by Aisthesis » Fri Aug 04, 2006 6:34 pm
On the floating part, I really don't know. I don't think he'll float 44 against me unless he hits.
I agree fully on your points about attacking this guy. Since he's one of the best players, I have no desire to really go after him. But, having a read, I do want to take a little bit at a time and respond appropriately to these raises. Whether or not HE has 43s or whatever, I'm planning on laying down KJo, etc. here. I just don't want to play it in a raised pot. So, as compensation, I think picking him off selectively and increasing my value on a hand like TT or AQs is a fairly balanced approach.
I feel like with that, I'm pretty much letting him do what he's doing with the rest of the table while getting some compensation for lost values on my part. Also, while I'm calling his raises with 66 (and he may have 44), I just go ahead and give him the pot with his CB if I miss, which is most of the time. But he's making me pay significantly more to try and set in these situations--and with little chance of stacking him as long as he's playing this strategy.
That also makes me wonder if I really should be playing these PPs at all to his raise unless there are a lot of other callers.
Another interesting aspect is how to play AA to this. If I'm to his left, I need to know whether or not he's going to call a re-raise very often (I think I'll find that out before too terribly long if we continue to be playing together as frequently as we have the last few weeks). If so, the re-raise is fine. If not, it might not be a bad idea to just flat call for a while with AA/KK, having let him do the raising for me. This is due to your other point about having the rest of the table fold usually to the $75.
Which brings me to yet another issue: Yes, they're going to fold usually to the re-raise, but no one is going to fold AA or KK, and I've seen some of these guys calling re-raises with hands like AJs sometimes (less so at this game, but that is the case at a nearby 5/10, and some of those players come over to this casino at times, so it's not a completely separate field). I think QQ will also almost always call, and JJ maybe. AK usually in this game.
Anyhow, just as note: If the calling range is AK and JJ-AA among 7 players with completely random hands, someone will call the re-raise about 20% of the time.
Hmmm... I'll run an EV calculation here for TT with that stat, which probably isn't too far off (note that if the field is already reduced by the time of the re-raise, I'm in better shape): Let's say Sam raises to $20, I have TT and make it $70, and there is $10 in limp/BB money already in there. The field folds 80% of the time, and Sam calls 50% of the time (this is a completely wild guess, as I really don't know what he'll do).
Ok, 40% of the time, I'm winning $30 with no contest. EV of $12 here.
If Sam calls, I'm winning $80 maybe 80% of the time but losing $70 plus my CB of $100 20% of the time (I'm also going to assume that if we start actually playing where we BOTH have some kind of hand, we'll break even). So, winnings of $64 here, less losses of $34 yields $30 total, and this occurs another 40% of the time, making $12 again.
So, we've got $24 up to this point.
But now let's take the 20% where some other player at the table calls. If Sam folds (50%), I think I can still take down the pot half the time with my TT. But I lose about 2/3 of my CB as well when I don't take the pot down. So, I win $100 here half the time, and lose $150 half the time for a net loss of $25. So, we have a subtotal here of $12.50 times 20% or $2.50 minus. So, this isn't too worrisome. Also note that if they re-raise ME, it's going to be rare, I"m going to assume AA or KK and obviously just go away normally (barring their giving me odds to set).
Tough is when both Sam AND someone else at the table calls. I'm not at all sure how often I win this one, but now we have a pot of $220 or so, and, if I CB, I'm going to have to CB about $150. I'll try this in a way that's probably a little optimistic for me and still assume that I win half the time. Ok, I take down $150 half the time here, and lose $220 the other half for a net of -$70. But this only occurs 10% of the time anyway. So, the net result is only -$7.
I guess that still looks pretty good, as the overall EV is a win of $14 on my TT in this situation--which is actually pretty decent for TT at about 3 BB/hand.
Despite Sam's being a very good player, I also think it's important to attack these raises with a fairly reasonable frequency, because he's taking away my ability to play KJo, which is actually a moderately profitable hand in a limp pot, and he's also devaluing my little pairs by making me pay more to see a flop under circumstances where setting is unlikely to be terribly profitable.