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ADVANTAGES OF FIRST POSITION
However, this point does bring out the fact that there are
a few situations where it's advantageous to be first. In
first or early position you get more check-raising opportunities.
Furthermore, with a lock in first position you might win
three bets by betting and reraising. Finally, you sometimes
want to drive players out to make your hand stand up; only
raising in early position, before opponents have had the
opportunity to call the first bet, can succeed in doing
this. Nevertheless, these first and early position advantages
are minimal in comparison to the many advantages of being
last.
ADJUSTING PLAY TO POSITION
There are times when your positional advantage allows you
to win a pot you would not otherwise have won. Most of the
time, though, the best hand wins, whether it happens to
be first or last. So what we really mean by positional advantage
is the extra bets that may be saved or gained by your being
in late position a check after your opponent checks, a raise
after your opponent bets, and so on. The importance of these
extra bets cannot be overemphasized. Never forget that in
poker we are trying to win money, not pots. Every decent
player wins a fair share of pots, but it is the extra bets
you can get into the pots you win and those you can save
from the pots you lose that increase your hourly rate and
the money won in the long run.
There is little you can do to secure last position from
one deal to the next, but when you have it, you should make
the most of it. In seven-card stud, for example, you should
anticipate the position you will be in from one round to
the next. If an ace or an open pair is to your immediate
left, that figures to make you last in the next round. You
may play your hand a little differently, a little more aggressively,
a little more loosely, than you would if you were expecting
to be first.
In contrast, when the bettor is to your immediate right,
forcing you to act ahead of everyone else, you must tighten
up considerably. It is extremely important that you fold
almost all marginal hands in this position. The possibility
of a raise behind you plus the chance of a reraise from
the original bettor is devastating. Furthermore, you can
frequently count on being in the same unpleasant position
not accidentally called under the gun - for the remainder
of the hand. If you constantly call bets with marginal hands
in this position, you will have to fold so many of them
either later in the same round when the bet is raised or
on the next round when the bet is repeated - that you will
lose an enormous amount relative to the occasional pots
you might win by staying in.
Thus, in five-card draw, if a player to your immediate right
in early position opens, you should throw away two aces
in most cases. In the same position in lowball, you'd usually
have to throw away a one-card draw to a 7,6 and possibly
a 7,5, even though these are hands you'd gladly play if
you were sure there would be no raises behind you. In seven-card
stud if the player to your right raises the opener on third
street, you should fold most middle-sized pairs when there
are several people behind you who might reraise.
With any of these hands you'd almost certainly call in last
position, a fact that underlines another of that position's
advantages: You can play more hands. You no longer need
to fear a raise from players who have not acted, and in
most instances you will probably remain last on future betting
rounds as well. Even in seven-card stud, when the bettor
to your left happens not to be high on board and thus first
to act, the other players will usually check around to that
bettor on the following round.
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The
Pace of Play and Position |
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