perfect tricks for calculating chip stacks quickly, and adjust play for stacks and round timing.
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The Pocket Idiot’s Guide to Tournament Poker
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Tournament poker, especially that form called “No-Limit Texas Hold ‘Em” has become something of a national phenomena over the past few years. Now tournaments are played in every major American city, are all over the television airwaves, and easily available online. David Apostolico has won poker tournaments in Las Vegas, Atlantic City, online gaming websites, .and writes a monthly poker column for “TopPair Magazine”. In The Pocket Idiot’s Guide To Tournament Poker, Apostolico draws upon his more than twenty-five years of experience to introduce the reader to the rules of poker, layout basic tactics and strategies, find a suitable tournament, and become a better poker player — especially in a tournament setting. One of the principle advantages of The Pocket Idiot’s Guide To Tournament Poker over the many “how to” books on poker that are now available, is that this one is quite literally “pocket sized” and can be slipped into the shirt or coat pocket and taken along to the tournament table for reference. Offering a wealth of advice, counsel, warnings, suggestions, strategies and tactics on every aspect and sequence of tournament play, no novice poker player or aspiring professional can afford to be without their own well read copy of The Pocket Idiot’s Guide To Tournament Poker.
Rating: 5 / 5
I can believe Mr. Apostolico would make a tough tourney opponent.Unfortunately this isn’t The Idiot’s Guide, it’s The
Pocket Idiot’s Guide. It’s not everything, it’s everything that fits in your back pocket.
The whole thing runs about 200 pages and there’s an awful lot of the basics covered here: examples of HE poker hands, a glossary, where to find poker tournaments, and on and on.
I’m looking forward to his book later in the year on the Pro Poker Tour. That may well be a worthwhile read.
For now, read one of Dan Harrington’s tournament poker books instead. He knows his stuff. (If you know the ranking of poker hands and have played a few times, you can follow it.)
For HE in general, read Getting Started in Hold ‘em by Ed Miller for basics and the mindset needed for Texas Hold’em.
Rating: 3 / 5