by k3nt » Wed Aug 02, 2006 8:14 pm
DON'T DO IT. JUST DON'T DO IT.
Yes Sklansky and Miller's new book recommends it occasionally. IIRC, their example hand is something like Ax suited. The section in the book suggests that in that type of situation, you have effectively "doubled the stakes." And yes, I suppose it makes sense, if everybody has $1000 in a $1/2 game, it's going to be tough to stack anybody in an unraised pot. So if you minimum raise, you double the stakes. If you minimum raise and happen to hit a nut flush against another decent hand, the amount you will win probably doubles. Your initial risk doubles but so does your payoff. So yeah, you've effectively doubled the stakes.
But online, situations where a significant number of players have 300xBB or 500xBB or more -- just doesn't happen often. If and when it does, then sure, think about what Miller and Sklansky say. But 99.9999% of the time, just forget it. It doesn't apply online.
Online, if you minimum raise with Axs, you have not "doubled the stakes." You have only made a raise that gives information about your hand, folds nobody, and lowers your implied odds.
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