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April 24th, 2009

Adjusting strategy mid-hand

Johan Storakers

Full Tilt Poker

22nd April 2009

Most of the time when you’re engaged in a poker hand, you’ll be thinking about what decisions you will make before you have to make them. For example, if you call a raise with K-Q, you’ll think to yourself: Okay, if I hit top pair, I’m going to play this hand. If I have a gut-shot and two over-cards, I’m going to play this hand. If I have an open-ender and two over-cards, I’m going to play this hand. Otherwise, I’m going to let it go.

However, there will often be times when something happens that causes you to change your strategy mid-hand. Maybe your opponent makes a weak bet that gives you information worth using to your advantage. Or maybe he makes a bet on the river that looks like a value bet and convinces you to fold a hand you were planning on calling with.

It’s always good to enter a hand with a plan, but it’s essential that you be willing to deviate from the plan if the situation calls for it. Every hand requires that you react to your cards and the cards on the board, but it’s equally important that you factor in your opponent and his tendencies.

Here’s a hand that I played recently at the 2009 EPT German Open in Dortmund, where I went on to finish in fourth place. It was late in Day Two, I had been fairly short-stacked for a while and occasionally shoving with decent hands, but I hadn’t yet made a serious bluff in the tournament. We were eight-handed, the player in second position made a very small raise to 8,500 with blinds at 2,000/4,000 and a 500-chip ante, and it folded around to me in the small blind with pocket fives. I had about 70,000 in chips, and all I knew for sure was that I wasn’t going to fold a pocket pair in this situation.

I decided to call rather than raise, knowing the big blind would certainly be priced in to call as well, and he did. The flop came A-8-3. I was obviously looking to flop a set, or maybe something like 2-3-4 or 3-4-6, and this flop was not at all good for my hand, so I checked. The big blind also checked. And the initial raiser made what looked to me like a very weak bet, 12,000 into a 29,500 pot.

I was quite sure from the bet that he didn’t have an Ace, and probably he didn’t have a pair of any kind. It seemed to me that he had a hand like K-J, something in that range. So when he bet 12,000, I considered all of the factors – my read on him, my tight image, and my stack size. I decided to raise 21,000 more, representing that I had perhaps a weak Ace and had committed myself to the pot (even though, in reality, I wasn’t committed and would be willing to fold to a re-raise, leaving myself with about 30,000 in chips).

The big blind folded, and after thinking for a long time, the initial raiser folded also. He simply had to give me credit for a real hand that I wasn’t going to lay down to a re-raise.

This was a situation where I didn’t really intend to commit many chips if I didn’t hit a favorable flop, but I adjusted my decision making based on my opponent’s post-flop action, believing the stage had been set for me to make a move. Always be willing to adjust your plan, and every once in a while you’ll find yourself winning chips that otherwise would have been pushed toward someone else.

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April 14th, 2008

 - Confused whales blame Internet conspiracy, foul play.

 

Las Vegas, NV: Countless whales have emerged from the gaming depths to sing their discontent at rogue www.poker4ever.com online poker cardroom. And for good reason: poker4ever.com is offering any and all takers a chance to win a trip to Las Vegas to take their very own seat at the 2008 World Series of Poker… all for just 1 cent.

 

Whines one discontented vertebrate: “I’ve been cruisin’ this place with my heavy home boys here ever since I can remember. Now www.poker4ever.com lets all these electronic wannabes loose in here, slippin’ around all flash like that. Great Neptune…”

 

Moans another: “I have to pull $10,000 to buy into this tournament – those happy little card sparks just slide right in on one measly cent. Barnacles to poker4ever.com!”

 

Experience and old glory aside, today these big blues almost seem to be struggling under their own weight. Will they wash up? Is it truly a wave of mutilation for the old school?

 

The 1 cent buy in players remain unfazed. “Look, it’s simple,” chimes one electrified qualifier. “My bank account liked the ‘pay 1 cent’ thing much better than the ‘pay $10,000 plus airfare and hotel’ thing.”

 

A second ecstatic participant explains: “All you have to do is pay 1 cent and swim through the 7 stages until you get here. If you don’t make it, go back and try again for another penny.”

 

Logic may win the day after all…