• PartyPoker.com
  • PartyCasino.com
  • PartyGammon.com
  • PartyBingo.com
  • PartyBets.com
  • Spread Betting
  • English
  • Czech
  • Dansk
  • Deutsch
  • Ελληνικά
  • Español
  • Flemish
  • Français
  • Français - FR
  • Italiano
  • Magyar
  • Polski
  • Português
  • Русский
  • Română
  • Suomi
  • Slovakian
  • Slovenian
  • Svenska
  • 中文

PartyPoker.com

Over 30 million downloads since 2001
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Tell-A-Friend
  • My account
  • Download
  • How to Play
  • Promotions
  • Tournaments
  • VIP & Rewards
  • Blog + more
  • Home
  • How to Play
  • Raise your game
  • Tips and advice
  • Attributes of a winner
Play Now
  • New to the game
  • Raise your game
    • Strategy & tactics
    • Bankroll management
    • Tournaments
    • Tips and advice
      • Become a poker hero
      • Attributes of a winner
      • Sit & go success
      • How to spot a fish
      • Raising your game
      • Improve your concentration
  • Master the game
  • Video tutorials
  • Poker trainer
  • Hand analyser
  • Other games
  • Playing on our tables
  • Welcome Lounge

Top 10 Attributes Of A Winning Poker Player

Things you will learn:

  • Win more the next time you play
  • Learn what it takes to become a winning poker player

Professional poker players have a lot to handle to stay at the top of their game and fall somewhere between professional sportsmen and businessmen. They succeed in an area where endurance, discipline and skill are paramount, but luck also plays a part. They often end a day with less capital than they started it with, and so need good money management skills and the right attitude.

Asked how she coped with the swings, top pro Jennifer Harman replied:

"When I experience a bad beat, I think of it as an overhead. If you own a business, you have to pay your bills and I consider a bad beat one of my bills. It's going to happen and there's nothing I can do about it."

Here are the top 10 attributes you'll need in order to make it big in the poker world:

1) Table selection

If you can consistently find cash games where one or more players is worse than you, then over time you're going to be a guaranteed winner.

Forget duelling with the greats at a WPT final table, because this is where the real money is made. If you practise good table selection you'll have a consistent earn rate to progress from, whether it be into bigger cash games or taking shots at tournaments.

How is it done? What you're looking for are weaker players, so getting to know the pros or donkeys in a game or on a site is the obvious way - then just look for one and be wary of the other.

One very useful tool of online play is the lobby, where statistics like average pot size or percentage of players seeing the flop can be an instant indicator. For example, if your game is Limit Hold'em, then the closer the average pot is to 10 big bets (eg, $100 in a $5/10 game), then the juicier it's likely to be.

2) Money management

Finding great games is all well and good, as long as you can afford the swings that are inevitable in them while your edge accrues. There's no point seeing a big game that you can't afford and sitting in it, as you risk going broke altogether. Another oft-neglected area is that of keeping records. Businessmen do it, bookies do it, so if you count yourself a serious player then you should too.

This can be as simple as writing down how much you've won or lost on a given day so that you know where you are over time, or as complex as also including factors like hours played, time of day, games and opponents, statistics garnered from the site and what kind of mood you were in. This way, over time you'll have a little black book that can be used to figure out your optimal playing routine, as well as tell you how much you're making (or losing) at the game on an hourly rate.

3) Hand selection

So you've found a game that you can afford and promises to offer you a healthy profit. What can you do to maximise your potential? In most low-limit games the good news is that if you simply wait for better cards than your opponents then you will have a huge edge, as they often play any hand in any position without much thought going into it. Perhaps this is because they're just recreational players, or maybe they've had a few drinks or gone on tilt. Whatever the reason, they're offering you a headstart, so take advantage of it.

This is particularly true in Limit Hold'em games, where the mathematics of position and the fixed-betting structure make imagination and deception less important than in the pot-limit or no-limit varieties. It also fits perfectly with multi-tabling. Rather than playing in one game, getting bored and playing every hand, why not play four at once and wait for premium hands to come along?

4) Aggression

Once you've gained the discipline to wait for some sort of hand and an understanding of position, you might notice that the other players start to become a bit more cautious of tangling with you. After all, if you've entered a pot, you probably have a good reason to be there, right?

Then it's time to execute part two of most winning poker players' strategy. Careful hand selection gives you an early edge (making you what's called a 'tight' player), but to capitalise on it you need to be prepared to continue with guns-blazing aggression if you make nothing on the flop or miss a draw, particularly at no-limit or pot-limit. Chances are, your opponents will have nothing themselves, or give you credit for something strong and fold in the face of your onslaught.

5) Changing gears

So it's tight/aggressive play that mostly brings home the money, but if you stick to one style and play hands in the same way all the time then even your worst opponents are eventually going to pick up on a few patterns and your edge in a game will start to diminish. Because of this, most top players have the ability to vary their styles of play to confuse their opponents about what they're up to.

In cash games where the structure stays the same this is often done at random - naturally tight players might suddenly play a wider quality or variety of hands and bluff more to steal some extra pots, or loose-aggressive opponents might slow down for a while so that when they get a big hand people don't give them enough credit for it.

In tournaments, changing gears is more dependent on stack size and what point of the game you're at. For example, with a big stack you can open up and bully the opposition, but with a short one you must look for a good hand to go all-in with.

There are always options open to imaginative players - such as playing fast and loose when you're close to the money and you can see other players are holding on to get there - especially if you care less about the increased risk of getting knocked out than winning the tournament.

6) Heart

Speaking of tournaments, this is what the great players who play just to win have in spades. Have you ever seen someone put their entire stack on the line with a bluff, or overcome a series of terrible beats to seize victory from the jaws of defeat?

These are the kind of things poker players mean when they say that someone has 'heart' and if you want to win tournaments you'll need to find some as if you just wait for good cards and hope they'll carry you there, the chances are you'll fall short.

7) Mathematical aptitude

Whether it's a sound grounding in probabilities and combinations or university qualifications in game theory and computer science, most poker pros have a good working knowledge of the mathematics that underpin the game. The rest have learned the odds by rote or experience.

Combined with years of play and seeing the same situations come up again and again, they can understand and estimate very precisely whether certain actions are likely to be profitable or losing plays.

8) Psychological awareness

Everyone knows that tells (and the people who exhibit them) are key to high-stakes poker and most of the ways they apply to poker have been covered in Caro's Book of Poker Tells. Between that and your own experience you'll be well on the way to spotting behavioural patterns. Of course, there is a bigger picture to watch out for as well, such as which players are on tilt, intimidated or showing the traits of a bully, but if you keep your eyes and ears open this will soon be second nature to you and you'll be able to adjust your play.

9) Lack of ego

When things go wrong, or every move you make seems to work perfectly, it can often have a big effect on the way you think about your game or feel about yourself and the other players. But it shouldn't do, as you're playing your ‘A’ game most of the time and the rest should just be the ebb and flow of luck swaying your results back and forth.

But, in reality, poker players rarely understand the fluctuations they can experience while still being either winning or losing players overall, and so they often end up thinking they're geniuses or doubting their talents. If you can let go of your ego and just focus on the game and the long term rather than how your luck is running, you'll be a mile ahead of many of those who already call themselves professionals.

10) Personal stability

If all this sounds like a lot to contend with then don't worry - it is! Poker is certainly 'a tough way to make an easy living' and you shouldn't attempt to get serious with it unless you think you can tick all the above boxes and more. The history of the game is paved the corpses of those who took their shot and missed, and only a small few live to get to the playboy lifestyle and can handle the downswings to keep living it.

This makes emotional well-being and the support of your partner, family and friends even more important than usual if you want to give playing seriously a go. Just remember that what was once a fun pastime might soon get stale if you do it every day. If any of this is making you think twice about living the poker life then maybe you should stick with the day-job. But if you're still set on sleeping till noon and being your own boss, just make sure the rest of your life is in good order first.

Videos

Popular

  • What cards should you play and when
  • 20 Hold’em statistics you should know
  • Recognise tilt and learn to prevent it affecting your winnings
  • How to spot a fish and adjust your game when you catch one
  • When to bluff and why it works so well in No-limit Hold’em
  • How to spot tables where you're more likely to win

Featured

The Power (And The Danger) Of 'All-In'

The Power (And The Danger) Of 'All-In'

All-in is a devastating weapon in your poker arsenal, and as simple as it is, transforms the game of poker.

Become A Poker Hero

Become A Poker Hero

Read our easy-to-follow steps which will turn you from zero to hero!

How To Turn $200 Into $5,000

How To Turn $200 Into $5,000

Sensible bankroll management can help you to make steady profits and is key to long-term success.

Watch Out For The Danger Hands

Watch Out For The Danger Hands

Learn to watch out for the most misplayed hands in Texas Hold’em.

Interactive Guides

Poker Trainer

Poker Trainer

Learn or practice Poker on our Poker Trainer.

Hand Analyser

Hand Analyser

Use our visual guide to assess how strong your hand is.

  • Responsible gaming
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Affiliates
  • Site map
  • Poker blog
  • PartyPoker.tv
  • Deposit Options

We are licensed by the Government of Gibraltar and regulated by the Gibraltar Gambling Commissioner under the Gambling Act 2005, and our games are tested by iTech Labs, an independent tester of gaming and wagering devices to ensure that the games are fair and operate correctly.

  • iTech Labs
  • EGBA
  • Government of Gibraltar
  • Know Your Limits
  • Gambling Therapy
  • Gamcare
  • ECOGRA

© 2012 ElectraWorks Limited. All Rights Reserved.

Play Now

Only players above 18 are permitted to play our games.

  • 18 plus