Online and Real World Poker Differences

For years Poker has been a booming game. Some have called it an enjoyable hobby, others a cutthroat sport. If not for online poker, the game would have never launched into iconic status. Let’s face it. Online poker is the one and only reason why the game grew at all.

It started some time ago with then thousands of people logging in to try their hand at this game. It soon became an addiction. Since then, many have ventured out into real world poker rooms and tournaments. Many online poker players today are “practicing” for the big-time. And many poker pros play online.

That said, there are two big differences between online poker and your brick and mortar poker room-and no, it’s not just the cigar smoke and sometimes annoying wait to get into a game. The two main differences are time and tells-the two T’s. Today, I’ll break them down for you.

Time

Online poker is a lightning fast game compared to real world poker. When you watch poker on TV, they actually do a major editing job to make it look more up to speed.

When you play online poker, you’re acting within 20-30 seconds. You either act before your timer goes down or you’re done. There isn’t much think time.

Now, play in the real world and it’s a drastic change. The game moves at a snail’s pace. For some this is good. You can sit there and think about what to do.

However, the slower game means less hands per hour, which in turn can mean lower profit per hour. If you’re a mechanical online poker player that just cranks out the profit per hand, real world play might not be good for you.

Tells

Countless articles and books have been written that deal with tells at the poker table. In fact, talk to any poker pro and he or she will talk about playing the player not the cards.

Good or bad, you can’t do this with online poker. Tells virtually don’t exist. Sure, you can pick up some playing habits if you play with someone long enough, but it’s difficult. There’s no way to study your opponent.

For some, this is a good thing. Your opponents can’t see you doing cartwheels, because you’ve just scored a full house on the river or picked up trips on the flop. But, true pros do their best work when they are sitting across from other players in the real world.

It’s my opinion that bluffing in online play is darn near stupid. The only way to bluff is to bet more or less and pray that your opponent(s) care. It just doesn’t have the same weight as the real world.

‘So Effortless’: Maxfield Completes Final Preparations For Clark Swansong

Godolphin's multiple graded stakes-winning colt Maxfield completed his major preparation Friday for next week's Grade 1, $750,000 Clark presented by Norton Healthcare with a five-furlong move at Churchill Downs in 1:01.20.

Under the watchful eye of trainer Brendan Walsh, Maxfield completed his final work before the Nov. 26 Clark under assistant trainer and exercise rider Tom Molloy. The seven-time winner is set to retire from racing following the Clark and stand at Godolphin's Jonabell Farm in Lexington, Ky.

“We'll certainly all miss him around the barn,” Walsh said. “This horse just cruises over this racetrack. He simply loves it at Churchill. He's doing everything great leading into this race and we'll be ready to go come Friday.”

Molloy, who regularly gallops and works some of Walsh's top horses, is set to begin his own training career following the Clark. The Ireland-native and former jockey has worked as an assistant trainer since 2015 and is poised to make his first start at Turfway Park in December.

“I've been on Maxfield at various racetracks around the country and I've never seen a horse that likes it at Churchill as much as he does,” Molloy said. “He's just so effortless when he hits the ground here.”

Maxfield holds a perfect record from four starts at Churchill Downs. The Street Sense colt won the $600,000 Stephen Foster (G2) in June and the $400,000 Alysheba (G2) on the undercard of the Longines Kentucky Oaks (G1).

Entries for Friday's 1 1/8-mile Clark will be taken Sunday. The 147th renewal of the race is expected to include a talented field of colts and geldings such as Winchell Thoroughbreds' Grade 3 winner and multiple Grade 1 placed colt Midnight Bourbon. The Steve Asmussen runner has been training consistently at Churchill Downs following his eventful runner-up effort to Hot Rod Charlie in the $1 million Pennsylvania Derby (G1) where he was forced very wide into the final turn.

The post ‘So Effortless’: Maxfield Completes Final Preparations For Clark Swansong appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘Not Like The Dirt Tracks In America’: Group 1 Winner Pyledriver Targeting Saudi Cup After Hong Kong

British trainer William Muir is aiming recent Lingfield winner Pyledriver towards The Saudi Cup meeting where his options include the $20 million Group 1 Saudi Cup and the $1.5 million Group 3 Neom Turf Cup.

The 4-year-old landed the Listed Churchill Stakes at the all-weather track on Saturday on his first run since winning the Group 1 Coronation Cup on Oaks Day at Epsom in June.

Muir, who trains in partnership with Chris Grassick, will now send Pyledriver for the Hong Kong Vase on Dec. 12 before a possible tilt at the world's most valuable race at King Abdulaziz Racecourse in Riyadh on Saturday, Feb. 26.

Pyledriver missed his intended big-race summer targets with a pulled muscle, meaning he heads into a worldwide campaign as a relatively fresh horse.

Muir said: “His Lingfield win was exactly what we wanted to happen, probably a little bit more.

“Our plan, to start with, was to go to Germany for the Group 1 Grosser Preis von Bayern the previous week. We knew he would be competitive but we also knew he wasn't 100 per cent fit. With the long journey on a horse box and the race, it might just have taken the edge off him.

“The Churchill Stakes wasn't ideal – we had to give away a 7lbs penalty – but we thought it would be better as a prep race. The race went perfectly – it was a great performance. He's taken it well and come out of the race fantastically.”

The frustrations of his summer campaign – when he was ruled out of the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes just days before the prestigious Ascot Group 1 contest – could turn out to be a blessing in disguise as Pyledriver embarks on his globetrotting adventures.

Muir added: “It was frustrating but it wasn't worrying because it wasn't really an injury, it was more of a niggle. Because he's such a good horse, you could have turned a niggle into a big problem if we hadn't done exactly what was right to do.

“I think he'd have gone very close in the King George. The last piece of work he did before the race was unbelievable, the way he looked and travelled. Maybe, it was meant to be, and this winter campaign is where it happens.

“We had planned in our minds that we would give him a break after the King George but it would've still been very tight. If we'd have won that, we would've probably said 'we'll have a go for the Juddmonte International at York', so we'd have had to stop then in August to give him a break. Would we have got back for Hong Kong? I don't know. This way, we're definitely on target, we're in great shape and we're ready to go.”

Pyledriver had a successful season last year. He won the Group 2 King Edward VII Stakes at Royal Ascot before landing the Group 2 Great Voltigeur at York in August.

His trip to York is the furthest he's travelled from Muir and Grassick's base in Lambourn, but the co-trainer has few worries about jetting across the globe to take in the The Saudi Cup.

Muir added: “I don't think the travelling will bother him one little bit. Everything we've done with him over the years, nothing's phased him. I can't say for certain because he hasn't done it but he'll probably think it is good fun.

“After he won at Lingfield I walked round to see him back in his box before we left and he had his head over the door when a jumbo jet flew over. He was staring up at it and I said to him 'look closely son, that's where you're going next'.”

Pyledriver's biggest victories have come over distances around 2400m but he had little trouble dropping down to 2000m for the Churchill Stakes. The Saudi Cup, at 1800m on dirt, is shorter still, but Muir is not overly concerned about a possible switch of surface.

He revealed: “They reckon it's the nicest dirt track in the world. I talked to David Egan and Ted Voute (Prince Faisal's racing manager) who was out there last year and they both said it was a lovely surface. It's not like the dirt tracks in America and Ted said our horse would love it.

“Everything we've thrown at Pyledriver, he's taken, so I would be confident enough that he'd handle it. The nine-furlongs (1800m) of The Saudi Cup is the only sort of nagging concern.

“After we finished third in the St Leger last year, I was at pains to say that we would have rather dropped back to a mile-and-a-quarter (2000m) than step up to a mile-and-three-quarters (2800m). He's got so many gears, but we had a go, it was a British Classic and we had a go.

“The Saudi Cup meeting fits in with our time plan. At this moment in time, we're looking to go to Hong Kong, Saudi, then we'll go on to the Sheema Classic in Dubai. The Saudi Cup is attractive as it's the richest race in the world but it's one step at a time.”

Pyledriver gave Muir his first Group 1 victory when landing the Coronation Stakes. Now he could take him to the world's most valuable races.

Muir added: “It's fantastic. This is what we've strived for since I started training in 1990. Early on we had Averti, who was touched off in the Nunthorpe when he was unlucky in running and was runner-up in the Abbaye.

“We've had other very good horses but Pyledriver is the best we've had as he's won a Group 1. This is what all small yards are looking for. Having this horse is a privilege as he's just a very special horse.”

The post ‘Not Like The Dirt Tracks In America’: Group 1 Winner Pyledriver Targeting Saudi Cup After Hong Kong appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Wild Stories, Unique Culture: Welcome To Derbyville Exhibit Opens At Kentucky Derby Museum

The Kentucky Derby is a bucket-list event for thousands of people around the world each year. Some come for the fashion, others for the party, the people-watching, or the horses. From spectators climbing the Infield's flagpole, to a skydiver surprising 100,000 fans with a parachute landing into the Infield crowd, visitors can explore the wild stories and unique culture of the Kentucky Derby at a new exhibit, Welcome to Derbyville, now open at Kentucky Derby Museum.

A ribbon cutting held Friday celebrated the opening of the exhibit, located in the Museum's Matt Winn Gallery, a space on the second floor used for rotating exhibits. The concept was born from the idea that on most Derby Days, Churchill Downs transforms into the state's third largest city, drawing its temporary residents into a remarkable cultural experience that is unique to other sporting events. The Museum's new exhibit explores this 147 acre city–Derbyville–and who comes to stay and why. Fans and critics, journalists and fashion plates, horsemen and horsewomen: there's something for everyone in Derbyville.

The unique culture of the Kentucky Derby comes to life through pictures, videos, artwork and artifacts, plus interactive components where visitors can write down and share their own Derbyville stories.

Additionally, the exhibit takes a deep dive into journalist Hunter S. Thompson and artist Ralph Steadman's raucous commentary, “The Kentucky Derby is Decadent and Depraved,” featuring some familiar (and NEW) artifacts from their trip to the 1970 Kentucky Derby. With one of Jeff Ruby's bedazzled Derby Day ensembles, the Museum is bringing to its guests a number of objects from the vault that have never been displayed.

The exhibit runs through the fall of 2022.

About Kentucky Derby Museum (DerbyMuseum.org):

Kentucky Derby Museum, a 501(C)(3) non-profit public charity organization in Louisville, Kentucky that has a commitment to ENGAGE, EDUCATE and EXCITE everyone about the extraordinary experience that is the KENTUCKY DERBY.

The post Wild Stories, Unique Culture: Welcome To Derbyville Exhibit Opens At Kentucky Derby Museum appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights