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Posted: Wed, 29 Dec 2004, 2:02am Post subject: Hardest Read: Two Pair |
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3-of-a-Kind

Joined: 27 Dec 2004
Posts: 85 WPP: 109
Location: Clarksville, TN
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When I play hold 'em it seems like my toughest read is two pair. The board tells you when there is potential for a straight or flush. With some analysis, you can put someone on a pocket pair or overcard to match the board for a single pair.
But, two pair is the great unknown and can really throw a monkey wrench into the equation and complicates analysis. I don't really know how to put anyone on two pair. |
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Posted: Wed, 29 Dec 2004, 2:32am Post subject: |
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LAME HUMOR THAT MAKES FISH LAUGH

Joined: 28 Sep 2004
Posts: 7266 WPP: 64
Location: This room is a good place to be
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Post some hands and we can help you out.
-'rilla |
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Posted: Wed, 29 Dec 2004, 9:54am Post subject: |
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Strike 3

Joined: 15 Apr 2004
Posts: 2223 WPP: 4
Location: Sacramento
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Posted: Wed, 29 Dec 2004, 11:43am Post subject: |
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4-of-a-Kind

Joined: 27 Sep 2004
Posts: 2838 WPP: 162
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| That is indeed brutal. So hard to read. It most often comes from someone who limped in and they can do anything at that point - small bet, check-raise, check-call (if they feel like taking chances), even a big bet. |
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Posted: Wed, 29 Dec 2004, 12:14pm Post subject: Re: Hardest Read: Two Pair |
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Straight

Joined: 20 Dec 2004
Posts: 154 WPP: 88
Location: Somewhere chasing an open ended straight despite several large raises
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| Jason Shoulders wrote: | When I play hold 'em it seems like my toughest read is two pair. The board tells you when there is potential for a straight or flush. With some analysis, you can put someone on a pocket pair or overcard to match the board for a single pair.
But, two pair is the great unknown and can really throw a monkey wrench into the equation and complicates analysis. I don't really know how to put anyone on two pair. |
I can usually spot them with an information raise. 4xBB is usually enough to weed them out. A call on this bet indicates a strong draw or possibly two pair. A raise is usually a made hand. |
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Posted: Thu, 30 Dec 2004, 12:50am Post subject: |
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3-of-a-Kind

Joined: 14 Nov 2004
Posts: 95 WPP: 116
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Any tips in limit, though? It seems the information you can ascertain in limit is much more...ummm...limited.
I find myself getting hammered by two pair more often than I'd like (no straights on the board, no flushes, no board pairing and I have TPTK: bzzzt! The guy who called my pre-flop raise with K4o spiked a 4 on the river for two pair). |
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Posted: Thu, 30 Dec 2004, 1:48am Post subject: |
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4-of-a-Kind

Joined: 18 Aug 2004
Posts: 3544 WPP: 78
Location: emo-kid
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| Brodie wrote: | Any tips in limit, though? It seems the information you can ascertain in limit is much more...ummm...limited.
I find myself getting hammered by two pair more often than I'd like (no straights on the board, no flushes, no board pairing and I have TPTK: bzzzt! The guy who called my pre-flop raise with K4o spiked a 4 on the river for two pair). |
there's nothing you can do about that except pay them off. if they show aggression on the flop, and again on the turn you should seriously consider dumping your hand instead of spending 2 big bets to find out.
NL is similar. the only difference is your opponents will try and bet an amount that is your "treshold" for calling, ie the maximum amount you will call. underbets and overbets are not so worrysome, but when someone can make it just right that either way i don't feel good folding or calling is a player i need to be extra careful around. |
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Posted: Thu, 30 Dec 2004, 5:08am Post subject: |
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Strike 3

Joined: 15 Apr 2004
Posts: 2223 WPP: 4
Location: Sacramento
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Posted: Thu, 30 Dec 2004, 6:41am Post subject: |
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Royal Flush

Joined: 12 Dec 2003
Posts: 16412 WPP: 85
Location: Blowing Zook off his hand with Seven Deuce
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| Brodie wrote: | Any tips in limit, though? It seems the information you can ascertain in limit is much more...ummm...limited.
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In NL you only have betting amounts and that tells you... hmmm... he shoved in all of his chips, gee..
In limit there is a much more eligant dance of checks, bets and raises. With practice you can make some pretty good guesses what kind of player is representing what. Unless they're some crazy TAgg like me
| Brodie wrote: |
I find myself getting hammered by two pair more often than I'd like (no straights on the board, no flushes, no board pairing and I have TPTK: bzzzt! The guy who called my pre-flop raise with K4o spiked a 4 on the river for two pair). |
It's a sick joke on the guy with K4o. He pays you off far more often, it's just easy to forget. |
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Posted: Thu, 30 Dec 2004, 9:42am Post subject: |
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EAT BUGS

Joined: 07 Dec 2004
Posts: 7754 WPP: 50
Location: trying to live
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| but sometimes hands like K4o make it on from the BB and get lucky. i know i have won some pots when i first sit down at a table and post the blind with trash cards and i end up flopping two pair. |
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Posted: Thu, 30 Dec 2004, 12:55pm Post subject: |
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3-of-a-Kind

Joined: 14 Nov 2004
Posts: 95 WPP: 116
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And it's very easy to beat me in these circumstances with two pair. Just call all the way to the river and let me be the aggressor. Just in case anyone is taking notes.
Fortunately I'm not doing that badly, so these circumstances don't hurt as much as they would if I was in the middle of a very bad run of cards. |
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Posted: Fri, 31 Dec 2004, 9:59am Post subject: |
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Full House

Joined: 11 Oct 2004
Posts: 1116 WPP: 67
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this i have a hard time with; I have AK or AQ so i raise it up and someonce calls me, board comes AAx I bet the pot he goes all in, I call he shows a boat...*sigh*
-anto |
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Posted: Thu, 06 Jan 2005, 1:20am Post subject: |
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Full House

Joined: 05 Jan 2005
Posts: 1125 WPP: 58
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| elanto wrote: | this i have a hard time with; I have AK or AQ so i raise it up and someonce calls me, board comes AAx I bet the pot he goes all in, I call he shows a boat...*sigh*
-anto |
Well consider how many time you're going to get paid off in those situations when he doesn't have the full house. Especially when you catch someone with a worse kicker. Also, consider the possibility of a bluff. Consider the chance that the player plays this way pre-flop with a pair... maybe you can lay a set down. Although it's the hardest thing to do in hold'em
But what about when the board pairs and you have aces-full?
Maybe when the board is AAT and an extremely tight player goes all-in after calling two pre-flop raises... you might find it hard to believe he doesn't have a full house
But if an aggressive player does that move, you will just have to pay him off. |
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