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June 15, 2025 27 mins
This is an episode just for brand new players. With a few pieces of advice for even old regulars too.

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10 Tips For Brand New Players

1 ask questions
2 table stakes
3 know the betting line
4 betting rules / string bets
5 multiple statements call and raise
6 going south
7 asking permission
8 high hand rules
9 decorum
10 floor is always right

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hello, Welcome into another episode of lolomick check Cash Games podcast,
where we talk exclusively about playing lolamitcash games and a
live casino and poker room environment. Glad to have you here.
Just a quick piece of news for you. We'll talk
more about this at the end of the episode. But
over at lolomitcashgames dot com, which is my Patreon based

(00:22):
training website, I've opened up a free tier show. I'm
doing free articles, we're doing some free videos, We're doing
some bonus type training and stuff over there for a
free tier, so it doesn't cost you anything. You can
just go sign up under for free and in the
free tier you'll get access to those. My goal is

(00:42):
to do one or two maybe articles a month, then
maybe a video quarterly or something to a little bonus training,
a little bonus help for absolutely free, and all you
have to do is sign up over at lowlanmancshgames dot com.
We'll talk more about what's over there at the end
of the podcast. I don't want to tie you up
on that now, but that's something new and it's a
little bit exciting, so I wanted to get that out there,

(01:03):
all right. So today's episode is going to be for
brand new players. Now that being said, tell me you
longer time players may learn something from some of these
things on this list of ten, because I see it
all the time, especially number ten. Especially number ten, players
that have been playing for years and decades still don't
get it. They don't understand it, and it causes them

(01:25):
a lot of stress. So look, the reason I did
this is because I had over the course of I
would say the past four weeks, I've had two or
three different players private message me on Instagram. By the way,
you can follow me on Instagram on Facebook Slowlan mccash
Games podcast, love to have you there. But they were

(01:46):
all going to be playing in a poker room or
casino whatever for the first time, first time ever. I'm
very nervous about it. So that's the first thing I noticed.
And then the second thing I noticed my poker room.
My home poker room is in a area where spring
show up in droves this time of year, and they
always make their way into the poker room, and many

(02:08):
of them are clueless. I've seen some of the most
interesting questions ask at the poker table over the past
few weeks that I've ever seen asked. And so all
these things said you know, led me to say, you
know what I need to do with just a basic
episode now, So this is a bonus episode April. It's
going to have five Sundays in it, and any month
that has five Sundays. Instead of giving you just the

(02:29):
one episode here on the free side, I give you
a bonus. So this is a bonus. Not gonna be
X's and O's strategy, but it's going to be helpful,
especially for new players, and some of the things maybe
eye opening or revealing or helpful to longer term players.
So brand new players playing in a poker room for
the first time ever. Number One thing to know, ask questions.

(02:50):
You can never ask too many questions. If you don't
understand something, ask questions and don't feel silly about it.
Don't feel silly to ask where do I get chips?
Or don't feel silly to go to ask you can
I rebuy more chips? Here at the table. I see
people nervous about things like that all the time. I
see people nervous about all kinds of things, ranging from

(03:14):
blinds to raise sizes and all this type stuff. Like
if you're ever at a point where there's something that
you're not sure about, rather than guessing and maybe doing
something that breaks a rule or doing something that breaks
common decorum or etiquette. Just as a dealer, the dealer
will always be helpful. Dealers should always be helpful. Look,
one hundred percent of dealers aren't amazing, but I'd say

(03:35):
ninety nine percent of them are, and they're happy to
help you. They want the table to run smoothly. They
want you to have a good experience. They want everybody
else to have a good experience. So if at any
point anything happens that you do don't understand, you're not
sure about, just ask. Just ask, and don't feel bad
about it. We all didn't know when we started. We're
on the same boat. You are number two table stakes.

(03:58):
So a lot of people, not a lot of people,
But I've seen several people who are confused about playing
poker in an actual poker room because their only experience
with playing poker is watching it on TV. And you
can watch old movies and old TV shows where these
guys are playing poker in a saloon or you know,

(04:20):
some underground card club or something, and a guy goes
all in for a million dollars and the other guy
doesn't have a million dollars and say, well, if you
can't call a million dollars, you lose. That's not how
it works. That's not how it works. It's table stakes.
So whatever you have on the table is the most
that you can win or lose. So if you have

(04:41):
a hundred dollars stack in front of you, the most
you can lose is a hundred. And if somebody else
goes in all in for five thousand and you just
have a hundred in front of you, you just call
a hundred. That's it. You don't have to worry about
coming up with the other five thousand. You just won't
be entitled to the whole plot. You'll just everybody else
is in the hand will contribute a hundred to match

(05:02):
your hundred, and that will form a side pot. And
so it's table stakes. So it's whatever's on the table
that's what's in play, and you don't get to add
stuff on. Let's say that you flop quad aces and
you only had one hundred dollars, and now you want
to get a bunch of money in, and everybody else
at the table has, you know, one thousand dollars, but
you only had one hundred in front of you. You're like,
oh shit, I got quat aces. I want to pull

(05:23):
five thousand dollars out of my pocket and put it
on the table and bed it. Well, you don't get
to do that. It's table stakes. You know. Whatever you
have on the table in front of you when the
hand starts, that's how much money you get to play.
It's the most you can put in to win a
share of the pot, and it's the most you can
ever lose should your hand lose. Number three. No, the
betting line. So this is something that changes from card

(05:45):
room to card room. So depending on where you're at,
you may have a there may be no betting line.
Like my protgroom has no betting line. There's no line
in the middle of the table whereby it's considered a
bed if chips go across the line. Other rooms have
a lot, but it's considered a soft line. In other words,
you could move a you could grab a big stack
of chips. You can move them out across the line

(06:06):
and then you can drop. You know, you can just
about one hundred You can put about one hundred stacks
of chips in your hand if you know how big
your hand is, and you can move them out and
you could drop a stack of twenty five, drop a
stack of twenty five and then pull the other twenty
five back in. Your bet would be fifty. That's the
way my home poker room, it is the way a
lot of poker rooms. Other poker rooms have a hard

(06:27):
betting line, what's known as a hard betting line. That
means that once you move your chips out over that
betting line, whatever's in your hand is a bet, or
it's a call, or it's a whatever. So don't move
anything that you don't intend to put in the pot
out past that line. Rooms that don't have lines, and
even some rooms that do have line have a forward

(06:49):
motion rule. So once you grab chips and you make
an overt forward motion, the usually past your chips or
something like that, your stack of chips that's conitered in
action where you intended to bet or something. My home
poker room has a very bizarre rule where your cards
are your betting line. So your cards are out there

(07:11):
on the table. Our poker tables have no line on them.
So once your chips, if you do a forward motion
and your chips past the front edge of your cards,
you have now moved them past the betting line, and
that's an action. Every room is different. Don't get burned
by not knowing the rules. The first thing I do
when I show up in a poker room that I
have never played in before is ask them what constitutes

(07:33):
a bet? What is your betting line? What is the
betting rule? It's very important that you know that number
four is a continuation of betting rules string bets, and
number five is a part of that multiple condition statements,
bets and calls, et cetera. So I've listed these is

(07:53):
two different things, but they're kind of all in the
same little umbrellas. We'll just run them all out there together.
So there's different rules for betting at different places. We
talked about the betting line. That's certainly part of it.
UH some rules if you some some bugger rooms. If
you intend to raise, it's been most prog rooms few
in totend. If you intend to raise, or maybe you

(08:14):
used to tended to call shooting, say call and you
put out certain number of chips that was over, you know,
one point five times the size of the last one
to go in. It's a mandatory raise. You have to
raise it you know, if you were to intending to call,
but for some reason you said raise or something and
you were confused, you do have to raise you didn't

(08:36):
a state of amount. They'll make you raise whatever the
minimum amount you could legally raise. String bets string bets.
String bets, as far as I know, are illegal in
every single poker room in the world. I've never been
to a room where string bets were legal. But a
string bet, let's say you wanted to bet one hundred dollars.

(08:57):
A string bet is where you grab a twenty five
dollars chip and then you move it out front. Then
you come back so your stack. You grab another twenty
five dollars chip and move it out. Then you come
back to your stack. You grab another twenty five dollars
chip and you move it out. Then you come back
to your stack. You know, so you're making different movements.
You're putting twenty five out coming back. You know, You're
you're trying to make it one hundred by putting a
twenty five out coming back, grabbing another twist. That's a stringbat.

(09:20):
Bats have to be made in one motion. You can't
make emotion out, drop chips, come back, pick up more
chips moving forward and drop more chips till you get
to the amount you want. Now, that's provided you don't
say anything right. That's provided you don't say I want
to bet one hundred. Now, if you make a verbal
declaration of what it is you're trying to bet, you
can get the chips out there however you want. If

(09:42):
you're to say I'm going to bet one hundred, you
make a verbal declaration, well, then you can. Then string
bets is not an issue. You can grab twenty five
and throw it out, grab another twenty five and throw it.
You can just keep throwing random chips out till it
adds up to one hundred, because you have declared the
size of your bet before you started moving chip out.
I would make this recommendation to you. Just always announce

(10:06):
what you want to do. If you want to bet fifty,
just say I've had fifty, and then it doesn't matter.
You don't have to worry about crossing lines. You don't
have to hear about forward motions, you don't worry about
how many chips, you don't have to worry about string beats.
Just to announce your bat. Let's say you want to raise,

(10:26):
always say for clarity. There's certain different ways you can
say raise. You can say I want to raise one hundred.
Technically that means you want to make it one hundred
more than what the last person put in. If you
say I want to raise one hundred, I think it's
much more clear and much more well understood. If you
say what you want to raise it to? What is
the amount you want to raise it to? How much
is how much is it you're wanting to put in

(10:47):
the pot? So if you want to raise to one hundred,
say I want to raise to one hundred, I want
to make it one hundred. I want to make it
a total of one hundred. I want to raise to
a total of one hundred. Say something very clear like that,
so there's no ambiguity about it. And then the last
thing I'll say on this whole topic is number five

(11:07):
on the list. And this comes again from watching movies
and TV shows, and I grew up watching them, and
until I started playing poker and poker rooms, I didn't
know any difference either. You can't make multiple statements. Whatever
you say is what it is, and so what am
I talking about? If you've ever watched an old gambling

(11:28):
movie or old gambling TV show, somebody would bet one
thousand dollars. Right, he's wearing him, but he's always got
a cowboy hat on, his nice bolo tie and nice
western outfit. I bet a thousand dollars and the guy
next to him would say something like this, I call
your thousand and raise you another thousand. Well, that's not

(11:51):
how it works in poker rooms. You don't get to
announce that you're calling his bet and then raising it
in another amount. Whatever you say first is what you're doing.
If you say I call your thousand, and what doesn't
matter about the hand apart you said I call a thousand,
that's what you're doing is calling a thousand. So, uh,
what else do I've seen him saying old movies, I'll

(12:12):
see your thousand and raise you another thousand. No, no, no, no.
Just if you want to raise, just say raised. Right,
If you just want to call it, just say call.
You don't make multiple statements because whatever your first thing
you say is that's what they're gonna hold you to.
Going south. I was at a table last weekend where
this happened. There was these two gentlemen. You can tell

(12:34):
they haven't really played in the poker room all that much,
one of them much less than the other one, but
neither one of them had played a lot, and they
were there together and apparently helping each other out with
money or whatever. So the first thing that happens, this
gentleman to my right, he doubles up in a big hand,
and he has like he starts with two hundreds and
is he has like four hundred in front of him,

(12:54):
and now he wants to take one hundred dollars of
that off, and he wants to put it in his pocket.
That's called going south. And you don't get to do
it as long as you're at a table. However much
you have won has to stay on the table, and
it has to be in play. It has to be
at risk. You can't, you know, win a thousand dollars
pot and then take five hundred that and put it

(13:15):
in your pocket and just leave the other five hundred
on the table to play with your money had Whatever
money you have has to stay on the table at
all times table stakes. When you take money off, it's
called going south. A lot of people having to tour
sleeping caught going south, whereas you know, they would have
like and this usually happens in bigger games, bigger than

(13:37):
one two and one three zero limit, but like you know,
fifty one hundred games, one hundred two hundred games, where
somebody will take a one thousand dollars chip at some
point without anybody noticing it, they'll slip it off their
stack and they'll slip it into their pocket. So it's
no longer up there. Why because they don't want to
risk losing too much. What's happened is they have won
some big pots and now they went from having like
a regular side of stack to having a monster stack,

(13:59):
and they don't want to put it at risk and
lose it in all one hand, so they're kind of
protecting themselves. Well, you can't do that. That's called going south,
and it's not permitted, it's not legal. It's also highly
frowned upon and you will get called names if you
get called doing it. As another aside, you also can't
pass any of your chips to another player. So that's

(14:19):
what these two guys to my right were trying to do.
They made two of these mistakes. The first one I
just talked about. The second one was the guy too
spots to my right got busted. He ran out of money.
But he's here with this guy that's in between us,
and he wants to take He wants to know if
he can get one hundred dollars of that guy's chips,
since their friends and they're there together. Well, can I
just give him one hundred dollars of my chips? Well no, no,

(14:42):
your chips are your chips. They have to stay on
the table in front of you. You can't be given
one hundred dollars of your chips to somebody else. Now,
can you take any chips off the table? In most
poker rooms, and I'm not going to say this is
one hundred percent of poker rooms, but in most poker rooms,
you can tip the waitress with chips out of your stack.
So if you want to chip a temple them a

(15:03):
dollar or two dollars or five dollars or ten dollars,
that's acceptable, right, You can do that. Some poker rooms,
especially Florida poker rooms, you have to actually pay for
your food. There are no comps, so you have to
pay for it. You can pay for your food out
of the chips on the table. So that's one way
you can actually take chips off the table. So if
you buy a cheeseburger and fries, it is fifteen dollars,

(15:24):
and you want to tip the waitress five, so it
comes up to twenty. You can actually take twenty dollars
off your stack and give it to the waitress. That's acceptable,
but any other taking of chips off the table is
going south and it's not allowed. Number seven is you
don't have to ask permission to do things like it's
not school, just like you're not in class. And the

(15:45):
reason I bring this up is I've seen two different
instances in the past two months along where these things happen.
One of them is asking to use the bathroom. If
you're at a poker table and you have to go
to the bathroom, you do not have to ask the
dealer's permission to go to the bathroom. You don't have
to tell him you're going to the bathroom. You don't
have to you don't have to say anything. You just

(16:07):
leave your chips on the table. You just stand up,
and you just go to the bathroom and wash your hands, please,
and then come back, sit down where your chips are
at and keep playing. Nobody cares. Nobody cares what you're
going to do. It doesn't matter. The most bizarre thing
I've seen in the past two months was a gentleman
who was so obviously new, sits down and within like

(16:29):
twenty minutes or so, he busts. He gets busted. He
has no chips in front of him, and he's just
sitting there in the seat, and he doesn't ask to
rebuy more chips. He doesn't say anything to anybody's just
sitting there. So after like five minutes of this, the
dealer looks at him and goes, sir, would you like
to buy more chips? You're gonna keep playing or what?
And the guy goes, do I have permission to leave?

(16:51):
Is it okay if I leave? It was a wholesome moment, right, like,
I don't want to make fun of people, But it
was fascinating to me that the gentleman didn't think that
he could leave the table. I don't know if he
thought there was a time limit, like if you have
to stay there for a certain amount of time since
you took up the city, I don't know. But the
dealer was like, absolutely, if you want to leave, if

(17:11):
you can leave, so you don't have to ask permission
to do things like go to the bathroom or go
to the bar or leave the table or whatever. Speaking
of asking questions, number eight is something you definitely want
to know. So if the room is running promotions like
a high hand promotion, like if you don't even know
what that means, just when you get there, ask the dealer,

(17:33):
or you can ask the brush or the person at
the podium, whatever they may be called, are you having
any promotions today? And they'll tell you if they are.
If they're having a high hand promotion, they'll tell you.
Ask them if they have a bad beat jackpot, get
them to explain it to you. Get them to explain
to you what the promotions are and how they work.
Every room is different. I've been in some rooms where

(17:55):
there only had you only had to have like five
or ten dollars in the pot for the hand to
qualify for a high hand. Other rooms it's ten dollars.
In some rooms it's twenty dollars. You know, it just
kind of depends on the room and on what schedule
they take the jackpot or promotional drop it's called. So

(18:16):
just to ask the rules, Ask what the rules are,
Ask what the promotion is, Ask what the rules are,
Ask how do you win? It and all this type stuff.
So number nine and number ten are things that many
longtime poker players need to know. I told you to
number ten especially, but number nine and number ten. Understand decorum, right,

(18:39):
understand some decorum. Don't be a jerk, don't be rude.
Don't blame your hand on the dealer. I mean, I
do this, but I do it jokingly. Don't blame it
on the dealer when you lose a hand. There's a
guy I play with. He blames everybody for everything. It's
everybody at the table's fault and the dealer's fault for

(19:00):
everything that happens. Why didn't you bat your hand? Why
didn't you raise there? I don't understand how you checked there.
I don't understand how you play those two cards. This
dealer is always giving them what they need, and just
on and on. This guy goes. I don't know why
it comes to play poker, because he's single handedly the
most miserable person I've ever seen at a poker table.
That's horrible decorum. Nobody's going to want to play poker

(19:20):
with you. Everybody's gonna hate seeing you show up at
the table. In fact, the only people that will like
seeing you show up at the table. Is if you're
really bad at poker, the people that are there playing
for profit will love to see you show up because
they will put up with your rude behavior because you're
gonna be giving them money. Other than that, nobody wants
to hear it. The people there are having to have
a good time, so have a level of good taste.

(19:44):
If you bad beat somebody, don't jump up and do
a touchdown dance. I mean, what's the point in that.
Like you can celebrate and go whoo oh oh, I'm
so lucky. You know, you could be excited to you one,
but don't don't you know, slam the the ball in
the opponent's face, right, don't spike the ball like in
a football game in your opponent's face. Like, don't be

(20:05):
a jerk about it. Hastened, DECORLM Like you've played poker before,
even though you haven't. And for those of you that
have for ten years, do better. By the way, I'm
not perfect. I struggled with this from time to time.
I made a statement the other night that I regretted.
It was in the poker game and my aces got
run down. I mean, I played the guy perfectly. I

(20:27):
got him to put in money he should not have
put in pre flopped with sixes. I made to raise
the perfect size so that he was just priced out
with any pairs. He really shouldn't have called it with
any pairs except maybe I don't know, tenserjacks plus. And
it was an amount that he would just have to
ship it on pretty much any flop where whatever he
had had anything, And it came like a five high
flop or something, I don't know, eight high flop, something

(20:49):
like that, and he had sixes and he just shipped it.
He shipped the whole thing and I called him the
bass and he'd make the six on the river. The
main reason that I said something because the guy was
Its not like he wasn't rude, but he wasn't pleasant.
He's one of those guys that are just they're I
don't know, they're just not He wasn't enjoyable to be
at the table with. But I regret it saying it,

(21:10):
and I'm always trying to do better but have some decorum.
And we finally arrived at number ten. And this is
probably the most important thing that you can ever learn
as a poker player. It will save you a lot
of stress. It'll save you a lot of headaches. It'll
save you a lot of grief. It'll save you a
lot of drama. It'll save you a lot of consternation.
It'll save you all those things if you will understand this.

(21:33):
The floor is always right. Now, that doesn't mean that
they are always correct in their ruling. That doesn't mean
that their ruling is correct. Sometimes floors get rulings wrong,
but it's irrelevant. Their floor is always right. The floor
is a dictatorship. And I don't mean that in a
bad way. I'm not calling floors bad names. Most flooras
are out there doing the best job that they can,

(21:54):
and most of them do a really good job nine
to nine percent of the time. Sometimes they'll just make
a bad ruling. I had a floor literally pull another
players cards out of the muck and give them back
to them. That shouldn't happen. That should just never happen.
That was a horrible ruling. But did it matter? No? Why?
Because the floor is always right. The floor is the
highest authority in the room, whoever the floor is. If

(22:16):
some kind of issue happens at the table, you feel
that you got done wrong, or somebody feels it that
you did them wrong, or this wasn't right, or that
wasn't right. The floor is the highest authority, and the
floor will be called to the table. The floor will
ask what happened. They don't care what you say happened.
What you say happened is irrelevant. They're going to ask
the dealer what happened. It's the dealer's job to explain

(22:36):
to them what they witnessed happened. The dealer is the
unbiased eyes and ears of what went down. Now, that
doesn't mean that players won't be chiming in, because they
will be, and some floors will listen to players and
some won't. I just recommend it's kind of pointless to
try to be in there trying to tell them what happened.
They want to hear the dealer tell what happened. Once

(22:57):
the dealer explains so what went down, the floor will
then make a ruling. It doesn't matter if you like
the ruling. It doesn't matter if you literally have a
rule book in your pocket that states that the ruling
is wrong. It's irrelevant. The floor is always right, and
if you just accept that the floor is always right,
and then you can't change it can't do anything about it.
It will just save you a ton of stress. The

(23:20):
floor is always right, all right, let's talk about low
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(23:40):
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some crushers, some winning, some starting to win. Some they're
just like you, trying to get better, but everybody helping
each other. And I'm there twenty four to seven. It's
twenty five bucks. Twenty five bucks, Like nobody has a
price like that. Why is it so low? I'm a
one man operation. I don't hire people to coach. I

(24:47):
don't hire people to do content. I don't have designers
and people for my websites and web hosting and all
this type stuff and processing and all this stuff for
credit cards. I outsourced all that to Patreon. And I'm
also not in it for a living. I don't do
it for a living. I don't need to make a living.
I sold a business many years ago, and I haven't
hit a lick at a stick as far as work

(25:08):
is concerned, since twenty twenty seventeen. So it's not a
living for me. It's a passion. But I do like
to get renumerated for it to some extent, but mostly
it's a passion and we keep it down. I don't
let a million people join it. I don't let a
thousand people join it, because again, I'm not trying to
get rich from it, trying to make a living from it.

(25:31):
I'm trying to have a small group of people that's
a controllable size, where I can be available to everybody
as much as possible. And in the discord, I generally
do reply to everybody, sometimes within ten minutes, sometimes within
an hour, always the same day. Very rarely does it
take till the next day. Like I'm in there, I'm
in the mix. I love the discord. I love the
people in there. I love talking strategies and hands and

(25:53):
answer them questions, and I love all of it. And
it's not just me. A lot of other guys in
there love doing that too, and they're really good. They
can help. And then of course she want one on
one coaching. I don't have any spots anymore. I had
a spot that just opened up a few days ago,
but it's you know, I have a list of people
on a on a waiting list that want to join,
and I message the next one on the list and
they immediately joined. Rarely the slots come open for that,

(26:15):
but you know, if you want to ask me to
put you on a list, or what I really recommend
is just check every few days and see if there's
a spot open if you want to join that tier,
or what you can do is if you want to
come in at the twenty five dollars tier, you get
a lot of help man that way, but if it's
just from the content and the interactions on discord and
you get a fair amount of access to me, and
then when one of those spots come open, you just

(26:36):
upgrade from the twenty five to the one hundred dollars tier.
But anyway, there's a tier over there for everybody. We'll
help you as much as we can. I'd love to
see you there, and don't forget new thing free tier,
free tier. Just go sign up for free and follow
me for free. So you need a Patreon account and
you go follow me on the for free and you know,
once you try some month, I'm posting new free content

(26:58):
over there as Well'd love to see that low limit
cash games dot Com. All this information is down in
the information section description section of the podcast on most
podcasts apps that shows up, so you can go down
and find the links down there. We'll see you next time.
Hope that you enjoyed this one.
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