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Poker - Better Sized $10NL
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#1
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Better Sized $10NL
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Probably a better one to post too, more tougher decisions, lost about $15 over the course of this though. |
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#8
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TT at 6:45 you should be raising out of the blinds. I was a little surprised how quickly you checked there. With two limpers and the sb tagging along we should be raising it to around 5BB and c-betting most flops. You have lots of equity and should value raise.
88 at 9:40 you raise pf then check a 962 flop - why? You're putting yourself in a really ugly spot if one of your opponents starts betting at the flop. Something I try to make a habit of is betting marginal hands more frequently earlier on in a hand to get my information for cheaper, as well as to protect my hand. Anyways that should be a bet there. 33 at 13:00 you raised OTB, got a call from the sb who min-donked an 862 flop. This is something I've realized is usually weakness and I'll often just pot it to take it down. By calling we give our opponent the impression we're not on a monster, and thus more incentive to keep betting at us (when we can't call). Q6o at 24:40 you open limp the sb. I still haven't made sense of the stats but against most opponents this should be a raise/fold spot. If this is a rare thing then I think it's fine as a mix-up but if you're regularly limping with trash hands like that it'll eat away at your stack. A9s at 37:30 you call a raise from EP when you're in the BB. This is a standard fold vs an ep raise - occasionally I might call a raise like this based on implied odds, but even then you don't have those as villain is only on like $1.50 |
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#9
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As I see it, the possible plays are 1. fold 2. play it like I did 3. raise 3x preflop 1. no matter what, I win no more, lose no more. ev=0 2. When I run into monsters, I lose 5 cents, as when I call, they're likely not checking a premium hand. No matter what the flop, I bet 20. So if I run into a hand that raises or calls (in which case I C/F the turn and river unless I hit a hand like 2-pair or trips), I lose 25 cents overall. If I win the pot, I make 15 cents overall 3. If he has a hand worth calling, I lose 25 cents unless I flop a hand. If he doesn't, I win 15. EV calculations: For these calculations, I'm going to assume that I never hit a hand, and that for #2 if I get a flop call and for #3 that I get a preflop call, that I lose the money. This is obviously not always true, but calculating cbet percentages, and further actions are all but impossible, and they should cancel out for #2 and #3, I'm assuming they'll both be above 0 so although I may be underestimating both #2 and #3, I'm not underestimating one more than the other I don't think. Tell me if my logic's off somewhere. 1. 0 - if only all calculations were this easy ![]() 3. He calls 15% of preflop raises, so this is an easy calculation. I win 15 85% of the time and lose 25 the other 15%. 15*.85 - 25*.15 =9 cents ev 2. For this, let's use the calculations on the PAHUD for this particular player. He raises PF with 4% of hands, and calls 15% of preflop raises. Only the first one is relevant here. 4% of the time I lose the 5 cents right here without seeing a flop, the other 96% of the time I see a flop. Now because I don't know how to calculate the odds of "hitting" a flop (knowing that a low pocket pair still may call), I'm just going to use the calculation that I already did. The ev for #3 is 9, so for #2 to be better, the ev would have to be better than 9. Call x the percentage of flops villain will hit (defined as good enough to call the flop bet of 20) with a hand in the bottom 96% (times he doesn't raise) range. Let's set the equal percentage. 9 = -5*.04-25*.96*x+15*.96*(1-x) 9 = -.2-24x+14.4*(1 - x) 9 = -.2-24x+14.4-14.4x 9 = 14.2 - 38.4x 38.4x = 5.2 x = .135 = 13.5% Apparently I was wrong. Although I think the way I played that is +ev, villain will hit far more than 13.5% of flops (and since he plays so tight, high cards are definitely in his range PF, so it's not like most of the time he pairs it'll be bottom pair crap kicker), thus I should raise more pf to just steal the blinds. Obviously this ignored the fact that he may call more from the BB feeling "committed", but I think this may counter the fact that when we hit in #3 we have a bigger pot and will win more than the pot in #2, even in future bets. Overall, I guess against a weak passive opponent like this, the PFR is the better option. Quote:
Thanks for the input. |
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#10
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^^^bold; give me 2 mins to answer to the rest |
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#11
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#12
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Basically I'm saying that with total crap in the SB with all folds to you, I would flat call preflop and bet the flop. My logic was that if you find out PF if he has a hand worth raising with, without having to pay the money to find out, you can then bet the flop on hands not worth it for him to raise with, knowing that the majority of the time he misses.
The math I did depended on this though: If you get called on a preflop raise or if you flat call PF and get called on the flop, you will not win the hand. I stated that this is false, but for the sake of our ev calculation we ignore this for both, knowing that the actual ev will be higher than our calculated ev, because we will sometimes hit a flop. But I'm talking about hands where you basically want 2-pair or better to show the hand down, as with Q6o. Even if the flop comes Q73, I'm wanting to see a cheap SD with Q6. If the flop comes Q63 though, I'm assuming I'm ahead either way. So most of the time we don't hit the flop, we're relying on stealing the hand and our hand is virtually meaningless in this calculation. Our calculation simply relies on villain's hand, and given the PFR numbers as well as calls PFR% we can make the calculation, although another small factor is the fact that many especially $10NL players will loosen their starting requirements from the BB. I've seen people call a PFR from the BB with as little as something like J6. So my logic was that they would call with hands like J6, but if the flop comes Q52 they could lay it down. I didn't factor that in to my ev equation, so if people loosen up sufficiently from the BB, the flat call to bet the flop becomes a better play. Quote:
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#13
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Thank you for watching and commenting on the video, in terms of size of turn and river bets, should I be leaning more towards the 1/2 pot bets? I don't remember specifically hands from the video where I bet like 1/3 pot, but most of my cbets and value bets will be 1/2 pot on the flop, and just under 1/2 pot afterwards. Once in a while in multi-way pots I'll make a big underbet, just to see if someone hit the flop or else as a value bet. In the next few sessions I'll keep an eye on this though.
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