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If you want to
play to win, you have to play your opponents at the best online casinos. You want to
identify the consistent mistakes they make and then put them
in situations to make these mistakes repeatedly.

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On poker message boards, I often see people ask how to
play a LAG style. LAG stands for loose-aggressive, and the
idea these people have is that loose-aggressive players win
more money than TAG, or tight-aggressive, players. Basically
they have the idea that one can improve upon ABC play, and
that playing LAG is the answer.

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It is a fact that excellent no-limit hold’em players often play quite loose and register high winrates. But it’s not the
loose preflop style that is the key. Playing bad preflop hands is always a handicap, no matter how good you are.

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These guys have identified mistakes their opponents make. These mistakes usually come after the flop. The good players are playing lots of hands because they want to create as many situations as possible for their opponents to make these mistakes. They are willing to fade the weak preflop hands, as long as they can generate enough advantageous situations after the flop to offset.

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So playing loose is not the point. The point is the mistake and the related adjustment. If the mistake is big enough, one can play loosely to exploit it fully.

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Here’s a simple example. Say you encounter an opponent who loves to steal the blinds. With nearly any hand on the button, he will raise. If called and checked to on the flop, he’ll nearly always bet. But after this flop bet, he’ll tend to give up with all of his bad hands. 

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If someone is raising most hands preflop and betting every flop, the vast majority of the time he’ll be weak. You can exploit this weakness by check-raising the flop or by checkcalling and betting the turn or river with a wide range of hands. Someone who plays ABC no-limit hold’em rarely defends
blinds against a steal. Since playing out of position is a disadvantage, this player folds preflop in these marginal situations. But you can do much, much better against this aggressive blind stealer. You can call with lots of hands and then check-raise the flop often. It’s an exploitative adjustment to a player who is making consistent errors.
You could make this same exploitative adjustment without calling with more hands preflop. You could keep a tight preflop calling range, but simply check-raise the flop with more of your missed hands.

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Do it again. Find another mistake they make. Think about how you can exploit it. Then run that counter-play as often as you can. Do it again. And again. And again. Don’t try to overhaul your current strategy. If you play ABC right now, that’s fine. It’s a good, winning starting point. Refine your game bit by bit by searching for and executing these exploitative plays. It’s an incremental process. And it’s how you get really good at this game. I could end the book right here. Look for the specific things your opponents are doing wrong and exploit them. The more you find and exploit, the more money you’ll make. But you could probably use some examples to get the ball rolling, right? That’s what the rest of the book is. I’m going to list a number of traits that are common among small- and medium-stakes no-limit hold’em players. I’ll tell you what the trait is. I’ll tell you what sorts of players commonly exhibit the trait. I’ll tell you, if I can, why I think these players show this trait.

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But why restrict yourself like that? If check-raising the flop with air is profitable, then why not play more hands? Doing so will increase your winrate. You’re not playing more hands just to play more hands. Instead, first you’re identifying a mistake. To exploit some mistakes you must have a hand at showdown. Others you can exploit with any hand. When you can exploit the mistake with any hand, loosening up will frequently supercharge your
winrate. What’s the moral of the story? I think it’s this. Don’t focus on how tight or loose you play. Trying to play looser just for its own sake is not a winning recipe. Don’t ditch ABC just because you know something better is out there. Focus on trying to improve, one play at a time. Look for a single mistake your regular opponents routinely make. Think about how you can exploit it. Then run your counter-play as often as you can. 

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Then I’ll talk about the mistakes a player will make due to having this trait. I’ll give example hands and show why it’s a mistake. Then I’ll suggest ways to adjust your game to exploit the mistake.
Again, these are just examples. Poker evolves. Any given trait or mistake may be common now, but uncommon in a few years. Memorizing the specifics in this book won’t make you a great player. Instead, understand the process behind it so that you can find mistakes and develop counter-strategies on your own. If you learn to do that, this book will have done its job.

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Before I get on with all the examples, I have a final point to make. I said before that poker is a math problem. It’s also a game of information hiding. Whenever you act on a poker hand, you betray information. If you raise under the gun in a no-limit game, you are more likely to have AA than you are to have 93o, even though you’ll be dealt 93o twice as often as AA. This is because you tend to fold 93o while you tend to raise AA. Thus, your raise betrays information. You could perfectly hide information about your hand by playing everything the same way. For instance, you could simply move all-in with every hand, and you’d be perfectly unreadable. Unfortunately, you would also be risking way too much money with way too weak a range of hands, and you would quickly lose. The goal is to balance the amount of information you betray with the amount of money you are putting at risk. Sure, generally you will risk more money with better hands. But within that framework you want to give up as little specific
information as possible. If you always have a strong hand when you make a big bet, your opponents can exploit you by simply folding. By always having a strong hand when you bet a certain amount, you are betraying far too much information with your betting. Poker players call this “unbalanced. ”

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