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					  Originally Posted by OngBonga   I rarely open -limp , the only times I do it is early in a low buy-in MTT , when the blinds are <100, and there's plenty of fish , and only if I'm  expecting to see the flop  for my limp . In that event, I won't lay down small pairs , I can set  mine this spot . 
 
Cash tables, I don 't open limp  any more. I sometimes limp behind  with scs or pps, but never open limp .
 
What spoon said. I've just given my brother an email bollocking for playing $3 rebuys with a small bankroll , linked him to this site pleading with him to read up on bankroll management . $3 rebuys require a bankroll  of at least $900. If you've got that, then I guess it's no problem to play $3 rebuys.
 
As for 100nl, if you really are a beginner then you're just giving your money away playing at this level . For a start, proper bankroll management  requires a roll  of $4000 before we even take a seat, and then we really need to understand the game if we intend to make money instead of losing it.
 
If I'm  honest, I'd say you're way off the required standard  to play 100nl. I say this because you tell  us that you don 't open limp  because a pro told you not to. You can learn a lot off the pros, but it requires more than just hearing what they say... you need to understand it too. Why is it bad to open limp ? If you don 't know, then please step down from 100nl very quickly. 
	I'd like to mention that there's nothing inherently wrong with open-limping or min-raising in NLHE. The problem is that the vast majority of the time (and I'm talking like 99.9%) it's better not to, and the advantage you gain in those few times over raising to a more "normal" amount is so small that it's not worth worrying about right now.
		
			
			
				
					  Originally Posted by daviddem   Seems to me I see a lot of people at 5nl adopting this min raising strategy in EP with marginal  hands. Problem with that is that once you know what they are doing and have a note on them, it becomes pretty transparent. Personally, I either standard  4xbb raise  my small pairs  in EP or just lay them down, depending on the table tightness/aggressiveness. At tight /passive  tables, I tend to raise  them and they often take the blinds or I get one caller and a cbet on a good flop  often does the job. At loose /aggressive tables, where I am likely to get multiple callers or be 3b, I lay them down.
 
Min raising is bad in general, since you lay such good odds for anyone to call  with a half decent hand. 
 An example of when it would probably be right to open-limp some hands is if you're playing with very passive pre-flop players left to act in a game that's fairly deep where people left to act often pay off multiple streets with bad hands.
 
 An example of when it would probably be right to open min-raise is when you're on the button against people who fold a very high percentage of the time. In fact, this is the default opening size for a number of small-mid stakes regulars on the button.
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