Dear
Mark, At our newly formed Thursday night poker club, I was informed that I
couldnt call a bet, and then raise. I used these words; Ill call
your $20, and raise you another $20. Someone objected and said that I couldnt
do that. I have seen this form of betting many times before, so enlighten me,
am I wrong? Jeb S.
Where you have seen Ill call your twenty,
partner, then after a swig of JD, the gambler utters, Ill raise you another
twenty is most likely at the movies. You wouldnt witness Ill
call you twenty, and raise you another twenty on Travel Channels World
Poker Tour or ESPNs World Series of Poker.
Calling
a bet, then digging back into your chip pile and declaring a raise is called a
string-raise. String-raising in never permitted in the above-mentioned tournaments
nor public poker games.
String-raising allows a player to read the reactions
of anyone already in the pot, or the feedback of active players yet to bet. No
legitimate poker game would allow a player to put some chips in the pot, then
decide to raise if he feels he has a better hand by how he just read his opponent(s).
The hesitation in the betting action is the illegal part of the move.
If
someone makes a string-raise, a dealer will inform the player that a string-raise
has just occurred, and that player will have to withdraw their raise and just
call the bet.
If you want to raise, Jeb, just declare raise,
then go to your stack of chips and count the correct amount of chips needed and
make the wager in one continuous motion.
Heres a tip for string-raises
at a kitchen table game. If someone states string-raise, but another
player says, Its okay by me, let it stand, youll first
want to agree with no string-raising, but youll also want to FOLD. Even
the two pair you might be sitting on is probably DOA.
The player who allowed
the string-raise in all probability has the nuts; an absolute cinch hand.