Learning to Lay Down a Strong Hand is Important?
I was at the sands in Atlantic City this weekend, playing $100 minimum buy in NO-LIMIT blinds $1-$2. First let me tell you I am a tight player. I am dealt A K unsuited one off the button. i have two limpers before me.
I raise to $12. First limper folds. Next limper looks back down at his hand ponders and raises me to $30. I look at him and puts his head down very weak looking. I reach for my chips then muck flipping over my Blick Slick. The guy next to me calls me dumb. AND THE LIMPER THROWS POCKET ROCKETS AT HIM. Regardless of now knowing he had aces do you think i made the right move?
Re: Learning to Lay Down a Strong Hand is Important?
Showing the table you were capable of mucking Big Slick pre-flop may have been a bad move, depending on table image, etc. Otherwise sounds like a great move to me. Lots of solid player and betting pattern reading there.
Re: Learning to Lay Down a Strong Hand is Important?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fnord
Showing the table you were capable of mucking Big Slick pre-flop may have been a bad move, depending on table image, etc.
I've been curious to find what image wins the most money at live games. Would you rather be pegged as a fish or very tight? What table would you like that image at.
I played at a pretty loose table and did a couple of stupid things early to give myself the fish table image. It worked pretty well. But that goes against the adage of playing loose at a tight table and tight at a loose table.
Re: Learning to Lay Down a Strong Hand is Important?
Quote:
Originally Posted by fsg03
I was at the sands in Atlantic City this weekend, playing $100 minimum buy in NO-LIMIT blinds $1-$2. First let me tell you I am a tight player. I am dealt A K unsuited one off the button. i have two limpers before me.
I raise to $12. First limper folds. Next limper looks back down at his hand ponders and raises me to $30. I look at him and puts his head down very weak looking. I reach for my chips then muck flipping over my Blick Slick. The guy next to me calls me dumb. AND THE LIMPER THROWS POCKET ROCKETS AT HIM. Regardless of now knowing he had aces do you think i made the right move?
Laying down in this situation (before the flop) depends on the type of player making the bet and your table perception. If you are a tight player, the raiser knows that and tries to push you out, a good strategy that you must consider. The other consideration is the type of player the raiser is. If he habitually calls/raises before the flop then he may be semi-bluffing, (a mid to small pair), or A-K, A-Q, A-J.
You had two other opions, reraise, or call. If you reraise and he folds, you just discovered some great info on the guy. If you reraise and he calls, he doesn't have A-A. He may have a K-K, Q-Q, J-J. IF you reraise and he reraises, you fold. ALthough you may not win the hand, you will get some value from reraise in information on how he plays.
Re: Learning to Lay Down a Strong Hand is Important?
Quote:
Originally Posted by amtorti
Quote:
Originally Posted by fsg03
I was at the sands in Atlantic City this weekend, playing $100 minimum buy in NO-LIMIT blinds $1-$2. First let me tell you I am a tight player. I am dealt A K unsuited one off the button. i have two limpers before me.
I raise to $12. First limper folds. Next limper looks back down at his hand ponders and raises me to $30. I look at him and puts his head down very weak looking. I reach for my chips then muck flipping over my Blick Slick. The guy next to me calls me dumb. AND THE LIMPER THROWS POCKET ROCKETS AT HIM. Regardless of now knowing he had aces do you think i made the right move?
If you reraise and he calls, he doesn't have A-A. He may have a K-K, Q-Q, J-J. IF you reraise and he reraises, you fold. ALthough you may not win the hand, you will get some value from reraise in information on how he plays.
this guy had already demonstrated a propensity for slowplaying rockets - i wouldn't put him past a smooth call if fsg had raised.
i still say good fold.