How Wide Are Your Ranges?
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We poker wonks tend to like to analyze individual hands. I had this and did this. Then my opponent did that. Then I did this, but actually I think doing this other thing might have been more profitable.
Then we write a thousand word article about the merits of doing this versus doing the other thing.
Analyzing individual hands has value, but if you do it too much you can fall into a bit of a trap. You begin to think of poker as a series of independently played hands. There’s a “right” way to play this hand, then a “right” way to play the next, and so on.
Poker doesn’t quite work that way. The hands aren’t independent. What happens on one hand can affect the outcome of a future hand. It won’t affect the actual cards dealt, of course, but it will affect how your opponents read your hand and react to your plays.
In other words, your goal isn’t to make sure that every hand you play is as profitable individually as it can be. Your goal is to have the most profitable overall strategy. You’d happily give up a penny on this hand if that would mean winning a dime on another.
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Tags: aggression, expectation, hand ranges, Hand Reading, narrow ranges, no-limit-holdem, poker, squeeze-play, wide ranges

I think that this is a great blog post! I love meta-game discussions.