#11
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Re: Raising Limpers - Button
[ QUOTE ]
87s plays fine multiway, I'm inclined to limp it because I mos def want to see a flop. The others depend if I think a raise will get it HU. if not, I'll limp them. Of course, in your scenario, raising is always profitable, but in reality in the micros I'm likely to be called in 3 places pre and twice on the flop. [/ QUOTE ] The implied odds of when you hit your SC go dramatically up if you raise with it PF and get callers, especially if you have the image of being a nutty-mcnutbar (like I usually do). In the situation that you described, with the callers folding a lot to a CB it makes it that much more profitable. And if you miss the flop with your SCs it brings up the possibility to float it against the right opponents, or fold to massive aggression without costing you too much (6BB assuming standard raise). Pilket |
#12
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Re: Raising Limpers - Button
Against calling stations overlimp, against nits raise. If they players are solid-ish probably raise all of them though some are marginal.
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#13
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Re: Raising Limpers - Button
Personally I'd raise all of your examples most of the time. This is because I want to establish my button as kind of a "tollbooth" as early as possible. In my opinion stealing blinds is really profitable and can make you at least breakeven, even during a run of horrible cards. By raising limpers on the button I'm doing my best to communicate this, while limpers don't really have to face any punishment if I just limped along. On top of that you should have an edge over your typical opponent just by reading this forum and applying what you learn, you're likely to have an edge because your cards are decent and you're not going to misplay them grossly postflop and you have an edge because you're in position. So I think if you have a playable hand, it can't be a huge mistake to raise it from the button, since I think with all those edges you're pretty much a favorite to win this hand.
I can see an argument for overlimping with 87s, but I still favor the raise. My reasons for that might be wrong, since they come from personal experience and amateur-ish analysis, but I see it this way: If you don't hit the flop, it's hard to take the pot down, since it's multiway and you showed no strength preflop. If you hit the flop, you need others to hit it as well to build a big pot. You're also more likely to get "overflushed", since you allowed suited Aces/Kings/Queens to enter the hand cheaply, whereas in a raised pot you're more likely to face pocket pairs and big broadways as your opponents, in other words hands that don't necessarily contest your made hand. I think this is a major advantage of suited connectors in raised pots, you make hands that your opponents are unlikely to beat. Finally, and this is more a guess than an observation, I'd imagine your fold equity with pushing combo draws to be very low in multiway pots. I'm not sure if this is a good or bad thing (if it's the case, at all), but it probably adds lots of variance and makes these hands harder to play. Okay, the last paragraph isn't a short one, but I think it's good reason for raising the above hands preflop. In case of tl;dr, cliffnotes: Keeping up a lot of pressure can throw casual players completely off their game. Another point to consider is what kind of players you're against. I know you stated that in your OP, but the thing with stats is you don't necessarily know how and in which circumstances your opponents achieved them. The typical uNL opponent, which you mentioned your opponents in these examples to be, is more of a recreational player that doesn't necessarily base his decisions on logic, even less poker strategy. Because of this I think a very tight player can actually get more action than an aggressive player with a wider preflop range. While we would assume the tight player to have very strong hands once he decides to play and more likely than not stay out of his way, I believe the more casual player has a tendency to think of the tight player as a "minor threat", since he's not really a dominant force that bullies the table, and the cost to enter a pot against him as a "minor investment", because the tight player simply isn't going to play a lot of hands and even if the casual player decides to play every pot with the tight player, it's no big deal financially if he can avoid paying him off every single time. On the other hand, if you raise a lot preflop, I think a casual player has a tendency to stay out of your way, because he realizes that it won't be cheap to play with you often and he's going to face a lot more difficult decisions against you and most people just don't have much fun facing difficult decisions against aggressive players, which is counterproductive to the reason they play in the first place. I think a big distinction between a casual and a more "educated" player is that one of them is process-oriented and the other one results-oriented. Which is understandable, because to a lot of players the game is not more than pasttime fun and the money they bring to the table is hard-earned one, so an aggressive environment makes them pay more money for less recreational value. The results-orientated solution is actually to contest less pots against you, even though you're less likely to have a hand compared to the tight player, simply to avoid difficult decisions and get more recreational value for their money. In a way you're educating the casual player to play more adequate preflop and I actually think this is exactly what you want, because their postflop abilities are still likely to be inferior to yours. This means that you can take down a lot of pots preflop or on the flop and still make profit postflop, because your opponents either decide to take a stand with AJ on an Ace high board against your AK, stacking off in the process, or trying to trap you with a monster while you control the size of the pot and can get away cheaply while you're behind. |
#14
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Re: Raising Limpers - Button
This really depends on table dynamics for me, mostly how often those players would raise/fold vs raise/call.
When I raise with KTo, I really do want all of them to fold. Most of those hands really become semi-bluffs. I'm most inclined to raise 87s, mostly because it'll play the best multway and there's less chance of being dominated (ppl will limp call weird Ax hands all day). But yea, the flow of the game really makes a difference here. |
#15
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Re: Raising Limpers - Button
I call the first two, fold the last two. You most likely will see a flop w/ two limpers, and I don't like playing either KT or A9 in a raised pot.
W/ one limper, I raise all 4, since you can usually pick up the dead money pf. |
#16
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Re: Raising Limpers - Button
I raise the first two. KT I overlimp, but only on the button. A9os, I raise or fold, depending on how I've seen limpers play.
I'm going to get flack for overlimping KT from a lot of good players. I only overlimp this on the button itself, and I assume we have fairly passive blinds too. KT is a hand that never, ever plays a big pot easily -- but it plays small pots just fine. We can control pot size fairly easily from the button, and we can use the position to take pots even if we miss the flop. You have to be real comfortable post flop to overlimp and to know why you're doing it to make it work. I don't have any problem with anyone saying fold it or raise it. My philosophy on this is pretty straight forward. I raise limpers with hands that play big pots well when they hit, and small pots well when they miss. pp's, suited connectors, Ax suited -- these all fit that criterion. KT doesn't. A9 doesn't. These are small pot hands that need to get to showdown cheap if they hit modestly. |
#17
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Re: Raising Limpers - Button
i´m raising all of them depending on table image etc. obv if i´ve been running hot and running over the table i won´t try to raise limpers with atc
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#18
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Re: Raising Limpers - Button
I open all except K10o... if i haven't been active at the table I will open K10o and if i have been more active than usual I will limp or raise less w/ 87s to build a big multi-way pot.
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#19
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Re: Raising Limpers - Button
this really depends on the players in the hand if they are stations then rasiing with most of those hands kinda sucks cause a c-bet/chances of taking it down right there are highly diminished. and hands like KT/A9 in that spot are kind of tricky to just raise for value in those spots.
87s I usually limp but sometimes raise. alot of players stack of pretty light at uNL so dont think you always have to raise to make your implied odds better. |
#20
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Re: Raising Limpers - Button
with two limps. i raise the first two, and fold the last two. with one limp, i raise all of those, assuming the same stats. its not really something i put a lot of thought into though, but it seems to work alright.
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