Elementos de Poker. Tommy Angelo Elementos de Poker Tommy Angelo Beyond statistics, beyond whether to raise, call, or fold, Elements of Poker reveals a new world of profitability for your bankroll and your life. You know tilt costs you money, but do you know how to make it go away? You know position is important, but do you know how to cash in.
Tommy Angelo | |
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Residence | Oakland, California |
Born | August 25, 1958 (age 61) Columbus, Ohio |
Information accurate as of 27 September 2016. |
Tommy Angelo (born August 25, 1958) is an Oakland, California professional poker player, writer, and coach. Angelo was a career musician in the 1980s, performing rock and country on drums and piano. In 1990, he became a full-time professional poker player.[citation needed] Since then has since written 100 magazine articles, written and produced 18 poker training videos, and written and published three books on poker.
Writer[edit]
Angelo has written and self-published five books. Four of them are about poker. The fifth is about meditation.
On December 13, 2007, Tommy release his first book, Elements of Poker.[1]
On May 1, 2011, Tommy released his second book, A Rubber Band Story and Other Poker Tales.[2]
On March 14, 2017, Tommy released his third book, Painless Poker.[3]
On October 23, 2018, Tommy released his fourth book, Waiting for Straighters[4]
On February 11, 2019, Tommy released his fifth book, Dailyness: How to Sustain a Meditation Practice[20]
Angelo has written articles for Poker Digest Magazine, PokerPages.com, Bluff Magazine,[5] and PokerNews.com magazine.[6]
Movies[edit]
Angelo was featured in the 2019 documentary film by Michael Bailey called For Love or Money: A Poker Documentary.
In 2019, Angelo partnered with Lee Jones to make YouTube videos for poker players. The series is called PokerSimple.
Poker coach[edit]
Since 2003, Angelo has offered one-on-on poker coaching called The T i l t l e s s Program. He has coached many top-flight poker players, including Jay Rosenkrantz, Phil Galfond, and David Benefield.[7]
With Wayne Lively and Rob Cole, Angelo produced an eight-episode poker-coaching video series titled The Eightfold Path to Poker Enlightenment (EPTPE) that focuses on the role of psychology for professional poker players. The title of the series derives from one of the principal teachings of the Buddha, the Eightfold Path. EPTPE was released during the summer of 2009 at DeucesCracked.[8]
In 2015, Tommy became a coach for the poker training site, Run It Once. His videos focus on mental game topics for professional poker players.[9]
In 2018, Angelo began coaching low-stakes players on poker strategy.
Musician[edit]
Tommy plays drums, piano, guitar, and bass, and produces his own music, sometimes with a band called Just Another Band. In 1980, Tommy self-released the LP A Work of Aardvark under the name 'Tom Angelo'.[10] In 2001, he released a six track CD album of poker-related songs entitled I'm Running Bad. Tommy is also related to Willie Angelo a famous artist out of Denver, Colorado.
Elementos Del Poker Tommy Angelo 2017
Podcast appearances[edit]
Angelo has appeared as a guest on these podcasts: TwoPlusTwo Pokercast,[11]DeucePlays podcast with Bart Hanson of DeucesCracked,[12] Pokercast.com,[13] HouseofCardsRadio.com,[14] ruKusradio.com,[15] and Badugi All-Stars,[16][17] ThinkingPoker.net,[18] RedChipPoker.com,[19] Poker Live Podcast with Joey Ingram,[20] KristyArnett.com,[21] TexasHoldemRadio.com,[22] PokerMindCoach.com with Elliot Roe,[23] HighRollerRadio.net,[24] and PokerNews.com.[25]
References[edit]
- ^CNBC: Are you a ‘results-oriented’ investor? If so, you’re making a big mistake, says top poker thinker[verification needed]
- ^'Rubber Band Story'. Retrieved August 18, 2017.[verification needed]
- ^'Tommy Angelo Presents His New Book 'Painless Poker''. Retrieved August 18, 2017.[verification needed]
- ^results, search (October 23, 2018). Waiting for Straighters: A Preflop Experiment for No-Limit Holdem and Pot-Limit Omaha. Tommy Angelo.[verification needed]
- ^'Bluff Archives: Tommy Angelo'. Archived from the original on July 30, 2012. Retrieved May 28, 2010.[verification needed]
- ^'Articles by Tommy Angelo PokerNews'. www.pokernews.com. Retrieved April 21, 2017.[verification needed]
- ^'Tommy Angelo Q&A'. Archived from the original on September 9, 2012. Retrieved May 28, 2010.
- ^Q&A with Tommy Angelo
- ^'Tommy Angelo - Run It Once'. Runitonce.com.
- ^'Original Songs and Renderings from The Eightfold Path to Poker Enlightenment'. Retrieved May 31, 2010.
- ^'TwoPlusTwo PokerCast with guest Tommy Angelo'. Retrieved May 28, 2010.
- ^'DeucePlays Podcast with guest Tommy Angelo'. Retrieved May 28, 2010.
- ^'PokerCast.com'. Retrieved July 18, 2011.
- ^'House of Cards Radio'. Retrieved July 18, 2011.
- ^'ruKusradio.com'. Retrieved July 18, 2011.
- ^'Badugi All-Stars - Guest: Tommy Angelo (Part 1)'.
- ^'Badugi All-Stars - Guest: Tommy Angelo (Part 2)'.
- ^'Episode 192: More Tommy Angelo – Thinking Poker'. www.thinkingpoker.net. Retrieved April 21, 2017.
- ^'Painless Poker with Tommy Angelo | Red Chip Poker'. Red Chip Poker. April 17, 2017. Retrieved April 21, 2017.
- ^joeingram1 (May 25, 2016), Guest Tommy Angelo : Poker Life Podcast, retrieved April 21, 2017
- ^'Drunk WTF Moment to Zen with Tommy Angelo – Kristy Arnett'. Kristy Arnett. October 5, 2016. Retrieved April 21, 2017.
- ^'Wade Andrews | Texas Holdem Radio | March 2017'. Archived from the original on April 22, 2017.
- ^'Episode 59 – Tommy Angelo on Playing Painless Poker | Poker Mind Coach'. www.pokermindcoach.com. Retrieved April 21, 2017.
- ^HighRollerRadioTV (March 27, 2017), Are You Playing Painless Poker? 'The Pain is Unique!' Tommy Angelo Q&A, retrieved April 21, 2017
- ^'PokerNews Podcast Episode 437: Painless Poker with Tommy Angelo'. Retrieved April 21, 2017.
External links[edit]
'The waiting is the hardest part.'
~Tom Petty
Anyone who conducts the Waiting for Straighters experiment when playing no-limit hold'em or pot-limit Omaha will find themselves doing a lot of waiting. Hole Card River is a game within a game for Omaha players. It's a way to pass time and make money. Think of it as a game with benefits.
In Waiting for Straighters, I categorize PLO starting hands into three groups: hands with a pair, hands with an ace, and all other hands. Straighters are a subset of 'all other hands.' A straighter is an ace-less, pair-less hand with no more than two gaps, total, in the whole hand. For example, J-T-8-6 is a straighter, while J-T-8-5 is not.
Waiting for straighters is defined as folding all non-straighters, which means folding 90 percent of group three. Like I said, lots of down time.
I'll show you how to play Hole Card River in pot-limit Omaha. You can extrapolate from there how to play it during any of the mutants of Omaha.
The Object of the Game
Tommy Angelo Poker Free
The object of Hole Card River is twofold. The first is to enjoy a gambly-type anticipation buzz without having to actually wager anything. The second is to train yourself to stay true to your preflop beliefs when you've become bored or unhinged.
How to Play
To play the game, look at your cards after you receive your third card. Those three cards are your 'flop.' Then your fourth card is the 'river.' (If you are playing a game with five hole cards, then look at your cards after the fourth card. There is no turn card in this game.)
After you see your hole-card 'flop,' you are either drawing dead — meaning you have no chance to make a playable hand — or you have outs. If you have outs, it's possible to know precisely what they are, thus providing an acute buzz when you peek at your 'river' card.
If my first three cards are, say, , and I'm under the gun, then I'm drawing dead. I can't make a straighter, and I'm not playing that hand in that position even if I draw a suited ace or pair up.
The hands that deliver the biggest buzz are when my first three cards would fit into the same straight, such as 9-7-5.
The most exciting starting hand in Hole Card River is of course three cards in sequence, like 9-8-7. Such a bounty of outs! If I catch a queen, jack, ten, six, five, or four, then I'll have a straighter, and I'll likely see the flop. I'm also playing this hand if I catch a nine, eight, or seven. That's like, a million outs in this game.
The anticipation is not only thrilling, but also profitable, by helping me hold the line. When my first three cards are 9-8-7, I know I'll be mucking if I catch a king, suited or not. That way, when I do catch a suited king (or any other near-miss card), I don't mindlessly think I have a decision to make. I just fold.
What if I don't buy into WFS?
If waiting for straighters is too strict for you, adjust to taste. Before you look at your last hole card, formulate some idea of which cards will result in a sure fold, which cards will result in definitely not folding, and which cards will leave you in an 'it depends' situation. Then see if you can stick to what you decided.
The point of this exercise is to fold the hands you think you should fold. I'm talking about the end of leaking, which also means more folding. So why not play a game that builds discipline, to while away the waiting?
World-class coach and author Tommy Angelo is now offering poker pain relief to everyone. You can schedule a call to talk to Tommy about bad betting, bad quitting, bad tempers, or whatever else is hurting your game. Just go to tommyangelo.com. Angelo's first book, Elements of Poker, was called 'the seminal poker text of the 21st century' by The London Times, and it has revolutionized the way serious players approach the game.
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Tags
cash game strategytournament strategypot-limit Omahastarting hand selectionWaiting for Straightersdisciplinemental gamelive pokerTommy Angelo