Resisting The Raising Reflex In No-Limit Hold’em
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No doubt you’ve heard from many a person that the key to poker is never to call. Raise or fold. If you can’t raise, throw it away.
It’s perhaps useful advice for a casual player who hasn’t yet seen how powerful aggression can be. But I think it’s also very limiting advice, and it completely fails to explain how to play a class of very common situations.
Often, calling isn’t so bad. This is especially true when you have position, and there’s still plenty of money behind. The ability to wait-and-see is a very powerful positional weapon, and if you’re overeager to get your money in the middle, you’ll forfeit it.
For instance, say we have Q-J in the cutoff with $500 in a $2-$5 game. A couple of players limp, and we raise to $25. Everyone folds to the big blind, who calls, as does one limper. The pot is 3-handed for $82.
The flop comes Q-T-7 with two clubs. The big blind checks, and the first limper bets $45. The action is on us. The flop bettor is an aggressive, but not crazy player. He would bet hands like flush and straight draws, top pair, and perhaps even a weaker pair. But he would also bet hands like two pair or a set. What should we do?
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Tags: aggression, calling, no-limit-holdem, playing position, poker, protecting-your-hand

great example to remind us to think about why we should or should not make a certain type of play and not unthinkingly use a necessary approach like aggressive play in the wrong situation. wish i could learn to think before i make plays on autopilot
re paying for articles : any consideration of an annual subscription for full access to all posts ?