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Author Topic: Check or Bet  (Read 3636 times)
daviebhoy
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« Reply #15 on: December 02, 2008, 12:58:41 PM »

Maybe, but 'plays 1 hand in 30' is usually a fugure of speech, and if he is playing only AA/KK we should hunt him and sit with him at every opportunity!

I do. His blind is there for stealing once a round as he never defends them without a hand and I have to call here with pocket trying to hit a set and stack him off. I have played with him enough now to know he isn't committing £80 here with AA, KK or AK and a flush draw though. Against most players I re-raise that flop every day of the week so I understand the comments being made. I am pretty sure he has put me on some kind of a flush draw hence the check on the river when the diamond hit. Re-raising earlier would have got all the money in here and I wasn't sure I wanted to do that.

The outcome anyway was :

Hero: calls £25.50
----- SHOW DOWN -----
4_king_l: shows [ ] (A Full House, Queens full of Eights)
Hero: mucks hand  [ three clubs]
4_king_l collected £87.50 from Main pot

I guess I am supposed to stack off here.
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Longy
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« Reply #16 on: December 02, 2008, 01:04:40 PM »

Tbh you didn't need to post results, i think we saw that coming.

I think he puts more than the £15 you invited him to postflop with aa/kk and akdd. Stay away from results orientated thinking imo.
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daviebhoy
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« Reply #17 on: December 02, 2008, 01:31:12 PM »

Stay away from results orientated thinking imo.

Can you elaborate on this a bit longy ? Do you think it's unwise generally to call pre-flop in this situation with 33 looking to hit a set when you are both deep stacked  and you are pretty sure you're up against a premium hand ? Or do you just think it is unwise for me to call in this situation :-)

dn
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Longy
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« Reply #18 on: December 02, 2008, 01:43:30 PM »

Stay away from results orientated thinking imo.

Can you elaborate on this a bit longy ? Do you think it's unwise generally to call pre-flop in this situation with 33 looking to hit a set when you are both deep stacked  and you are pretty sure you're up against a premium hand ? Or do you just think it is unwise for me to call in this situation :-)

dn

When i say results orientated, you appear a touch to me, in both recent hands justifiying the play of the hand by the result of the hand. Whereas when he shows up any hand that isn't qq here, you would look at the hand differently.

The preflop call is fine as long as you set out to play the hand, in a different way to what you did in the end. You managed to only get just over £15 in post flop from £2.50 given your line, if he flats the river and shows you an overpair. Which means your call pre is bad cos you are not getting the correct implied odds to set up here.

Whereas if you happy to stick your stack in (or pretty close to it) when you bink the 3, you are getting correct implied odds pre. I am of course assuming you aren't going to bluff this nit off his premium hand postflop.
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daviebhoy
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« Reply #19 on: December 02, 2008, 02:00:24 PM »

When i say results orientated, you appear a touch to me, in both recent hands justifiying the play of the hand by the result of the hand.

I really hope I'm not doing that Longy. I admit the first one I posted was a terrible call despite winning the hand and I agree with your comments about how I played this hand. But my concern was really particular opponent having seen him only ever play big hands I'm expecting him to pot it on the flop and then I can come over the top of him or for a check or a big bet on the turn. I just thought his bets on the flop and turn stank and at no stage am I sure I am ahead to try and get it all in. My questions on this hand really are can I check the river and was the call on the end terrible? The consensus seems to be that I am supposed to go broke here and that I am sacrificing equity by not trying to get it all in which I suspect is generally correct.
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mondatoo
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« Reply #20 on: December 02, 2008, 02:13:21 PM »

It didn't seem to me that he was being results orientated as i was glad to see that despite him winning the AQ hand he had stated that he was ooking to stop making mistakes like this and acknowledged that he should've folded

This is just a cooler but ignoring that a few pointers i would take out the hand

Firstly do you always just limp with baby/smaller pairs in ep i'm personally not keen on this i think you should still be rasing it otherwise it's kind of polarising your limp range utg and makes it easier for better players to put you on that type of hand

Then you've hit your set which was the objective of calling the raise,obv we put no more in the pot if we don't hit it.Now you've said you think he has AA/KK most time here so if this is the case we are stacking him on the flop so you have to raise looking to get it in,it's totatally irrelevant that it turns out he had QQ you should be looking to get all the money in on the flop as there are scare cards which will slow him down on the turn.

Also the fact you flat call it both streets, if the only other had you put him on is AK and its diamonds the way you've played it he probably won't stack of with the flush 

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daviebhoy
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« Reply #21 on: December 02, 2008, 02:41:40 PM »

Firstly do you always just limp with baby/smaller pairs in ep i'm personally not keen on this i think you should still be rasing it otherwise it's kind of polarising your limp range utg and makes it easier for better players to put you on that type of hand

I am pretty sure my opponent put me on 2 diamonds. He would have got all the money in if he thought I had 33 and the Check-Raise on river pretty much confirms this. 6 handed I am looking to take the blinds a lot and take pots away in position after the flop so I am raising an unopened pot a lot with a very wide range of hands. I find a lot of people at this level either play too tight and give up their blinds very easiliy or play too loose and are in almost every hand with ATC. Both lose their money just at different speeds. Depending on who is at the table depends on how often I am raising here. When I do raise I am happy to be called by blinds and can play the hand post-flop in position.

In first/second position I'm not raising so much except with proper hands and balancing this by bluffing with some raises with suited connectors utg. I am also limping with strong hands UTG including AK. I don't really want to raise with 33 UTG too often as I am showing down a lot of different hands when they hit so I am likely to be re-raised a lot and be OOP in addition to decreasing my implied odds so I may have to throw the hand away here quite a lot depending on the action behind me and the stack sizes of opponents involved. If I am raiseing a lot then I need to limp sometimes too and this seems like a good spot to me.
« Last Edit: December 02, 2008, 03:05:42 PM by daviebhoy » Logged
kinboshi
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« Reply #22 on: December 02, 2008, 03:44:42 PM »

It didn't seem to me that he was being results orientated as i was glad to see that despite him winning the AQ hand he had stated that he was ooking to stop making mistakes like this and acknowledged that he should've folded

This is just a cooler but ignoring that a few pointers i would take out the hand

Firstly do you always just limp with baby/smaller pairs in ep i'm personally not keen on this i think you should still be rasing it otherwise it's kind of polarising your limp range utg and makes it easier for better players to put you on that type of hand

Then you've hit your set which was the objective of calling the raise,obv we put no more in the pot if we don't hit it.Now you've said you think he has AA/KK most time here so if this is the case we are stacking him on the flop so you have to raise looking to get it in,it's totatally irrelevant that it turns out he had QQ you should be looking to get all the money in on the flop as there are scare cards which will slow him down on the turn.

Also the fact you flat call it both streets, if the only other had you put him on is AK and its diamonds the way you've played it he probably won't stack of with the flush 



If you limp with your monsters as well (not all the time, but some of the time), then it's fine to limp with small pairs here as well - imo.
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« Reply #23 on: December 02, 2008, 04:09:33 PM »

I hate open limping in any form.
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daviebhoy
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« Reply #24 on: December 02, 2008, 04:26:09 PM »

I hate open limping in any form.

What happens when you raise 3BB and short stack with 32BB re-pops it to 9BB with Aces and everyone else folds ?

I try to limit my limps to about 20% of the time and raise 80% overall. When I do limp, I do it on the button in position with any hand and with AT-AK or small pairs in early position. I have to be pretty confident someone will put in a raise to limp here with a big pair but I will do that aswell sometimes.

Also, if the table has lots of short stacks then you are limiting your implied odds against these hands so I prefer to see cheap flops against these opponents and will limp more.

Another reason is you don't want blinds to think you are constantly stealing their blinds because they are playing too tight so it's worth letting them see a flop every so often and then making a continuation bet on the flop when they miss the majority of the time and then go back to taking their blinds away by raising when they don't have a hand for the next few rounds. You can even get lucky here and flop a big hand cheaply.

For these reasons alone any reasonable strategy has to include open limping.
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GreekStein
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« Reply #25 on: December 02, 2008, 05:53:44 PM »

I hate open limping in any form.

What happens when you raise 3BB and short stack with 32BB re-pops it to 9BB with Aces and everyone else folds ?

I try to limit my limps to about 20% of the time and raise 80% overall. When I do limp, I do it on the button in position with any hand and with AT-AK or small pairs in early position. I have to be pretty confident someone will put in a raise to limp here with a big pair but I will do that aswell sometimes.

Also, if the table has lots of short stacks then you are limiting your implied odds against these hands so I prefer to see cheap flops against these opponents and will limp more.

Another reason is you don't want blinds to think you are constantly stealing their blinds because they are playing too tight so it's worth letting them see a flop every so often and then making a continuation bet on the flop when they miss the majority of the time and then go back to taking their blinds away by raising when they don't have a hand for the next few rounds. You can even get lucky here and flop a big hand cheaply.

For these reasons alone any reasonable strategy has to include open limping.

Subscribe to cardrunners mate. A lot of the stuff you are saying here is kinda flawed. I'm not qualified to criticise or advise the same way some of the guys are on here but you're taking a one dimensional view of a lot of things.

Whilst people might think that you are stealing a lot of their blinds and occasionally play back at you, have you not considered that the looser your image, the more likely you are to get paid off when you do make hands?

I used to play the 25p50p cash on Crypto many of the regs on there aren't terribly prone to making plays at you for raising a lot or 3-betting you like they do at 1/2 and above. They genuinely played quite solid abc so if I was you I would just adjust what you do pre flop a lot more.

Will post a few other comments when I get home this evening, currently trying to tie things up at work! (unsuccessfully)
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« Reply #26 on: December 02, 2008, 09:53:22 PM »

This thread is sick and put me on tilt for the next 46 seconds
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mondatoo
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« Reply #27 on: December 02, 2008, 10:37:46 PM »

This thread is sick and put me on tilt for the next 46 seconds

 
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bolt pp
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« Reply #28 on: December 02, 2008, 10:39:18 PM »

This thread is sick and put me on tilt for the next 46 seconds

 

1:28 seconds then
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NoflopsHomer
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« Reply #29 on: December 03, 2008, 12:08:13 AM »

I hate open limping in any form.

What happens when you raise 3BB and short stack with 32BB re-pops it to 9BB with Aces and everyone else folds ?

I try to limit my limps to about 20% of the time and raise 80% overall. When I do limp, I do it on the button in position with any hand and with AT-AK or small pairs in early position. I have to be pretty confident someone will put in a raise to limp here with a big pair but I will do that aswell sometimes.

Also, if the table has lots of short stacks then you are limiting your implied odds against these hands so I prefer to see cheap flops against these opponents and will limp more.

Another reason is you don't want blinds to think you are constantly stealing their blinds because they are playing too tight so it's worth letting them see a flop every so often and then making a continuation bet on the flop when they miss the majority of the time and then go back to taking their blinds away by raising when they don't have a hand for the next few rounds. You can even get lucky here and flop a big hand cheaply.

For these reasons alone any reasonable strategy has to include open limping.

1) I don't really see the point behind your example. You'll have to elaborate more.

2) Open limping the button is bad. Real bad. Why limp when most of the time you can win the blinds/antes without letting them see the flop. They're OOP too and will check/fold much of the time. I'd rather raise or pass than limp in early position, the point being I'm the aggressor or I'm protecting my stack. Limp-calling is so horrible because you're going to be OOP and then check/fold many flops.

3) You don't really have implied odds vs short stacks DUCY?

Conclusion:

Don't drink, don't smoke, don't do drugs and don't open-limp kids. (Do the first three if you want to look cool though)
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