Q&A #85: Resisting the Raising Reflex in No-Limit
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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.
Today’s question about flopping top pair with a decent kicker in no-limit comes from threads13,
This is something I have been thinking about for a little bit, but PNL is shedding new light on this subject. I am thinking about hands like QJ and JT. These hands can be tricking little hands since they can easily be dominated and also can still have overcards that can come to your top pair. I am trying to think of these hands in an SPR light.
Here is an example:
You have QJ one off the button with 100BB stacks. You get a couple limpers and you decide to limp it also. Everyone folds to the BB who checks. The pot is 4BB. Your SPR is ~24. The flop comes of Q74r. The BB checks the first limper bets 3/4 the pot and the second folds. Are we calling or raising here? We are not committed so we want to keep the pot small. However, we have to balance this with wanting to get overcards out and getting some value from a worse Q. If the villain is betting 65 we should raise his semi-bluff. Say we raise to 12BB. This will put us at the commitment threshold and we will not be committed, so our plan would be to check the turn. Any amount that we raise will do this. So, how good is a raise here if we are just going to need to check the turn most of the time. (yes, against some opponents we can safely bet the turn but that is the exception).
Another example:
Same hand and stack sizes but this time it is folded to you one off the button. You decide to make a steal and raise to 3BB and only the BB calls. The pot is 6BB and your SPR is 16. This should be a good SPR to make a steal. The flop again comes Q74r and the BB bets 5BB. If you call you will be at the committment threshold and not committed. So, you should make a plan. Are you committed to any turn card? I wouldn’t be. So, you are calling and checking behind the turn if checked to? What if your opponent bets into you again. Are you raising this flop?
I have always felt that QJ and JT are tricky hands to play correctly. They often make a top-pair hand that may be ahead but will be difficult to extract value when ahead.
Whenever you have position and there’s lots of money behind, you’re in a flexible situation. Sometimes it’s good to keep them guessing.
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Tags: aggression, no-limit-holdem, poker, protecting-your-hand, raise-or-fold, spr, top-pair

Ok first off threads13
You are thinking in a too standardised way!
We should not think ok we have QJ the flop comes Q74r shoudl we raise or call here.
Adjust your play to suit your opponent and his tendancies.
Sometimes we should fold.
Other times we should call.
Other tiems we should raise.
In your example, we need to look at your opponents style of play and their tendancies, to determine their range. Once we decide what their range is we can easily make a decision.
For instance we know villain could have a set leading in here, but his overall range suggests we are ahead most of the time, adn that his calling a raise range is pretty wide too (ie he will call with a worse hand most times) therefore this becomes a raise for value.
If we believe villain is betting with a wide range, but his calling range is narrow, then raising for value has no merit as he will fold out our value raises. Instead we should just call, play the next street, and determine his range using his actions.
This is probably the one most people dont understand. WE play QJ hit TP and oyu wnat to fold on the flop.
Well Yes
Some situation calls for a flop fold!
For instance if we raise preflop, and a villain calls us. Thnen he suddenly leads into us on the flop.We know he is tight passive. What range does that?
If he has never lead into us and usually check-called down with a good marginal hand then this often suggests we are behind, and we should fold out early on in the deal.
A good example of this is here:
I should have folded but didnt…….
Villain is 30/3/1.35
Image is reasonable.Been aggressive but not that wild and didnt expect a lot of playback here.
Seat 2 is the button
Total number of players : 5
Seat 2: Villain 1 ( $116.15 USD )
Seat 3: Villain 2 ( $113.12 USD )
Seat 5: Hero ( $124.80 USD )
Seat 4: Villain 3( $100 USD )
Seat 1: Villain 4 ( $34.25 USD )
Villain 2 posts small blind [$0.50 USD].
Villain 3 posts big blind [$1 USD].
** Dealing down cards **
Dealt to Hero [ Kh Qh ]
Hero raises [$4 USD]
Villain 4 folds.
Villain 1 folds.
Villain 2 calls [$4 USD]
Villain 3 folds.
** Dealing Flop ** [ Qd, 3h, 2s ]
Villain 2 bets [$6 USD]
Hero calls [$6 USD]
** Dealing Turn ** [ 7c ]
Villain 2 bets [$17 USD]
Hero calls [$17 USD]
** Dealing River ** [ Th ]
Villain 2 checks.
Hero checks.
Villain 2 shows [ Ah, Qc ]a pair of Queens.
Hero doesn’t show [ Kh, Qh ]a pair of Queens.
As you can see I should not have called the turn bet, and the flop bet is also questionable as his range is usually ahead to justify a fold.