Seven Card Stud
When to fold
Knowing when to fold is always a hard thing for poker
players to learn and in Seven Card Stud it is a critical part
of the game. Unlike other versions of poker, Seven Card Stud
offers so many options for hands that the lure for chasing is
almost irresistible. With 4 rounds of betting coming after the
bring in round, chasing down a dream hand can get expensive
without the players even realizing it. Even without raises, the
pot can grow quietly while your stack sinks. You have to be
able to tell yourself that the risk is not worth the pot.
Anyone that sits at a poker table and expects to play or win
every hand is living in a fantasy world. Even players that
claim to win half or more of the hands are fooling themselves.
The object of poker is and always has been to win chips. The
number of hands won doesn’t do anything for your pocket.
The most watched factor is the opening deal. Players take a
look at their first 3 cards and have to decide if it is a hand
they can build on. Obviously a hand that looks like a patch
work quilt is not going to be one worth playing. If you open
with a hand like Jh,2c,8s you should not even have to think
about it. Fold it and wait. The obvious pairs like Aces and
face cards will never get folded at the start and even deuces
off the deal are not a bad start. It’s worth the bring in or
initial bet. A couple of good face cards or a single ace is
even something you might be able to build on depending on what
you see on the board. A good rule here is that if you
have 2 cards that are what you are thinking is a potential
straight or flush, change your thinking and let them go.
Now you get another card. At this point a minimum of a pair
or a 4 card straight or flush is what you want. Holding onto a
High Card Hand with and ace is Ok depending on what you see on
the board and if the betting is very limited. By that I mean if
someone raises or is throwing out chips like last weeks
garbage, let your cards go. Keep your eye on the board .
The next 2 cards dealt to you should make your hand solid.
If you do not have it by then, chances are not good. It is like
building a house, the first 3 are the foundation, the next card
should be your walls and the following 2 cards should either
put a roof on it or give it another story. If at the river (or
the net ) you don’t have a hand that you know can win or the
board has you beat, fold it out. It doesn’t matter if you
have put chips in the pot. Losing more won’t get them back for
you. Cut your loses and move on to the next hand.
At the net, some of us are still holding the 4 card straight
or flush or that pair of 5’s backing the ace high. We are
thinking we can hit it. The cards are flowing for us, we can
hit. Fine, check the bet and see what happens but if the chips
are going into the pot and you can not beat the board, you are
playing the lottery. Even after the final card; don’t try, let
me repeat DO NOT TRY to bluff the player that has been betting
every round and has the pair of aces showing. He is not going
to fold and chances are you're going get raised. It is pride
that won’t let us fold out on the last card and pride will cost
you even more money.
It is not uncommon for a hand of Seven Card Stud to be won
by High Card. However, in my personal experience, I have seen
more Full Houses played in Seven Card Stud than any other type
of poker. It is so very important to watch the board and
remember the cards that the players that fold out where
showing. If you are going to chase, you need to make sure that
the card you are chasing hasn’t already been in play and
folded. Poker is fun but it is not easy. You have to be aware
of the cards and how to play them. Folding is not a bad thing.
Folding is a defense for your chips. Use it. I keep telling you
that the object of poker is to win the most chips you can by
the time you stop playing. It is not about how many hands you
play or win but the size of the stack you’re counting in the
end. Its poker, play it, have fun with it and if you can win as
many chips as you can.
|