Poker Strategy - Advanced Shorthand
This section will provide tips
to help you in certain trouble situations in a
shorthand-limit game:
1. When you're dealt a small pocket
pair (7s or less)
Preflop:
Small pocket pairs work best
in a large, multiway pot (you're hoping to hit
another card of your pair and make trips) or heads
up. Therefore, your preflop strategy should reflect
this. If you're on the button, one guy has raised
and another has folded, your best strategy would
be to shut out the blinds and make it heads up.
So in this case, reraise. However, if you're the
big blind and three other people have already
called the big blind, it's best to just check
and hope to hit a set on the flop.
Note: Don't use the reraise
to make it heads up against a very tight player.
There's a good chance he has a higher pocket pair,
in which case, you're owned. The reraise to make
it heads up is useful under the assumption that
your opponent just has two high cards.
On the flop:
If you're in a multiway pot,
the answer is simple, fold if you don't hit a
set, jam the pot if you do. The only exception
is if you hit a weird flop - like 552 or 666 (and
you hold like 77), in which case, you probably
hold the best hand and should jam the pot.
If you're heads up, it gets
a little tricker. If the flop is mainly low cards,
bet at it, he probably has nothing. However, if
the flop is AJQ, you're probably toast. You can
go ahead and bet at it (in case he has a low pocket
pair too), but if you encounter any resistance,
you must fold.
2. Flop bluffs
Flop bluffs work best against
one or maybe two opponents. The method is fairly
simple. Suppose you raise it up preflop with KQs,
and the flop comes A95, well you have nothing,
not even a flush draw, but they may have nothing
too. Go ahead and bet at it, you might steal the
pot right there.
If they just call you. You have
a decision. They may have Ace and a low kicker
or they may have like K9. Either case, you're
losing. You should generally check and fold. Do
this about 80% of the time. However, you don't
want them to be able to crack your bluffing strategy
by just calling you on the flop and then seeing
what you do on the turn. Because of this, I recommend
sometimes slow playing. For example, suppose you
have A9 at this flop, I'd bet at flop, then check-raise
at turn. In other words, you must punish them
for just calling. People should never be allowed
to just call with a second best hand if they hope
you're bluffing, they should be forced to raise
to see where they are. If you suspect that they
just call you with the second best hand. You should
bet til the river when you have the goods, but
now always just bet/check-fold when you don't.
You sometimes (most of the time don't) should
bluff on the turn too. And hey, who knows, you
may hit and win it anyway.
3. Slow playing
I'm not a huge slow player because
I like to run flop bluffs and flop bluffs are
only successful if you actually bet with the goods
at the flop. However, sometimes it's best to just
wait and jam the pot. I like to slow play in multiway
situations when I really have the goods. For example,
If I have AQ and the flop is AQ3, turn is A, I
have the stone nuts. I'll generally wait for a
bet if I think one will happen and then raise
it. In other words, slow playing and jamming the
pot on the turn will often be very profitable
in mulitway pots, but I don't recommend it in
heads up situations. Often, in heads up, you'll
give them a deadly free card and it's not worth
losing the pot for one bigger bet.
One thing to always remember
about slow playing is that it is successful when
you have a super boss hand and you want to let
them develop a hand that is good but not good
enough to beat yours. Slow playing a set when
a flush draw is on board is dumb, because you
are allowing the to develop a hand that can beat
yours. You have to think 'what can they develop
that won't beat me but will still make them bet
so I can raise them.' Don't slow play if you just
have a good hand, slow play if you have the boss
hand but it won't be paid of unless something
develops on the board that won't beat you but
will cause people to think they can beat you.
4. Paired board when you
have the third card
This is a trouble situation.
Say the board is QQA and you have AJ. You may
have the best hand or you may be toast. However,
the situation is pretty simple. If it's checked
around to you, check. After all, what will people
call you with? The only thing people will call
you with that can't beat you is A7 or maybe a
pocket pair (few would call though).
So, when you're in this trouble
situation, you have to consider two factors: What
will people call you with that won't beat you
and what are the chances they have the trip. The
higher the two cards, the much higher the chance
they have the trip. AAJ is far scarier for someone
with KJ than 44J. I would treat the first flop
with caution and probably give it up pretty easily
while the second one I'd bet at it.
Which brings up the question:
What do you mean play it carefully? Well, if someone
bet at me with the board AAJ and I had KJ, he
may have QJ, so I'd go ahead and raise, he'd probably
fold if he had QJ, but he probably wouldn't if
he held an ace.
Of course, this brings up the
counterpoint: Don't they know you don't have an
ace if you raise? Well, that's why you can't always
slow play in these situations. If you have AQ
on that board, go ahead and raise too. This way
they can't predict what you have.
5. Play against a CRAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAZY
maniac
Maniacs can be a real pain in
shorthand. However, they are generally dealt best
with by just calling (although raise them if you
hold a very strong hand). They will increase the
variance of the game, but you will win in the
long run. For example, one game at the 100-200
at Intercasino, I was dealt QQ, a nice hand. Anyway,
someone calls, maniac raises, I reraise, maniac
caps and there's one other standard player in
the pot. Flop comes AK4. I mean, this is the worst
possible flop for me. Anyway, I bet at it, the
standard player folds (thankfully) and the maniac
raises me. Normally, I would fold but this guy
is nuts so I just check call to the river. Anyways,
I win. The maniac had 35.
6. Don't pay them off
Sometimes, when people are on
a flush draw and you have top pair or top two
pair, they will wait for you to bet so they can
raise. If you think they were on a flush draw
and then the flush card hits on the river, don't
pay them off. Just check it on the river. Think
about the math. If you are in position and just
check the river, you save yourself 2 big bets
(4 total bets). If it's a standard hand, there
was probably a raise preflop and bet-calls on
flop-turn. So you put in a total of 5 bets. You
literally save yourself about half the money you
would have lost using this technique.
Some Quick Don’ts of Shorthand
Don't go in with any ace if
someone else has already gone in. Chances are,
they have a decent pocket pair, A and a higher
kicker, or something like KQ. Any of these hands
dominate you. Fold.
Don't play above your bankroll.
I've made this mistake several times myself. Shorthand
has a high level of variance. Make sure you can
bank many hours of play before sitting in. You
don't want to go in, have your aces cracked, and
be broke!
Don't just play your hand. Always
remember what the other player is thinking. While
this isn't quite as important as it is in no limit,
you have to think about what the other player
went in with and what he is calling/raising with.
Don't always bank on that he's bluffing because
most of the time he's not.
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