WHAT IS THE calling card (pun intended) of the weak no-limit hold'em player? My answer would be letting the opponent draw cheaplyor for freeand then paying off big-time when the opponent gets lucky. Many people would agree with this, including a lot of poker writers. Generally, slow-playing pocket aces gets chastised in print, to the extent that slow-players of this hand often are derided in poker literature. I admit that I myself do not do a lot of slow-playing, but there is a big difference between infrequent and never. My opinion is, there are some spots in which slow-playing aces is at least a viable alternative to consider, and there are a few situations in which it may well be the superior play.
Aces can be a candidate for slow-playing both before and after the flop. There is a sound technical reason for this. Aces, being a pair of the highest-ranking card, cannot encounter an overcard, so they are outdrawn less often than any other hand preflop, and also are not very easy to outrun after the flop. Failing to bet or raise is therefore not penalized as often as with other pocket pairs. I will discuss preflop play in this column.
Few people slow-play aces when someone has already entered the pot in front of them. The most frequent time that people limp in with aces is when they are the opener, especially when under the gun. Limping in when opening from early position is so common that opponents will be wary of you when you just call from up front. I open-limp with aces less often than I open-raise, but am still prone to using this play. It fits my general poker philosophy of varying how I play the nuts. I hardly ever limp with aces if someone is already in the pot. I am not above limping when I am the first player in even when having late position. You may recall a hand with which I opened from the button in the 2006 World Series of Poker with a very short stack. Neither blind raised, yet I still managed to triple up on the hand. I also use this play on occasion when in the small blind. Open-limping from the small blind with aces and then reraising the big blind if he gets frisky is a good way to let the big blind know that a limp is not a white flag that gives him a license to steal. One play I have seen that I never useand think is idioticis failing to raise one or more limpers when in the big blind. Deceptive, yes; profitable, no.
With pocket aces when facing a raise, the normal play is to reraise. Make sure that your reraise is big enough. I like to at least triple the total bet; for example, with $50$100 blinds, if someone made it $300 to go, I would make the total bet at least $900, and probably a little more. An even grand is a good number. If I am out of position, as in one of the blinds, I would make it at least four times the total bet (here, $1,200).
Do I ever slow-play aces when facing a raise? Yes, but only if conditions are ideal. Here are all of the criteria that must be met:
My favorite situation to slow-play pocket aces preflop is when I have been reraised by one of the blinds after I have made an open-raise. This reraise from out of position is almost always kings, queens, or AK, so I have both position and confidence in reading where I stand on most of the flops. This is a gambling situation to relish.
As you see, I believe that slow-playing pocket aces preflop, far from being a no-no, is a useful tool when conditions are right. Besides being very effective in certain situations, it provides a nice variety to your no-limit hold'em game, giving it a certain amount of unpredictability that keeps the opposition off balance. ![]()
