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My controversial poker take is that you should look at your cards as soon as you get them.
You have more time to think about your decision, it speeds up the action and most importantly, nobody is looking at you.
It takes 0.5 seconds to squeeze and you miss nothing.
People think you give something away by looking early.
It’s the opposite.
You’re much more likely to give something away when there’s a raise and 3-bet, and now the WHOLE TABLE is of course starting at you, watching your every move because the action is on YOU!
I don’t understand why I’m the minority here. Makes zero sense to me.
Can someone who prefers to squeeze when it’s on them please explain your logic?
The FAIR BET Act now has bipartisan support! Thank you @RepTroyNehls for signing on.
I will continue championing this legislation through Congress.
Keep the momentum going!
WSOP Main Event players:
Normalize calling the clock. It’s not personal, it is within your right as a player in the tourney.
I would suggest being quicker to call it on those that are excessively slow on every action pre/post flop and more lenient on players who act quickly but need some time on a big river decision.
And it’s ok to tell certain players who are habitually slow that they will get no more than 2 minutes on any decision before a clock will be called.
They have a right to play slowly, and it is within your right to call clock.
It’s not personal.
It’s just business.
Buried within the BS Republican Budget bill is a provision that harms poker players and those who gamble by limiting loss deductions. I’m working on a legislative fix that fairly treats gaming losses in the tax code.