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View Full Version : Ugly comments in hand histories.


Pokey
11-19-2007, 10:17 PM
As I read through uNL hand histories I see a big range of responses: the good, the bad, and the ugly.

Good responses are thorough, thoughtful, and based firmly in solid math and solid poker skills. "Raise preflop because your hand is probably best and you want to be heads-up and you want cut down on your opponent's implied odds." See? That's a good response because it actually explains what you are thinking and why, because it's based on good poker theory, and because it actually has the potential to educate the reader.

Bad responses are sparse and unhelpful (even if they are correct). "Raise pre" is a bad response. Even if you are 100% correct, nobody would ever gain any new poker insights from your comment. Since the goal of 2+2 is to be a learning community, accuracy is less important than thoroughness. An incorrect answer that is well explained will at least move the discussion forward, even if only to have others explain why that line of thinking is incorrect. A correct four-word answer accomplishes nothing.

Ugly responses are ones that SOUND like good responses but that are based on BAD poker theory. Many times these are often-repeated poker aphorisms which get mentioned so often that people begin to think they are true. These are the comments I want to explore in this post, because the sooner we clean them out of our Bin 'O Responses, the sooner we'll get back to learning good poker.

<font color="blue">You should raise for information.</font>

Information is great -- it's valuable and useful. But it's rarely worth the price if that's the only reason you're betting. Usually we SAY we're betting for information when in reality we're betting for other reasons. We're betting because we think we're ahead, or we're betting because we think the bluff will work often enough to be +EV, or we're betting to disguise our hand, or we're betting to block our opponent from making it too expensive for us to call ("pricing ourselves into the draw") or what have you. Now it's true that villain's response to the bet will give us information, but that's not really WHY we're raising. Think of it this way: if you folded to your opponent on the flop/turn/river and he said to you "hey, give me 20 BBs and I'll let you see my hand," would you do it? THAT'S paying for information, and it's a bad idea.

<font color="blue">Fold -- you've only got 4 BBs invested in the hand.</font>

Wow -- I've always hated this argument. It dove-tails nicely with that old poker aphorism "don't go broke in an unraised pot." Your "investment" in the hand is irrelevant. Whether you've got 200 BBs in the pot or 2 BBs in the pot, your decision of whether to bet/raise, check/call, or fold should be related to your hand, your opponent's range, and the odds. Some people are using this "investment" idea as a proxy for what they really mean: "since the pot was limped your opponent's range is wider than usual, so you need to be extra cautious -- beware of sneaky monsters." Alternatively, some people mean "you've got so much behind (relative to the size of the pot) that your hand REALLY suffers from reverse implied odds." Both of these can be extremely valid points that can mean that folding is best, but they have nothing to do with your "investment" directly. Stop saying the irrelevant and inaccurate versions and say what you mean instead.

<font color="blue">You're definitely ahead of his range, here -- push.</font>

This bit of advice is bad in a very sneaky way, because it tricks you into making a mistake.

Let's say you've got 5/images/graemlins/spade.gif 4/images/graemlins/spade.gif in the BB and you overcall a raise from a tight-passive opponent.

The flop comes T/images/graemlins/diamond.gif 6/images/graemlins/spade.gif 3/images/graemlins/spade.gif. You bet 2/3rds pot, it folds to the rock, and he calls.

The turn is J/images/graemlins/club.gif. You check and the rock checks.

The river is 8/images/graemlins/spade.gif, giving you a low flush. Now, you are undoubtedly ahead of your opponent's range right now, but that does NOT mean that you should bet hard, or even check-raise. Given that your opponent is tight and passive, he's going to fold most of the hands that you already beat, and he's going to call with most of the hands that beat you. He's also going to raise with hands that have you beaten badly. By betting strongly you make a very -EV play, even though you are ahead of your opponent's range right now. Remember -- there's a huge difference between being ahead of his range and being ahead of his range AFTER HE CALLS. Make sure you don't confuse the two.

<font color="blue">If you xxxxxxxx you are turning your hand face-up.</font>

No, you're not. Ever.

If the board is A477A and you push, you are not turning your hand face up. You will get called by a 7 every time, and you'll usually get called by 44. If the board is Q/images/graemlins/club.gif 9/images/graemlins/diamond.gif 3/images/graemlins/club.gif and you B3BAI you are not turning your hand face-up; you could have JT, you could have /images/graemlins/club.gif /images/graemlins/club.gif, you could have a set, you could have an overpair, you could have AQ. If you check/call the coordinated flop, check/call the turn, and donkbet the river when the draw hits, your opponents will assume you could have two pair or even TPTK slowplayed. If you five-bet all-in preflop you could have AA, KK, or AK (wider if your opponent is hyperaggressive).

If you are ever taking a line so incredibly specific that you could ONLY do it with one precise hand then you need to change the way you play VERY quickly, because that's a bad situation. More importantly, if your opponents are so narrow-minded as to put you on a SINGLE holding when you make a particular action that narrow-mindedness will prove a cash bonanza for you when you start to think outside the box and they don't. The coolest situation in the world is when your play "turns your hand face up" as a hand you DON'T have -- that's where big-time profits come from. Look for opportunities to "turn your hand face up" as something other than what you hold, because that's where FTOP mistakes are born. If your opponent folds to your bluff, you make out like a bandit. If your opponent pays off your sneaky monster you'll usually make DOUBLE-money: first from the pot and second from the advertising and confusion that you put in your opponents' minds.

<font color="blue">Call and play poker on the turn/river.</font>

Wow, great suggestion! Here I thought we were playing hearts....

"Call and play poker" roughly translates as "call, but I have no idea what to do on the next street." You should NEVER call and "see what happens." You should look ahead, see what MIGHT happen, and plan your responses accordingly, and you should do that before you call. If you've got QQ and your OOP opponent donkbets into you for half-pot on a flop of AJ7r, you don't "call and play poker on the turn." You decide NOW what you're going to do on the turn. If your opponent frequently donkbets as a bluff and then gives up on the turn, you should call now and check behind on the turn, intending to call any river bet. If your opponent never donkbets without TPNK or better you should either fold now or raise now (if you have oodles of folding equity because your opponent is extremely weak-tight). If your opponent could have any pair you might call down to the river or you might raise now and fold to a three-bet or you might call intending to raise the turn or river. But you never just "play it by ear" -- you act with a plan or you don't act at all. Much of our postflop poker profit comes from knowing in advance what we're going to do on later streets. Because your opponents are too shortsighted to bother looking ahead they'll make FTOP mistakes postflop that you won't make because you've got a plan and they don't. Since this planning is a major source of your profits you should never give it away by "playing poker."

whyzze
11-19-2007, 10:25 PM
first of all, I want to say awesome post.

Especially:

[ QUOTE ]
<font color="blue">Call and play poker on the turn/river.</font>

Wow, great suggestion! Here I thought we were playing hearts....

"Call and play poker" roughly translates as "call, but I have no idea what to do on the next street." You should NEVER call and "see what happens." You should look ahead, see what MIGHT happen, and plan your responses accordingly, and you should do that before you call. If you've got QQ and your OOP opponent donkbets into you for half-pot on a flop of AJ7r, you don't "call and play poker on the turn." You decide NOW what you're going to do on the turn. If your opponent frequently donkbets as a bluff and then gives up on the turn, you should call now and check behind on the turn, intending to call any river bet. If your opponent never donkbets without TPNK or better you should either fold now or raise now (if you have oodles of folding equity because your opponent is extremely weak-tight). If your opponent could have any pair you might call down to the river or you might raise now and fold to a three-bet or you might call intending to raise the turn or river. But you never just "play it by ear" -- you act with a plan or you don't act at all. Much of our postflop poker profit comes from knowing in advance what we're going to do on later streets. Because your opponents are too shortsighted to bother looking ahead they'll make FTOP mistakes postflop that you won't make because you've got a plan and they don't. Since this planning is a major source of your profits you should never give it away by "playing poker."

[/ QUOTE ]


someone finally said it.

shyturtle27
11-19-2007, 10:36 PM
Wow, really nice post. Most people (including myself) need to take this advice to heart especially in uNL where there are so many posters coming and going.

Pokeyisright
11-19-2007, 10:37 PM
&lt;---------

Monster207
11-19-2007, 11:00 PM
This is a really good post. I'm guilty of the "you're ahead of his range" one. I usually realize when I'm playing that 'said' bet will most likely only be called by a better hand but don't always consider that in a post. Definitely something i should be much more concious of when I make a post and it'll definitely be something that will hopefully improve my play as well.

z28dreams
11-19-2007, 11:28 PM
Excellent, especially on the "play poker" comment. I just had a discussion with Orange about really forming a plan for every single hand - and not just taking it street by street.

There are so many spots here where I see someone call a huge turn bet and then fold a river when an obvious bet is coming.

Either know you're willing to stack off and figure out how to best get it in, or fold immediately.

shyturtle27
11-20-2007, 12:20 AM
Furthermore on the "call and play poker" point, this really does revolve around planning your hand and commitment. That's why I liked PNL so much. This is all it dealt with. I've heard people talk about sick good 6-max players knowing how to play in tough spots, but I bet they all had a plan before they got to that spot and they didn't just want to wing it when they got there. If you plan your hands you never really get into a really super tough spot without some kind of idea of what to do.

billip62
11-20-2007, 12:30 AM
wow, I just posted and advocated betting for information... but I do stand by it. Betting or raising is a great way to narrow a villian's range and make better decisions with you're stack. Sure, if the opponent has a weaker hand it's value, but that doesn't change the nature of the raise/bet.

In response to the 'give me 20BB to know my cards' agrument I think of it this way, I'm going to spend 20BB to save myself 100BB on a later street.

derosnec
11-20-2007, 12:32 AM
good stuff. potsize does matter though.

ICMoney
11-20-2007, 12:54 AM
I expected to see Pokey getting slammed in the table chat.

/images/graemlins/heart.gifPokey

The best poster ever

http://mindpetals.com/wp-content/images/think_winner.gif

kaz2107
11-20-2007, 01:49 AM
this should b its OWN sticky not just added to the sticky. most of these replies piss me off beyond belief

nice post pokester

orange
11-20-2007, 01:53 AM
raise more for information and see the turn.

DockDD
11-20-2007, 01:53 AM
<font color="white"> Pokey </font>
Pretty much the best <font color="white">poster ever </font>

john voight
11-20-2007, 02:02 AM
another fine post

TheChad
11-20-2007, 02:21 AM
Pokey, much appreciated.

Ace Smokin
11-20-2007, 03:11 AM
Really great post. The first line had my attention right away. I actually had just started up "The Good The Bad and The Ugly" for background entertainment as I surf the site. Total Classic.

FTOP = Fundametal Theorem of Poker??

Sorry for the noob question, but google didn't have much to say about the acronym and it's not listed in the acronym sticky.

WhiteWolf
11-20-2007, 03:11 AM
Another great Pokey post (although I think you might have left one off that I've been seeing a lot lately: "Fold. There will be better chances to get your money in.")

WhiteWolf
11-20-2007, 03:13 AM
[ QUOTE ]

FTOP = Fundametal Theorem of Poker??


[/ QUOTE ]
Correct.

Unknown Soldier
11-20-2007, 03:24 AM
[ QUOTE ]
first of all, I want to say awesome post.

Especially:

[ QUOTE ]
<font color="blue">Call and play poker on the turn/river.</font>

Wow, great suggestion! Here I thought we were playing hearts....

"Call and play poker" roughly translates as "call, but I have no idea what to do on the next street." You should NEVER call and "see what happens." You should look ahead, see what MIGHT happen, and plan your responses accordingly, and you should do that before you call. If you've got QQ and your OOP opponent donkbets into you for half-pot on a flop of AJ7r, you don't "call and play poker on the turn." You decide NOW what you're going to do on the turn. If your opponent frequently donkbets as a bluff and then gives up on the turn, you should call now and check behind on the turn, intending to call any river bet. If your opponent never donkbets without TPNK or better you should either fold now or raise now (if you have oodles of folding equity because your opponent is extremely weak-tight). If your opponent could have any pair you might call down to the river or you might raise now and fold to a three-bet or you might call intending to raise the turn or river. But you never just "play it by ear" -- you act with a plan or you don't act at all. Much of our postflop poker profit comes from knowing in advance what we're going to do on later streets. Because your opponents are too shortsighted to bother looking ahead they'll make FTOP mistakes postflop that you won't make because you've got a plan and they don't. Since this planning is a major source of your profits you should never give it away by "playing poker."

[/ QUOTE ]


someone finally said it.

[/ QUOTE ]


great post, but disagree with the call and play poker part, sometimes it's ok to say that. Usually the poster does not give nearly enough information on our opponent to make some decisions. If there's a standard spot where raising and folding are both bad, but it puts us in a marginal spot on the next street then we should "call and play poker". In the sense that various subtleties about the player, the dynamics leading up to the point and how he views us could easily change our marginal decision on the next street. Plus, internet poker is fast. Obviously it would be great to draw out a plan for the entire hand, but it's not always possible.

EMc
11-20-2007, 03:36 AM
Man where is Dan Bitel when I need him most?

MrWooster
11-20-2007, 08:40 AM
Amazing - thanks

infinity235
11-20-2007, 08:54 AM
Thanks Pokey... You are a great writer and player.

choccypie
11-20-2007, 09:06 AM
&lt;3 Pokey

Micro Donk
11-20-2007, 06:30 PM
this should stay bumped since it still pops up

Spurious
11-20-2007, 07:06 PM
nice post

johnnybeef
11-20-2007, 08:43 PM
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
first of all, I want to say awesome post.

Especially:

[ QUOTE ]
<font color="blue">Call and play poker on the turn/river.</font>

Wow, great suggestion! Here I thought we were playing hearts....

"Call and play poker" roughly translates as "call, but I have no idea what to do on the next street." You should NEVER call and "see what happens." You should look ahead, see what MIGHT happen, and plan your responses accordingly, and you should do that before you call. If you've got QQ and your OOP opponent donkbets into you for half-pot on a flop of AJ7r, you don't "call and play poker on the turn." You decide NOW what you're going to do on the turn. If your opponent frequently donkbets as a bluff and then gives up on the turn, you should call now and check behind on the turn, intending to call any river bet. If your opponent never donkbets without TPNK or better you should either fold now or raise now (if you have oodles of folding equity because your opponent is extremely weak-tight). If your opponent could have any pair you might call down to the river or you might raise now and fold to a three-bet or you might call intending to raise the turn or river. But you never just "play it by ear" -- you act with a plan or you don't act at all. Much of our postflop poker profit comes from knowing in advance what we're going to do on later streets. Because your opponents are too shortsighted to bother looking ahead they'll make FTOP mistakes postflop that you won't make because you've got a plan and they don't. Since this planning is a major source of your profits you should never give it away by "playing poker."

[/ QUOTE ]


someone finally said it.

[/ QUOTE ]


great post, but disagree with the call and play poker part, sometimes it's ok to say that. Usually the poster does not give nearly enough information on our opponent to make some decisions. If there's a standard spot where raising and folding are both bad, but it puts us in a marginal spot on the next street then we should "call and play poker". In the sense that various subtleties about the player, the dynamics leading up to the point and how he views us could easily change our marginal decision on the next street. Plus, internet poker is fast. Obviously it would be great to draw out a plan for the entire hand, but it's not always possible.

[/ QUOTE ]

Totally agree here Here is the thing. We all know that poker is a game of incomplete information. We also all know that the person with more information has the advantage (i.e. position.) The reason why deep stack poker is more difficult than shallow stack is because the turn and river bring more information about your hand, and better opponents will process that information more effectively. So to say call the flop/play poker is not a good way of going about things is a bit shortsighted in my opinion because the turn and river will bring more information about the strength of your opponents holdings (whether it be a bet size or a timing tell, or whatever.) So all in all, nice post pokey, but I think you are just a bit off on the last point as there are a ton of times when it is correct to call and reevaluate in marginal situations.

whyzze
11-20-2007, 08:48 PM
you shouldn't know exactly you are going to do everytime you call a bet.

However, you shouldn't call if you dont have any plan. Before you call, you need to know what cards are going to be good to bluffraisse on, you need to be prepared to call the shove in some circumstances, you need to look ahead. Thats the whole point.

call and reevaluate says, hmmm...i has a good hand...ahhhh im scared....but i has a good hand. Which the majority of the time ends in a fold, when it should have been a shove somewhere, or a fold earlier.

traz
11-21-2007, 01:14 AM
I had the same thoughts as US...mostly good, but I in alot of situations calling and playing poker is fine

Pokey
11-21-2007, 10:47 AM
[ QUOTE ]
I had the same thoughts as US...mostly good, but I in alot of situations calling and playing poker is fine

[/ QUOTE ]

Calling and playing poker doesn't SAY anything. It's an ugly comment because the original poster doesn't know what the hell you mean. When you say "play poker" it's always shorthand for something else.

A bad player says "play poker" when he means "I have no idea what to do after I call." For the bad player this is a horrible choice. It is rarely followed by an easy turn and/or river choice, and after you "call to play poker" you are more likely than usual to make an FTOP mistake, and that FTOP mistake is larger than usual. For bad players, calling to play poker is an expensive mistake.

A good player says "play poker" when he means "use my insights and strategy to make good choices based on the turn card and turn action." That's fine at the tables but it's bad advice, because the original poster often doesn't know what those good choices would be on the turn. For the good poster to turn this ugly statement into a good one requires replacing the short hand with something useful. Unfortunately, this requires writing an extra (*gasp*) four sentences, but it transforms the post from correct-but-useless into correct-and-enlightening.

Take a look:

Ugly comment: "Call and play poker." (From a bad player who doesn't have a clue how to play the turn.)

Bad comment: "Call and play poker." (From a good player who knows how to play the turn but can't be bothered to explain.)

Good comment: "Call. On the turn you can fold if it bricks and your opponent bets more than 3/4ths pot. If it's 1/2-pot, I probably call hoping for a free (or cheap) showdown. I'd use the spades as a bluff card because villain looks weak, so if a spade hits and my opponent bets 1/2-pot I'm raising to $11 and expecting to win it immediately. Obviously if my straight comes in I'm pushing over any turn bet by villain. I shut down if the board pairs, checking behind and probably even folding to any bet."

One final note: in HSNL, MSNL, or even SSNL, "call and play poker" can be a perfectly acceptable comment. in uNL, it's an ugly comment because many posters lack the body of poker knowledge required to properly interpret it and implement it.

traz
11-21-2007, 11:32 AM
To be honest, I don't have the time to write out big responses like that. When I say "call and play poker", I mean that there are so many variables affecting the next action that I don't feel like exhausting all of the possibilities.

It's not ideal, but really, I just don't have time to fully explain everything I say. I think the attitude of "people should be posting replies with thorough explanations" is largely BS. I'm going to post anything I feel is helpful, but it's really not my responsibility (nor am I able) to spell everything out. In an open, voluntary forum like this, responsibility falls on the learner to ask questions.

I fully agree that one-liners with questionable theory are terrible.