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Re: Taking risks against passive players
 Originally Posted by Anosmic
After reading some advice here I've started giving players at my level a little (a lot?) less respect. The question is, have I gone too far?
After just reading this line, I would say: very likely. The reason is that I have seen it in myself that when I make a "new discovery", I tend to take it to too much of an extreme.
Because of the number of times they call it's hard to tell if they're slow-playing a monster or just fishing for that elusive card.
I used to have problems with that too in the past, but I don't anymore now. If I see a guy put his money on TPLK with a lot of scare cards on the board that could beat him, then I simply know that in my future calculations with this guy in the hand, I need to add a bigger range of cards to what he might likely be holding. When playing vs a player who knows how to value his hands properly, I can narrow this range down. That's the only difference.
(this "how highly a player values his hand" property is in my experience the main thing you need to know about a guy, and has a lot less to do than you might think with how tight/loose a player is)
Okay, scarey flop, so I make a moderate bet for information.
I think $0.50 is not a good idea here. When you are first up, either you have to make a raise that will put the flush-hunters (quite possible with 2 people in the pot) at bad odds, or you simply have to check. A moderate bet here really tells you very little if it gets called. I'd bet $0.70 or $0.8O here. If someone calls that, either they have something, or they are chasing their flush/straight with bad odds.
It's possible he's got a hand and is trying to trick me into staying in. More likely he's not got a K and is waiting. I'd guess he's got clubs, or a straight draw.
A higher raise on the flop would have given you more definite information when this guy calls. For one you could worry less about them chasing a draw and a crap low pair hand.
I can't seem to get rid of them by giving bad odds, so I give another half-pot-ish bet. He follows along.
Not easy to know where you're at now.
Great. If he's got the king I don't care any more. It's not a club and the straight is not possible. So, the only possibility is the flush. If he has the flush that means he called my flop bet with three cards to his flush. Unlikely, so I go all-in (the converter seems to have missed my bet) and he calls.
I don't understand why you would go all-in here. You don't know where you stand.. he'll only call with a hand that has you beat most likely. So it's better to just 'check' here. Atleast you'll get some info on what he has. If he was gonna fold to your all-in, you probably win too if he checks after your check. If he raises you below your stack amount, I think you have to call due to the odds here. If you lose, you have something left. If however he pushes you all-in.. not sure how much your stack % is towards the total pot, but then you'd have to do some calculations to decide between fold or call.
Sorry, don't feel much like doing the calculations for this particular hand at this point, just played 2 hours and I'm a little tired (up $15 single table 10NL, so it was good).. so it's more general comments I made.
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