Poker Strategy: Cash Poker

 

Poker strategy
Jackanory

Lead opponents down the wrong path and fleece them

Annie Duke says successful poker is often a matter of using your bets to tell a story that leads your foe to a reasonable, yet wrong, conclusion. Here’s a story I like to tell. I call it the ‘I have a hand, no I don’t, yes I do’ story.

On a flop of 7-8-K, I’m holding K-7. I probably have the best hand and I want to extract some value. So in first position I tell part one of the story by making a ‘utility underbet’ – about half pot-size. This bet tells an interesting lie: it looks like it’s trying for a cheap draw, but really it’s disguising a big hand. When the turn doesn’t connect to either the straight or flush draw, I immediately check.

This is chapter two of the story, and it confirms in my foe’s mind that I’m on a draw and hoping for a free ride to the river. Let’s say I get it, and I ‘miss’ again on the river. Now my foe is emboldened to bet, maybe even to bluff, for the three parts of my story have made it clear I’m on a draw that didn’t hit. Imagine his surprise then when I raise on the river. He either folds or makes a bad call, giving me either good or great value on the hand.

In short-handed poker you must look to exploit these patterns of play, and aberrations in others’ patterns of play against which you must be wary.

 
   
1. Annie Duke knows her poker
Annie Duke knows her poker

 
 
 
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Jackanory

Lead opponents down the wrong path and fleece them
 
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