Two Plus Two Newer Archives

Two Plus Two Newer Archives (http://archives1.twoplustwo.com/index.php)
-   Beginners Questions (http://archives1.twoplustwo.com/forumdisplay.php?f=34)
-   -   Starting out in Limit (http://archives1.twoplustwo.com/showthread.php?t=557404)

SellingtheDrama 11-30-2007 04:55 PM

Re: Playing Limit
 
[ QUOTE ]
Kurn, umm I don't have a pair on the river, I have the nuts.

Selling, thanks for the advice. Your last paragraph is what I'm really struggling with in my head though. I just can't wrap my mind around both players playing correctly because it seems like the only thing that separates the winning players from the losing players then is variance which in the long term is supposed to even out, therefore that makes everyone who can count odds and outs a winner which is probably more than half the poker playing community, which makes this impossible. Sorry this is just weird poker theory stuff I'm making up.

Anyways, in the hand above UTG had J[img]/images/graemlins/diamond.gif[/img] 8[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] for 2 pair and UTG+2 had Q[img]/images/graemlins/diamond.gif[/img] T[img]/images/graemlins/club.gif[/img] for the turned straight. We all played this hand correctly except for UTG on the river I suppose. I'll have to think about this some more, weird.

[/ QUOTE ]

Many poker players think they understand concepts but apply them horribly. And you are absolutely correct that variance can be a huge part of limit games, and you now know why. I don't frequent the limit forums, but this is the crux of why winrates are so thin relative to big bet games.

And yeah I've struggled with the same concepts too - I basically don't ever play LHE for a reason.

Dalek 11-30-2007 05:11 PM

Re: Playing Limit
 
I think he means in a specific hand both players can play correctly. Over the course of thousands of hands it becomes clearer that one player plays better.

I would raise pre-flop with AQ suited but my experience with limit is small. Is this an alright play or should i just call with AQ type hands?

Kurn, son of Mogh 11-30-2007 05:46 PM

Re: Playing Limit
 
Uh, How is QQ the nuts on a JT542 board?

11-30-2007 05:48 PM

Re: Playing Limit
 
Definitely raise preflop with AQs.

JH1 11-30-2007 06:20 PM

Re: Playing Limit
 
[ QUOTE ]
Uh, How is QQ the nuts on a JT542 board?

[/ QUOTE ]

Sorry thought you were talking about the second hand I posted where I rivered a flush.

Kurn, son of Mogh 12-01-2007 11:32 AM

Re: Playing Limit
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Uh, How is QQ the nuts on a JT542 board?

[/ QUOTE ]

Sorry thought you were talking about the second hand I posted where I rivered a flush.

[/ QUOTE ]

I realized that after I posted this. Sorry for the confusion.

MattHH 12-01-2007 03:31 PM

Re: Playing Limit
 
[ QUOTE ]
You make money in limit when you realize that your made hand or draw is not the best and fold, saving bets.

[/ QUOTE ]

There are many ways to save bets in limit, but they are not limited to folding.

[ QUOTE ]
It just didn't make sense to me before how you could have winning players because if there multiple players in pots all getting 5:1 a lot of the time or better, they are almost always all correct to call, therefore no one is making mistakes and therefore everyone should be a winner which does not compute.

[/ QUOTE ]

A lot of times, people are not getting the correct odds to call and they call anyways, donating money to everybody else. Also, you have to think about making their odds worse by raising/ check-raising to make opponents get worse odds (in the appropriate situations).

If you haven't read ToP yet, I highly recommend it.

pzhon 12-01-2007 06:29 PM

Re: Playing Limit
 
[ QUOTE ]
is this correct:

You make money in limit when you realize that your made hand or draw is not the best and fold, saving bets.

[/ QUOTE ]
That is just one of many ways to make money in limit.

[ QUOTE ]
It just didn't make sense to me before how you could have winning players because if there multiple players in pots


[/ QUOTE ]
If there are routinely multiple players in pots, then they are playing bad hands. If the game is maniacal and they are correct to call postflop, then that means their preflop errors were much larger. It's quite common for a player to give up more than half of the size of the big blind in a multiway pot (in BB/100, that is losing 25 BB/100), and sometimes players even give up more than a big blind in a reraised pot. These calls make up 100% of the profit of many winning full ring limit players--the rest of their skill advantage may pay for the rake. It is hard to impossible to recover from poor preflop play in limit, since the postflop bets are not large in relation to the preflop bets.

[ QUOTE ]
all getting 5:1 a lot of the time or better, they are almost always all correct to call,


[/ QUOTE ]
Actually, no. There was a hand in the small stakes limit forum where someone mentioned playing 33 in a 5 or 6-way pot where the cap was 5 bets. 5 players put in 5 bets on an A93 rainbow flop. The set of 3s held up. No one else pointed it out at the time, but what could the other players have had? Think about it... they couldn't all have aces, and no one had 99. They were not getting the correct odds to draw, and they put in 5 bets, which was a huge mistake.

Even if the players have the odds to draw, they often call without what you would call a decent draw, and they pay off on the river while dead.

[ QUOTE ]

therefore no one is making mistakes and therefore everyone should be a winner which does not compute.


[/ QUOTE ]
Even if no one is making a mistake by calling, that doesn't mean they aren't making mistakes by failing to bet or raise when they should. By the way, many players overemphasize trying to get their opponents to make mistakes. Don't forget that you have to avoid making your own mistakes, which means pumping up the pot when you have an equity advantage, and calling to longshot draws when you have the odds.

[ QUOTE ]

One more question, I read a post, I think by Ed Miller, that you should not be folding a reasonably big hand in a large pot for one bet. Is this true? ie. don't fold a set or a straight on a 3 flush board, etc.

[/ QUOTE ]
It's common for people to try to figure out "where they are at" during a hand. However, your task is not to determine whether you are probably ahead or not (even when you are betting, you can't bet as a 80% favorite if you are only ahead of busted draws which can't call). Your task is to determine whether your call is a good investment. When the pot is huge, calling does not need to win often at all to be a good investment.

Let's suppose you have A[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img] K[img]/images/graemlins/club.gif[/img] on a board of A[img]/images/graemlins/club.gif[/img] T[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] 8[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] 3[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] 2[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img], and are first to act on the river. You could check and call, in fear of a heart, but after you check, just about any hand that beats you will be able to bet for value. If you bet, many weaker hands like AJ with no heart will make a crying call, and you can safely fold to a raise against most opponents, which means you do the same against stronger hands while getting more value from weaker hands. The same is true if you have many other hands of similar strength. So, when someone bets into you on a scary board, and you don't think that person is bluffing, consider that they may be making this type of bet. They figure that if you have them beat, they will call anyway, so why not bet? That possibility means you often have an easily profitable call when the pot is large and you have a set on a scary board.

The previous paragraph was not beginner-level thinking. Most of your opponents have not thought about that sort of situation. They just react to the current one. If you have thought about situations like the above, this should give you an advantage, since you can make correct plays your opponents think are surprising or wrong.

pzhon 12-01-2007 07:42 PM

Re: Playing Limit
 
While you won a huge pot, you made two plays that I think were expensive mistakes, on average.

[ QUOTE ]

CO posts
Pre-Flop: A[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img] Q[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img] dealt to Hero (UTG+1)
UTG calls, Hero calls, UTG+2 calls, MP1 calls, 3 folds, SB calls, BB checks

Flop: (6.4 SB) 9[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img] 2[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] J[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img] (6 Players)
SB checks, BB checks, <font color="red">UTG bets</font>, Hero calls, <font color="red">UTG+2 raises</font>, 3 folds, UTG calls, Hero calls


[/ QUOTE ]
You should be raising, at least preflop and at the second opportunity on the flop. You have a big equity advantage on these streets, and you will be called.

Preflop, you have an excellent hand, AQs, that does particularly well when no one else has shown strength, and the pot is likely to be multiway. The CO posted. In that situation, I would raise KJs for value, and maybe QJs.

On the flop, you have a flush draw and two overcards. That is often a favorite over top pair, and it usually wins far more than par in a multiway pot. You may prefer to call the first time if you think raising will knock too many people out of this small pot, but you can raise for value the second time, when the pot is larger and people are tied to it.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:48 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.