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      <title><![CDATA[Trouble Hands and Loose Passive games in Stud 8/B]]></title>
      <description><![CDATA[In this installment of my blog I am going to write about my favorite game, Stud 8/B.  Stud 8/B is played like 7 card stud, except the pot is split between the high and the low hand.  A low hand is qualified by 5 cards 8 or lower.  When reading the best low hand, always read from highest card to lowest.

Ex. 87432 is better than 8752A

Some people get hung up on the fact that the latter hand has an ace in it, but the important key is to read the hand from highest to lowest and the lowest number wins.  Now that we have a brief explanation of the game I am going to show you some extremely bad spots to be in, that might look pretty, but they are not.

High pairs

These hands look nice, but in fact they are one of the hardest hands to play in this game.  A person going low can easily back into the high, but the high will seldom back into the low.  This is also magnified by the fact that the key to the low hand is the Ace.  High pairs should commonly be discarded in early position on 3rd street, unless almost the entire field has high cards showing, and even then if there is an Ace or two showing its an easy fold.  The times to play these hands are in late position and when you can get the pot 
heads up.  This will rarely happen in lower stakes games.  We will comment on them after we finish up a few hand examples.

3 to a flush without 2 low cards

I see this hand overplayed at least once every time I play.  Without 2 decent low cards, 3 card flushes are the suck.  They are even worse when 2 or more of the suit is dead.  Stud 8 is truly a game of live cards.  If one of your suit is out, the hand is still playable as long as it has something else working for it like two low cards to a wheel.

3 high connected cards

Hands like KQJ are poor starting hands in Stud 8/B.  The only time you would consider playing this hand is in late position for an ante steal, particularly when the players left to act have high cards themselves.  Once again, this is a situati ..]]></description>
      <link>http://blog.flopturnriver.com/post/ihategnomes/925/Trouble-Hands-and-Loose-Passive-games-in-Stud-8B</link>
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    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[It feels really good to run good]]></title>
      <description><![CDATA[I have absolutely been tearing it up lately.  Its nice to be able to enjoy the upside of varience.  Im up right around 20 buyins in the last 9 days, but only about 16 hours of play.  I am however starting to feel completely comfortable running 8 tables now.  For the longest time last year and this last spring I rarely played more than 3 or 4 tables.  Everytime I played more I was chip spewing donkey.  I guess it just takes some practice with it.  I hope everyone is running as well as I am!]]></description>
      <link>http://blog.flopturnriver.com/post/ihategnomes/922/It-feels-really-good-to-run-good</link>
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    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[First blog]]></title>
      <description><![CDATA[Welcome to my first blog!  I guess I will start out with a bit about myself.  My name is Jeremy and I currently live in Columbus, OH.  I have been playing poker for quite a few years now.  I started play seriously (non-holdem games) around 2001 or so.  Mostly playing 7 card stud and 5 card draw.  My &quot;training ground&quot; was at a pool hall, where I would routinely lose all of the money I made playing pool in the back room playing poker.  After a few months of being beat up by old men, I decided to stop playing and take a month of from the game and try to work out some basic strategy.  I wish I knew there was a lot of good poker literature back then as it would have made life a lot easier.  When I came back I was crushing the stud games.  Then I really learned how to play 5 draw well, the game they routinely would switch to so they could breakeven.  It wasnt too much longer that I started to beat other bigger stud games in the area.  Next thing I knew, there was no more action for me.  In 2004 I decided to try online poker.  I bought in for a couple of grand and started killing every LHE game I sat in even though I had never played the game before.  Turns out, I was just a fish on a killer run, and lost my inital BR and all of my winnings within a couple of weeks.  Then I decided online poker was rigged and that I would never play it again.  Obviously never only last about 1 month.  I finally decided to scour the internet for information and I found flopturnriver.com.  Without a doubt finding this site was the most +EV thing that has happened in my poker career.  Currently I can be found 6-8 tabling 100NL 6max games on Poker Stars or Full Tilt .  I also play in the 5/10 Horse/Omaha 8/Stud 8 games on either site.  Well now that I have you guys caught up on my poker life hopefully my next post will have a bit more &quot;meat&quot; to it.  Take it easy kids, and if its easy, take it twice!]]></description>
      <link>http://blog.flopturnriver.com/post/ihategnomes/921/First-blog</link>
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