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Slow playing to maximise
value
Written by: Dave Colclough (2004-04-26 20:47:40)
Ok Folks,
So here I am at the 2004 World Series of Poker. Binion's
Horseshoe has been taken over by new owners... at long
last. That is not the most obvious change that greeted
me though. America has gone Poker mad, mad, mad. An
astonishing 343 have just paid an amazing $25,000 to
play the main event at the Bellagio. And yesterday I
walked into Binions satelitte area and couldn't believe
my eyes. Last year there would have been maybe 3 or
4 tables running. This year there were 23 or 24 tables
buzzing with excitement. Hordes and hordes of new players.
God bless America, god bless the WPT on the discovery
channel, and god bless Chris Moneymaker. This is Poker
heaven!
I managed to win a seat for the $2000 No Limit Hold
em event in a one table satelitte. I got lucky when
I slow played pocket Kings catching both blinds who
both flopped top pair. As an added bonus, I was given
a poker lesson by a very attractive young lady with
a large bosom. She explained how dangerous it was not
to raise with Kings before the flop. Bless her! Anyway
I tripled thru and managed to outlast the rest to gain
a seat in the NLH event for a paltry $230.
It can be very annoying playing you play tournament
poker and you have waited two hours to pick up a hand.
You finally look down at a pair of Kings, raise 3 times
the Big Blind and everyone passes. Doh!... So what is
the correct thing to do?
In the majority of cases the correct thing is exactly
that. If you raise 3 times the Big Blind with AJ in
mid to late position, then you must raise 3 times the
Big Blind with your Kings (regardless of position).
That way your eagle eyed opponents wont be able to tell
what cards you play. If everyone passes, it's not the
end of the world. At least you didn't lose with them.
In the satellite I mentioned above, I picked up the
Kings in first position in a 9 handed aggressive one
table satellite. I figured if I flat called, someone
in a later position would raise, and then I could re-raise
and get all my chips in the middle before the flop.
A cunning plan... that didn't work. Everyone passed
around to the blinds who smooth called. The flop came
Jack high and they both decided they liked it. So it
was just a matter of crossing my fingers and hoping
neither had two pair.
In Limit Hold'em there is rarely any justification in
slow playing big hands, especially in the lower limit
games. If you have a pair a Kings I would recommend
that you raise at every opportunity. The obvious reason
is to make the pot as big as possible, so you win as
much as possible. Another good reason though, is that
you are better off playing against 1 or 2 opponents
with your Kings than against the whole table. Less players
will call 2 bets, and hopefully you wont lose the pot
to anyone playing 5,6 of hearts. Post flop, the song
remains the same. If it shows 3,7,J and your opponent
bets, then raise him. Don't get cute. If for example
he has 10,J or J,K, and the next card comes an Ace.
Although it doesn't help either of you, it freezes the
betting because it scares you both. And the pot that
you win is that little bit smaller.
So as usual, I am being as contradictory as ever. But
most of the time, it doesn't pay to be too clever.
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