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What makes a good
player successful? Poker players are constantly looking for one or a
few "secrets" that have brought a top player success - and hope to
learn those secrets so they can use them themselves. The truth is, a
good player has a wide range of skills that separates him from the
pack. Even so, there are a few tricks in betting that are mostly or
exclusively the property of top players. I will discuss some of
these tools, looking at how they would apply to a limit hold'em
game.
The bluff-call. There is an old poker adage that says a bettor might
be bluffing, but a caller is not. That adage is not always true. It
is possible to set up a bluff by a call on the previous betting
round. Consider this situation: You are in the small blind holding
the 7
6 .
A player in middle position calls, the button calls, you call, and
the big blind raps. The flop comes A
A
4 .
You check, and the others also check to the button, who bets. The
button is a lady who is aggressive in betting when checked to, and
likes to slow-play her good hands if she can afford to give a free
card (as with this flop). Furthermore, she thinks you are a tight
player because you do not play lots of starting hands. You think
this is a good opportunity to pick off a bluff, or catch her with a
light hand that cannot stand pressure. In fact, the main problem is
that the other two players in the pot know what you know, and would
probably be inclined to check an ace here if they have one. What
should you do? This is a good spot for the bluff-call. Just call the
bet, hoping that the other two players will leave you heads up
against the button. If your ploy works, the other two players will
fold, and you will bet the turn and win the pot. (Should a heart or
a 5 come on the turn and you pick up a draw, so much the better.) If
one of the other players who checked comes to life after your call,
you are out of there at a minimal investment.
Reraising a
reraise as a semibluff. When you have a drawing hand in position, it
is a common play to raise on the flop betting round when an
early-position player bets - a semibluff. The main purpose is not to
win the pot right there - although that would be nice - but to
intimidate the bettor into just calling the raise and checking on
the next round. If you make your draw, you probably have gotten an
extra bet by raising when you did. If you miss, you have the option
of either continuing the charade by betting again or taking a free
card after the limit has doubled. Unfortunately, the bettor can gum
up the works by reraising, then betting into you. However, you can
still try to do with a reraise what you had hoped to do with the
first raise - put your opponent into call-and-check mode. On the
turn, it is unlikely you can get him out with a bet, so just take
the free card if you miss your draw and he checks to you. This
reraise is more likely to be effective if the bettor has only one
pair, and now starts worrying about your having two pair or a set.
Raise for a
free showdown. A standard hold'em tool is a bet on the turn, looking
for a free showdown at the river. In position, you bet a marginal
hand, such as pocket queens with an overcard on the board, "one more
time into the breech" because you do not want to give a free card,
instead of checking the turn and then having to make a crying call
on the end. Well, you can raise with a similar intention! Here is an
example: You have pocket jacks. A player in early position opens
with a raise and you call on the button. The others fold. The flop
comes 7-4-2. The opponent bets, you raise, and he calls. A queen
comes on the turn. He bets; what should you do? If you decide to go
with your hand, a raise is a very reasonable play! The opponent
could have a pocket pair smaller than yours, and could be trying to
scare you. When you raise, what is he to think? If he has A-Q, as
the betting indicates, he will almost surely call and check the
river. Your raise says A-Q is no good. (A real tight player might
even fold A-Q.) You will get a showdown for the same price as a call
on the turn and a call on the end. A purist might argue that just
calling is the better play, because it encourages the opponent to
keep betting, and if he has that hoped-for pocket pair, he has only
two outs. However, he could have A-K, which is six outs. More
importantly, anyone who has seen you make this play is going to pay
you off the next zillion times you pop him on the turn and he has
anything reasonable - and he is going to go sailing for two big bets
more on the hand after paying off at the river, as well.
The
bluff-raise at the river. This ploy can come in a couple of
different forms. Here is one example: You hold the Q
J
in the cutoff seat (the first seat right of the button). Someone
opens, you call, the button calls, and the big blind raps. Four of
you see a flop that comes K
8
6 .
The big blind checks, the early-position player bets, you call, and
the button calls. The big blind folds, so there are three players
now. The turn is the meaningless 2 .
The flop bettor bets again, you call, and the button calls. At the
river, the last card is an offsuit 10, making a possible straight,
but leaving you with zero. The bettor bets. A raise here is
possible. If the bettor is bluffing with something like the
nut-flush draw, he has you beat, but won't call. The player behind
you is not going to call unless the river card gave him two pair or
a straight. Raising is a gamble, but it could work out against a
person who plays his drawing hands strongly. Once again, you may get
a lot of action in the future when they see this play.
Here is
another scenario for the bluff-raise at the river: We can use the
same hand for you and the boardcards that were in the previous
situation. This time, however, you are first to act, the pumper is
second, and the button once again is in. When that 10 hits on the
river, you do not think a bluff has much chance of success, so you
make a give-up check. But now, here's a small surprise. The pumper
also checks, and the button bets. Here's your chance; raise him. The
person who had carried the betting probably has no more than a pair,
and is being confronted with a double bet. There is a fine chance
that your raise will knock him out. If the button was bluffing,
you're home.
As you can
see, there is no money-back guarantee that these plays are going to
work in any given situation, but they are useful tools to employ if
the occasion feels right. One thing is certain: Players who have
seen your moves at work are going to regard you as a tricky player,
and will pay you off when you have the goods.
Bob
Ciaffone has authored four poker books, Middle Limit Holdem Poker
(available at CardPlayer.com), Pot-limit and No-limit Poker, Improve
Your Poker, and Omaha Holdem Poker. Ciaffone is available for poker
lessons: e-mail
thecoach@chartermi.net. His website is
http://www.pokercoach.us/,
where you can get his rulebook, Robert's Rules of Poker, for free.
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