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THING TO REMEMBER
Slow playing is an extremely effective way to get
good value for your strong hands, but since you are giving
weaker hands free or cheap cards, you must slow play with
caution. You must have a very strong hand. You shouldn't
slow play when your strength is obvious or when the pot
is large. Nor should you slow play when a cheap or free
card has a fair chance of giving an opponent a better hand
than yours or a justifiable draw. For example, in seven-card
stud an obvious straight bets into your hidden ace-king-high
flush. You might just call if there are other flush draws
around. But if you have only a king-high flush, you should
raise to make it as costly as possible for higher flush
draws to call and possibly draw out on you. Ideally a good
slow play occurs when, by making the hand they are hoping
to make, opponents still end up second-best, when they are
drawing dead. However, so long as your opponents will still
not be getting proper odds after receiving a free card or
a cheap card, a slow play is worth considering.
Scrap the general notion that you play tight in
a loose games and loose in a tight games and use the following
guidelines instead. In a loose games you must tighten up
on your bluffs and semi- bluffs, but loosen up on your legitimate
hands. You bluff less, but you bet for value more. You also
call with more hands and play more drawing hands. In a tight
games you loosen up on your bluffs and semi-bluffs, but
you must tighten up your legitimate hand requirements. You
bluff more, but you bet for value less. You also call less
and give up more quickly with drawing hands.
These guidelines can also be applied to individual players,
as well as to games. When a very tight player with raises
in a small-ante seven stud games and everyone ahead of you
folds, you would probably throw away a pair of jacks. You've
tightened up your requirements because the chances are good
your opponent already has you beat with a pair of kings.
But when a very loose player raises in the same spot and
everyone ahead of you folds, you might reraise with jacks,
not as a semi-bluff but as a bet for value.
To use all the poker tools at your disposal, you need to
adjust your play according to the games and according to
the individual players in the games. While
in a horse race you like being first, in a poker games you
like being last.
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The
Pace of Play and Position |
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