by briachek » Tue Nov 30, 2004 7:19 pm
I will express my amature opinion in the hopes that its correct or that someone can set me right.
I do agree that there is a big difference between QQ and down and KK/AA. I will be happy to get all my money in with AA preflop anyday, even against a couple opponents. Against many, I might not be above 50% win, but I will be better than the other guys. However, I caution about KK because sometimes a player will give you overwhelming evidence that he has AA such as a min raise from ep and then a non all in re-raise preflop. Depending on the opponent, this still might not mean AA but now you really have a decision. Although, 95% of the time, I have no problem getting all in preflop.
On occasion, which I have problems getting myself to actually do, it might help to call a big raise with KK, looking for a favorable flop (no ace, hopefully no Q, J or 10 either) and trap a guy overplaying a lesser pocket pair. Normally these hands will pay you off preflop anyway so you don't have to wait for a good flop, but this could save you if an Ace flops or if there is another caller, you can get them as well calling with top pair.
IMO, QQ is MUCH better than JJ because of how often those overcards will hit and one of the only ways you get the action you want with JJ and lower is if you hit your set when they have overpair or you hit second set and they had tptk or overpair. Otherwise, you are hurting. I would raise with QQ before the last two position, usually from any place (shows my inexperience and the quality of the people I normally play against) but I would say that raising from MP should be used too because otherwise you give drawing hands or mediocre overcards and blinds to catch two pair, overpair or solid draw. QQ doesn't hold up as well against many people and its strong enough to win without improvement a good amount of the time. I would either call a moderate raise or reraise against a weak player with QQ.
Pairs JJ - 77 maybe should be limped unless its folded to you in LP (maybe one weak limper) and you can either take the pot right there or get heads up against a weak player.
Pairs 66-22 is always a limping hand (except in ep with 22-44 with big raisers behind you) to hit a set or fold. The only time you could raise with these is extremely shorthanded play or short stacked and its an all in.
Ok, that was much longer than I thought it would be and I decided to throw my quick take on all PP. I'm a NL SNG player and in home games and normally a limit player online and B&M so my NL experience is limited. I mostly agree with Johnny but I have some differences. Please critique.