1-2 NL Live.
Stacks around $150
Hero 3 off the button (low jack) with 7d-8d
Two limpers, hero limps
Highjack limps
Button raises to $10
One limper calls
Hero calls
Highjack calls
Four players, $43
Flop Jc-5d-3c
Limper checks, hero checks
Button bets $30
Everyone folds
Two limpers, hero limps
Highjack limps
Button raises to $10
One limper calls
Hero calls
Highjack calls
Four players, $43
Flop Jc-5d-3c
Limper checks, hero checks
Button bets $30
Everyone folds
Same hand
Hero raises to $10
Button calls, Limper calls
Three players, $33
Flop Jc-5d-3c
Checks to hero who bets $15
Button calls, limper folds
Heads up, $66
Turn Qh
Hero bets $60
Villain folds
The second hand is an example of situations I faced on my
last trip to Las Vegas over and over.
I’ve been transitioning to no limit and spread limits games and I had a
very fruitful meeting with my coach, Ed Miller. Ed emphasized to me that most consistent and disastrous
mistake players will make against you is that they play too many hands. When players have junk hands they
rarely hit big and can play aggressively.
A much more likely case is hitting the flop lightly and having two
options: 1.) Call down or 2.) Fold.
During the Moneymaker era when fish schooled into casinos to
play poker, calling down was the option of choice. Chips rained from heaven in those days and it was easy to
make truckloads of money by waiting around for big hands and getting paid
off. The more common option these
days is to fold. Regular players
have learned that making big calls with marginal holdings is generally not the
way to make money in poker. They
would never make a pot sized bet on the river without having very close to the
nuts and assume others would play this way as well. The problem nearly all regular players have is that because
they play too many hands they are caught too often with marginal hands. Hands like unsuited connectors, suited
rags and ace-rag typically flop middle or bottom pair, or top pair with a weak
kicker. These hands almost always
don’t improve and when faced with a big bet on the turn players fold.
The trick is to realize the fundamental error that low
stakes players make (playing too many hands) and the two options they have with
these weak holdings (calling or folding).
When you are lucky enough to find a game where opponents are calling
down with weak hands the game becomes as simple as the halcyon days of
Moneymaker: sit back, make hands
and press for value.
Much more common is to find tables full of regular players
who have become very good at not paying off big value hands. The flop in the hand above is a perfect
example. Regular players recognize
that single high card and very dry boards polarize an opponent’s range. Either the leading bettor is very
strong or bluffing. When a big bet
comes on the later streets these players figure they have gotten their answer
and fold their weak middle pair, gut shot or overcards.
Exploiting this tendency of players folding too much is tantamount
to out-and-out thievery. Ed talks
about the fact that advanced players make most of their money by out playing
opponents on the later streets.
Most players play pre-flop and on the flop well so my goal is to build
pots on these first two streets to steal on the later streets. The question I am asking myself when
dealt a hand I’m going to play is “How can I set up this hand so that a big
turn bet, designed to steal this pot, is nearly automatic?” The two biggest factors in this
question are hand selection that yields good equity and solid board texture
reading.
In the above hands 7-8 suited is excellent not because it
flops monsters but because it yields such good equity by the river. The flop completely missed this
hand but so many cards can come on the turn (any diamond, 10 , 6, 7 or 8) that
improve my hand. My flop bet isn’t
just a naked bluff that I’m plowing in.
I have equity. So many
times my opponents will have weak hands but in the few cases when the do flop a
set or two pair, I have a ton of ways to get there by the river. That can never happen if I play hands
like A-rag.
Ed has said it a million times, the bread and butter of
advanced players is solid board texture reading. Had the flop been Q-K-10 there would have been no reason to continue
betting at this pot because I have no equity and my opponents aren’t going
anywhere. Another reliable aspect
of regular players is that they don’t bluff enough. If I check the flop and they come out with a bet on the turn
I can be confident they have a hand enough of the time to make my fold a good
decision.
When considering board texture, the key card is the
turn. Most flops come down loosely
connected with a single or two high cards. Opponents will most often have gut shots, three or four card
flush draws, middle or bottom pair or top pair with a weak kicker. The Qh in the above example is a good
brick card because it doesn’t complete any draws and it’s a good scare card to
what I am representing. Even if
the card does hit my opponent who has maybe Qc-6h it would be very hard for him
to continue when faced with big bets on the turn and river. My 7-8 with this board is good enough
that even bad cards like a 4 or 6 that improve my opponents hands, also improve
mine. Pretty much only the board
pairing is what I would need to worry about (making trips and full houses),
cards that improve my opponents but not me and may lead to me drawing dead or
very slim.
Essentially what Ed is asking me to do is turn my game
upside down. What I’ve been doing up
till now is waiting for hands with big pot equity, raising preflop and praying
to hit the board. Usually, on
missing the flop I would c-bet, praying to improve on the turn but rarely
putting a big bet out unless I did.
Now, I am happy to see a brick on the turn and am less concerned about
the two cards I am playing. I only
know that card didn’t improve my opponent’s hand and they will consistently
fold to a big bet. Occasionally an
opponent will turn up with a slow played set or two pair and put in a big
raise. Because they don’t bluff
enough, I can be confident in my fold.
Even if they show the bluff it still doesn’t change my answer because
they are still folding the turn 70-80% of the time. My turn bets are a profit lock in this scenario.