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 Originally Posted by drmcboy
your other post said you've quintupled your BR in 2 motnhs or something - why do you think that was? Could it be all the fish calling with crap and not hitting most of the time?
I don't think it is.
I seem to make most of my profits by putting players on hands and then making them throw them away.
Example: I am fairly certain my opponent is on a flush or a straight draw but I have absolutely nothing. I make a huge bet on the flop or turn so that my opponent does not have the odds to draw to the flush or straight. My opponent, who is not getting the right odds, folds. He may well have held a higher card than I, but I've made him dump it.
Example: I am fairly certain my opponent has a pair. I have nothing but call small to medium bets hoping for a bluffing opportunity. A third suited card falls on the turn or river. I move in on him. He folds.
In the above situations, a call from my opponents is a bad, bad move - it takes a stronger hand to call than to bet. If they get a large bet in first with eg a flush draw, well that's a different matter - I will fold. They have played the hand correctly.
My style is very aggressive and I am thinking all the time not so much about my cards but my opponent's hand. Of course such moves don't always come off and I have misread my opponent, but this is how I play.
This is what I mean by the fish making bad calls. But one bad call is all it takes to upset the apple cart.
Say I have top pair on a flop which is two suited or connector such as K78. I bet with my AK and overbet the pot to pick it up there and then and drive out the drawing hands. The next player to act, who is getting terrible odds with his flush draw, calls. Now, the player after him isn't getting such bad odds with his straight draw so he also calls. And the final player who has paired one of the cards (lets say he holds Q8) also reckons he can call, hoping for two pair or trips.
Because of one bad call, players have not been driven out and although I am in front I'm not favourite to win the pot. Any one of nine suited cards will beat me, any one of six straight cards will beat me, any one of the two eights will beat me as will any one of three queens. Twenty cards can do me on the turn or the river - it is long odds on that one of them hits something. Sure, I could hit an A or K to strengthen my position, but could still be hit on the river by any one of twenty cards.
All this has arisen because one, just one, fish makes an inadvisable call.
On a table of fish, you might not make them fold hands. I tell anyone who will listen that in poker there is one difficult hand you must learn to fold - assuming you know that you don't play second or third pair - and that is Top Pair Medium Kicker. Too many fish play this hand and top pair weak kicker. This is great when I hold TPTK, but that doesn't happen very often.
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