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New exercise to practice hand reading!
Today while I was in the shower (I do my best thinking there) I was bemoaning the fact that I still suck at thinking about opponent ranges when I'm playing. I do give it consideration when I'm reviewing hands, but it's still something I'm not great at. What I need is practice.
Then it occurred to me that with most opponents, the information I have to work with is very limited. I may have stats like VPIP, PFR, maybe a note or two that they're a calling station or have some sort of bet sizing tell. But there are a lot of gaps in the information, and that makes hand reading difficult. I know, that's something you have to get used to and learn to deal with. But when practicing a new skill, I prefer to start off at the easiest level possible and work my way up. So to practice hand reading and thinking about ranges, I want to have the most complete information possible.
My database isn't very large. I might have 1,000 hands on a few guys. A lot of information can be gleamed from this, but I desire more. I want to practice this skill against a player whose game I know inside and out. Fortunately, I know of one such player, and I have a ton of hands on him: Myself!
So I load up HEM and go to my hand histories. Next, I close off the column that shows my hole cards, the flop cards, the turn and river. Then I sort my hands by largest pot size. From here I can simply right click a hand and copy the HH to my clipboard. I found one hand converter that allows me to hide the Hero's hole cards; it just so happens to be FTR's converter.
Unfortunately, this also hides the Hero's identity. However, there is a column in HEM that allows me to see what my position was in the hand. Because of the care I took in closing off the columns, I can paste a HH to the forum knowing nothing about the hand except for the pot size and my position; and the fact that I played it.
Now I'm ready to practice hand reading! I'll do this in real time and see how it goes.
In this hand I am in the CO:
Full Tilt No-Limit Hold'em, $0.25 BB (9 handed) - Full Tilt Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com
UTG+1 ($19.25)
MP1 ($10.77)
MP2 ($25)
MP3 ($31.70)
CO ($39.42)
Button ($26.80)
SB ($75.55)
BB ($22.61)
UTG ($71.75)
Preflop:
UTG bets $0.75, 1 fold, MP1 calls $0.75, 2 folds, CO calls $0.75, 1 fold, SB calls $0.65, 1 fold
I know I don't 3-bet a ton, which is probably a leak. I'm flatting here all day with 22-TT. Occasionally I'll also flat with AQo+ and JJ, but I 3-bet them fairly often so we can discount that somewhat. I think it's pretty safe to discount QQ+ entirely, as I'll 3-bet those 100% of the time. I play very nitty when I don't have initiative, so much of the time I'll fold hands like AJo and KQs here.
Flop: ($3.25) 4 , 6 , K (4 players)
SB checks, UTG checks, MP1 checks, CO bets $2, SB calls $2, UTG calls $2, 1 fold
Even on a board this dry, I am almost never c-betting here in a 4-way pot without at least top pair. My range here has to be very narrow. It's pretty much just 66, 44, and AK.
Turn: ($9.25) 10 (3 players)
SB checks, UTG checks, CO bets $6, 1 fold, UTG raises to $14.25, CO raises to $36.67 (All-In), UTG calls $22.42
I double barreled, which is consistent with AK. But then I shoved over the 3-bet. Lately I've been trying not to play for stacks with TPTK unless I have a read, especially when this deep. That may or not be the case here. But for the most part, I think my hand is weighed a lot more heavily toward sets.
Wow, having this much information is pretty amazing. Could I really have narrowed down my range to 2 hands?
River: ($82.59) 4 (2 players, 1 all-in)
Total pot: $82.59 | Rake: $3
Results below:
UTG had K , K (full house, Kings over fours).
CO had 6 , 6 (full house, sixes over fours).
Outcome: UTG won $79.59
Yes! That went very well. I know this is a very simple example, and maybe hand reading is absurdly easy against a player you know so well. But it's a starting point. By simplifying things as much as possible, I can get very comfortable with the basics. Once I feel that I have mastered hand reading against myself, I'll move on to reviewing hands against opponents that I have the most information on. Then work my up from there, with less and less information available.
I may post a few more hands later. But feel free to try this yourself. No peeking!
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