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Renton theorem aka ABCD theorem

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Renton
Post Posted: Sat, 10 May 2008, 1:13am    Post subject: Renton theorem aka ABCD theorem Reply with quote
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In poker, we attempt to make money by playing the best we can, making what we feel is the most profitable play in every scenario, making as few mistakes as possible. Assuming you know the exact hand range of your opponent, there is almost always a clear best play, and if you like money you should make that play every time, right?

Yes, on a basic level this is true. Whenever we have the nuts we should bet/raise/reraise, whenever we have nothing we should fold. If we have nothing and feel like we can make our opponent fold a better hand enough of the time, we should bet as a bluff.

However, theres another level of poker that goes beyond this one hand. Not only does your opponent have a range, but you do as well. Not only do you want to make the best play with THIS hand, THIS time, but you want to make the most money with your range, EVERY time. You want to make the most profitable plays when you are in this spot. You want the average EV of your play with your range in this spot to be as high as possible.

A pretty common example of this was in an infamous Samoleus/EmpireMaker2 thread on 2p2 a while back. Samoleus criticized EM2 for 3-betting QJs in button vs blind scenarios. His reasoning was that "QJs has too much value in calling." He believed that it was more profitable to call QJs than to waste it on a 3-bet.

The other less obvious reason why "QJs has too much value in calling" is that EM2's range consists of subdivided ranges in which he 3-bets/calls/folds, and putting QJs into the 3-bet range reduces the number of profitable plays he makes as a whole.

Renton Theorem:

In any no limit hold'em scenario where there is money left to be bet, hero's range is divided into subranges A, B, C, and D, where:

A = hero's 'nut' range consisting of hands to be aggressively bet/raised for value.

B = the range of hands that aren't as strong as range A and benefit from passive play and/or pot control.

C = the range of hands that have a nominal amount of value, but can stand little or no action.

D = hands with little or no value

The four ranges are determined by the resultant play that is optimal for the range as a whole.




Subranges A, B, C, and D are directly adjacent in terms of playability/strength (i.e. the bottom of 'A' borders with the top of 'B'). All of the hands in a given subrange should be played the same (barring randomizing your play), and this is how the range is defined.

What do I mean by "optimal for the range as a whole?" Is that different from "optimal in a vaccum? Let's start with an example similar to the QJs above.



Example 1:

Thinking opposition opens a wide range (we'll say 30% of holdings) and we are on the button. We have 3 ways of exploiting this player:

1. 3-bet for value
2. 3-bet as a bluff
3. call and exploit postflop

We don't have many reads on this player but we can safely assume that like most players, he is going to fold his open to 3-bets an exploitably large amount.

So as an example within the example, lets say our hand is 98s. What is the optimal play in a vaccum?

Hard to say. Since we think our friend is going to fold a ton to 3-bets, it is highly likely that 3-betting is optimal, due to a high amount of preflop fold equity. However, 98s is a great hand postflop, and can continue on a very high %age of flops, so we are also certain that its profitable to coldcall with. So do we 3-bet or call? Probably 3-bet if we feel that given gameflow he's gonna fold 85% of time.

However, even if he folds a massive amount of the time, the best play for our entire range is to call.

In this situation our ranges are subdivided as follows:

A = {QQ+ AK}. These are hands we'd be glad to stack off with, and should 3-bet for value and get it in.

B = {55-JJ, AJ-AQ, KQ, suited broadways, suited connectors, some 22-44}. These hands aren't comfortable stacking off and are certainly profitable to coldcall.

C = {22-44, gappers, offsuit aces/broadways}. These are hands that are slightly too weak/unplayable to call, and we elect to 3-bet these as bluffs/semibluffs.

D = {the rest}. Have almost no value and we fold.


We can play ranges A, B, and C profitably. So our duty, in order to maximize the amount we exploit our opponent, is to make A + B + C add up to the highest possible percentage. 'A' is a static value range. 'B' consists of all the hands we feel we can profitably call that aren't in range 'A'. 'C' consists of the widest possible percentage of remaining hands that we can 3-bet and get away with it, and are chosen from hands just below 'B' strength due to maximizing value when called.

By 'get away with it' I mean that since we're up against thinking opposition, we want to play as aggressively as we can whilst avoiding exploitation at all costs. If villain wizens up and starts 4-bet bluffing us, thats very bad, and we are no longer exploiting him without readjusting which takes time and causes us to make mistakes in the transition.



Example 2:

Seat 1: AmPHisbaenA ($414.25 in chips)
Seat 2: gl79 ($402.60 in chips)
Seat 3: Tnx4urMoney ($456.10 in chips)
Seat 4: Kodack ($186 in chips)
Seat 5: 69MadMike69 ($53.70 in chips)
Seat 6: jhndh541 ($106.05 in chips)
Seat 7: Renton555 ($524.60 in chips)
Seat 8: jfager007 ($394 in chips)
Seat 9: whaaatever ($253 in chips)
gl79: posts small blind $2
Tnx4urMoney: posts big blind $4

*** HOLE CARDS ***
Dealt to Renton555 [9d 9c]

Kodack: folds
69MadMike69: folds
jhndh541: folds
Renton555: raises $8 to $12
jfager007: folds
whaaatever: calls $12
AmPHisbaenA: folds
gl79: folds
Tnx4urMoney: folds

*** FLOP *** [Ac 8s Jd]

Renton555: checks
whaaatever: bets $24
Renton555: folds

In this hand, betting the flop is absolutely certainly profitable, as this flop bitchslaps our range and he has to fold the vast majority of his. Betting may even be best. However, checking is profitable with 99, since he likely checks down worse pairs.

Without going too deep into this, let me create the subranges.

A = {AJ, A8, AA, JJ, 88, AK, AQ, T9} Hands we bet and continue to a raise.

B = {A2-AT, QQ-KK, Jx} Hands we check call for pot control and deception.

C = {77, 99, TT, 87ish} Hands we check fold for showdown value.

D = {air} Hands we bet as a bluff.

Even though betting 99 is profitable and maybe best, we prefer to bet all our air and try to check down 99, and hence have a less exploitable cbet.


Extrapolating further:

Say we bet ranges A and D and get raised. Then we have a whole new set of subranges.

A = {AJ, sets} Our nut range, we 3-bet all in or call and get it in on turns, depending on what we feel is most profitable.

B = {AK, AQ, A8, T9} We call and reevaluate.

C = {air like KcQc} We 3-bet as a bluff and shove turns we improve.

D = {rest of air} We fold.

It goes on and on.


The Renton theorem is something I think good players think about a ton. I've never seen anything like this quantified very clearly, and only recently started seeing it this clearly myself. Hopefully this isn't totally redundant info to you guys.

gl


Last edited by Renton on Sat, 10 May 2008, 8:31pm; edited 1 time in total
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AlphaKennyBody
Post Posted: Sat, 10 May 2008, 3:30am    Post subject: Reply with quote
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So if I understand this correctly, you're saying that against "thinking" opponents, we should play our garbage hands the same as our monsters in order to gain more value our big hands?
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Marshall28
Post Posted: Sat, 10 May 2008, 5:27am    Post subject: Reply with quote
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your "subdivided ranges" appear to me to be just the difference between when you are merging and when you are polarizing your range.

i dont care if it was samo, i've said a lot of dumb things in the past, but i am pretty sure of one thing.... by excluding certain hands specifically from my 3betting range it does a number of things:

1. allows villain to get a better read on how i think and how i play
2. makes it easier to put me on a hand postflop, i guess i just said this, but actually the more hands you include in your 3bet range, the more difficult it is for villain to play against u if he decides to play back at all or more specifically call preflop.
3. i dunno, this is all dependent on the range of hands we estimate villain to be flatting 3bets or folding/possibly 4betting us with anyways. to say "never" is a sin in poker, and to never 3bet jqs, especially in a bvsb scenario seems straight retarded to me if you understand anything about your opponent.

the dynamics at the time might have suggested that it was bad timing to 3bet that particular hand and given that it would have been more profitable to call, then u have an arguemtn for a specific situation, but to say always, or never ... its just ignorant.

as far as renton theorem or whatever, i think u r close to getting it, spend some time thinking about why you came to these conclusions ... specifically considering random distribution of cards (we are all dealt roughly the same amount of good and bad hands over the long run). so like, if you can force a fold out of someone where u have like 30% equity and they had 70 to win the pot, like you 5bet bluff someone w/ A5s and they fold TT or whatever.... you are gaining a ton in that sense. this is part of the reason you want your pure bluffs/semi bluffs and your monsters to have similar lines. to blur your opponents perception of your range, and make it as difficult as possible for him to play you correctly.

--my drunken rambling 2 cents.
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spoonitnow
Post Posted: Sat, 10 May 2008, 6:52am    Post subject: Reply with quote
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I don't see why this is so complicated lol.
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IowaSkinsFan
Post Posted: Sat, 10 May 2008, 10:02am    Post subject: Reply with quote
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spoonitnow wrote:
I don't see why this is so complicated lol.


It isn't but a lot of people will not get it to no fault of their own.
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minSim
Post Posted: Sat, 10 May 2008, 10:43am    Post subject: Re: Renton theorem aka ABCD theorem Reply with quote
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Renton wrote:
The four ranges are determined by the resultant play that is optimal for the range as a whole.

Subranges A, B, C, and D are directly adjacent in terms of playability/strength (i.e. the bottom of 'A' borders with the top of 'B'). All of the hands in a given subrange should be played the same (barring randomizing your play), and this is how the range is defined.


Shouldn't you have more subranges, if you link them to playability?

The way it is, you suggest there's only 4 possible plays. But when we're OOP there are a lot more (c/f, c/c, c/r, b/f, b/c)
When we're a bit deeper, theres even more like c/r/f, c/r/c, b/c, b/shove)

Especially the difference between made hands and draws I don't see coming back into the subranges, and would expect to.
Let alone the 'strongness' of the draw. (i.e. a monster draw is still something else as a nut hand, as a real nut hand we should consider slowplaying from time to time). A monster draw is still something else than a weak draw, as a monster draw you sometimes want to c/r, while leading a weak draw. etc.
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spoonitnow
Post Posted: Sat, 10 May 2008, 10:48am    Post subject: Reply with quote
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IowaSkinsFan wrote:
spoonitnow wrote:
I don't see why this is so complicated lol.


It isn't but a lot of people will not get it to no fault of their own.

This is probably true.

I think my comment was born more out of the AIM convo we had before he posted this here. He explained it and I was still waiting for him to tell me the idea because all of it was leading up to something else hehe.
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Renton
Post Posted: Sat, 10 May 2008, 7:52pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
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bump
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donnybaker
Post Posted: Sat, 10 May 2008, 9:41pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
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Forgive the ignorance, this is all something I've been trying to wrap my head around.

Is the general idea here to have as wide and balanced a range as possible for each of our actions? i.e. we bet a flop with our A/D hands and check with our B/C hands. This gives us a very wide range for each action (we're betting with garbage or nutty hands) and checking hands both fairly strong and fairly weak.

However, don't you have to sometimes check your As and Bet your Bs to balance your lines?
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will641
Post Posted: Sat, 10 May 2008, 11:08pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
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good post renton.
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spoonitnow
Post Posted: Sun, 11 May 2008, 4:27am    Post subject: Reply with quote
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No longer a sticky? Wat?
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swiggidy
Post Posted: Sun, 11 May 2008, 11:28am    Post subject: Reply with quote
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donnybaker wrote:
Forgive the ignorance, this is all something I've been trying to wrap my head around.

<snip>

However, don't you have to sometimes check your As and Bet your Bs to balance your lines?


If you're below 100NL you don't need to worry about balance. You make money off the lose passives who don't pay attention, let alone adjust. The "regs" are probably all tight and don't really adjust either.
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Renton
Post Posted: Sun, 11 May 2008, 3:02pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
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Marshall28 wrote:
your "subdivided ranges" appear to me to be just the difference between when you are merging and when you are polarizing your range.

i dont care if it was samo, i've said a lot of dumb things in the past, but i am pretty sure of one thing.... by excluding certain hands specifically from my 3betting range it does a number of things:

1. allows villain to get a better read on how i think and how i play
2. makes it easier to put me on a hand postflop, i guess i just said this, but actually the more hands you include in your 3bet range, the more difficult it is for villain to play against u if he decides to play back at all or more specifically call preflop.
3. i dunno, this is all dependent on the range of hands we estimate villain to be flatting 3bets or folding/possibly 4betting us with anyways. to say "never" is a sin in poker, and to never 3bet jqs, especially in a bvsb scenario seems straight retarded to me if you understand anything about your opponent.

the dynamics at the time might have suggested that it was bad timing to 3bet that particular hand and given that it would have been more profitable to call, then u have an arguemtn for a specific situation, but to say always, or never ... its just ignorant.

as far as renton theorem or whatever, i think u r close to getting it, spend some time thinking about why you came to these conclusions ... specifically considering random distribution of cards (we are all dealt roughly the same amount of good and bad hands over the long run). so like, if you can force a fold out of someone where u have like 30% equity and they had 70 to win the pot, like you 5bet bluff someone w/ A5s and they fold TT or whatever.... you are gaining a ton in that sense. this is part of the reason you want your pure bluffs/semi bluffs and your monsters to have similar lines. to blur your opponents perception of your range, and make it as difficult as possible for him to play you correctly.

--my drunken rambling 2 cents.


Playing polar ranges doesn't necessarily make you easy to read postflop at all. It might allow them to weight out some nut combinations from your range, but if you have a bluff frequency that is in reasonable ratio with your value frequency, they are in just as tough of a spot as if you had a linear range.

Also everyone seems to take issue with the ABCD concept, saying that "you should not play all hands the same blahblablah." The theorem defines optimality. It doesn't say this is always how u have to play the hands. I threw in a (barring randomizing your play) in there somewhere. You can and should 3-bet TT/JJ a percentage of the time in position, but it should be a low one.
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Renton
Post Posted: Sun, 11 May 2008, 3:04pm    Post subject: Re: Renton theorem aka ABCD theorem Reply with quote
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minSim wrote:
Renton wrote:
The four ranges are determined by the resultant play that is optimal for the range as a whole.

Subranges A, B, C, and D are directly adjacent in terms of playability/strength (i.e. the bottom of 'A' borders with the top of 'B'). All of the hands in a given subrange should be played the same (barring randomizing your play), and this is how the range is defined.


Shouldn't you have more subranges, if you link them to playability?

The way it is, you suggest there's only 4 possible plays. But when we're OOP there are a lot more (c/f, c/c, c/r, b/f, b/c)
When we're a bit deeper, theres even more like c/r/f, c/r/c, b/c, b/shove)

Especially the difference between made hands and draws I don't see coming back into the subranges, and would expect to.
Let alone the 'strongness' of the draw. (i.e. a monster draw is still something else as a nut hand, as a real nut hand we should consider slowplaying from time to time). A monster draw is still something else than a weak draw, as a monster draw you sometimes want to c/r, while leading a weak draw. etc.


I think having strong draws in group A and weak draws in group B works in most scenarios. Its really about thinking on step ahead. Once you are thinking two or more, then things become more complicated and that goes outside the scope of this.
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daven
Post Posted: Sun, 11 May 2008, 3:05pm    Post subject: Re: Renton theorem aka ABCD theorem Reply with quote
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Renton wrote:
Hopefully this isn't totally redundant info to you guys.

IowaSkinsFan wrote:
spoonitnow wrote:

I don't see why this is so complicated lol.

It isn't but a lot of people will not get it to no fault of their own.


for me this has been very useful. Not too difficult to grasp once read carefully, but something i had never before seen clearly described.
Thanks.
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Renton
Post Posted: Sun, 11 May 2008, 3:11pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
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donnybaker wrote:
Forgive the ignorance, this is all something I've been trying to wrap my head around.

Is the general idea here to have as wide and balanced a range as possible for each of our actions? i.e. we bet a flop with our A/D hands and check with our B/C hands. This gives us a very wide range for each action (we're betting with garbage or nutty hands) and checking hands both fairly strong and fairly weak.

However, don't you have to sometimes check your As and Bet your Bs to balance your lines?


Yes to the last part, as i just mentioned in my last post.

The general idea is to make the maximum amount of money vs their range with your range, to avoid being bluffed off of medium strength hands, to get maximum value out of our value range, while retaining the maximum fold equity out of our bluff range.
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Marshall28
Post Posted: Sun, 11 May 2008, 6:35pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
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Renton wrote:
Marshall28 wrote:
your "subdivided ranges" appear to me to be just the difference between when you are merging and when you are polarizing your range.

i dont care if it was samo, i've said a lot of dumb things in the past, but i am pretty sure of one thing.... by excluding certain hands specifically from my 3betting range it does a number of things:

1. allows villain to get a better read on how i think and how i play
2. makes it easier to put me on a hand postflop, i guess i just said this, but actually the more hands you include in your 3bet range, the more difficult it is for villain to play against u if he decides to play back at all or more specifically call preflop.
3. i dunno, this is all dependent on the range of hands we estimate villain to be flatting 3bets or folding/possibly 4betting us with anyways. to say "never" is a sin in poker, and to never 3bet jqs, especially in a bvsb scenario seems straight retarded to me if you understand anything about your opponent.

the dynamics at the time might have suggested that it was bad timing to 3bet that particular hand and given that it would have been more profitable to call, then u have an arguemtn for a specific situation, but to say always, or never ... its just ignorant.

as far as renton theorem or whatever, i think u r close to getting it, spend some time thinking about why you came to these conclusions ... specifically considering random distribution of cards (we are all dealt roughly the same amount of good and bad hands over the long run). so like, if you can force a fold out of someone where u have like 30% equity and they had 70 to win the pot, like you 5bet bluff someone w/ A5s and they fold TT or whatever.... you are gaining a ton in that sense. this is part of the reason you want your pure bluffs/semi bluffs and your monsters to have similar lines. to blur your opponents perception of your range, and make it as difficult as possible for him to play you correctly.

--my drunken rambling 2 cents.


Playing polar ranges doesn't necessarily make you easy to read postflop at all. It might allow them to weight out some nut combinations from your range, but if you have a bluff frequency that is in reasonable ratio with your value frequency, they are in just as tough of a spot as if you had a linear range.

Also everyone seems to take issue with the ABCD concept, saying that "you should not play all hands the same blahblablah." The theorem defines optimality. It doesn't say this is always how u have to play the hands. I threw in a (barring randomizing your play) in there somewhere. You can and should 3-bet TT/JJ a percentage of the time in position, but it should be a low one.


its all just opponent dependent ... i think i responded too quickly and didnt sort out my thoughts clearly enough. obviously just having a polar range vs thinking opponents isnt going to always be good ... its probably going to be bad vs players better than you. its really best against weak imperceptive opponents who won't try to put you on a hand and just assume that what they are holding is no good when you jam all in repping a strong hand.

i 3bet TT and JJ 95% of the time in position ... it'd be silly for me not to .. ive sat at a table w/ you before, you play like 14/12 so yeah of course you should be 3betting these hands at a lower rate because you are missing postflop value or getting stacked if you decide to go w/ them preflop.

u asked for my comments im just telling you what i think. but i think the part i said about random card distribution is real important.
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Renton
Post Posted: Sun, 11 May 2008, 6:43pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
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if TT and JJ are part of your nut range, then of course its good to 3-bet them.

I run 22/18ish at six max in general, in there are some players that i can for sure stack off pre with JJ/TT, and against them I do 3-bet those hands. Three betting JJ/TT in position without history is generally a weak play though.
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Cocco_Bill
Post Posted: Sun, 11 May 2008, 6:51pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
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swiggidy wrote:
donnybaker wrote:
Forgive the ignorance, this is all something I've been trying to wrap my head around.

<snip>

However, don't you have to sometimes check your As and Bet your Bs to balance your lines?


If you're below 100NL you don't need to worry about balance. You make money off the lose passives who don't pay attention, let alone adjust. The "regs" are probably all tight and don't really adjust either.


Poker is a game based deep down on optimal strategy, the sooner you can start optimizing your play against a wide variety of styles the better. A balanced 100nl player who acts on reads is lot stronger than a player who only exploits loose passives. The mathematically balanced player will be stronger by far by all metrics if he/she can adjust even slightly to opponent tendencies.
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vegascoop
Post Posted: Sun, 11 May 2008, 6:52pm    Post subject: Re: Renton theorem aka ABCD theorem Reply with quote
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daven wrote:
Renton wrote:
Hopefully this isn't totally redundant info to you guys.

IowaSkinsFan wrote: