Archive for March, 2007

Flop Play: Overpair

An overpair is your pocket pair being higher than the higherst card on the flop. I love overpairs because they are tougher for your opponents to put you on.

Bet out or raise with this hand to isolate you opponents and protect your hand. Its better to take the pot now because unless you hold AA, theres always the chance of a higher card to your pocket pair springing up.

Now and then you should check raise with this hand if you think your opponent is going to bet out the flop.

If you get raised, the best play would be to re-raise. Most players bet out with top pair (and so they should) so you should raise or re-raise to gain information and isolate play to just one opponent.

V

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Flop Play: Two-pair

The tips here refer to when you have paired both your hole cards. They do not relate to playing a pocket pair and the board pairing up.

Do not slow play two pair. You should be open betting or raising if you can.

If you flop two pair but the board contains two or three same-suited cards (or even connecting cards) you should bet/raise out anyone trying to draw to a better hand. Make your opponents pay to see the next card. Work out the odds they would need to call, and screw them up for them.

Hitting two pair with a weak Ace. If it is a raised pot, you hold A3s and the flop comes down A 9 3, a player holding AK or AQ will usually give you a lot of action. Let them.

V

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Top-pair with Weak Kicker

Also known as TPWK (Top Pair Weak Kicker) or TPCK (Top Pair Crap Kicker)

You should bet out your hand to find out where you are. Checking tells you nothing and gives no information.

In an unraised pot you should bet out and try to win the pot straight away before scare cards hit on the turn or river.

In an un-raised pot make a value bet and try to take the pot immediately. This is especially relevant if your pair is Ten or below, as almost any card on the turn will be a scare card.

More often than not, you should fold if you are raised.

Think about how many other players are fighting for the pot and relate this to the strength of your hand. Is it good enough to beat that many players?

Flush draws and straight draws on the flop will seriously weaken your hand.

Was the flop all paint (picture cards)? If it was, it is likely you are up against two pair, or an opponent with a much better kicker.

Avoid a check-call strategy by either betting out, check-raising or raising.

V

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Top Pair Top Kicker (TPTK)

Most of the time you should value bet on the flop and continue to do so on the turn, as you often have weaker players staying in with weaker kickers or worse hands.

Don’t  get too attached to your hand. A small pocket pair that hits a set on the flop will love to be against someone holding TPTK. Be ready to fold your cards should there be signs of a better hand.

Watch out for overpairs especially in raised pots. Keep an eye on what cards your opponent is playing.

Avoid a check-call strategy by either betting out, check-raising or raising.

In order to protect your hand against draws be ready to raise if someone bets.

V

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Duff’s Mum

A great email from Duff’s Mum of all people.

“Take care, and dont lose all your money this evening. Love mum xxxx”

If that’s not a tip of the day, I don’t know what is!

Maybe she’s an advocate of tight aggressive play…

V

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Don’t Be Afraid to Bet Big

Don’t be afraid to make a big pot-sized bet on the river with a monster just because you’re afraid your opponent won’t call. The bigger the bet, the less often your opponent has to call for the bet to be profitable.

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Don’t Say A Damn Word

So I’m sat on the button in a £40 freezeout at Sovereign poker. Blinds are 50/100, Ive got about 4,000 in chips. There are 3 limpers coming into play. I look down and see JJ.

Theres all sorts of characters involved and I really did not fancy myself getting pot comitted with JJ so I elect to limp along with everyone else in an attempt to fly under the radar and see a flop. You could argue that I should have raised here – but I didnt. The small blind calls as well.

The board comes down a ten high rainbow. Lovely. Theres two checks and an opening bet of 100 into a 500 pot. What a knob. What was he hoping to achieve with that bet? Ive got an overpair and so I crank it up to 500 total to play.

The SB calls and the rest of the table folds. Turn card is a Queen. Ouch. OK, so there’s now an overcard to my Jacks. Not to worry, seeing as the SB called my raise on the flop, I’ve got to put him on top pair with a half-decent kicker. Is his kicker a Queen?

He checks to me. A great trap move if he has 2 pair. But I don’t think he does have it. This guy has been playing all kinds of wild cards tonight. Its POSSIBLE he has QT but that would be one for the poker Gods to decide.

I feel comfortable my Jacks are in front and decide to put this guy’s hand to the test. Looking at his stack I ask how much he has left for two reasons. To appear strong as though I am prepared to go all in against him, and secondly to look for tells. I wanted to see if his hand was shaking, if he licked his lips, if he smiled, anything that would let me know how strong his hand was.

The reply was “A little over 3,000″. I thought a bit more and decided to bet half of his stack; 1,500 into a 1,600 pot. As always, I put out my bet into the middle of the table, rested my cheek on the palm of my hand, put my head down and stared at the table cloth.

What the hell this guy did next I don’t know. He took an age and a half to decide what to do. He looked at his cards, ruffled his chips, then started to ask me all kinds of questions. “What have you got? Two pair? Can you beat a pair of tens? If I fold, will you show me your cards?” it just didn’t stop.

If ever you find yourself in this situation – SAY NOTHING. Not a sausage. This guy was clearly looking for tells. Either that or he wanted the table to know he looks for tells in order to give his table image a bit more ‘danger’. Stpidly I decided to respond to his last question and said “If you want to see my cards, it will cost you 1,500″.

The manager of the club in the end had to come over and give this guy a 1 minute time limit to make a decision. I don’t know how long this hand went on for but it must have been a while. Eventually he folded, and I won the pot. I wasn’t really worried about saying something or not as I think he would have folded regardless.

Again, later on in the tourney, blinds up to 200/400 I’m on the SB with about 3,000 and am dealt ATs. The table folds round to me and I decide to lump all in and hope to either steal the blind, or double up. This time I put my bet in, placed my cheek in my palm and did not move at all. Again this guy fired all sorts of questions at me but I did not say a word. After a minute or two, he folded and I took his blind.

Nothing about this guy said to me he was a dangerous player. He was seeing far too many flops and even playing blind at one point. His recklessness went on to knocking out BazzyG. When he faced an all in from BazzyG, he called and turned over 64u which seemed to be well behind BazzyG’s A7u. Somehow he made a straight and that was BazzyG gone.

He went on to obtain a 2nd place finish but his game was far too reckless to be consistent. I really do not think he was actively looking for tells. It was more of a showpeice to the rest of the table to say “Hey, look at me, I look for tells! Be careful because I can spot tells. I am a dangerous player”. Twat. Maybe he’s seen someone on TV do it.

The moral of this story, if indeed there is one, is do not say ANYTHING at the table. Put your bet in and if you are on a bluff, a steal, a draw, or a monster then find a position that you are comforatble with and sit in that position and do not move. Do not make eye contact, do not speak, do not do anything. Make sure that your pose is comfortable and relaxed because you never know how long you might be sitting there for. Make sure you sit in EXACTLY the same way each time so that you can never give off anything that might be a tell.

For me, I feel most comforatble hiding under the brim of a baseball cap and shades with my left hand on my cards, and my right elbow resting on the table rim-cushion with my palm supporting my chin. This also helps to cover a good half of my face as well.

Always keep your chips out in front of you in an easy-to-read stack. If someone asks how much you have left, make it easy for the dealer to count. Say nothing to this quesiton – the dealer is obliged to count your chips for you in order to get the game progressing.
Keep quiet, and keep your moves the same. Give nothng away and your opponents will have a much harder time trying to read you.

V

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Ladies Are Dangerous

Pocket Queens are a great pre-flop starting hand but definitely not worth slow playing in the least. If you get dealt QQ then you have to raise it up to isolate against one or two players.

There is a 41% chance that an overcard will hit the flop. Even if an Ace or King doesn’t appear on the flop, there’s then a 59% chance you will be outdrawn by the river.

Got QQ? Play them hard and make your opponents pay to see every single community card.

V

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Return To Sovereigns

Duff, Vster  and possibly BazzyG are making another welcome trip back to the Sovereigns card room in North Camp tonight for the semi-freezeout tournament. So far as a team we have a record of three visits and three cashes. Hopefully we will continue that record again tonight. If you do come down and see us play, the first person to come up to us and mention “StoneColdBluff Blog” will earn themselves a beer. Just make sure you do it when it’s Duff’s round!

V

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Hand Analysis

Ok, so Duff sends me these two hand histories from his Virgin Poker account and asks the following questions: Was it a good play of the player and the board in #1 and good laydown in #2?

#1 and #2 are below. You decide.

0.25/0.50 Texas Hold’em (FL)
Table TH 192 (Real/Cash Game)
Seat 1: luisfr (79.74)
Seat 2: revuelta25 (19.19)
Seat 3: peponet (21.46)
Seat 4: suborn (0.00)
Seat 5: JOJO234 (9.13)
Seat 7: peterhole1 (114.37)
Seat 9: selika82 ( 25.00)
Seat 10: Dimborg (19.37)
Dimborg post SB 0.13
luisfr post BB 0.25
** Deal **
luisfr [N/A, N/A]
revuelta25 [N/A, N/A]
peponet [N/A, N/A]
JOJO234 [N/A, N/A]
peterhole1 [N/A, N/A]
Dimborg [4h, 4s]
*** Bet Round 1 ***
revuelta25 Fold
peponet Fold
JOJO234 Fold
peterhole1 Call 0.25
Dimborg Call 0.25
luisfr Check
*** Flop(Board): *** : [2d, Ah, Jh]
*** Bet Round 2 ***
Dimborg Check
luisfr Check
peterhole1 Check
*** Turn(Board): *** : [2d, Ah, Jh, Ad]
*** Bet Round 3 ***
Dimborg Bet 0.50
luisfr Fold
peterhole1 Call 0.50
*** River(Board): *** : [2d, Ah, Jh, Ad, 7c]
*** Bet Round 4 ***
Dimborg Bet 0.50
peterhole1 Fold
*** Showdown *** : Rake: 0.08 Total Pot: 1.67
Dimborg By default Win:1.67


0.25/0.50 Texas Hold’em (FL)
Table TH 192 (Real/Cash Game)
Seat 1: luisfr (79.27)
Seat 3: peponet (24.92)
Seat 4: suborn (0.00)
Seat 5: JOJO234 (4.63)
Seat 6: canario69 (18.97)
Seat 7: peterhole1 (107.12)
Seat 8: çömezz ( 5.18)
Seat 9: selika82 (25.00)
Seat 10: Dimborg (29.16)
peterhole1 post SB 0.13
çömezz post BB 0.25
** Deal **
luisfr [N/A, N/A]
peponet [N/A, N/A]
JOJO234 [N/A, N/A]
canario69 [N/A, N/A]
peterhole1 [N/A, N/A]
çömezz [N/A, N/A]
Dimborg [As, Js]
*** Bet Round 1 ***
Dimborg Raise to 0.50
luisfr Call 0.50
peponet Call 0.50
JOJO234 Raise to 0.75
canario69 Fold
peterhole1 Fold
çömezz Call 0.75
Dimborg Call 0.75
luisfr Call 0.75
peponet Call 0.75
*** Flop(Board): *** : [Jh, Ks, Ah]
*** Bet Round 2 ***
çömezz Check
Dimborg Bet 0.25
luisfr Fold
peponet Call 0.25
JOJO234 Raise to 0.50
çömezz Fold
Dimborg Fold
peponet Call 0.50
*** Turn(Board): *** : [Jh, Ks, Ah, 5h]
*** Bet Round 3 ***
peponet Check
JOJO234 Bet 0.50
peponet Call 0.50
*** River(Board): *** : [Jh, Ks, Ah, 5h, 7d]
*** Bet Round 4 ***
peponet Check
JOJO234 Bet 0.50
peponet Fold
*** Showdown *** : Rake: 0.30 Total Pot: 5.83
JOJO234 By default Win: 5.83

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