Every Hand Revealed
By Gus Hansen
4/5
()
Poker
Strategy
Tournament
Poker Tournament
Aggressive Play
Gambler
Underdog Story
High-Stakes Game
Hero's Journey
Mentorship
Rags to Riches
Rivalry
Underdog
Mentor
Strategist
Luck
Friendship
Gambling
Skill
Competition
About this ebook
Now You Can.
One of professional poker's most intriguing and fascinating players, Gus Hansen has often been called "The Madman" for his crazy, fearless, aggressive style. But you can't dispute the fact that this poker superstar knows how to win--and win big. The holder of the inaugural Poker Superstars Invitational title as well as the only player to win three World Poker Tour tournaments, Gus won his fifth major international title when he became the 2007 Aussie Millions Champion, outlasting 747 players and nabbing $1.2 million. Now, for the first time ever, Gus analyzes the hands that he played during the tournament and reveals his secrets for winning in Every Hand Revealed.
You'll learn:
• An extensive, easy-to-follow analysis of the more than 300 hands he played during the Aussie Millions. . .
• The radical, yet coolly logical, methods behind Gus's "madness" that have helped him to win consistently. . .
• Each and every bluff, precise calculation, educated guess, and read of his opponents . . .
• How to call large bets with seemingly unplayable hands. . .
• When to raise out of position with garbage holdings. . .
• How the prize structure should influence your play. . .
• And much more!
Offering unlimited access to one of the most successful, popular poker players out there, Every Hand Revealed will help you understand some of poker's most coveted secrets--and simply shows you the right way to play the game whether you're a beginner or a poker pro. Now with Gus Hansen by your side, you too can turbo-charge your game and watch it take off!
Superstar poker pro Gus Hansen has shaken up the poker world with his loose, aggressive style. Called "The Great Dane" as well as "The Madman," the five-time international title-holder transforms his hands with cool logic . . .and flattens his opponents. Voted one of the world's sexiest men by People Magazine, Gus is an avid athlete, backgammon player, and poker commentator for both Danish and American T.V.
Gus Hansen
Superstar poker pro Gus Hansen has shaken up the poker world with his loose, aggressive style. Called “The Great Dane” as well as “The Madman,” the five-time international title-holder transforms his hands with cool logic …and flattens his opponents. Voted one of the world’s sexiest men by People Magazine, Gus is an avid athlete, backgammon player, and poker commentator for both Danish and American T.V.
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Reviews for Every Hand Revealed
35 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Most enjoyable an thrilling poker book I've ever read. Also very useful.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A really great read for any poker players or fans! Be warned, the book uses plenty of jargon, but this is a really in-depth, truly experiential example of professional-level tournament playing. Hansen details every single hand he played during a million-dollar win at a Melbourne tournament, analysing his own play and providing countless insights for the up-and-coming player. He's level-headed enough to recognise his own image, but at the same time he also provides examples of moments where other great players wouldn't have made his choice, and the advantages on either side. What I found refreshing is that this is not an example of a book that tells you what to do; it gives you the circumstances and one possible (usually successful) play, and leaves you to analyse the moment yourself. Hansen also has a playful writing style that makes this a fun read.
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Book preview
Every Hand Revealed - Gus Hansen
easy.
INTRODUCTION
FOR A LONG TIME I have been searching the market for challenging poker literature. I am a firm believer in listening to and learning from people who have done well but I rarely come across a book that convincingly presents a viable poker strategy based on practice, not theory. Too many books out there are solely theoretical and way too many have a much too cautious view on how to play poker.
My victory in Melbourne in January 2007 provided me with the perfect opportunity and material to write the book I have been looking for myself. It would be an instructional book comprised of real hand examples and extensive commentary extracted from on-the-spot experience. Basically it is like being at the tournament yourself, only you are able to avoid the mistakes and hopefully profit from the successful moves I made. At the same time I get to share my trade secrets rooted in actual holdings, thoughts, and plays without a lot of theoretical and hypothetical mumbo-jumbo. This is the way I would like to learn!
My basic idea was to make the format of this book very simple. After a brief Introduction and a few tips on how to get started in a live high-buy-in tournament, we will get the real action going. Hand after hand after hand…
With very few exceptions, all of the hands that I played during the Aussie Millions Championship Event are presented in this book. I decided to take out almost all the hands that I folded without any action pre-flop but aside from that, only minor adjustments have been made to the hands extracted from my little tape recorder. In order to display as much information as possible every hand comes with hand info
detailing the size of the blinds, my holding, my position in the hand, and the approximate size of my chip stack.¹ These are all important data if you want to thoroughly evaluate the specifics of a hand.
I am a big fan of hand examples with extensive commentary as the poker problems become much easier to extrapolate from and understand. In this case you have a whole book of hand examples guiding you on how to get started, how to play during the first levels, how to pick up speed and be aggressive, how to deal with the different styles of play you encounter, how to fight off tilt, how to progress in short-handed play, how to be a successful closer, and much, much more!
The Outline of the Book
Each chapter takes you on a one-day journey Down Under with thorough lead-in advice relevant to that particular day’s action.
In Chapter One all the hands from day one are revealed along with my considerations as to starting in a live tournament. Chapter Two covers day two with special emphasis on how to play high-ante structures. Day three of the tournament is laid out in Chapter Three including my advice regarding short-handed strategy. During Chapter Four we are down to fourteen players battling it out for the final table. In the introduction to that chapter I focus on how to keep the pressure on and at the same time avoid the obvious all-in moves by the short-stacks. In Chapter Five we are finally seated at the seven-handed final table. I discuss final table tactics and the ladder principle before presenting the hands playing down from seven players to three. Chapter Six shows all the hands played between Andy Black, Jimmy Fricke, and myself. The initial advice discusses the dilemma of going for the gold or settling for second. My heads-up battle against Jimmy Fricke can be found in Chapter Seven. Before the actual hand showdown and commentary I explain my heads-up strategy.
All days are fully reported, from the first cards dealt to the bagging of the chips. Each chapter contains several special highlighted hands called crucial hands. All crucial hands will be marked for easy access. There are more than twenty crucial hands highlighted in the book. You will find a list for easy reference at the end of this outline.
Chapter Eight provides you with the stats of my tournament play. The stat charts include how many hands I played, how many top-notch hands I actually had, how many uncontested pots I won, a whole section on bluffing, and lots of other good stuff. I present my final remarks in Chapter Nine.
Although I try my best to reveal everything in this book, I am not afraid of the potential repercussions. The most important skill of a successful poker player is to be able to change gears and, thereby, always to keep his opponents guessing. So go ahead and test me—I am always up for a challenge.
CRUCIAL HANDS
CHAPTER 1
AUSSIE MILLIONS—DAY 1
My Advice Before Today’s Play
How to Approach a Tournament
from the Beginning!
There are many different ways to approach the beginning levels of a tournament.
Some people feel the most appropriate measure is to sleep a couple of extra hours and enter the tournament at their convenience. A few pros actually take this method very seriously, following it almost religiously. Others think that the first couple of levels are the very building blocks of what could be a bright and prosperous tournament. The theories range from A to Z but it’s hard to say which one is better. I would say it depends solely on your mood. If you are feeling tired and exhausted from a late-night poker session the day before, it could very well be your best move to get some extra rest. Sacrifice a little equity in the beginning to be on top of your game for the subsequent higher and more important levels! If on the other hand you are in tune and ready to go, no need to skip anything! I have personally fiddled with both and my best results definitely stem from the latter. I will say though that the sample size is too small from which to draw any conclusive result. Obviously for anyone out there for whom stamina never is going to represent a problem throughout five long and grueling days at the poker table—although I doubt if you exist—playing all levels is of course a must!
I have mixed emotions, but my advice to you is clear cut. Show up from the get-go, especially if it’s your first major tournament. You don’t want to miss anything. Indulge yourself in the atmosphere, control your emotions, feel the crowd, observe your opponents, and last but not least play some poker! These are all the little things that make a poker tournament a truly unique experience!
It is nice to mess around with your sleep schedule, but what’s most important is of course: When I do show up on time, how should I proceed?
Again we are looking at two completely different approaches.
Limping with a lot of hands, trying to see cheap flops.
Playing ultra conservative, only entering pots with top-notch hands.
and double up, although each and every one of us would welcome that scenario. People are looking for pre-flop edges, and for their Kings to hold up against AJ, 66, or 98 suited.
So which one will yield the best results? I wish I knew. I have used them both successfully and unsuccessfully.
I do believe that Hold’em is somewhat of a flop-game, so if you can see three cards relatively cheaply it is generally a good idea. The problem is that sometimes you get raised along the way, and now your speculative hand has turned into an unprofitable one! Another problem with playing mediocre starting hands at the early levels is that it mainly depends on your opponents making mistakes. I personally don’t like my game plan to be built too much around other peoples’ inadequacies.
Somewhere along the same lines lies this statement: There is almost no money in the pot. Why bother messing around with inferior holdings?
I can come up with no good answer! I would have a hard time arguing that limping for a 100 at the 50–100 level with 8–7 off-suit in middle position is an obvious moneymaker with 20,000 in front of me. I just cannot make that statement! It is way too hypothetical!
Regrettably the conservative approach is not without downsides either. There is one question you should always ask yourself when playing tight: Is my style too predictable?
More often than not the answer is yes, and it is a considerable downside worth noticing.
If you sum it all up, it may sound like I’m giving the conservative approach the go-ahead. I’m so much of a flop fan that it overrides my other arguments.
Bottom line: I lean toward approach number one, but I’m not convinced. I don’t think there is a wrong or a right answer. Remember, this is not an internet tournament where blinds and antes shoot through the roof in a matter of minutes and aggression is the ultimate feature. This is a major tournament with a slow progression of the blinds, allowing much more room for individual style and preference.
Now Let’s Shuffle Up and Deal
Hand 1
The day before the tournament started I was joking with Phil Ivey and Patrik Antonius that we would start out at the same table so that the organizers could hype up the tournament. But with more than 350 players seated on day two we knew that it was highly unlikely to happen.
Obviously I was a little bit surprised to find Phil Ivey as well as Kathy Liebert and Evelyn Ng at my table. Not the best of table draws, but at least Patrik wasn’t there. I am not at all a morning person as I am usually a fairly slow starter and not especially keen on risking it all during the first couple of levels. Having one of the world’s very best male players and two of the best female players at the table wasn’t my idea of a let’s-take-it-easy kind of start. One thing was clear—I had to play my very best from the get-go.
Although I definitely would have preferred some more unfamiliar faces at my table, Mr. Ivey’s presence did raise a couple of interesting questions:
Is Mr. Ivey bringing his deadly I want to win this tournament
game-face to the table?
Is it a more relaxed Phil-version just arriving from the golf course?
What kind of interesting side bets are we gonna make?
The answers come in the order received:
I hope not, as Phil’s A-game will represent a major headache for anyone aspiring to win the trophy.
A much more pleasant alternative. No matter who you are, winning a poker tournament takes concentration, dedication and focus. Not saying that a relaxed Phil doesn’t have a chance, but he has to kick it into gear before he becomes a real factor.
A lot of the pros love to make side bets on a poker tournament. Phil and I both happen to fall into that category.
There are three different kinds of bets: Last Longer, Must Win, and Cross-Booking. As the name indicates, Last Longer
solely concentrates on outlasting your opponent. Must Win
means that you must make the money to qualify for winning the bet. For this type of bet there is usually a bonus for making the final table and winning the tournament. For both categories a predetermined amount is wagered, and you therefore know exactly how much you stand to win or lose. Cross-Booking
is a totally different story. You are essentially betting that your opponent will not make money in the tournament. Whatever he wins you will have to pay and visa versa. Let us for example say that Phil and I cross-book each other and Phil ends up winning the tournament. I would have to pay him an additional first prize, in this case $1.2 million! This type of betting is of course only for hardcore gamblers.
At last year’s World Series of Poker, I had Must Win
bets in two different tournaments. Unfortunately, it was against Sammy Farha who won the Omaha high-low and Chip Reese who won the H.O.R.S.E event. Needless to say, that was NOT a lucrative experience! It was time to make up for my losses. Side bets are usually made before the tournament starts, but since we are at the same table we might still get some action going.
Phil and I discuss the different options, but since Mr. Ivey is a top-notch negotiator, making Samuel L. Jackson look like a 5th grader, we end up settling for the fourth option: No Deal!
Having to worry about how Phil is doing throughout the tournament can also be a slight distraction when trying to play your best, so maybe discarding the side bets is not that bad an idea after all.
This is our 10-handed feature table:
. Jimmy limps along and so does Phil and the two blinds.
Five guys to the flop:
Besides my unlikely back-door flush I guess this is what you could call a nothing-at-all
flop. An easy check-fold and on with the next hand. The blinds check, I check, and when Phil bets 300 into the 500 pot everybody mucks.
Hand 2
Four of my opponents limp for 100 and I tap the table in the BB holding 78o. Another five-handed flop:
—one of the few hands where I wish I would have called!
Hand 3
Everybody folds to my SB and I look down at 78o again. Limping and folding are okay but raising is just a lot more fun. Furthermore it is about time I win my first hand. I do as Mr. Wong folds.
Hand 4
and decide to spend 100 on a cheap flop. The button wants to play a little higher and makes 350 to go. The BB calls and I call another 250 to win 850.
The flop comes:
Again not really what I was looking for. The BB checks, I check behind, and the button bets 700 into an 1,100 pot. My hand hits the muck almost as quickly as our BB friend announces raise! The BB makes it 2,200 more and takes down the pot.
Hand 5
and with the blinds limping along we have a nice little threesome.
The flop comes:
A no-hitter! Both blinds check and I take a 150 stab at the 300 pot. Small blind folds, but the big blind is waiting for me and quickly raises it 400 more. I muck my Seven high no nothing hand.
Hand 6
. Pretty decent hand with only four players yet to act! Luc Mazzocchi in the BB is my only customer.
The flop comes:
Although I don’t really have a clear-cut impression of Luc’s style of play I put him in the somewhat conservative category, which means that he is likely to be playing high cards. He checks and I bet 400 to win the pot right there, or if that fails go for plan B—hit an 8 on the turn. Betting the flop after a pre-flop raise is called a continuation bet and trust me, we will encounter a lot of those along the way. He calls. Time for some drawing power to set plan B in motion.
Turn:
No Eight, but a sneaky and straighty Three. He checks again and I convince myself that it is the perfect card to execute plan C. He didn’t project a lot of strength before or after the flop, so another bullet on a four-to-a-straight
board should be enough to finish him off. Nine hundred into a 1,450 pot feels like the right amount. Unfortunately Luc thinks 2,900 is an appropriate amount! My Q-high can’t compete against a 2,000 raise so without further ado I muck. Plan A was good, plan B needed luck, and plan C was imaginative. Overall, not my best performance. It is still early though, and I have plenty of time to correct my wrongdoings, but I can’t afford too many 1,600 I-have-absolutely-nothing
moves.
Hand 7
is worth another 200 so I decide to call.
The flop comes:
Bottom pair! A hit but nothing to get too ecstatic about. On the other hand there is no straight or flush draw on this totally discombobulated board. I could therefore very well be ahead since it is not an easy flop to connect with. A check on her part would, with a high probability, have confirmed a miss but Kathy bets out 400, not giving me any information whatsoever. I have to decide which path to take:
Folding! A bit premature with a pair and a back-door flush draw.
Calling! Reasonable to see what the turn will bring and maybe be able to use my positional advantage.
Raising! Last legal and viable option. Knocks out any inferior holding and some superior as well. It also gives me some more information as to where I stand in the hand.
I believe it is a close call between options two and three, and as many times before I choose the active route. I raise 900 more but would quickly regret that as Kathy came right back over the top for a total of 4,000. Time to depart with bottom pair.
My raise had cost me 900 and a chance to improve, but that’s the price you sometimes have to pay when testing the waters. Kathy clearly had the best hand, so no shame in folding.
Hand 8
Status check: End of level 1 and my stack is diminished by 20%! Not that I am really worried though, as I still have a little more than 15,000 left in front of me.
. I was able to steal Jimmy’s blind once before but alas, not this time. Mr. Wong re-raises me an additional 900—a rather small and odd amount! It could be an invitation to call, quite possibly representing a big hand. I almost always respond positively to nice invitations, especially when the odds are so compelling, and this time is no exception. Being up against a potential powerhouse though, my plan is to proceed with caution. I call the 900 and the flop comes:
Well, that was a brief party. I have nada, so checking feels right. Jimmy’s 2000 bet quickly ends the hand, and another 10% of my stack has gone missing.
Hand 9
in the big blind. I am not even contemplating a re-raise since I am dealing with two early-position players in a ten-handed game. Although it may sound ludicrous coming from me, folding is probably the second best option. The flop comes:
No help, and my hand’s justifying powers run out. I check, Dennis checks, and Phil bets 1,200. You never know with Phil, as he could have any two cards. Playing back at him with Ace high and another player behind me is not on today’s menu, though. I fold and Mr. Huntly folds behind me.
Hand 10
. Everybody folds to Kathy in the big blind, who calls another 400.
The flop comes:
Kathy checks and I make a standard continuation bet—700, just over half the pot. She calls instantly and the turn is:
Kathy checks again and without really thinking about it I fire the second bullet—1625 into a 2650 pot. Again Kathy calls without a lot of hesitation. A King or a Queen on the river would be nice. The river is:
for top two, and as expected my King-high came in as a nice second-place finisher.
I’m going to hit the ground floor pretty soon, unless I start saving those 1625 bets I have scattered around lately. I barely have 10k left and we are only on the second level—not good!
Hand 11
in the big blind and am pleased to see a couple of early limpers. James Sui tries to spoil the party by making it 800 on the button. I would be well advised to fold my hand in this spot, especially after losing too much on the last hand but I guess I am just a little impatient. I call 600 more and the two limpers fold.
The flop comes:
Top pair medium kicker, but I’m not quite sure of Mr. Sui’s intentions so I decide to take it slow. I check and James bets 1,200 into a 2,100 pot. I call, waiting to gather some more information on the turn. The turn is:
That is all the information I need! I’m not going to back off this one. My only concern is how to extract another 8,150 from Mr. Sui! Even though there are two flush-draws lurking out there, checking seems to be the right approach.