by Ichoi » Wed Oct 12, 2005 1:35 pm
About the smallblind, play far tigher than you think you should. You're going to be out of position against anyone that you end up playing against postflop.
The time when the small blind position becomes strong is if you get someone raising preflop, and then a bunch of people calling. Then you benefit from enhanced position on the flop. Able to ram and jam and trap a lot of people stuck between you and the original raiser.
I play smallblind almost like I play EP except that I very frequently end up playing almost any pair if there's a few people in the pot. I often see the flop from the sb with any pair (depends how tight the table is), whereas I don't play lower than nines in EP.
A good VP$IP? Depends on the limit/table. If it's 8 or 9 handed with lots of loose/passive players, a good VP$IP is a lot higher than it would be if you're playing 10 handed against a tight aggressive field.
On the old party network over about 60000 hands my VP$IP in 9 and 10 handed games was around 13% playing mostly 5/10 - 10/20. My PFR was 9%. I think 5% PFR is low.
About PP's, this again depends on what kind of table it is. There are some loose tables where you could get away with playing any pair in any position. Other times you'll rarely get to see the flop with any pair unless you open raised with it or are in the blinds.
Calling cold an EP raiser with low-mid pairs is not a good situation if you end up HU with them. Even if you got paid 3.5 bets everytime you spiked a set you wouldn't be winning enough
My advice, either get in cheap against 4+ players, gladly cold call if it's gonna be over 5 people, or open raise with them. (My personal guidelines, I'll open 99 UTG, 88 UTG+1, 77 UTG+2), I don't start open raising 55-66 until the CO and 22-44 on the button, if at all, depending how loose/aggressively the blinds defend.
About big cards. Be careful. They're not as much trouble as they are in NL, but they're still trouble if you got a raise before you from most players, or if it gets 3 bet, if you opened.