poker player, writer, and coach

tommy@tommyangelo.com
phone: 650-996-9633

 
 
 

TommyAngelo.com

Random Tommyism: I knew he was going to die the day I met him.

 


Beyond statistics, beyond whether to raise, call, or fold, Elements of Poker reveals a new world of profitability for your bankroll and your life. (...more)


A Rubber Band Story and Other Poker Tales collects the best articles, blogs, and stories from Tommy Angelo's last 12 years of writing and showcases them with eighteen new introductions and afterwords.


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A Little History

In the year 2001, according to a census taken by me, only a few hundred people in the United States played no-limit hold'em and pot-limit hold'em in legal, public poker rooms. (We called no-limit and pot-limit "big bet poker" to distinguish them from limit poker.) As to pot-limit, there was one table in Hollywood Park , California . There was one table in Oceanside, California . And there was one table in Albuquerque, New Mexico . As to no-limit hold'em, there was one table at the El Dorado in Reno , and in the San Francisco Bay Area, several casinos spread no-limit, but they didn't all go every night. The average for the whole Bay Area was about two tables per night, bringing the total number of no-limit hold'em games in the country to three.

Six tables. Of all the tables of legal, public, cash-game hold'em going on in the United States in 2001 - in Vegas and L.A. and Atlantic City and along the Mississippi River and everywhere else - all of it was limit except for about six tables. Tens of thousands of poker players loved to read, write, and think about cash-game big-bet hold'em, but hardly anyone got to actually play it. (I was one of the lucky ones. Or at least that's what I kept telling myself during my growing pains: "I am one of the chosen few who has the opportunity to get run over by the Cadillac of poker!")