I'm really loving these short-handed games! There's this one guy I keep bumping into who is extremely LAGGY. I have him noted as "overplays the shit out of his hands". I especially love when he's at the table with a couple calling stations!
Party Poker 0.50/1 Hold'em (6 max, 6 handed)
Preflop: Hero is CO with
,
.
UTG calls,
1 fold,
Hero raises,
2 folds,
BB 3-bets, UTG calls,
Hero caps, BB calls, UTG calls.
Flop: (12.50 SB)
,
,
(3 players)
BB bets, UTG calls,
Hero raises,
BB 3-bets, UTG calls,
Hero caps, BB calls, UTG calls.
Turn: (12.25 BB)
(3 players)
BB bets, UTG calls,
Hero raises, BB calls, UTG calls.
River: (18.25 BB)
(3 players)
BB checks, UTG checks,
Hero bets, BB calls, UTG calls.
Final Pot: 21.25 BB
Results in white below:
BB has Ah Tc (two pair, aces and nines).
UTG has 8h Kh (two pair, nines and eights).
Hero has Qc Ac (two pair, aces and nines).
Outcome: Hero wins 21.25 BB.
In most cases, I'd just call down from the turn. But not against people who massively overplay their hands!
As I mentioned a few posts back, two of my neighbors are huge into poker. Occasionally I'll be drinking some beers while watching them play some tourneys. One of them, John, is the classic weak-tighty. The other, Tom, is semi-loose and weak. When I watch them play, I'm simply amazed they can win in the long-run.
Whenever John or Tom have a hand they want to raise, they only minimum-raise it. Everytime they do that, I ask them what the hell they're doing. I've heard a few different reasons:
John
* He doesn't like his hand that much. If it doesn't connect with the flop, he wants to be able to get away from the flop cheaply. He commonly does this with low pocket pairs, and big cards.
* He doesn't want people to fold when he has a premium hand like QQ-AA.
* When you minimum-raise, more people call, making it a bigger pot when you connect.
Tom
* The loose players would call a 3 BB raise anyways, so it doesn't matter.
* He's trying to steal the blinds cheaply. He doesn't want to invest much to take down the blinds.
* Everyone else does it.
My biggest problem with minimum-raising is you are giving your opponents the correct odds to call with any two cards.
Blinds are 50/100
Folded to you in MP3. You minimum-raise to 200 with KJo.
There is now 350 [200 + 150 (the blinds)] in the pot.
The SB receives odds of 2.3:1 (350/150 to call)
The BB receives odds of 3.5:1 (350/100 to call)
Any random two undercards against KJo is only a 1.75:1 underdog. Both the SB and BB can profitably call here with any two cards. To win money from your opponents, you want to bet enough where calling would be a mistake. Plus, when you raise more you also have more folding equity.
As most of you know, I have almost exclusively been playing LHE the past few months. Occasionally I still pop up a few SNGs, but now I only play the turbos and PP SNGs (less chips, so people get knocked out quickly). I always remember how frustrating it is to play a SNG for an hour only to end up in fourth place, so I just stick with the faster pace ones. Lately I've completely altered my 3-way and heads-up game in SNGs.
* Months ago I used to be somewhat more picky with the cards I'd push with when I'm short-stacked. Now I just push any above average hand! I don't have time to wait for better hands when the blinds are creeping up and everyone's folding away.
* In nearly every case, I have less than 12 BBs when we're heads-up at the ridiculously high blinds. So any hand I play, I just push. None of this 2.5-3x BB raising crap. In almost every case, I'm not that big an underdog (except against the big pairs). I cannot afford to lose a 3rd of my stack when I completely miss the flop and am faced with an all-in bet. I might as well push for the fold equity, and so I can see all five cards with my hands.
* When heads-up, I defend my BB everytime when it's minimum raised. I remember picking up J4s in the BB. Donk minimum-raises me and I call. The flop comes T75. I check with the intention of raising all-in. He bets a small amount and I push. He folds showing me his random AX hand. Now that he bled all those chips and I scooped up the big pot, he's crippled. I have a 3:1 chip lead. I push every above average hand as usual, he folds a couple times, then calls with K5 when I have A4. A-high wins it and that's game!
My original approach to playing heads-up was pretty much straight from Volume 2 of Harrington's. What I neglected to consider was that heads-up section is dedicated to when both players have over 30BBs. There you can afford to play some actual poker. In these internet SNGs, you just keep pushing the small edges and hope to blind him away or win the all-in battle.