Why do you 3-bet PF? What are the biggest factors for your decision whether to 3-bet or not in that particular situation?
I dont want any "I dont 3-bet" or "I min 3-bet only with AA/KK" type of answers.
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Why do you 3-bet PF? What are the biggest factors for your decision whether to 3-bet or not in that particular situation?
I dont want any "I dont 3-bet" or "I min 3-bet only with AA/KK" type of answers.
OOP on a very draw heavy board where I know my opponent has a good hand that he wont fold to a 3-bet but might fold when a scaredcard hits ie 2 pair on a monotone board vs overpair (in this case he could have overpair + flush draw so best to get money in while ahead).
Multiway pot where there has been a bet and a raise already by two other players or when i bet and someone raises and there is a coldcaller.
When I can get an opponent all in with a reasonable sized 3-bet for example he only has 3/4 pot left after his raise the i can just go ahead and 3-bet him all in if i believe i have the best hand.
Main reasons are:
-When I believe the opponent will call but might fold if i dont and a scarecard hits.
-When I can sandwich a raiser between me and a coldcaller (who likely has the weakest hand) and I can get the original raiser to fold the best hand.
I rarely 3-bet though.
When I think my hand is better than a short stack's range I push. I rarely 3-bet though, it's -EV to give away you have AA.Quote:
Originally Posted by Pingviini
I play only full ring though.
I 3-bet yesterday against a Rock who called my 3-bet and then called my AI/Pot bet on the Flop with...ATd...that completely missed the Flop.
I open up my range against Maniacs commiserate with his reraising range.
Any other 3betting PF in Full Ring games besides AA/KK is FPS and a leak.
I am asking about pre-flop. PF = pre-flop
How does 3-betting give away that you have AA?Quote:
When I think my hand is better than a short stack's range I push. I rarely 3-bet though, it's -EV to give away you have AA.
I play only full ring though.
Keep in mind, preflop, the BB is considered the first bet, so a raise would be considered a 2-bet, and a reraise the 3-bet.
Ping: I know you have been playing 5/10 NL, which I have never played, so take my advice fwiw.
When I 3-bet, it's generally a situation where I think my hand is significantly ahead of my opponent's range, I want to play for stacks (or just quickly take down the pot, *ahem AK*), information leakage isn't an overly huge concern (keep in mind it shows the strength of your hand, but also somewhat reveals the strength of your opponent's hand), and ideally I'm in position.
Comparing a 3-bet range when a laggy co opens for 4x and you are on the button, is worlds apart from say, a tight UTG raiser opens for 4x and it folds to your BB. One might make the argument that, being OOP, you want to be more agressive and quickly take down the pot. I think that's kind of flawed thinking though, and think that Fnord's frequent advice of not building a pot OOP with a well-defined hand applies much better in these situations.
In my first example (laggy co opens, i'm OTB), my range could be as wide as say, JJ-AA, AQs+, AKo or so. Same situation, but it's a tight UTG raiser and i'm OTB, maybe QQ+. If I'm in the blinds, I become very cautious about 3-betting unmade hands. Facing a tight/tricky player, I often even have reservations about doing it with as strong of a hand as QQ. In that situation, my range is probably like QQ+.
Like I said, take my advice fwiw. It's an area of my game that I'm personally trying to improve on myself. And I think it becomes more important not only to expand this into your own game as you move up, but also understand what other players think on the subject as it gives you some insight into what you should be thinking when you are OOP facing down a 3-bet holding something like AK.
Quote:
How does 3-betting give away that you have AA?
I know a lot of guys who min-reraise PF with AA which is just plain horrible. When you reach higher stakes 3-betting comes a useful weapon under certain circumstances, I am curious to find out what the circumstances are :)Quote:
I open up my range against Maniacs commiserate with his reraising range.
Any other 3betting PF in Full Ring games besides AA/KK is FPS and a leak.
Also, it is much more useful in short handed games which is what I play. I dont play full ring at all.
Phil gordon speaks about re-raising PF in tournaments in his book.About "playing great hands when they raise"
He says he is more prone to re-raise PF if he is against a tricky player, if they will overplay their hands like QQ and he has AA, if they overplay their hands post flop.
these all are arguments that do better in tournaments becausee of the blind structure.
I have found myself "defending my blind" in SH games when certain guys raise too often in position, sometimes I raise with AK, sometimes 89s, TT etc. With hands that are not that easily dominated post flop. I dont really re-raise that much in position unless there is a lot of action in front of me and I have perhaps JJ+ and I want to thin the field.
I raise TT UTG, guy in blinds 3-bets it with his AA. He's literally asking me to outflop him and destack. Because TT is my lucky hand :)
I'm another person that is curious "what's the point in min 3betting PF?" For me it seems like cardinal mistake, either flat call and play g00t postflop or re-raise bigger than minimum.
Isolation of loose raiser? Isolation of minraising donk? Building the large multiway pot (in PLHE)?
I am not even mentioning min-raising here, your re-raise should almost always be 3-4x the initial raise.
Over 247 hands I've played with you, you've also only raised exactly 1.21% of your hands preflop...Quote:
Originally Posted by Iconoclastic
I don't know if I necessarily agree with this here. In practice, this may be true with deep stacks, but with only 100bb, I don't really agree. Say you bump it up to 4x UTG with TT in full ring. I'm sitting in the BB with a 100BB stack, you cover, and I bump it up to 15x. This is -ev for you to play here, and that's assuming every time you hit a set (and I don't, and don't improve on later streets) you take my stack.Quote:
Originally Posted by Vrax
I agree 100%. In the past, I'd take a marginal hand and say.. wow, I'm getting better than 3:1 here, let's see a flop! Now it's just like.. ok my AQs plays like dogshit to his range, lets just muck, but I'll happily call with a pair trying to set and destack. It's really quite a laugh to me when I bump it up to 4x and somebody else makes it 7x to go.Quote:
I'm another person that is curious "what's the point in min 3betting PF?" For me it seems like cardinal mistake, either flat call and play g00t postflop or re-raise bigger than minimum.
I'm pretty sure it's another guy with a similar name cuz I've only played at UltimateBet, Empire, and Pokerroom recently. And I KNOW my PFR% is over 5%. What's your screenname cuz I don't remember anyone named Lukie.Quote:
Originally Posted by Lukie
Here is my opinion:
Required 3-bet: AA,KK,AKs.
Marginal 3-betting: AKo, QQ, AQs
Read dependant on player: AQo, AJs, JJ
Additional possible 3-bet vs Maniac: TT, ATs,KQs,maaaaaybe AJo.
Sorry my fault, on pokerstars there is somebody with your exact screenname. He's very tight-passive preflop.Quote:
Originally Posted by Iconoclastic
This is a horrible way to think about this subject. Only time I would see a "required 3-betting" is that the pot would be big and multiway and I want to improve my chances to win it. -->Thin the field.Quote:
Originally Posted by WhooFleuryScores
i three bet for two reasons.
1. To define it opp wants to play for stacks preflop or wants to see a flop. Therefore i know how good my hand is and what his range thus is.
2. Isolation or encouragement to push from a weaker but still strong hand.
Eg. In a raised-reraised pot id 3 bet TT-KK for isolation and information.
In a mass limped pot with an lp raise my range is wider for isolation only.
If you're 3 betting with TT-QQ and you get reraised allin by op, you're obviously against an op with AA,KK assuming your op is decent and doesn't puch with AK,etc. You're not going to call this allin. However, if you call the reraise and flop comes T high with TT. You're potentially destacking op. I think your 3 bet with a weak PP for information is a bad idea. A reraise probably gives you most of the info you need and gives the op a chance to put all his money in. You then eliminate your chance at hitting a set.Quote:
Originally Posted by Miffed22001
to me a 3 bet generally represents AK AA QQ JJ and surprisingly sometimes TT. A 4 bet almost invariably means KK or AA and I will lay down QQ if I have enough respect for the raiser ( or will call hand play for the set, depending on the pot odds and stack depth).
I don't know about you but with AA or KK most people don't get to 4bets. The money is in the pot long before then.Quote:
Originally Posted by Renton
in small stakes (10, 25, 50, etc.) its EXTREMELY common. People are way too obvious with AA and KK at these levels.Quote:
Originally Posted by bigred
Unless the game is really fishy or LAggy, I stay away from pre-flop 3-bets in NL without AA or KK.
Sometimes with KK, I'll do it against a really tight player to see if he pushes. Then I can fold.
remember the big blind is the first bet...