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Originally Posted by Wait Don't Call
Hello!
For the AK hand, preflop immediately gets
weird when the BB flats in. I'm also☀️ grinding micros so I'm not some expert or
anything, but I feel like I tend towards caution in these multiway☀️ spots especially
when I've whiffed. As played just blasting 2/3 multiway seems like a good way to bloat
the pot☀️ up when you aren't necessarily excited about anyone calling you. It's a 3bet
pot, and I feel like the CO☀️ and BB can both have a bunch of random pocket pairs that
continue at least 1 street on this board.☀️ The BB particularly can end up flatting fishy
with all sorts of QTss, JTss, AT, KTss, etc and you're not☀️ happy about any of that
because you know it will never fold to your flop bet.
So I guess conceptually I☀️ just
want to ask what your thought process is when you fire on the flop here. It doesn't
seem you☀️ really planned to bluff a whiffed turn/river, and you're leaving yourself with
only a pot-sized bet left while representing huge☀️ strength by blasting multiway when
you could have checked. The expected follow-through would be a turn jam since that's
what☀️ you've left yourself with, but you're checking instead which doesn't exude
strength from villain's perspective.
On the river, you're jamming one☀️ pair against
sudden OOP river aggression. Those are the bets villains make when they have a great
hand and are☀️ scared you're going to check back lol. That's gotta be bad no matter the
situation. They just aren't bluffing there☀️ very much. You have a great pair, I think
your only consideration is call in that spot. It's just hard☀️ to make up worse hands
that are here at the river with you and leading out like that; you're essentially
☀️ praying that they are bluffing, and in that case a jam is entirely unnecessary.
IMO
check back flop, re-evaluate on any☀️ ace / king / spade whether or not you want the
smoke, make much cheaper river call if they are☀️ passive on the turn and you face that
river bet. If they lead out on the turn, you have the☀️ world's easiest fold multiway. I
think you should have lost 12-35ish bbs this hand instead of your entire stack.
glgl I
☀️ hope you have some awesome sessions coming up. subbed
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Etiquette is the set of rules and manners that dictate behavior, both in personal e
essional Septting. Pokereticatta Is The collection📉 Of noerm a ou Rule In And Aroundthe
oke
{nl}Here is the original version of this "quick poker tips" article, which was a bit more
advanced (originally published July📉 6th, 2024). You will notice some overlap between
these tips and the ones in the updated version.
Tip #1: Tighten up📉 your preflop
game.
Developing a solid preflop game is by far the easiest and fastest way to improve
your game. However,📉 while developing solid preflop ranges is relatively easy to do
having the discipline to stick to them is difficult.
This is📉 especially true if you
play live poker, since the number of hands you play per hour is very low compared📉 to
online. A live player can expect to play 20–25 hands per hour, while a multi-tabling
online player can play📉 400–600 hands per hour.
So, when playing live, stay disciplined
and use your extra dead time to study your opponents’ games.📉 Pay attention to their
tactics and which hands they are showing down. Don't allow yourself to get impatient
and play📉 a hand not worth playing.
Tip #2: Don’t be afraid to pull the trigger with
your bluffs.
Too many players don't have📉 the guts to fire big bluffs, which leaves them
exploitable to attentive opponents who will stop paying them off. In📉 turn, they lose a
lot of value.
You need be the player who rouses fear and anxiety in your opponents by
📉 applying pressure in big pots despite not always having the goods.
Being able to do
this effectively will make you a📉 better and more versatile player overall, and will
increase your win-rate tremendously.
Of course, against weaker opposition you needn’t
bluff as📉 much, since they won't be as attentive to your strategy, know how to exploit
it, or have the discipline to📉 follow through with a counter-strategy. Unless, of
course, you're up against a weak player who folds far too often--the perfect📉 type of
player to bluff relentlessly.
Further reading: Bluffing in Poker Explained (by Doug
Polk)
Tip #3: Don’t change your bankroll management📉 or study habits when things are
going well.
Every professional poker player has a friend who won big money in a📉 large
tournament, then proceeded to blow their winnings in cash games or by registering
tournaments at stakes way higher than📉 their usual.
It’s important to remember that
poker is a game of peaks and troughs. To survive the troughs, you need📉 to act
responsibly during the peaks.
That’s not to say you shouldn’t celebrate, or be proud of
your success. To the📉 contrary, it’s important to savor the results you work hard to
achieve. Just remember that going on a heater doesn’t📉 mean you’ve suddenly become a
poker god, and that downswings are inevitable.
Tip #4: Don’t bloat the pot with
medium-strength hands.
Medium-strength📉 hands should usually be played passively, since
they are rarely the winning hand in big pots. The exception is when📉 they should be
played a bit more aggressively to deny equity.
These types of hands tend to play better
as bluff-catchers,📉 as they protect the weaker hands in your range--like ace high or
weak pairs. This is very helpful because your📉 opponents will not be able to easily
bluff you once you check.
And playing these hands passively is another key to📉 a
well-rounded playing style. It will give you confidence in having good hands in every
scenario, so that you won’t📉 feel the need to make marginal-at-best hero calls with
ace-high.
Tip #5: Game select, game select, game select!
You should always put📉 yourself
in positions where your edge is the largest. This is why it’s important to leave your
ego at the📉 door when playing poker.
It’s much better to be crushing a smaller and/or
weaker game than barely beating a larger and/or📉 tougher game. This is not only because
it’s more profitable, but because it’s less stressful, and playing against weaker
opposition📉 brings lower variance.
Moreover, only barely beating a game might be a sign
that you’re not yet ready to be playing📉 there. And it will still be there when you are
ready.
Tip #6: Lean towards fast playing your strong hands so📉 you can build the pot and
make more money.
It’s a sad sight when a player checks their flopped nut flush📉 three
times, and then has to awkwardly table their monster when their opponent checks back
the river. Slow playing is📉 a mistake common among players who are afraid of chasing
their opponents out of the pot.
In most cases, it’s best📉 to bet your strong hands to
build the pot and protect your equity. That’s not to say you should always📉 bet/raise
your strong hands. You can check your strong hands if:
It’s unlikely that you will be
outdrawn.
There aren’t many scare📉 cards to prevent you from getting paid on later
streets.
Your opponent’s range is heavily weighted toward hands with no showdown
📉 value.
However, when you feel uncertain, just bet. Yes, it’s disappointing when your
opponent folds, but that’s not nearly as disappointing📉 as getting outdrawn or missing
out on potential value.
Further reading: Fast Playing vs Slow Playing Revealed
Tip #7:
Play poker about📉 twice as often as you study poker, but make sure to study!
Studying is
essential to becoming the best poker player📉 you can be, but at the same time, poker is
a game that requires practice. Without practice, we can’t apply📉 what we’ve learned off
the felt, and we’ll begin to lose our innate sense of the game.
Many of the decisions
📉 you make at the poker table are automatic. However, you’ll find that the longer you go
without practicing, the less📉 automatic these decisions become. This, of course, only
gets worse as the decisions become important. For this reason, it’s necessary📉 to
regularly play poker in order to stay sharp.
But it's very important you set aside time
to study. Reading poker📉 articles, playing around with poker tools, and talking over
hands with friends are a few of the many ways you📉 can improve your game away from the
table.
Tip #8: Do you know definitively whether your river bet is a value📉 bet or bluff?
If not, you shouldn’t be betting.
This is a mistake many new players make, but also
some more📉 experienced players.
The situation usually plays out as follows. Their
opponent checks to them on the river and they have a📉 medium strength hand, so they
bet...
...But they weren’t paying close enough attention to how dangerous the board
was, or to📉 how the action went on the turn, or to how their opponent plays in general,
and so they end up📉 losing when their opponent calls the bet and tables a slightly
better hand.
On the river, you should be betting with📉 a polarized range. That is to
say, bet with a range that contains both value bets and bluffs, and check📉 everything in
between.
You do this because there are no more cards to come after the river, and so
there’s no📉 need to protect your equity. Either your hand is the best, or it isn’t. All
you have to do is📉 check and showdown with these medium-strength hands and hope to drag
the pot.
Tip #9: The earlier the street, the more📉 often you should be bluffing because
that’s when the equities run closest.
Poker expert and game theory wizard Matthew Janda
says📉 we should bluff the most on the flop, slightly less on the turn, and the least on
the river. He📉 provides a mathematical proof for this in his advanced holdem strategy
book, Applications of No-Limit Hold’em.
Applications shows that in order📉 to bet with a
balanced range (a range composed of the optimal number of value bets and bluffs) on the
📉 river, we need to bluff less on each progressive street. This is because our bluffs
will have more equity on📉 earlier streets, as well as the opportunity to bluff again on
a later street.
Think about it... When you bluff preflop,📉 on the flop, or on the turn,
you usually do so with a hand that has potential to improve--like 6♠📉 5♠ on J♠ 7♣ 2♠.
So, because we have more equity, we can bluff more often while still remaining
balanced.
Betting📉 with a balanced range is most important on the river, because that’s
when the pot is largest.
If you're unaware of📉 the benefits of betting on the river with
a balanced range, read How You Should Think About Poker (But Probably📉 Don't).
Tip #10:
Think of the early stages of a tournament like a cash game. Don’t worry about survival
and focus📉 on playing solid poker.
There’s a time and a place for stack preservation,
and the beginning of a tournament isn’t it.📉 This is one of the most misunderstood
aspects of advanced tournament poker strategy.
Consider that in order to finish in the
📉 money, you’re going to have to at least double or triple your starting stack (usually
more). So, instead of playing📉 defensively, you should be playing solid and aggressive
poker early on in order to build up a stack for a📉 deep run.
If you find yourself
short-stacked and near the money bubble or a pay jump, then you can start using📉 a more
survival-oriented playing style.
Further reading: How to Build Stacks & Avoid Spewing
Early in a Tournament
Tip #11: Take your📉 time on each decision.
Poker is a complex
game. You have to weigh many factors in order to choose the best📉 path of action.
Bet
sizing aside, the choices themselves are not many: you only need to choose between
checking, calling, betting,📉 raising, or folding. But figuring out which one of these
actions wins the most is seldom obvious.
This is why you📉 should always avoid rushing
when making a decision. An extra moment's thought could provide the crucial insight
needed to make📉 the right choice, and it'll help you keep emotions out of your decision
making. Do this and you'll win more,📉 and learn more while playing.
That said, it's
important to avoid all unnecessary tanking. You should never, for example, take 15
📉 seconds to fold your 9s5c preflop from under the gun. Not only will it piss off your
fellow players, you📉 will actually hurt your own win-rate by reducing the number of
hands played per hour.
Tip #12: Make poker friends.
Building a📉 network of poker playing
friends will advance your understanding of the game. You'll bounce ideas off of each
other, and📉 gain new perspectives on every situation.
The problem with going it alone is
that you're more prone to biases. With another📉 2 or 3 or 4 different poker minds around
you, you can more easily find what's right about your thought📉 processes and thus
eliminate most of the bias.
Another benefit of having poker friends comes into play
when those inevitable downswings📉 occur. Your friends can provide an amazing source of
support during the hard times, and since they are poker players📉 themselves that support
will be all the more helpful. But don’t forget to be there for them to and share📉 your
quick poker tips.
Tip #13: 3-bet more often.
Most players are too passive preflop. To
take advantage of them, you need📉 to 3-bet to build big pots from the get-go with your
premium hands, such as QQ+ and AK.
But in order📉 to get paid with them preflop, you also
need to add in an appropriate amount of bluffs. Sure, 3-betting only📉 premium hands will
work at first, but your opponents will soon catch on and start folding. Bluffs add
depth to📉 your preflop strategy, and help you to build more balanced
range.
Additionally, many low stakes players are not accustomed to playing📉 versus
3-bets. This inexperience leads to many mistakes on their part, and the benefactor of
those mistakes is you--the 3-bettor.
Further📉 reading: This is Why (And How) You Should
3-Bet More Often
Tip #14: Check more when out of position.
There is no📉 harder spot in
poker than playing out of position with a high stack-to-pot ratio. The situation is so
complex that📉 even solvers use almost exclusively mixed strategies which are impossible
to execute as a human.
One trick to bypass this is📉 to play more defensively and check
more of your good-but-not-great hands. This will prevent opponents from stealing pots
from you📉 once you check, since you will no longer be check/folding as often.
Additionally, those hands that you would typically check/fold,📉 but which still have
equity in the pot, will get to realize their equity once your opponents see they cannot
📉 bluff you off so easily.
Tip #15: Avoid bluffing on the river with Ace-high when it
checks down.
I know you love📉 to bluff when it checks down to the river, and I don’t
blame you. It’s such a good spot to📉 fire, since many players clearly signal that
they've given up and won't often defend their ranges when they arrive in📉 that
situation.
That being said, one of my favorite quick poker tips is that you should
remember that Ace-high often still📉 has a decent chance to win the pot even if you check
it down. Turning this hand into a bluff📉 in that spot not only opens you up to be
exploited by loose calls, it also wins less than checking📉 because you are not actually
folding out that many better hands.
What often happens is your opponent holds a worse
high-card📉 hand, which you beat, but which you don't get to see shown down because
you've bet.
So, next time you get📉 into that spot, just check it down!
NOTE: Join the
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