Q&A #105: More Suited Connectors In No-Limit Hold’em
Don't miss one article! Subscribe to the Full Feed RSS or get NPA in your inbox.
My last post was an article I wrote for Card Player about how to play suited connectors out of position in no-limit hold’em. The basic one word conclusion of that article was “don’t.”
Today janeg of the forums at InternetTexasHoldem.com alerted me to a discussion they were having about a no-limit hand played with a suited connector. But this hand was played from the button. Will I still want to steer clear of the little suited monster? Or will I be more interested in it this time around?
Here’s a summary of the hand in question. Please visit the original thread at ITH for a more thorough presentation and discussion.
It’s a full ring online $0.50-$1 game played with $100 effective stats. A player opens three off the button for $3.50. The next player calls. The cutoff folds, and the action is to us with 8
6
.
The thread provides a detailed description of the open-raiser, so again, please visit the thread to get the full information. Most notably, however, the poster says that he estimates the raiser’s range as approximately: 55+, AT+, A8s+, KJ+, QJ . He also notes that this player is quite willing to play for stacks with a decent top pair even on scary boards.
The original poster calls the $3.50, and the blinds fold. So the pot is about $10.50 on the flop, there’s $96.50 behind, and the flop comes:
A
9
7
![]()
Everyone checks to us on the button, and we bet $8 into the $10.50 pot. The preflop raiser then checkraises to $25, and the middle player folds. The action is on us.
Here were my thoughts about the hand.
The remainder of this article is insider content available to premium members only. Log in to your account or become a premium member and get instant access.
Tags: big draws, implied-odds, internettexasholdem, ith, leveraging position, no-limit-holdem, poker, squeeze-play, steal equity, suited-connectors

Thanks Ed… very insightful discussion on this… Playing this live at a $2-$2 table for same effective stacks ($100), how does this change your thinking?
- HJ