Common NL Texas Holdem Mistakes - How To Avoid The Worst Mistakes

Common NL Texas Holdem Mistakes - How To Avoid The Worst Mistakes
You must avoid these worst yet most common NL Texas Holdem mistakes or else you will never make money playing Holdem. Read this article now to learn them.
Making any of these very common NL Texas Holdem mistakes is like having a glass of gasoline with your corn flakes each breakfast. Sure, you might live for all of about 1 day, then you are going to be seriously ill and die. These common mistakes are just as poisonous.
Worst Common NL Texas Holdem Mistakes #1
The most common and worst of all mistakes to make playing Holdem is contesting far too many pots for your own good. Unless you are a season loose aggressive play with a larger than average stack with the right table reputation and in position... well, you get what I mean.
If you are playing to many pots you will lose. You just can't win them all, it's a fact of life. Only play at the pots you have a solid chance of winning.
Worst Common NL Texas Holdem Mistakes #2
The next most common mistake is betting like a complete retard. The amount of times I see this is amazing. Actually it indicates to me who are the fishes so I can target them. Here's some remedies:
1 - Bet the same amount pre-flop to conceal the strength of you hand
2 - Don't commit more that 30% of your stack to the pot unless you are prepared to go all-in
3 - Post-flop, bet in relation to the pot size and not the big blind size. When the big blind is $2, a bet of $10 at a $10 pot is completely different to a bet of $10 to a $50 pot. Get the idea?
Worst Common NL Texas Holdem Mistakes #3
The third mistake is practically a plague of poker, it is a disease that infects 95% of players. That is, playing the game of poker on a pure physical basis. What I mean is, playing by the rules, the cards, the probability and the bets... and that's it.
Most of the game is meta-physical. This is, things you can't see or touch; psychology, the psychological state of yourself and your opponents, position and positional effects, timing, feeling of the game, personal reputation and table image. All the things you can't see and touch that have more of an effect on the outcome of the game than you realize.