Tactical Help
Types of hands to play:
The types of hands you play
in No-Limit differ than those in Limit. This is
because of implied odds. Hands like KQ off suit
go down in value because they cannot withstand
much pressure. Even if you hit a K with this type
of hand, you still may be losing to a set, two
pair, AK, or may lose eventually to a draw. Thus,
with big cards, you generally want to take down
the pot at the flop. The exception to this is
if you think you have someone out kicked (say
AK vs KJ with a K on the board), or if you hit
the flop hard (like KK3 when you hold AK). In
these cases, you generally want to extract money
from your opponent bit by bit.
The types of hands that go up
in value or ones that you can bet with confidence:
pocket pairs and suited connectors (strong draws
in general). Pocket pairs do well because they
are sneaky and can often withhold pressure. With
pocket pairs, you can bet hard if you have a set
or an over pair, which are hands that people generally
don't expect. Suited connectors go up in value
for several reasons. First, if the flop comes
weird, you generally will be paid off. For example,
if you hold 76, you'll get paid off a lot more
if flop is A76 (against an AK) than you would
pay off an AK if the flop were A72.
Furthermore, you can take down
pots and disguise your hand with semi-bluffing.
If you hold 76 and the flop comes 45J. People
will probably put you on a jack if you bet. They
will then either fold or will probably call. Thus,
you will either take down the pot at the flop
or will be drawing to a hand that people don't
expect. If the next two cards are 8 and A and
you’re opponent holds AJ, expect a huge reward.
How to bet
Many novice No-Limit players
simply don't know how much to bet. Well, the concept
is simple. You want extract as much money from
people who have made hands but are probably losing
to you, you want to punish draws, but at the same
time you don't want to be trapping yourself.
Example: Suppose you have
99, flop is A89. You are pretty sure he doesn't
have 10J.
You want to put in about pot
size bets here. Reason being: He either has a
straight draw or pair of aces. If he has a straight,
you don't want him to draw on the cheap, and if
he has pair of aces, he probably won't let go
of them so take as much as you can.
Example: You hold KQ of spades,
flop is A95, A5 are of spades.
Bet into this flop. But don't
bet too much, just enough to make people fold
if they don't have an ace but enough to maybe
make an AQ just freeze up and call. A 1/3 size
pot bet would be good. This way you draw relatively
cheaply and can punish if you hit your flush.
Bluffing
This relates back to the showdown
percentage. More showdowns means bluffing works
less. If you are in a game with a lot of showdowns
(typical of lower limits), cut down on bluffing
and punish them when you have the boss hand.
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