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Re: limping UTG
 Originally Posted by sarbox68
6max, $10NL. Have started limping 22-77, maybe 88 & 99 UTG and then calling a raise w/ set odds. Found when I raised these, was getting 3-bet enough times (esp from shorties) that destroyed any set odds and forced a fold. By limping, these same players raise which I can call and still be eff 15:1+. I know the "never limp UTG" mantra... but is my thought process of with this one?
Who is the guy 3betting? if its a semi-loose or loose aggressive, than you should be 4 betting light or floating the flop. if it's a tight player, you should be looking at your notes to see how he stacks off. if he stacks off any TPTK or overpair, you don't have to wait to get 15:1 because you know he'll stack off PERIOD. call the 3bet and bet the flop if you hit. he'll gladly push in the rest of his stack. if it's an opponent that can release those types of hands, there's no real point in set-mining period. The point of this is you don't know who's going to do what when you're UTG. If you limp, you're losing value to the nits that will limp behind for cheap but would've otherwise folded to an open-raise. you lose value to the aggressive players, because the pot is going to be alot smaller. the larger the pot, the more tempted they are to c-bet the flop regardless if they hit, since they have position. but, if they're observant and see what you've limped UTG, they might change the way they play based on board texture. But, if you play UTG pretty much the same way, they won't have that kind of read. so basically, play all UTG hands the same. Why? Nobody knows what you have besides you. They don't know you're holding 22-77. you could just as easily be holding KK/AA. the point is, since you're first to act and will be giving information away first. you should give as little as possible. this makes it harder for your opp to put you on a hand, and more likely to make a mistake.
cliff notes: limping UTG can change dynamics of preflop action, causing few positive effects, except maybe pot control on the flop. and set odds don't matter preflop unless you're up against an unknown villian.
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