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Ace Speaks - Playing the player
by Rolf Slotboom
Most poker literature is aimed at limit play, how to play a specific hand in
a specific situation. In pot-limit, it is not so much the hand you play that
is important- it is much more how you play the hand from the flop onward
(note the difference). Because in limit a large percentage of the pots ends
in a showdown, you will simply need a good starting hand to have a decent chance
to win. In pot-limit, this is not necessarily the case. For a lot of good pot-limit
players it is often more important who they are up against than the hand they
are holding. To be more specific: in pot-limit, good players can often win against
weak, predictable players almost irrespective of their own hand, and they try
to do everything they can to get involved with these players as often as possible.
(That said, I am considered to be one of the tightest "good" pot-limit
players around, and I hardly ever enter a pot without a good starting hand,
even against relatively weak opposition. Still, this doesn't take away the importance
of the strategies I'm going to share with you today). In this article, I will
discuss a situation where a top professional is not playing according to the
strength of his own hand, but where he is playing the player. He is making
his decisions based on the cards his opponent probably holds, or better: on
the cards his opponent does not hold. I will share with you some of the
thought processes that may guide the pro's decisions at the different stages
in the hand.
The situation / plays / actions:
A pot-limit Omaha game, buy-in $500, blinds $10-10, no rake (you are paying
time collection). You (the pro) are on the button with a very weak Omaha hand,
Ah 6s 5s 4d, and have the biggest stack on the table. A weak player in middle
position, playing a $800 stack, has called. What makes him weak is not that
he plays bad starting hands (quite the contrary in fact, since this player needs
a fairly good hand to enter a pot), but that he doesn't play well after the
flop: he plays in predictable patterns and is easy to read, as his betting actions
always represent the exact hand he holds. All other players fold, and it's up
to you. What do you do?
Professional player's thoughts:
Gee, this hand is really horrible, and it can never be played on the basis
of hand strength alone. The player in mid position almost certainly holds
a better hand than I do, most likely some sort of high card / big pair hand.
Normally I would throw away a hand like this almost every time, even on the
button. However, if I raise and I can get the pot heads up between me and
the caller, then I might be in a profitable situation even with the poor hand
I hold. I will be in position, heads up against a predictable player, who
is easy to read and also easy to bluff, which means that I almost certainly
have a positive expectation here.
You decide to raise to $30, your standard raise in this game, the blinds fold
and you're heads up against the caller in mid position (just as planned). The
flop comes Qh 9d 3h. Your opponent bets into you for the size of the pot, $80.
What do you do?
Professional player's thoughts:
I can never win this pot on the basis of the strength of my hand. My opponent
almost certainly holds Q9, 33, 99 or QQ, as he almost always has a good made
hand when he comes out betting; he doesn't like to bet his draws as a semi-bluff,
for example. In the past I have always won the big pots against him, and there's
no doubt he fears and respects my play- which has caused him to play even
more predictably against me. Therefore, the most likely scenario is that he
simply wants to win this pot right away with a hand that he thinks is probably
good now. He doesn't want to fight, he just wants me out, as he fears I might
outdraw him on the turn or river. Even though it is possible he has a flush
draw in addition to his made hand, I hold the ace of hearts, the nut-flush
blocker. It is unlikely he will want to risk his entire stack calling me down
if a third heart comes on the turn. Plus, from his perspective: if I call
his flop bet, taking into account my preflop raise, he will figure me for
precisely the nut flush draw (or, less likely, a straight draw). This means
that if a third heart comes, I will almost certainly be able to bluff him
out of the pot. If a straight card (king, jack, ten, eight) comes, I will
let my opponent's betting actions dictate my own course of action: if he checks
or bets small -and therefore doesn't have the straight- I just KNOW that I
can bet him off his hand, either on the turn or river.
You call the $80. The turn is the deuce of spades, as much a blank as your
opponent could have hoped for. Once again, he bets the pot ($240). What do you
do?
Professional player's thoughts:
Even though this is not the card I had initially hoped for, it is still
a great help for my hand. I have created quite a few nut outs with this deuce,
and I will have my opponent in deep trouble on the last betting round. My
opponent still has $470 left and will almost certainly make the wrong decision
on the river if I call now. From his perspective, I am in there with the nut
flush draw or a straight draw if I call his turn bet- and probably both. This
means that if a club, a king, a jack, a ten or an eight comes up he will almost
certainly check, and he will have a hard time calling me on the river for
all his money, when I put him to the test. What's more, the cards that look
like blanks to him, actually give me the nuts. With a four, five or six he
will most likely bet all-in (so I can simply call with the nuts), and with
an ace he will most likely check-and-call (when I bet the nuts). Either way,
I will probably get his entire stack when I improve and make him lay down
the best hand when I don't- now, in pot limit things don't get better than
this. There are only three river cards that don't change anything (the three
sevens), in addition to the cards that pair the board of course (in which
case I will simply give it up). There are over 30 river cards left in the
deck that can force him to make a bad decision- either by folding the best
hand or by calling with the worst hand. Therefore, folding or raising are
no options here. Folding is no option because the situation is just too favorable,
raising because I cannot make my opponent lay down his hand (because it's
pretty obvious I would be semi-bluffing) AND because I will give away my good
prospects for the river. In this case, calling is clearly best.
Some final words.
The thought processes described here are the way the excellent players, the
top professionals, think when playing pot-limit: they play YOUR cards, rather
than their own. (These thought processes also show that top players always think
at least one or two steps ahead. They know exactly what the possibilities for
the next card are and how they can, or should, adjust to each and every one
of these possibilities. This should be second nature for any serious player,
even in limit poker). Please keep in mind that I don't consider myself to be
in this category of really excellent players, playing on an incredibly high
level. I still think that playing from a solid basis -good starting hands- is
the way to go in almost all poker games, PLO being no exception. (Also, it should
be clear that for people who have just stepped up to pot-limit poker, trying
to use the strategies I have described here is not something I would recommend).
That said, playing ABC tight in pot-limit will make you easy to read, and if
you're playing regularly against good or even excellent players, they will easily
take your money by representing hands that you cannot hold (based on your starting
requirements and / or the way the betting went), on the assumption that you
cannot call. And if you try to counter their strategy by simply check-calling
all the time, they will pick up on this faster than you can imagine, and you
are going to lose a lot of money; in pot-limit, there is no place for people
who check-call on a regular basis. The advanced plays I have touched upon today
need to be understood very well in order to be a successful pot-limit player.
Without at least a basic understanding of the thought processes I have discussed
here, you will stand no chance playing pot-limit. Take care, you guys, and good
luck.
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