If you’re serious about your game then you must know about Harrington. We take a look at Volume III
The first two volumes in the Harrington series (Strategic Play and The Endgame) cover the entirety of a no-limit Hold’em tournament and are acknowledged by pretty much everyone (except possibly Doyle Brunson) as the bibles of poker strategy.
This, the third, is styled as a companion to the previous two, with 50 poker problems for you to work through taken from real life and online tournaments, and which concentrates mainly on one thing: improving post-flop play.
When should you bet? When should you check? What can you deduce from opponents’ actions?
Answers to all these questions are revealed as you work through the quiz-style book building up a score for a final grade.
The true genius of the book lies in the way Harrington dissects a hand to show you the correct play, even if in that particular instance it doesn’t pay off. And when a bad hand triumphs he shows you why it was a bad play – it’s all about maths and pay-offs, not speculative plays.
Most importantly the book teaches you how to think through a hand with precision rather than just stabbing at the pot in the hope you’re ahead.
Its aim is to make you think like a worldclass player and put your opponent on a hand. Buy it, read it and you’ll be a better player – it really is as simple as that.