View Single Post
zook
Old 09-27-2006, 09:57 AM #10 (permalink)  
zook's Avatar
4-of-a-Kind

Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 3,676
zook
Quote:
Originally Posted by fasin8ing
PG 29 " Back Alley Mugging "

When someone leads out on a flop of 8 6 2 and the turn is an Ace ... There was no PF raise ... If its checked to me and I bet this is an example of a BAM. Does everyone agree this would only work with one opponent in the hand? Or better yet HU ?
I wouldn't feel comfortable doing this OOP vs. more than one opponent, but in position maybe.

Quote:
Originally Posted by fasin8ing
How much would you bet if you were pos and it were checked to you to accomplish taking down the pot?
It depends. Half-pot?

Quote:
Originally Posted by fasin8ing
Whats the difference between floating and BAM ?
Floating is what you do first.

Quote:
Originally Posted by fasin8ing
Blinds are 100 / 200 - If it goes PF raise , you call , check check , check check , check .... Q on the river .. How much are you betting into a 800 dollar pot? What is a convincing bet if you have say 12 X the BB left in your stack ?
Probably ~1300 in the pot, 2400 behind, you want to leave yourself with enough chips if he looks you up... maybe 600-700 here.

Quote:
Originally Posted by fasin8ing
PG 33..

Delayed C bets - Is this smart only if you have overs or a draw? Is there any other examples on when it would be good to use this? If anyone has an example please use it .. Iam thinking you hit the flop and had something like TPGK and you check it then bet the turn when something lower hit or a non scary card... Am I right?
I think it's just a way to gauge your opponent's strength before making a c-bet. If you're OOP, you give him a chance to bet the flop if he got a piece and get out of the hand cheaply. If he doesn't you can probably lead a blank turn safely, even if it misses you. If you're in position, you can check behind the flop to avoid a potential c/r , get out of the hand cheaply if he leads the turn, and c-bet if he doesn't. I think you can make this move with any holding, but if you have missed overs or a draw it makes more sense to check behind on the flop so you don't risk getting c/r'ed off your hand.
Reply With Quote