InsideEdge: Dealing With a Poker Nutter

Taming The Poker Maniac

Illustration of a poker maniac

Let him blow his top - then clean out his wallet

Don't be intimidated by the hyper-aggressive play of a poker maniac. You can tame these wild cards – and turn a tidy profit

 
The maniac always meets his doom when confronted with the appropriate counter-strategy – specifically designed to neutralise the maniac’s hyper-aggressive tendencies

Picture this. A man brings a brown grocery sack to a game, takes a seat and then dumps the entire contents of the bag – $25,000 – onto the poker table into one big pile. Bundles of hundred-dollar bills tumble onto the green felt. The man has everyone in the game covered at least five times over.

The date is winter 1996, the place Resorts International, Atlantic City, the game pot-limit Texas hold’em. The man posts his $5 blind and is dealt a hand. What happens next defies the imagination. He becomes an instant legend in poker circles. He proceeds to raise on each successive round of betting. This wouldn’t be unusual but for one crucial detail: he never looks at his cards. The man is an eccentric, a gambler, a freak, a risktaker, an oddball – and a godsend to any poker game.

He is the quintessential maniac, playing without any fear of losing and seemingly lacking any regard for money. Incredibly, he wins a few hands early on and busts two players at the table before meeting his inevitable destiny. The $25,000 lasts 20 minutes. His fate sealed, the man toddles out of the casino, never to be seen nor heard of again.

While this was an extreme example of what a maniac does to a poker game, it epitomises the grave risk and tremendous upside potential of having a maniac sitting at the poker table. The maniac is certainly capable of breaking his opponent with a combination of good hands and reckless aggression. However, in the long run, the maniac always meets his doom when confronted with the appropriate counter-strategy – specifically designed to neutralise the maniac’s hyper-aggressive tendencies. Crafting a counter-strategy to deal with maniacs is the intent of this article.

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How To Spot A Maniac

What separates maniacs from loose-aggressive players is that maniacs play even more hands and tend to bet, raise, and re-raise to the point where the game is played for significantly higher stakes.

Therefore, the dynamics of an ordinary poker game are altered radically because of the presence of the maniac. In short, a maniac usually displays the following characteristics and tendencies:

5 Ways to Spot a Maniac

  1. He has more than an average number of chips on the table
  2. He often posts a live straddle (when permitted to do so)
  3. He plays far more hands than normal
  4. He raises and re-raises far more often than normal
  5. He bluffs far more often than normal

 
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