Sunday, July 27, 2008

Poker and Olympic sport this year?

A guy from China download the ebook--maybe he's getting ready for the Olympics. Poker tournaments are an Olympic sport this year? I didn't even know China would allow access to gambling products.

Just think--maybe I can offer him a MLM deal on selling my books--how many billion people on the net in China?

Other stuff:
Amazon's real late on the "Search inside"feature. They are suppose to get it up in 6-8 weeks. Now we are into month 3. Doesn't help. Real bummer.

Finished 200 or so on the FT Sunday event. Tough way to get taken out with A-Q versus 10-9 offsuit. That loss crippled my stack.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

I always like to hear my Poker Book is helping poker players

From Two plus two poker forum:

Re: Tournament poker: 101 winning moves
Take it how you want it, but the book is great. There were so many tips in this book that I didn't know that have helped my MTT play tremendously. Reading this book together with "Every Hand Revealed" will definitely teach any player how to play LAG successfully.

Monday, July 14, 2008

New Review of Tournament Poker book

Author and poker player, Mitchell Cogert, sets down 101 “Winning Moves” for no-limit tournaments in a thoughtful, meticulous manner. These moves fall under three main categories: Pre-Flop Moves, Flop Moves and River Moves. The premise of the book is handy, and it makes you feel “armed” for your next tournament.

Part of what Cogert succeeds at is illustrating his conviction that playing aggressively is the way to win no-limit poker tournaments. And he supports his argument by giving good advice on various types of raises and bluffs.

Cogert teaches the “No-Look” Blind Steal, Under-the-Gun Steal-Raise, Leave-Something-Behind Re-Raise and the Naked Ace Bluff, among others. These are tough, but needed, moves to pull off in a no-limit tournament, according to Cogert.

Throughout the book, Cogert gives little quizzes at the ends of each section and chapter. What’s great about these little tests is the amount of detailed information given in order to make your decision. Cogert sets up scenarios well. He tells you how many chips you and your opponents have, your seat position, blind amounts and what table images you and your opponents might have, and of course what cards you’re holding.

The only place to really fault Cogert is that his full-throttle approach to tournament poker doesn’t leave much room for tight, conservative play, or anything in between. Yes, you have to make some risky plays in order to win in tournaments, but Cogert preaches a “Risk is Good!” sermon almost to a fault.

This book has its fair share of stats and percentages, which are useful in the way Cogert uses them, and he doesn’t just throw numbers at you because he can. Another useful tool Cogert offers the reader is a two-page Appendix called “Planning: Boring But Necessary.” In this section Cogert gives the potential tournament player a little “pep talk” by listing key questions the player should be thinking about before and during the tournament. It boils the book down nicely, so if you can at least walk away thinking of those questions your tournament life should improve.

More fun little sections in Cogert’s book are the little stories he writes between a few of the chapters about hands he played against pros such as David “The Dragon” Pham, Daniel Negreanu, Layne Flack and others. Cogert doesn’t take himself too seriously in these stories, so it’s a nice distraction from the rest of the book.

As far as poker books go, this is an easy one to relate to. It’s based on real experience, a little theory, and a lot of courage! At about 200 pages, it’s a quick read and worth picking up.

-texasholdem101.com

Monday, July 7, 2008

Ratings on amazon: 5 out of 5 stars

Not a bad start for the feedback on amazon. One player thanked me for winning more tournaments than ever before. Another player said they cashed for the first time at the WSOP after reading my book.

Anyway, I appreciate the positive feedback and I'm happy the book is helping players.