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Calling
on the Basis of What Your Opponent Thinks
There is a
very important principle based on thinking about
what your opponent thinks you have, and it is this:
When an opponent bets in a situation where he is
sure you are going to call, he is not bluffing.
This point is obvious, yet many players overlook
it. What it means is if you create the impression
- by the way you have played your hand, by the
look of your board, by the action you have put
in the pot, or even by artificial means - that
you are going to call a bet, an opponent who bets
is betting for value. He figures to have you beat
because he knows you are going to call. Therefore,
you should fold if he bets unless your hand warrants
a call on the value of the hand. You should certainly
fold a mediocre hand that can beat only a bluff;
clearly no one but an idiot would bluff when he
is sure he's going to get called.
A prime example of such a situation arises
when you bet on the end and a player raises
you. It is very rare to find an opponent
who is capable of raising on the end as a bluff. It is even rarer
to find an opponent who would raise on a bluff when you have
been betting all the way and have, therefore, given every indication
of paying off a raise. So against all but very tough players
capable of such a bluff raise, you should fold a routine hand
because your opponent wouldn't raise without a good hand. Similarly,
if you raise on the end and your opponent reraises, you should
usually fold unless your hand can beat some of the legitimate
hands with which he might be reraising." In sum, when deciding
whether to call a bet or a raise, it is important to think about
what your opponent thinks you're going to do. An opponent who
is sure you're going to call will not be bluffing when he bets
or raises.
A corollary to this principle is if your opponent bets when there
appears to be a good chance you will fold, that opponent may
very well be bluffing. What this means in practice is that if
your opponent bets in a situation where he thinks he might be
able to get away with a bluff, you have to give more consideration
to calling him even with a mediocre hand.
Astute readers will have noticed that this principle and corollary
are the bases of stopping and inducing bluffs, which were discussed
in page Twenty. When you show strength, especially more strength
than you really have, to stop a bluff, you must be prepared to
fold when your opponent bets into you because that opponent is
expecting you to call; therefore he has a hand. Conversely, when
you have shown more weakness than you really have, you must automatically
call a player who bets on the end because you have induced a
bluff: That player may be betting because he thinks you will
fold.
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