JV'S
KILLER POKER:
F.E.A.R.
BY:
John Vorhaus
There's an acronym that comes from
somewhere -- recovery circles, I think
-- that goes F.E.A.R: Future Events Appear
Real. In the real world, it reminds us
that certain of our fears are phantom
fears and we can dismiss them. In a poker
context, it reminds us to use our foes'
fears against them. Let's see how that
works...
First,
recognize that certain of your foes at
certain times feel like they're cursed.
Maybe they've had some recent bad beats
or maybe they just dwell in negativity.
In any event, bad luck has afflicted them
and they expect it to strike again; they
live, in other words, in F.E.A.R. These
foes will give you a predictive tell,
a tell which lets you anticipate how they'll
react to the fall of certain cards. If
all goes according to play, your opponents'
own anxieties will win you the pot.
What
you're looking for in hold'em, for example,
are scary flops, such as three to a straight
or three to a flush, that you can "own",
by playing as if you're on that draw.
If the draw gets there, your chosen victim
will experience a momentary lapse of reason.
His judgment temporarily clouded by a
fatalistic sense of here we go again!
he won't pause to consider that you're
betting a hand you don't have. He'll just
see himself as damned unlucky once more,
and fold his hand without a second thought.
Why would he call? He put you on a draw,
and, because he's cursed, your draw got
there.
You
can help reinforce this set of mistaken
assumptions by "betraying" yourself with
a betting pattern consistent with the
draw you aren't on. Suppose you're heads
up against one such Gloomy Gus and looking
at a flop of T-9-8 rainbow. If he bets,
go ahead and raise. Figure he's got top
pair, good kicker. He, meanwhile, figures
you for a naked jack or a seven. You're
not actually looking to hit on the turn.
You're hoping to hit a brick and have
your opponent check, so that you can check
too. He'll conclude that your raise on
the flop was a foreclosure raise, and
will now firmly put you on the straight
draw. If the river comes queen, jack,
seven or six, his own dour evaluation
of your hand has to put you on a straight
or new top pair. Skittish as he is, he
knows he's beaten. He checks, you
bet, he folds. Happy outcome. All because
your foe feels snakebit and because you
played the hand in a way which let him
put you firmly on a hand that beats him.
If
you should be "unfortunate" enough to
"hit" your hand on the turn (say a jack
comes), you can still carry this gambit
through by checking behind your foe on
the turn. If he checks the river, you
bet; if he bets, you raise. To a player
caught in the throes of F.E.A.R., your
bet on the turn would have looked very
much like a bluff. But checking the turn
(as if to induce a bluff) and betting
or raising the river is consistent with
a trap, not a bluff, and that's where
your foe will put you.
Different
situation, same concept: Suppose you're
in the big blind and it's folded around
to the button, who makes a standard real
estate raise. A call from you here
can be consistent with a medium ace. Keep
this in mind, because this is the hand
you want him to put you on. Now here comes
a flop of 9-7-3. Not much of anything
for anyone. You check, he bets, you call.
What does this tell him? That you have
a weak piece of the flop, or overcards,
or a bit of both with something like A-3
or A-7. The turn is a 2, and nothing seems
to have changed. You check. Your foe checks
too, because he's feeling star-crossed
and he doesn't want to bet again into
a pot that you've demonstrated you won't
be bluffed off of. (What does he hold
here? Since he made a real estate raise
preflop, he could have as little as nothing
at all.) The river comes an ace, and you
gleefully bet out -- betraying your glee
if you can. Your opponent knows there's
no point in calling... you obviously hit
your hand! He'll feel cursed that an ace
fell on the river, but also (incorrectly)
smug for making a good laydown in the
face of a bad outcome.
Yes,
I know he could have raised on the button
with a good ace, in which case the river
ace helps him more than it helps you.
But many players will raise an unraised
pot on the button with many non-ace hands.
They figure to own any board that remains
ace-free, but willing to surrender to
that scary ace when it falls. The real
question is: Do you know your foe's preflop
raising requirements here? If you have
him well dialed in, you can make this
move; otherwise, save it for an enemy
whose tendencies you're more sure of.
In
all events, this whole class of play requires
a foe you can steer. It's not like they're
not out there; weak-minded players abound.
Just make sure it's the right kind of
weak mind. You need someone who's feeling
like a loser -- but not so much like a
loser that he's past the point of pain.
You want him to be dumb enough to conclude
he's beaten, but smart enough not to play
sheriff on you. It's a fine line, but
a profitable one -- one you prepare for,
needless to say, by studying your foes
intently throughout the course of your
play. Don't just look at their betting
patterns, look for the underlying psychology.
Find out who lives in F.E.A.R. and then
use their fear to steal pots.
(John Vorhaus is author
of the KILLER POKER series and News Ambassador
for UltimateBet.com.)
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