Raising to Drive Out Opponents
When you raise to get people out, what you are really doing is raising to
cut down their odds. In fact, you may sometimes cut their odds so severely that
you hope they will call rather than fold after you raise.
By cutting down a person's odds, we mean reducing the amount of money he may
win per dollar invested. For example, if there is a $100 pot, someone bets $10,
and you call the $10, the player behind you gets 12-to-1 odds on a call. That
is, that player hopes to win $120 from his $10 call, or $12 per $1 invested.
But suppose you raise the initial bettor, making it $20 for the player behind
you to call. Now there's $130 in the pot instead of $120, but the player behind
you must invest twice as much - $20 - for a chance to win it. You have thus cut
his odds almost in half - from $120-to-$10 to $130-to-$20, or from 12-to-1 to 6
1/2-to-1. In so doing, you have created a situation where the player may make a
mistake, according to the Fundamental Theorem of Online Poker Games, by either
calling or folding. Even when he folds correctly after you raise because he is
getting insufficient pot odds to call a double bet, you certainly prefer that
to his calling an un-raised bet correctly and proceeding to outdraw you and win
the pot.
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