Here are my low limit thoughts based on my experiences at the .5/1 SH tables.
There seem to be three types of players:
1) weak tight
2) CS/sponge
3) give me blind defense or give me death types
1) Weak tight
There are some weak tighties who will fold to the raise and/or the continuation bet, but I think it's easy to play against these players, so I won't discuss it. I do like the complete and "steal" on the flop against these guys. It doesn't seem to make them feel as pwned as they really are.
2) CS/sponge
I think these players are pretty tough to play against -- you have no idea where you stand. You have very little fold equity except maybe on the river if they don't hit and you fired all barrels. If you try to save some bets, they'll come right back at you, and you've lost any chance of a river fold. Yuck.
The only time they will fold is if you raise and high cards come. Even then, they will call down or chase if they get a part of the board or a draw.
One play I like to do is complete, let them check down, and then bet out the flop (like the WT play mentioned above) or CR the flop. This gives my bet some credibility if the board is mostly low cards. I get A LOT of CSs to fold with this play. Of course, if they call, you have to play them the way you regularly play the CS, but you've only invested .75BB, so it's easy to release.
I love to play some of the middle suited connectors and one-gappers (e.g., 79) and other janky hands (e.g., Q7o). Your flop bets get A LOT of respect when you show one of these down with one or two pair -- they start to realize that they can't just assume that you missed a board with all low cards. Anyway, I tend to play a lot of hands against these players due to the fact that I'll get paid off if I hit.
3) Patrick Henrys
It seems like a lot of people have heard of the blind defense concept. As such, I find that when I raise from the SB, I often get reraised. If I call the reraise and bet out on the flop, I get raised again. Based on the times that i've actually had hands and these clowns showed down with me, they are playing the situation rather than their cards. The only time I can get them to lay down is if a lot of high cards hit on the flop.
Against these players, I prefer to complete much less frequently than with the CS/sponge, but with the similar range of hands. I almost never raise, as they will do it for me. Here are two line of play that I seem to see a lot of:
- I complete with good cards (e.g., two broadway), they raise, I call. I hit a pair on the flop and bet, they raise, I call. Repeat to river. Sometimes you get sucked out on, and sometimes they will fold. Anyway, they sometimes slow down once they realize that you are playing good cards.
- I complete with middling cards (e.g., J8), they raise, I call. I hit top or middle pair on the flop and check, they bet, I CR. They either call or jam. I bet out on the river and typically get a fold. Sometimes they will come back at me, and I will have to call down to the river. Anyway, once they see that I will play non-Broadway cards, they start to have a hard time putting me on a hand and slow down.
Of course, I mix up my play so that it's not easy to put me on a hand -- X% of the time I represent something different than what I actually have.
In response to Mecos' OP...
- I love completing with janky hands like Q7 and 8To -- just not every time I see them.
I get paid of big when I hit, and they are easy to release if I miss.
- I don't think completing is as weak as you think. The lack of information caused by just completing can take away a lot of initiative from the BB. For example... I complete, you raise from the BB with AKo, and I call. Flop comes rags. I bet out. What do I have? You raise and I reraise? What do I have? Do this song and dance a few times and show down a raggedy two pair sometimes and TPTK other times, and the BB is going to be completely flummoxed.
- I think it's really difficult to take the initiative from the BB on an SB steal. Anyone with a modicum of experience knows that the BB's positional advantage is huge. I think the best one can do is induce doubt (as described above).
Anyone else have thoughts on these lines?