• Take a break. Get up when it's your big blind and go do something else until it's your big blind again.

• Tighten up your pre-flop starting requirements for an hour or so. This means you'll be playing fewer hands than average, but you'll have much better than average starting hands when you do play. This will cut down your exposure to the number of bad beat possibilities.

• Use this time to study your opponents. Try to figure out what their starting requirements are for each position.

• Realize that it usually takes both the turn and the river for a player to put a bad beat on you. That means that he'll be putting a lot of money in the pot to see the river card and when he misses, which will be often, you'll win some pretty big pots.

• Get a seat change. If possible, sit to the immediate left of the bad beat artist. That way, he'll always have to act before you.

• Ask for a deck change or a new set up. It doesn't necessarily change your luck but it will make you feel better and improve your attitude.

• Last, and maybe most importantly, be willing to accept a temporary loss if you have to. There'll always be another game and another chance to get your money back. It's just not worth losing your entire bankroll in an effort to get revenge on one player.

Tags: poker

There's not much more I can say about bad beats that hasn't already been said. Just keep in mind that a bad beat is a statistically improbable draw and that really is the way you want your opponents to play. Here are a few things to keep in mind if you've suffered more than your share of bad beats:

• Don't give up your game plan. Stick to your basic strategy. Don't abandon those qualities that make you a good player.

• Don't give in to the temptation to play more hands in an effort to get even quickly. Remember, you're playing for the long run and you should understand that bad beats are a necessary part of the game.

• Don't get mad or upset. Sometimes it seems as if the players putting the bad beats on you don't have the social skills necessary to stay out of a barroom brawl. Some of them are just plain obnoxious jerks. Don't get emotional even though you feel like you're being taunted. It can only affect your game in a negative way.

• Stay in the game for as long as you're a favorite to win. Time at the table is a sure cure for recovering from bad beats.

• Keeping that in mind, you shouldn't pass up an opportunity to move to an even better game. Don't stay in a bad game just because you feel you have to beat a certain player out of a certain amount of money.

• Take a break. Get up when it's your big blind and go do something else until it's your big blind again.

• Tighten up your pre-flop starting requirements for an hour or so. This means you'll be playing fewer hands than average, but you'll have much better than average starting hands when you do play. This will cut down your exposure to the number of bad beat possibilities.

• Use this time to study your opponents. Try to figure out what their starting requirements are for each position.

• Realize that it usually takes both the turn and the river for a player to put a bad beat on you. That means that he'll be putting a lot of money in the pot to see the river card and when he misses, which will be often, you'll win some pretty big pots.

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Tags: better game, game plan, poker