Poker River Rat
There are typically four different types of poker player:
- Loose-Passive
- Loose-Aggressive
- Tight-Passive
- Tight-Aggressive
June 2: Uptown Lexington Bike Night to benefit the River Rats July 10 & 11: Annual River Rat’s Poker Run August 15: Clean Sweep Poker Run on Rowan County side of High Rock Lake September 12: Casino Night September 19: Clean Sweep on High Rock Lake September 26: Annual River Rat’s Golf Tournament. What is River Rat in Poker? A river rat is a player who has a history of catching lucky cards on the river to win the pot. Of course, statistically all players will catch the same amount of good river cards in the long run. Created by Roco415 on July 23, 2009. Someone who continually makes their hands on the river and sucks out. That Jim kid sure is a river rat, he chases every draw and always seems to hit. River Rat Motorsports is a dealer of new and pre-owned ATVs, motorcycles, UTVs, Side x Sides and PWC, located in Kingman, Bullhead City and Lake Havasu City, AZ. We carry the latest Yamaha, KTM, Kawasaki, Suzuki, SSR, Arctic Cat, EZ-GO, Textron and CFMOTO models.
Loose means that a player's requirements to put money into the pot are lower than average. For example, a loose player may like to play hands like K3s (suited) preflop in Holdem, and could be seeing anything from 30 to 100% of flops in that game type.
Tight is the opposite. A tight player plays fewer hands per hour than his opponents average. This can result in only seeing anywhere from 10% to 25% of flops in Holdem.
Passive players are those that rarely bet. They are happy to call and fold, but they are not often seen making raises of their own.
Aggressive players on the other hand, are those that raise and reraise significantly more than the average. They may be perfectly willing to reraise you whilst on a flush draw, or whilst holding second pair.
Obviously the degrees of aggressiveness or tightness vary from player to player, but the vast majority will fit quite neatly into these classifications. Coupled with issues like how weak or strong a player your opponent is, you will have a powerful tool to help you decide what your opponent is holding in each situation. Classifying other players is also an extremely important aspect when considering your strategy for a specific table, tournament or hand.
In-Depth Strategies[edit]
There are many different types of poker players. The two broadest categories are those of successful and unsuccessful players. A player who is successful does not just look at what is in his hand and on the board. Players who are unable to read other players or do not make it a point to watch even when they are not in a hand are often unsuccessful as Poker players. Under the category of successful players, a successful player is able to group someone into one of many different categories. The first category is:
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Aggressive: Aggressive players will play almost any starting hand. The cards in their hand may be 2 7 of hearts and clubs and they will play it. They are the players who will contribute to some of your biggest wins and biggest losses because they are very hard to bluff out of a hand. If you are at a rock garden (table where everyone appears afraid of what others have) and one player is betting big every hand or every other hand and winning about every hand it is suggestible that if you have mid-pair you call their bluff at least once, to gain an accurate characterization of their betting patterns and because it is likely you have them beat. If someone is betting it up every hand and constantly winning and mucking it is suggestible to 'look them up' if you think you might have it. These are the players that you don't want to try to bluff, because as bluffers themselves they will often turn the tables on you or look you up.
Passive Aggressive: Passive-Aggressive players are often the most experienced of all players, are able to get a good read on who is a rock and who is aggressive and will not throw their chips away. Passive Aggressive players often call the blind to the flop if their hand seems decent enough (middle cards or high) and will do their fair share of bluffing, but not as much as a player who is purely aggressive. These are the players who will go after you hard and smash into the aggressive players when they get a hand. Often times Passive-Aggressive players will be the big-stack at the table because they rarely call large bets into hands they don't have a good chance of winning and rarely make mistakes. The worst enemy of a Passive-Aggressive player is a 'River Rat'.
River Rat: A River-Rat is often considered the worst poker player at the table. A river rat will usually bet before the flop if they have good cards and upon seeing a flop they don't like they will call ANY bet you throw at them just hoping desperately for that miracle at the end of the river. It is a common misconception among weak poker players that you will have a tougher time making money off of these types of players, when in fact quite the contrary is true. Profit in poker comes when your opponents make mistakes, and River Rats are constantly calling bets when they do not have the odds in their favor.
Rocks: A rock is an extraordinarily tight, patient and reserved player at the table. When they do not get a premium hand pre-flop they won't even call the blinds. When you are involved in a hand with these characters you can almost tell immediately that they have either got two high cards, an ace and a high or middle card, or a pocket pair 8 or higher. These players rarely play hands but when they do they will bet big. Their worst enemy is an aggressive player who might scare them out of a hand. While they will normally go far they won't go as far as most passive-aggressive players or very good aggressive players. River Rats give them a very large chunk of their change because they don't realize that when a rock is betting they have little chance of winning. The worst enemy of these players is themselves. They lose a lot of money to blinds for hands that they don't play.
Passive-Rocks: Passive Rocks are the players who will bet very very rarely. These guys will get a premium hand and will call bets with it, with an almost certain chance to win the hand will only call and will not bet. Passive Rocks are the most dangerous when they are involved in a hand with an aggressive player or a player who misreads them. Thinking that they are 'chasing' cards because they are calling rather than betting, someone may bet an all-in on them and they will call, putting a bad hurt on whoever it is that raises them all in. Passive-Rocks generally do worse than pure rocks.
Slow-Players: These are some of the craftiest players. Slow-Players have unlimited restraint on betting on a good hand in order to allow somebody to think they have the best hand. These players know how to read others and know exactly how to look and bet like they have a bad hand or are chasing. Slow-Players are good at drawing as much money out of a hand as they can, especially when involved with aggressive players. These players are the worst enemy of any aggressive player because of the toughness of getting a read on them. A slow-player may catch three of a kind aces on the flop and check, just to draw another player into betting so that they can either A.) Raise them, B.) continue their play, acting as if they have a weak hand and meekly calling or C.) if they have plenty of chips and want to mislead other players as to how they play they will fold this hand and show the table then saying something like 'I KNOW you have the straight' simply to make other players think that they are rocks or easy to get out of a hand and therefore making it easier for them to bluff.
The Perfect Player This player can read you by your actions, they know exactly what kind of hands you play by observing you when they are and are not in hands with you and other players and he knows how you chat or how you bet, etc. when you have a hand, including whether you are notorious for slow-playing or not. This guy will not give any money to rocks because they know if they are in a hand they almost certainly have an advantage over their hand and know when an aggressive player is bluffing and when they truly have a hand. He has elements of a slow-player, playing certain hands to draw money from someone who he knows will fold to a bet, has elements of a passive-aggressive player, betting big when its all river rats and aggressive players sitting around him, and a rock in the sense that he doesn't play bad hands in bad positions or with a 'family table' meaning close to everyone at the table is in the hand. This player has elements of every class in them. These are the players you should fear. It is hard to predict the betting pattern of these players because it is modified depending on who they are in a hand with. The best way to learn how they play is to watch every single hand they are in and see how they act for each and every person, including yourself, because it will be modified when they are playing against you. You may even want to call some of their small bets just to learn what type of hand he will bet certain ways against you with so that he does not have a chance to muck his hand and leave you in the dark about them.
A flop type game, such as Hold’em or Omaha uses community cards. Community cards are cards which the dealer places face up in the center on the table, and all players share. In a typical flop game there are five community cards in total. These are split into three segments, and the delivery of each segment is separated by a round of betting. Each segment is independently named and has its own position between the betting rounds. The first segment of community cards is delivered after the first betting round. It consists of three cards and is called “the flop.” The second and third segments are a single card each and are called “the turn” and ‘the river,” respectively.
The “river” is also the terminology used for the final card in a stud game, but the context of its usage is slightly different. In a flop game, community cards are used, causing everybody to share the same river card. It is delivered face up to the center of the table by the dealer. This does not happen in a stud game. In a stud game, community cards are not used (except in extremely rare occasions when the dealer runs out of cards in an eight handed game.) Instead, each player is dealt their own series of cards. Some of the cards are dealt face up and some are dealt face down, and from these each player must form their best poker hand. Each player receives their own river card, which just as it is in a flop game, is delivered just prior to the final round of betting. In a stud game, the river card is typically dealt face down, so that it is concealed from the other players in the game, and is known only to the recipient.
Regardless of whether you are discussing a flop game or a stud game, the river is always the final card dealt. Over the course of a poker hand, the lead can change hands several times. The river card is so significant because it represents the last opportunity for players to improve their hands, and if the hand goes to showdown, it determines who the winner of the pot will be. Because of this, players tend to have a special, often superstitious relationship with the river card.
A “river rat” is a player who seems to be constantly making their hand on the river. In order to catch up on the river, you need to have been behind earlier in the hand. Players who have a tendency to chase are frequently behind, and are therefore more likely than tighter player to be in a position to catch up on the river. This is why players who chase are often thought of as river rats. Of course, they are only seen as river rats as long as they are running good and hitting on the river. When they are chasing and missing, they are more commonly seen as fish or donkeys.
If you hit a card on the river, it can be said that you have “rivered” that card. For instance, if the river card completes your flush, it can be said that you’ve “rivered” a flush. Similarly, if you have the best hand on the turn, and lose to another player on the final card, it is called, “getting rivered.” Getting rivered can be a brutal experience, especially if you hold a very strong hand, if your opponents hold very few outs, of if the pot is very large. If you repeatedly get rivered while you are holding favorites, it is referred to as “running bad,” or “running badly.” Conversely, if your hands are holding up on the river, it is referred to as “running good.”
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Quite often, when a player gets rivered, they were a substantial favorite on the turn. This can be a jarring experience, to go from anticipating winning a pot to realizing you’ve lost it. It is an experience that will inspire certain players to complain vociferously. This is not an admirable quality, and most players regard excessive complaining about the river card as obnoxious. In addition to being annoying, complaining about and feeling victimized by river cards is not a healthy psychological approach to the game. It is much better to accept that sometimes you will get rivered, and to be at peace with it when it happens. If you can accept unfortunate events when they happen in a poker game, it can keep you from going on tilt, which can translate into more profit for you over the long run. And the other players in the game will appreciate not having to listen to the music every time that you are snapped off at the river.
Usage: Snapped Off On The River, River Showdown, Rivered It, He Keeps Rivering Me
Previous Poker Term: Ring Game