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Suited Connectors vs Pocket 5s Good or bad move?

🃏 Hand of the Day: Suited Connectors vs. the Small Blind Min‑Raise
Some hands are won or lost before the flop ever hits the felt. Today’s spot is a perfect example: the Small Blind min‑raises with pocket 5♠5♦, and Hero must decide whether calling with suited connectors is sharp or spewy.
Let’s break it down.
🎬 The Setup
Blinds are posted.
Villain is in the small blind holding pocket fives, a hand that loves to see flops but hates playing bloated pots out of position.
Villain chooses the modern low‑risk opener: a min‑raise.
Hero looks down at suited connectors Queen Jack of spades— hands built for deep stacks, position, and implied odds.
The question: Is calling the min‑raise a good decision?
🧠 Strategic Breakdown
🎯 Why Calling Is Usually the Correct Play
Against a small blind min‑raise, calling with suited connectors is often highly profitable:
- You have position: Acting last on every street is a massive edge.
- Your hand plays beautifully: Suited connectors make disguised monsters — straights, flushes, two‑pair.
- You attack a capped range: Pocket 5s struggle on most flops that aren’t 5‑high.
- You’re getting a great price: A min‑raise gives you excellent pot odds to peel.
This is exactly the type of spot where suited connectors quietly print money.
⚠️ When Calling Becomes Marginal
There are a few exceptions:
- Shallow stacks (20bb or less): You lose the implied odds that make suited connectors profitable.
- Villain is extremely tight: If the SB only raises premiums, your equity realization drops.
- You overplay weak pairs: Suited connectors require discipline — they’re not top‑pair hands.
But in a normal cash game or deep‑stacked tournament, the call is standard and strong.
🔍 Villain’s Perspective (Pocket 5s)
Pocket fives are awkward:
- Too good to fold
- Too weak to love big pots
- Vulnerable to almost every flop
- Easy to outplay from position
The min‑raise is fine, but it invites exactly the type of hand — suited connectors — that can make Villain’s life miserable postflop.
🏁 Verdict
Calling with suited connectors versus a small blind min‑raise is a good call — often a great one.
You’re in position.
You’re getting a price.
You have a hand that wins big pots and loses small ones.
And Villain’s pocket 5s are exactly the type of hand that struggles to navigate postflop pressure.
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Ultimate Texas Holdem: popular casino game
Several people have requested information about UTH and basic strategy for effective play. I really enjoy this game when there are no tables available so please enjoy

🃏 Ultimate Texas Hold’em Basics: How to Play, When to Bet, and What New Players Must Know
Ultimate Texas Hold’em (UTH) is one of the most popular casino poker games because it blends the strategy of Texas Hold’em with the simplicity of playing head‑to‑head against the dealer. If you’re searching for a beginner‑friendly guide that explains the rules, betting structure, and basic strategy, this article breaks everything down in a clear, SEO‑optimized format.
⭐ What Is Ultimate Texas Hold’em?
Ultimate Texas Hold’em is a house‑banked poker game where players compete directly against the dealer using standard Texas Hold’em hand rankings. Unlike traditional poker, you’re not bluffing opponents — you’re making strategic decisions about when to raise, when to check, and when to fold.
🎯 How Ultimate Texas Hold’em Works (Step‑by‑Step)
- Place Your Bets
To start a hand, you must place:
- Ante
- Blind
Optional:
- Trips bet (pays based on your final hand strength)
- Receive Your Two Cards
This is where the most important decision happens. You can:
- Check, or
- Raise 3x–4x your Ante
This early raise is the strongest move in the game.
- The Flop
Three community cards are revealed. If you didn’t raise earlier:
- You may check, or
- Raise 2x your Ante
- Turn & River
Two more cards are dealt. If you still haven’t raised:
- You may raise 1x, or
- Fold
- Dealer Qualification
The dealer must have at least a pair to qualify.
If not, your Ante pushes, but your Play and Blind bets still resolve normally.
💰 How Payouts Work in Ultimate Texas Hold’em
Play Bet
- Paid 1:1 if your hand beats the dealer.
Ante Bet
- Paid 1:1 only if the dealer qualifies.
Blind Bet
- Pays based on a payout table for strong hands (straight or better).
- Pushes on weaker winning hands.
Trips Bet
- Pays based solely on your final hand, regardless of whether you beat the dealer.
📘 Beginner Strategy for Ultimate Texas Hold’em
If you want to lower the house edge and play correctly, follow these simple strategy rules.
Pre‑Flop: Raise 3x–4x With Strong Hands
Raise early with:
- Any pair
- Any Ace
- Kx suited
- Q8+
- J10, J9 suited
- Most suited connectors
This is the most profitable decision point in the game.
Flop: Raise 2x When You Connect
Raise if you have:
- Top pair or better
- Strong draws (open‑ender, flush draw with overcards)
- Any pair that likely beats the dealer
River: Raise 1x or Fold
Raise if:
- You have at least a pair
- You have Ace‑high that beats many dealer hands
Fold if:
- You have nothing and the board is dangerous (paired, straight, or flush heavy)
🎲 Why Ultimate Texas Hold’em Is Great for Beginners
- Easy to learn
- Low house edge with correct strategy
- Fast gameplay
- Big decisions without complex opponent reading
If you enjoy poker but want a casino game with real strategic depth, Ultimate Texas Hold’em is one of the best options on the floor.
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Poker Position 101

I wrote an article recently called the importance of understanding position in poker and have had several people ask me more about the different positions and what they are called. I decided to follow up with this simple explanation as a back to basics.
Poker table positions are one of the most important concepts for beginners to learn in Texas Hold’em (the most popular poker variant). Your position at the table determines when you act in each betting round, which gives you more (or less) information about what other players are doing. Acting later is a huge advantage because you see everyone’s actions before deciding.
The dealer button (a small disc labeled “Dealer”) moves clockwise each hand, so positions rotate. This guide focuses on a standard 9-handed (full-ring) table, common in live games and many online settings.
Why Position Matters for Beginners
• Early positions act first → tougher, play fewer hands.
• Late positions act last → easier, play more hands aggressively.
• Blinds post forced bets but act out of order.
Positions are grouped into early, middle, late, and blinds.
Poker Positions Explained (9-Handed Table)
1. Small Blind (SB)
Directly left of the button. Posts the small forced bet (half the big blind). Acts second-to-last preflop (after big blind calls/raises) but first postflop (after the flop). Tricky spot—play carefully.
2. Big Blind (BB)
Left of the small blind. Posts the full forced bet. Acts last preflop (great for seeing raises) but second postflop. Defend your blind with decent hands.
3. Under the Gun (UTG)
First to act preflop (left of big blind). “Under the gun” means pressure—no one has acted yet. Tightest position—only play strong hands.
4. Under the Gun +1 (UTG+1)
Next after UTG. Still early position. Similar to UTG: be selective.
5. Lojack (LJ) or Middle Position
Early-middle. More flexibility than UTG but still somewhat early.
6. Hijack (HJ)
Middle-late position (right of lojack). Good spot to open-raise if folded to you.
7. Cutoff (CO)
Right of the hijack (one seat right of button). Strong late position—often steal blinds with wider ranges.
8. Button (BTN)
The dealer position (button in front). Best seat overall. Acts last postflop in almost every hand—maximum information. Play most hands aggressively here.
Quick Tips for Beginners
• Position > Cards — A mediocre hand in late position often beats a good hand in early position.
• Always note the button location—it shows who’s in late position.
• In online poker or 6-max games, positions shift (fewer early seats, more late-play opportunities).
• Start by playing tight from early positions and looser from late.
Mastering positions will instantly improve your game more than memorizing hand rankings. Practice at low-stakes tables, watch where the button is, and ask yourself: “Do I act early or late?” Good luck at the tables
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Monthly Home Game March

Another good time, cigars, beverages, and cards! 18 players battling for 1st place prize and points to the championship! Action was slow till level 2 brought tons of action! After the break players returned to 150/300 blinds and things really heated up! Action quickly progressed from 3 starting tables to 2 and now down to 1.

Final table action takes off at 350/700…and we’re off!



Action continues fast and furious till we get to the final 4. But then Leslie loses to quad 4s to Lem who also now takes the high hand. Play now down to 3.

After some back and forth Jeff wins a much needed hand with Pocket Aces, however a few hands later the game end in a wild hand!
Jeff flat calls with King King, Terry and Lem are in the blinds, Terry calls from the small 8 6 off and Lem checks his option with K 6 off. Flop comes out 6 3 6. Jeff jams all in with 2 pair, Terry and Lem both call with Trips… Lem is the winner when his his King kicker holds.

Congratulations to all 3 and Leslie and Sean both earn points toward the Championship.
Atlantic City Trip Day 2
Woke up and checked out of Cesars they were really great about us leaving early and going to a different casino.
We decided to drive to Margate and see Lucy the elephant, I was told about this from a friend,which was really cool. I have to admit though I thought it was going to be a real elephant, I was wrong but still really great site to see.

Driving to Tropicana we saw a fire truck headed to the hotel but honestly thought nothing of it. We are in line at the front desk when a young man says I just came down to get a new room , um mines flooded from the sprinklers going off due to a fire or something, I’m not sure because I’m still hung over. My wife quickly asked what tower because I hope we’re not staying there! The young man was super cool and it appears he and the other guests involved will be well taken care of!
My wife and I go to check in and in my haste last night to find a different room accidentally booked March 19 by mistake. Host was super amazing and quickly sorted it out and we were booked in minutes.

Finally had a chance to play cards so I bought in min for $2/$5 well $600, I was looking for good action but not a call fest. I played for a few hours up down couldn’t make anything work, eventually lost when I rammed 77 into a caller on a straight and a flush draw, I had hit a set on the flop. I shoved my stack and got called for a river straight. The pot was already $70 plus preflop so I figured my set was good…
Overall nice poker room, fun, mixed batch of players, good pace and well run!
Anyway spent the rest of the night hanging out with my wife, great few days so I’ll call it a win!


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Monthly Home Game Fun!

This past week was the monthly tournament,full of competitive, great players! I really enjoy playing cards with this group, great venue, having a few drinks, smoking cigars and the banter amongst everyone is top notch!a small $ amount and a cigar buys you in and additional $5 and your part of the high hand prize. The tournaments are well run with nice tables and poker chips and there is a blind clock to manage the rounds!
The tournament director is incredible and everyone has a fun time! Whether you’re playing great or your down everyone is supportive and there to hang out and enjoy the camaraderie!

The atmosphere is great and the hands can get wild. The pace and the action is great for both beginners and those that have played for years.

It’s a great time, and allows me an opportunity to continue to learn and sometimes share what I’ve learned. Whether I’m trying a new strategy or losing with my current strategy I enjoy playing with great people and watching the game evolve. Making new friends and building on long friendships, the relationships amongst players is often overlooked in the poker “how to” guides!


In ending whether you’re a recreational player, a grinder or even a pro, make time for your home game. Enjoy the players, the relaxed pace and try to enjoy yourself! (Bluff your ass off)

This article is dedicated to Terry missed you last week brother and Sean who will be missed as he heads off to great opportunities in Cali!
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