by Danhdan » Fri Jul 14, 2006 6:03 pm
I read this is Cardplayer the other day by Alan Schoonmaker. I thought it was interesting because it overlapped with this topic. This article was called "Should you switch to No-Limit Hold'em? Part III
Loose-Aggressive Players (LAP)
Most discussions of position and styles focus primarily on LAP because they have so much impact on your results and emotions.
Your position relative to LAP, especially the most extreme ones (Maniacs), is even more important in NL than in limit.
In limit sit to their immediate left so they act before you do. Generally, you want to be to the left of loose players, whether they are aggressive or passive. You can raise and isolate them to exploit their tendency to play weak hands.
You want LAP to raise before you act, not afterwards. If you acted first, you may put in one bet, then another with a hand that you would not willingly play for two bets.
However, if someone is predictably loose-aggressive, sit to his right. That predictability can come from two factors:
• Being an utter Maniac who raises nearly every hand
• Telegraphing when he will fold, check, bet, or raise
Because many LAP — particularly Maniacs — lack patience and self-control, they often telegraph their intentions. In fact, they will occasionally act out of turn. You can fold marginal hands and check-raise and slow-play your strong ones.
In NL your decision is more complicated because the size of the bets and raises is so important. You need to win only a few large pots, and nobody builds bigger pots than a LAP, especially a Maniac. You therefore want to be to the immediate right of a LAP who frequently makes very large bets and raises, even if he is not a complete Maniac who raises all the time.
You can check or just call with big hands, hoping he will make a move, which will drive the rest of the table into you. They will often overplay their hands because they don’t respect his bets and reraises. Of course, you may slow-play, but be disappointed: He may just fold, check, or call. But you take that chance any time you slow-play, and he is more likely than anyone else to make a large bet.
If you do it many times, and he makes a move only a few times, but traps one or two others, they may be too pot-committed to get away from their hands when you make a large raise. In fact, they may have pushed all in before you have a chance to act.
Your chances of winning a monster pot go way up.
In addition, if you sit to the left of a Maniac, some other players — especially the better ones — will slow-play into him, then trap you between them. You may overplay a hand because you don’t respect the LAP’s bets or raises, but then find someone to his right pushing all in.
Finally, you will be last when he bluffs, and he may bluff very frequently. If you are to his left and suspect a bluff, but have someone behind you, you can’t call with a marginal hand. You would hate to snap off his bluff, but have someone overcall.
The only serious downside to sitting to his right is that you will often be raised when you want to play cheaply. For example, if you limp with pocket fours, hoping to get multi-way action, he may raise too much, knock out everyone else, and ruin the odds for you. This risk is much less important then the preceding advantages.
The bottom line is that you should sit to the left of LAP in limit, but to their right in NL.
"Million dollar play, ten cent finish."
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