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#1
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[ QUOTE ]
Your major adjustment needs to be to lower your starting hand requirements though. [/ QUOTE ] You think the best way to exploit huge preflop raisers is to loosen up? By them raising so much preflop can't you just wait for only super good hands preflop and play those hard for big pots? ****The following is a Novel but I have experience with this. If you don't care then don't read*** I am in the 100% same situation as the OP. I used to play with friends and we played a tame game where I just beat them by playing solid poker. I had better reads than them, played better cards, and knew where to draw the line better as far as odds and drawing hands. We have always played with 25 and 50 cents blinds and a big night used to be $20 to the good or the bad because no one was loose or wild. Then a few months ago these new guys started playing and they are maniacs, but thinking maniacs, and they just ran everyone over or got people to gamble in really marginal spots. Now a big night is a few hundred, yes still .25/.50 blinds. A standard preflop raise is $5 or more and if TP meets a draw the pot could swell to 100+BBs easily. My results have since been extremely erratic and its an ongoing thing I've been experimenting with and I still haven't completely figured it out. I've tried fighting back often (aggression vs aggression)but it doesn't work so well because they will ALWAYS pressure me back post flop and I'm not nearly as willing to run huge bluffs with nothing or call off my chips with weak hands so a lot of the time I was creating a big pot that they were still more likely to win when we both missed. I've tried just playing super tight but it was a little transparent and they were sometimes able to fold correctly against me when I was strong. I've tried playing back at them with sheer bluffs but they are so willing to "gamble" that the risk was almost never worth the reward in my experience. They are too prone to call with inadequate holdings and often times multiple barrels or huge overbets are neededd to induce them to fold. Ultimately I'm not sure that there is a foolproof system to beating maniacs who have some knowledge of how to play and are thinking players. You can/will beat them in the longrun by just playing solid poker but the variance is inevitable and I'll never be able to consistently win a medium amount just about every night like I used to when it was all milk-toast competition. Steady wins are just not going to happen vs maniacs. You've gotta be willing to get it in and rake huge pots as well as lose your stack. Its a rollercoaster. I mix it up now with a LOT of strong value betting and pushing percieved edges, especially post flop and on the flop. I'll also trap with monsters on the rare occassions the pot is small on the flop and they are leading the betting. I very rarely bluff but when I do its usually EARLY in the night. This is the time when people will fold a lot more readily. Towards the end of the night I'll often start to tighten up preflop and try to catch one of them gambling with a small PP or 2 face cards against my, JJ-AA/AK and try to get as much in the middle preflop as possible. Its all balance and changing gears but the most important thing IMO is ALWAYS HAVE THEM COVERED! I know you may not want to buy in for 10 times the amount you're used to risking but you absolutely have to be able to hammer these guys when you catch a big hand. Also, as you know, their stacks are constantly growing whether they are winning or losing since they always buy back in for a lot and the money stays on the table. If you can find one favorable spot a night where you can double up on somebody for hundreds of BBs it will set you for the night. Just make sure you have a ton of chips at all times. Its hard to not go broke when you start with $10 and play for 4 hours against guys who will go all-in with a ton of hands and buy in for $50. Buy-in big and dont be afraid to risk it when you are fairly sure you have the best of it. If in serious doubt stay out of the hand early or specualte cheap. Don't get into situations where you're calling off your stack because you might have the best hand. When you get it in be confident you're best. The constantly huge pots they create in relation to the blinds allow you to be selective. There is no rush and throwing away a few bluff catchers wont kill you. Calling all-in drawing dead will. |
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#2
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go to war with 3 and 4 betting pre flop
fight fire with fire don't back down |
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#3
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I didnt read the other posts.
Just play a bit tighter but when u get a hand you are going to play, reraise it preflop vs them and keep the pressure up. Ifg they play like total lagtards, limp reraise alot. |
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#4
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put them to a decision for all of their chips
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#5
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Play your solid cards that you have been playing. When you hit the flop just call, let them bet. If on the turn, you think they are on a draw and it hasn't come, bet big enough so that they can't profitably call. Otherwise just call them down with decent hands. I think of these as 'value calls'.
They make money by making other players fold. But if you call them with good hands you will make money. Don't forget about the other players at the table as they may be trying to trap the maniac and catch you too! Of course your winnings will now have more flucuation then it did before. That's just the nature of adding a maniac to the game. |
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#6
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[ QUOTE ]
put them to a decision for all of their chips [/ QUOTE ] Exactly. Even the most LAG players will shrink to that. |
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#7
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[ QUOTE ]
I've tried just playing super tight but it was a little transparent and they were sometimes able to fold correctly against me when I was strong. I've tried playing back at them with sheer bluffs but they are so willing to "gamble" that the risk was almost never worth the reward in my experience. They are too prone to call with inadequate holdings and often times multiple barrels or huge overbets are neededd to induce them to fold. [/ QUOTE ] The only way to reconcile these statements is if they always know what cards you have. |
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#8
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you miss the point of loosening up.
its not loosening up to try to play back at them. its loosening up because qj is better than their starting range (or KQ etc). there is really only one way to play against people who overbet the pot and that is to just slow play and trap them. however, you are able to slowplay and trap with more hands than you think. buttom line is these guys suck really bad at poker. you could just be losing due to higher variance. |
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#9
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If you can't beat the bad players, how are you going to beat the good ones?
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#10
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You are an idiot
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