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When you 'get caught' bluffing, don't let it stop you from bluffing again. Many people are so scared after they are caught bluffing, that for the rest of the night, won't bluff agian. Be more selective after being caught, but don't stop alltogether. 
Catch other bluffers in teh act. If you notice a bluffer at the table, make a note of it. THere are a select number of poker players who are habitual bluffers. Re-bluffing against them can be very rewarding. 
Use 'scare cards' to your advantage. If you are playing players that have a fairly good knowledge of the poker game, they should be trying to put you on a hand. If you feel your opponent is weak, and the 3rd flush card comes out, or a card that will make a straight, or an overcard to any on the board, this is the time to bluff. 
Bluffing is as much an art as it is a science. And rocket science it's not. To be a successful bluffer, you need to categorize the table your are playing at, and categorize the players at your table. In a live game, this takes about an hour to do. I always play tight-conservative for the first hour, until I've read every player at the table. Bluffing is one of the most misunderstood aspects of the poker game, and must be in your arsenal to be a successful player.

It does, of course, place greater demands upon floor-people to creatively solve difficult problems. It does not afford them the traditional cop-out of ripping off the dealer.

Paying pots has, in the past, been a means of shaking down dealers. Regulations relating to this issue are necessary. California as yet does not have a centralized authority for poker regulation. This does not rule out positive action, it just makes it more difficult. Nevada, however, does have a Gaming Control Board. It is established for the purpose of protection of all elements of gaming. This protection includes and extends to poker dealers. 


Reading people is an essential business skill, and—with all due respect to Hull and his blackjack buddies—nobody’s as adept at evaluating the other guy as a poker player. Just ask Erik Seidel. Lanky, loose-limbed, and aggressively casual-looking in his favored baggy jeans and untucked shirts, Seidel kicked around college for a few years, made a name for himself on the international backgammon circuit, and in 1985 parlayed his reputation as a wily game player into a job as a Ginnie Mae trader at PaineWebber. These days Seidel is best known as a top-ranked poker player-in the movie Rounders, he’s shown finishing second to Johnny Chan in the 1988 World Series of Poker; last year, Seidel bested Chan in another tournament with a prize of more than $400,000.

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