What to do when your raises don't make anyone lay down hands
I'm @ paradise playing .25/.50 and I raised AK off the BB and 8 out of 10 called to see the flop, yes, 8 people put in a dollar. The one who won the hand had 9 10 and caught 9's on the flop. But should I even bother raising premiium hands like this when obviously no one is folding? Also, what hands should I play at a table like this?
Re: What to do when your raises don't make anyone lay down h
Quote:
Originally Posted by redflea13
I'm @ paradise playing .25/.50 and I raised AK off the BB and 8 out of 10 called to see the flop, yes, 8 people put in a dollar. The one who won the hand had 9 10 and caught 9's on the flop. But should I even bother raising premiium hands like this when obviously no one is folding? Also, what hands should I play at a table like this?
Paradise is a goldmine if you adjust right to those players. You have a lot of different players, (stations, nits, lags, tags) but everyone of them is totally unbalanced in one way or another.
AKo isn't "premium hand" in deep NLHE.
Listen to Fnord and experiment with overbets.
Learn to distinguish "big pot hands" from "small pot hands".
Build pots in position with big pot hands. If you hit hard then bet bet bet, if you miss, then try to get freebie suckout.
If you hit hard flop in small, unbuilt, limped pot, then overbet 1.5/2x or even more. Don't get pissed if you get folds around, it means that everyone missed. Expect to get called by gutshots, flush draws, one pairs.
3bet above protection threshold with your Aces and Kings.
And read this:
http://www.flopturnriver.com/phpBB2/...ighlight=bozos
Welcome to No Fold'em Hold'em.
From a limit perspective nobody, is going to fold after the whole table has limped in and the Big Blind raises. Reason being, a 50 cent raise isn't going to make anybody squirm. Even, at higher limits. Sure, a hand or two may drop out at a 4/8 table. Still, it is not life threatening. If you have a pretty good draw hand to start with then, it makes a lot of sense to stay in. The pot odds are built in. As the raiser, you need to nail your hand on the flop or, you can expect to be run over. AK doesn't like a big field to start with. With so many players already in the pot you might as well hang a bullseye on yourself....Had you been an early raiser instead that would be different. Without the element of a real "loss" to think about then, there is nothing to think about at all. Let's see who gets lucky for a few quarters!...In an eight player hand you need the BEST hand...