#1
|
|||
|
|||
Deep Stack NL Hold\'em Theory
On GSN's High Stakes Poker, I noticed preflop that players often limp in with suited connectors and suited gappers like 5 [img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] 3 [img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img]from any postion. Why are they doing this? Why would you do this in this game but not in a tournament?
and, in the WSOP, why does Daniel Negreanu play every hand? And, did he mainly play the hands calling in position or just raising every pot regardless of position? thanks |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Deep Stack NL Hold\'em Theory
think implied odds
NLTAP covers this in detail greatly, but when effective stacks 500bb deep, these sort of speculative hands are good to play almost everywhere due to the insane implied odds you get of potentially stacking somebody postflop. EDIT - wait, do they even play that deepstacked on GSN? if not, disregaurd my post |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Deep Stack NL Hold\'em Theory
Here are some things to think about.
1. These players do this a lot in position because they can use their position better than most players. 2. They are experts at post flop play and can either get away from the hand or outplay their opponents. 3. They play a wide range of hands to make it hard to read them. 4. They play these hands to get paid off when then have premium starting hands. 5. They are playing against opponents who are capable of making a big laydown. 6. They have superior reading skills and can sort out where they are in a hand really accurately and wether their opponent is weak or not. 7. They are experts at reading the texture of the flop and proceeding accordingly. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Deep Stack NL Hold\'em Theory
These players are all multi-millionaires with big egos. No one wants to be seen as a nit in front of thousands of television viewers, and I'm sure its understood by the players that the fans want to see excitement not boring tight poker.
If you watch something like 100/200 NL cash games on full tilt where players are actually trying to make money and not show off you're going to see supertight poker. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Deep Stack NL Hold\'em Theory
8. They want more TV time.
9. They chop the money after the filming is over. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Deep Stack NL Hold\'em Theory
[ QUOTE ]
9. They chop the money after the filming is over. [/ QUOTE ] Is that true? Can you cite a reliable source? [img]/images/graemlins/confused.gif[/img] |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Deep Stack NL Hold\'em Theory
No, I cannot. I should have added 'IMO' to my original post.
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Deep Stack NL Hold\'em Theory
sorry to completely ape others..
but if the stacks are deep, you're in position, it's unraised, a few limpers, fairly passive post-flop (althoughs some ability to get paid too), then it's a great play... loosen up any assumptions, and then it probably requires an expert to play that way (although 1000BB stacks, i suppose you could call raises too). playing in most of our tourneys where you get to 15-20BB stack reasonably fast, i think you're just giving money away (especially calling raises).. basically very deep stack play to play 53s (and then the other conditions mentioned at the top - and i might have missed some) |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Deep Stack NL Hold\'em Theory
5-3 suited is one of my favorite hands to play, tourney or not. If you do hit the flop, especially with the ace low straight, you will get paid off. If you know that a pre-flop raiser is playing a big pair, you have a great chance to bust him.
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Deep Stack NL Hold\'em Theory
[ QUOTE ]
5-3 suited is one of my favorite hands to play, tourney or not. If you do hit the flop, especially with the ace low straight, you will get paid off. [/ QUOTE ] It sounds so simple when you say it like that, but you're making a ton of bad assumptions. It's hard to get implied odds with 53s, and I think suited connectors are vastly overrated by a lot of players. You both need deep stacks. Next, you have to flop the nuts with that ace-low straight (very hard to do). What's next? Oh, he has to have that big hand. Wait, there's more... he has to be willing to risk all of his money with just an overpair. If he has trips or decides to semi-bluff a flush draw, he's going to have outs to make a better hand than you. That's a lot of criteria. It's even harder in tourneys when you've got a medium-size stack. You going to call a raise with 53s when you only have 15 big blinds left? As far as the players chopping after filming, that's not such a crazy notion. They get, what, $1,250 an hour per (something like that), which in an of itself is nothing. But they have the freedom to create an artificial table image to the whole viewing audience, including maybe a few business guys who might come out to Vegas and blow $150k. I don't think they actually DO that, of course, but it's not inconcievable. I'd do it. |
|
|