by flafishy » Wed Mar 22, 2006 10:17 am
I do tend to play more hands at the ultra-passive Crypto 1/2 and 2/4 tables, just because I know I can get in cheap most of the time, and a lot of the times, if you get a decent draw on fourth street, you'll have five people checking around and you can see a few freebies along the way if you need to.
For that reason, I'll almost always bet or raise fourth street if I plan to stay in the hand. If you have a made hand on fourth street, then obviously you'll bet/raise to build the pot. If you just have a draw on fourth street, a bet/raise on fourth street won't chase everyone out who plans to continue but it will give you command of the table and buy you a free card or two if you need them to complete your draw.
Anyway, as far as starting hands, I'll play those baby pairs, the baby flushes, the baby straights, three unpaired and unsuited high cards that I normally wouldn't play at a table where there's a little bit of aggression. I'll even play a medium one-gap straight sometimes if the board is particularly low.
At those Crypto tables, you can get in cheap and hang around for a couple of streets for cheap while you try to improve them. But I'll dump them on fourth street if I don't improve and someone bets out. If I'm last to act on fourth and I haven't improved and it's checked around to me, I'll throw a bet out there anyway to try to steal or at least buy a free card or two on fifth and sixth. If I do improve on fourth, I'll usually always take the betting lead either with a bet or a raise.
But you have to pick your spots with those kinds of hands. I wouldn't play a pair of 2s with a lousy kicker, for instance, if there's another 2 on the board. I wouldn't play a 8-high flush if more than two of my suits are showing elsewhere on the board. I wouldn't play most straights if three or four of the cards I need to complete the open ends are showing.
But generally, at those passive Crypto tables, I'll take a few more chances with those kinds of hands than I normally would. At a table showing any kind of aggression, those are the kinds of hands I almost automatically toss and love it when someone at the table likes to play them (about 90% of the people at a low-stakes stud table). When I do play them at a particularly soft table, I don't fall in love with them and have no trouble dumping them early and cheaply. The problem most people have with playing those kinds of hands is that they fall in love with them and will chase them to the bitter end.
"It's all over, baby." -- Scotty Nguyen
"It's all downhill after the first kiss." -- Lou Reed