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Poker Strategy - Expert
Players
Tactical Concepts - Dumping
the 2nd Best Hand
In blackjack, everyone grimaces
at being dealt a 16. It’s the worst possible hand
and odds are you are going to lose your money.
The holdem equivalent to a 16 is a 27, which is
considered the worst possible hand. However, with
a 27, odds are you will lose nothing (because
you will fold preflop) or just your blind. In
fact, I don’t even mind being dealt 27 because
I know what it’s worth. I’m much more afraid of
being dealt AA because that hand has the potential
of costing me a lot of money. The paradox that
a good hand is to be feared much more so than
a bad one centers on the most important concept
of poker: Relative Hand Value.
Everyone knows that to win at
poker, you must maximize your wins and minimize
your losses. Maximizing your wins is fairly easy.
Slowplaying and trapping help accentuate these
wins, but the reality is that any fool can win
a decent amount when he has a good hand. What
generally separates a winning poker player from
a losing one is how the two players lose their
hands. The winning poker player knows how to dump
his second best hand while the loser will call
it down and lose at the showdown.
To me, the psychological difference
is generally that the losing player must satisfy
his need to know what the other guy had. The desire
to be a policeman and make sure his opponent isn’t
bluffing and to make sure he didn’t lose what
he could have won causes him to call when he shouldn’t.
The winning poker player has overcome this innate
desire and forces him/herself to play well.
Now that I have brought your
attention to what the second best hand is- how
do you play them? It really depends on limit vs.
no limit poker.
Limit Poker
In limit, calling with the second
best hand won’t kill you quickly. You will notice
your negative bank balance only in the long run
b/c you will win sometimes in the short run. Generally,
the best way to limit your second best hand losses
is preflop play. Don’t go in with hands without
a decent kicker (i.e dump K8, A7) b/c those are
often dominated hands. A dominated hand generally
means when you’re up against an opponent and you
have similar hands but one will almost always
beat the other. Examples would be AA vs. AQ or
AK vs. A9. The hand that is dominated has 3 outs
or less (AQ must catch two queens without an ace
hitting or a straight to win). Thus, correct preflop
play can limit second best hands because you call
less with dominated hands due to kicker.
Flop play is a bit different.
Suppose board is AK9 and you have KQ. You definitely
have 2nd best hand potential- but how do you tell?
Well, generally the best way is to bet or raise
at flop and see what happens. If you encounter
a lot of resistance, you’re done for. Also, if
there is a large multiway pot, go ahead and fold.
Someone is bound to have the ace.
No Limit Poker
At no limit, it’s a totally
different ball game. At limit, you won’t lose
too much for one second best hand, but you can
easily lose your whole stack at no limit. That’s
why, at no limit, it’s best to play the nutlike
hands more. In other words, pocket pairs go up
in value b/c of their ability to hit a set and
so do connecting cards b/c of their ability to
hit straights. Ace-suited goes up in value too
b/c of the nut flush but people are generally
very aware of the flush potential and will shut
you out at the flop when you hit a flush draw.
Since these hands go up in value-
what goes down? AQ, AJ, KQ, KJ, etc. These hands
are the ones that can get raped at no limit poker.
These hands will win small pots with top pair,
but will lose large ones when someone else hits
a set or a straight.
The key to no limit poker is
not dumping these second best hands preflop necessarily.
It’s sniffing out what other people have on the
flop. Do not simply call bets with the second
best hand, you must raise to see where you are.
When someone bets at you, they are threatening
your whole stack (if the bet is a signicant one).
You must reciprocate by threatening theirs. If
the board is K107 and you have KQ, you could be
in a lot of trouble. Someone betting at you could
have 10J or 1010. It’s important to figure out
their relative strength by raising them at the
flop.
Now, many will respond “well
couldn’t they just bluff reraise me.” Of course
they could, but that will cost them a lot when
you finally get the nut hand. Simply call the
reraise and then zap them out of the rest of their
stack on the turn/river.
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