Low
Limit No Limit Part 4:
Backing Down From A Fight
BY:
Ashley Adams
Contact at: (Asha34@aol.com)
Author of Winning 7-Card Stud
A
lot of the new young guys who play in
the low limit No Limit Hold Em games these
days see themselves as gunslingers. I
love these guys (most of them are guys
anyway). They are filled with this whole
macho thing. They come to the poker table
to do battle. They have a little bit of
the swagger to them. You've seen them.
They snap their chips in. They stare you
in the eye, daring you to call or raise
them back. They're tough. They don't back
down from a fight.
I
love them as opponents. They haven't learned
to unlearn their habitual response to
being challenged. They are an easy mark.
You
see, in poker, especially in No Limit
Hold Em, it's vitally important that you
not get caught up in the poker-as-battle
paradigm. Sure, a poker game is a contest,
but not in the sense that most competitive
sports are. If you follow the adage that
winners never quit and quitters never
win then you'll eventually go broke.
Here's
an example. You have Kh Qh. You are in
late position. Three people in front of
you call the $2 big blind in this $1/2
blind No Limit Hold Em game. You raise
to $10, exploiting your position and their
apparent weakness. You get two callers
- two of the people who called the Big
Blind. The flop is Ah Ks 8s. The first
player checks. The second player checks.
You're looking pretty good. You figure
an Ace would have bet out. You have about
$100 in chips and throw in $30 hoping
to win the pot right there but also prepared
to see the Turn if you get called. Your
first opponent, with about $500 in chips
folds. Your second opponent, with $220
or so raises you all-in. Do you fold or
do you call?
The
macho man in you responds almost reflexively
"Call this jerk - raising YOU all in.
What a bluffer. He thinks YOU'LL fold
to his raise. Fat chance! CALL!!!" We
don't want to back down after we've taken
the lead. It seems so wimpy, so weak,
so pathetic. What, we just crawl away
and say, "never mind" and fold? What a
wuss we'd be to do that.
Our
brain, however, tells us that this is
exactly what we MUST do that. He most
probably has an Ace - maybe even an Ace
Queen. Those are both highly possible
hands for him to play in the way he played
them in that position. Sure, he may be
bluffing. But the chances are too small
to be worth our entire stack to find out.
Fold is clearly the right play unless
we know our opponent to be a chronic bluffer.
And even then it's probably a bad call.
Backing down is the right play.
These
situations happen all the time in no limit
hold em. The good players resist the urge
to call the challenger. If we can't resist
that urge then we'll often end up mumbling
to ourselves about our bad luck. But if
we're smart, we should go out of our way
to turn the tables on guys who can't inhibit
this habitual response to take the bait
and fight to the finish.
Here's
another situation that shows you how to
exploit your tough guy opponents (who
aren't good players). We have the same
hand, the same position, and the same
chips, as do our opponents. The action
before the flop is also the same. You
raise before the flop and get two callers.
But the flop in this hand is Ah Jd 10d.
The first opponent checks. The second
opponent bets $30. What do you do?
You're
tempted to slow play. Maybe you can snooker
the first guy into calling. Maybe you
won't get drawn out on by a guy with a
four flush who hits his flush on the Turn
or on the River. Maybe, with the right
opponents that's the right play. But I'll
tell you this. With most low limit no
limit players I'm up against these days,
an excellent move is to try to fake a
bluff by doing some acting at the table.
Challenge their manhood. Look them in
the eye, sneer a bit or laugh at them
and say, a bit loudly, "ALL IN" while
shoving in your chips dramatically. Some
of the young guns that play this game
may very well take the bait. If they have
that Ace, and especially if they have
that Ace Queen, they won't be able to
resist your throwing down the gauntlet.
And they'll call - and then cry later
about the bad beat they took when you
caught the miracle flop. Give them a good
excuse to make this call.
Let
them have their story. You'll have their
chips.
A
postscript. This is a cheap trick that
will not work on good players or even
bad players after a while. But if you
pick your spots and take your shot against
a guy who can't back down from a fight,
well then you'll double up. Believe me
- I've done it many times.
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