
Originally Posted by
dreamover
My uncle who plays professionaly told me early of NL, "this is a trapping game". He also told me later, "I
slow play all my winning hands, which is more risky but far more profitable".
Online/Offline?
Stakes?
Effective stack size?
For the most part, people
call too much and playing fast is more often than not the way
to go as you win the max when they have a hand and mitigate the risk of being sucked out on and paying off big.
Many opponents are very transparent with bet sizes, small bets with weak hands, value bets (with
slow play mixed in) for strong hands, over-bets are often bluffs (how can you
call that?!?!?!) Throw in the calling reflex, paranoia, mistrust and lack of tells online and just pushing with the
nuts is a pretty darn good
line, more often the best
line than you would think.
For a long time, I would just auto-
push hands like T9s on a Js8c2s board. I got called A LOT. Now I often
push JJ/88/22 here too and get called A LOT. Contrast this to slow playing and having a
straight or
flush card hit. You gave up value on the
flop and ended up in a difficult
spot on the
turn. Another part of
NLHE is avoiding difficult spots. Sure, great players find a way to get the most of them, but the best players avoid them when a better
option is available.
Consider the amount of mony in the pot and amount of money
behind. In a small pot, you have less to risk by slow playing, but it's hard to win a lot if you
don't build something. In a healthy pot with little money
behind, skipping streets is fine because it's easy enough to get it in on the next
street. In a healthy pot with lots of money
behind, playing fast is often best to mitigate the suck-out cost, get maxium value and getting a hand drawing live (as few as 2-4
outs) to
fold isn't too terrible.
Finally, consider that many players make dubious calls for lots of money on a medium-strong
draw. If you
slow play, you fail to get money in when the other guy is willing to pay.