How to play this kind of table? *update*
Hello all,
I've played a couple games of NL Texas Hold 'Em with some of my friends (6 total) and after a bad beat last night I'm frustrated and wondering if I should change my strategy. I would characterize the table as pretty beginner level: people call too many bets, it is rare that there is a pre-flop raise. I would say it's generally hard to bluff because people call a lot even with bottom pair, and people tend to underbet a lot too (20% or less of the pot with top pair top kicker with no flush or straight) which can make it hard to put them on a hand. People call bets rather than reraise all the time, but will call reraises if you do it to them. I decided I should try and get in to see the flop cheap with almost anything, from most positions because I am unlikely to be raised, wait for a good hand and let them call me all the way down, maybe slowplay it if I flop an absolute monster and try and let them catch a little something to bet with. Well, I got one good hand all night while someone else was always getting two pair or trips. I got whittled down all night trying to catch something and finally went all-in fairly shortstacked from BB with only limpers with A10o 4-handed, got one caller with 910s and lost when he caught a 9 on the river. Anyway, what are some ways to do better at this table? Thanks for any advice...
Re: How to play this kind of table?
Quote:
Originally Posted by andaval
I decided I should try and get in to see the flop cheap with almost anything, from most positions because I am unlikely to be raised, wait for a good hand and let them call me all the way down, maybe slowplay it if I flop an absolute monster and try and let them catch a little something to bet with.
That is basically the strategy I have adopted at my home game, except for the slow play. Don't slow play. Bet and they will find a reason to call.
The other thing I've noticed is that people have no understanding of pot odds and they always bet too small when they have a good hand. For example, 20 Big blinds will be in the pot and they will bet 3x big blind with top pair top kicker. I try to take advantage of this by playing more draw hand than I normally would and "chasing" more than I normally would because the pot odds justify it.
Re: How to play this kind of table?
At a loose table...
(1)you need to become a bit tighter
(2)use less semi-bluffs and less bluffs
(3)bet more for value/strength
(4)as soon as the pot gets LARGE, TAKE IT DOWN, dont hope for calls unless you have the pure nuts( Royal flush). Dont hope for calls, even if the other player only has 1 out. you need to WIN THE BIG POTS RIGHT AWAY
(5)only play marginal hands if you are getting good pot odds(example: you only have to call 5 dollars to get a chance at a 50 dollar pot)
better to win a small pot, then lose a large pot
so be patient, let these loose players go all in and knock down the table to short-handed, and most of all, dont get frustrated and on tilt 8-)
Re: How to play this kind of table?
Quote:
Originally Posted by dutchfan
At a loose table...
(1)you need to become a bit tighter
Only if it's loose-aggressive pre-flop. Otherwise, you should be playing *more* hands if you're a good post-flop player.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Krapp
How I would play the table:
(1) Preflop raise with a strong hand (2x-3x BB)
More if they're calling with crap!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Krapp
How I would play the table:
(4) Dont play marginal hands unless good pot odds and bets are low and for hands where you are drawing to a top hand (flush or straight)
Once again, often these are exactly the kind of players you want to see cheap flops with marginal hands with if you got the post-flop skills to back it up. You just need to target stronger hands since you're going to be in so many multi-pots.
Make a strong hand on the cheap, show it to them, rinse and repeat.