Wager Mage
Photo: Javon Swaby
The player immediately to the dealer's right is the “cutoff”. The player one further seat around is the “hijack”. And the player to the hijack's right is in the “lojack”. The two players to the dealer's immediate left are in the small and big blind, and the player to their left is “under the gun”.
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Read More »It’s not long after you first begin showing an interest in poker basics that you start being bombarded with the game’s unique language. There are specific terms for particular actions, equipment, players and even seating positions — and it’s the last of those we’ll take a look at here. While advanced players might already know what the terms “under the gun”, “hijack” and “cutoff” means for their poker strategy, it’s often less clear where the terms originally came from. And while new players might want to focus more particularly on their poker tips and tactics , it’s also interesting to get an idea of how these terms came about, and what they mean. But beware: just as poker itself is a game of incomplete information, the etymology of poker terms is similarly shrouded in uncertainty. One of poker’s most appealing aspects is its reliance on educated guesswork rather than hard-and-fast certainties, and that kind of doubt extends into the attempts to find the origins of some of poker’s long-established terms.
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Read More »These soldiers could literally be said to be “under the gun”, with their task made all the more urgent by the rain of gunfire. It’s certainly a feasible explanation, although hard evidence is scant. In response to a question posed on Quora, the American writer and poker player Aaron Brown says that the phrase first appears in 18th century U.S. writing, but that it’s only ever used in a figurative sense. “No literal guns are involved,” Brown writes. “It has no known older history of military, sporting, criminal or other use. You can imagine a soldier under fire, or a person with a gun pointed at him or an athlete under command of a starter’s pistol; but there’s no citations to support any of these etymologies.” He adds that the earliest poker citations are from the 1990s, suggesting this is a term that grew in popularity alongside poker itself, and particularly as the game started being shown on television and played on the internet. In both these cases, it’s useful for table positions to have a label.
If there's a tie, you get your money back. If your pick loses, you lose your wager. It's as simple as that. The amount you win depends on each...
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A term used mostly in the West Coast of Scotland which means mouth. However, it is not a polite phrase. For example “Ah warned ye tae shut yer...
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The odds of flopping a Straight Flush are so unlikely (0.02% or less) that the majority of poker equity calculators don't even show the precise odds.
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5-under par Examples of Under Par, Even Par and Over Par If the golfer shoots 67, that's 5-under par; if the golfer shoots 90, that's 18-over par....
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