Poker Winning Graph
Poker odds charts come in useful when you want to quickly work out the odds of winning a hand in Texas Hold'em. The most commonly used odds charts are the 'standard poker odds charts' below, which give both the percentage and ratio odds of completing your draw depending on the number of outs you have (see pot odds and drawing hands for more information).
- I have been playing and winning at poker since 2008 and have put together some charts for you. The chart will work well both online and live, in cash games and tournaments. In order to make things simple, I have given you an easy to read, yet comprehensive, range chart that covers virtually every pre-flop decision you could face at the poker table.
- Poker Hand Rankings (Highest to Lowest) Win More Games With This Guide - Recommended by Professional Poker Players. Download and print out our poker hands ranking chart, or save it to.
- Poker Hand Rankings Chart. Print out this free poker hand rankings chart – and always know the best winning poker hands. Poker hands are ranked in order from best to worst.
Poker Drawing Odds Chart This chart lists the mathematical odds of hitting your outs from the flop to turn / turn to river / flop to river and can be used as a handy reference when calculating pot odds.
The second set of odds charts highlight interesting odds for different situations in Texas Hold'em. These will help you get to grips with the different likelihood's and chances within the game of poker.
Standard poker odds charts.
Other poker odds charts.
Why use these odds charts?
There are currently many odds charts on the Internet at numerous poker websites. However many of these can be tricky to use. ThePokerBank provides easy to use charts highlighting the key draws on each, which makes them simple and effective to use during play.
I am confident that these odds charts are the easiest charts that you will ever use.
How to use poker odds charts.
Poker odds charts help you to determine how much you can call when trying to complete a drawing hand, such as a flush or a straight draw. By comparing your pot odds with the odds of completing your draw, you can work out whether or not it will be profitable to call certain sized bets from your opponents.
Poker odds charts are most commonly used when working out pot odds.
It is perfectly possible to work out the odds of completing a draw in your head, but these odds charts make things much easier if you are looking for a quick reference or if you're just starting out. However, over time it is a good idea to learn the most common odds so that you no longer have to refer to any charts whilst you play.
Work out probabilities for yourself.
Don't just take my word for it or settle for the probabilities I've listed on the site, try working out probabilities for yourself. It's not as tricky or mathsy as you might think.
My guide on how to work out preflop hand probabilities gives a nice overview on basic starting hand probabilities. For flop probabilities and the likelihood of different combinations of cards on the flop, try the article on working out flop probabilities.
Go back to the handy Texas Hold'em tools.
Everyone loves to see a sick graph and there are very few sicker than the five huge winners you are going to see today – ranging from single session $millions to beautifully consistent decade long grinds at the highest stakes.
By: Andrew Burnett
Isildur’s $6.5million monthly paycheck
Viktor ‘Isildur1’ Blom is the natural place to start when discussing the most amazing runs in highstakes online cash game poker.
The Swede blasted his way through the ranks as an anonymous teenager in the late noughties.
His first tilt at the nosebleed games on Full Tilt in October 2009 saw him quickly lose $1million, but within the month he had reversed that – topping out at $5.46million!
We’ll see how that money disappeared when we get to Brian Hastings bio, but from the graph above you can see that Blom – by this time outed as the man behind the Isildur1 account – almost reproduced that amazing month in late 2012.
His 2009 battles featured this monster PLO pot against Phil Ivey, showing that $million swings could happen in seconds in the rail heaven days on Full Tilt.
Isildur1 flops kings full against Ivey for $1,127,955 pot
Phil Ivey’s pre-Black Friday FullTilt Feast
You can’t mention Phil Ivey and leave it with one huge losing hand of course. After all, nobody won more than the now 43-year old Californian in the online nosebleed cash games.
That’s four years and a total of $19,242,744 profit, working out at a massive $60 per hand for Ivey, and his own biggest single winning pot was a revenge of sorts against Isildur1…
Ivey flushes out Blom to scoop $832,940 pot
The year 2009 on Full Tilt was the when the stakes were highest, the play as loose and free as you’ll ever see, and where fortunes were won and lost in single sessions.
Hastings takes Isildur to the cleaners
How To Play Winning Poker
Tuesday December 8th 2009 is one of those dates that poker players don’t know, but most certainly now about. It’s the day that Isildur1 had his entire bankroll cleaned out by Brian Hastings.
Here’s how we reported it the following day: ‘It seemed to be another massive day for Isildur1, winning $471K from Jungleman12 at $100/$200 NLHE and $722K from Brian Townsend at $500/$1000 PLO. He stayed well in the green all throughout the period, even peaking as high as $2M, but things were about to change.
In steps Brian Hastings, and from then on Isildur1 seemed to fall into a bottomless pit. Over the course of the next 2858 hands, he lost an astounding $4.2 million dollars, and it was clear from the comments he made in the chat, that he thought he was caught in a parallel universe or something.’
That parallel universe was because Hastings had teamed up with Brian Townsend and Cole South to dissect Isildur’s hand histories – which they should never have had in the first place.
And that explains Hastings’ late 2009 graph…
The biggest pot he took being this one worth $682,995
Phil Galfond’s $8million upswing
A year prior to all the other impressive graphs, Phil ‘OMGClayAiken’ Galfond had already set a huge bar for anyone looking to impress the poker world.
Winning Poker Network
That’s a monster $7million profit for Galfond, although it helps when you pick up kings in the big blind and flop a full house when you have the likes of Sami ‘LarsLuzak’ Kelopuro and Phil Ivey sniffing about for action at your table!
The Flying Finn builds a $12million wall
If you are sitting second on the all-time highstakes profit list, the chances are good that you have an impressive graph to show off. Patrik Antonius, however, has perhaps the sickest of all…
Video Poker Winning Videos
Three full years at $4million per annum puts the Flying Finn among the legends of the game, and he still boasts the record for the single biggest PLO pot of all time – a $1,356,947 monster against our old friend Viktor ‘Isildur1 Blom.…