#11
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Re: Phil Gordon\'s Little Green Book - Preflop Open Amount ... Wha?!
I'm pretty sure this is for tournaments. Chris Ferguson advocates a similar if not the same PF raise ammounts.
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#12
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Re: Phil Gordon\'s Little Green Book - Preflop Open Amount ... Wha?!
[ QUOTE ]
seriously, any advice given by phil gordon is ignorable.... I have read alot by him and nothing makes sense. [/ QUOTE ] Nothing makes sense? Really? None of it? Sorry about that. |
#13
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Re: Phil Gordon\'s Little Green Book - Preflop Open Amount ... Wha?!
[ QUOTE ]
one explanation could be that he wants to play smaller pots out of position because it is harder, and that the early position raise has an inherit power because of the perception that you only raise good hands from early position. I think Thunder Keller wrote something about in Cardplayer magazine before, but i could have that wrong. edit: Thunder Keller article CPM [/ QUOTE ] Yeah... you just linked to an article about stealing the blinds in tournament poker. |
#14
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Re: Phil Gordon\'s Little Green Book - Preflop Open Amount ... Wha?!
"Therefore, I will often raise more from late position and less from early position to balance out the impact that position has on how strong my raise looks"
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#15
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Re: Phil Gordon\'s Little Green Book - Preflop Open Amount ... Wha?!
I find it that usually you get smaller pots on average when you raise big as its less likely to be multiway.
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#16
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Re: Phil Gordon\'s Little Green Book - Preflop Open Amount ... Wha?!
To add some sort of content, if you raise small in EP, expect to get called very often. This will not be a whole lot of fun if you're playing against good opponents.
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#17
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Re: Phil Gordon\'s Little Green Book - Preflop Open Amount ... Wha?!
> one explanation could be that he wants to play smaller pots out of position because it is
The problem I have with this argument, is that opening for less isn't really going to do this, it only encourages big multiway pots. My feeling is that the slightly smaller pot size on the flop that is achieved by under-raising the pot UTG, is negated by the fact that good players in position can really put you to the test by making big bets on late streets when checked to. You don't play small pots by making small bets preflop. You play small pots by NOT making big bets postflop. There seems to be some similarities with raising limpers out of the blinds. When you see a player raising UTG or OTOB, his hand range is usually fairly strong. He is giving away vital information on his hand, PLUS he has no position. In order to counteract this disadvantage, he then makes a large raise to counteract the implied odds of his opponents. Another way to say it, is that when UTG, you often cannot safely raise with anything but your strongest starting hands, for fear of a player behind you waking up with the near nuts. Therefore, when an opponent sees you raise UTG, he can call your (relatively small) preflop bet as an underdog, because he can play perfectly against you postflop and induce (relatively large) errors on late streets. So, if you are going to raise UTG, you might as well raise big to try to narrow the field and deny your opponents such juicy implied odds... |
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