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I've always contended that a key difference between a good and great player involved knowing how to properly size your bets and thus extract the maximum value out of your winning hands.
Assume two equally skilled players as far as basic strategy goes. Both know how to play preflop, understand positional concepts, can bluff and semi-bluff effectively and know how to fold a hand if it appears they are beat. So whats one key difference that can make one player a significantly larger winner than the other? Bet sizes. The title of this is Level 2 and 3 Thinking and How it Relates to Bet Sizing. By Level Two Thinking Im obviously referring to the Levels of Thinking (Level 1: What do I have etc) Level Two is "What Does My Opponent Have". Since so many players (even those at higher levels) do not go beyond level one thinking (in the sense that they can read the board and know what beats their hand, but they arent accurately putting you on a range of hands based on how the hand has played out thus far) I think this is the most important thing to master. What plays into account just as much, is analyzing your level one thinking (what do I have) to the point where you can assess how strong your hand is and what kind of hands will be able to call that you beat? The other point is to use your level three thinking (What does my opponent Think I have) particularly when you have disguised your hand well and believe your opponent to undervalue your hand. So how does this all relate to bet sizing? You've limped in LP with K ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() With a little hand reading skills you can likely assume that he isn't on a big hand here, since it's unlikely he'd check and call a flop like this with a strong hand. If he leads out on a blank turn, maybe we'll reevaluate. The turn is a K ![]() The river blanks off with a 6 ![]() In a different scenario the situation could be totally reversed. With 77 on a A J 7 T 7 board against a PFR, we might opt to bet the full pot on the river (of course depending on previous action) since there are a bizillion hands that can call a large bet that our opponent may hold and we want to get paid the maximum. To give a full hand example assume 2 limps and a button PFR. We decide to call ith J ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The turn comes a K ![]() ![]() ![]() We're now at the river which blanks off 2 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() These two examples aren't the greatest ones (in fact there may be issues with my thinking on one or both of them) but these are just two hands that I've recently played in the past few days so they are fresh in my mind. Evaluate your hands strength and determine how wide a range of hands below yours might call a bet and how big of a bet would they call. Use level two thinking to put your opponents on hands and then determine your bet amount. Use level three thinking to figure out what hands opponents are giving you, and thus readjust your original range of hands that will call to include this new information. Two players can win the same hands, yet one can come out a loser the other a winner simply because one player has sized his bets properly. At all times (obviously when value betting, not bluffing/blocker betting etc), you want to bet the absolute most you believe your opponent will call -- don't simply underbet your monsters. Each time you bet as little as $1 less than this maximum, you are leaving money on the tables, and this can add up to hundreds or thousands of dollars in as little as 1 session --- imagine for a year or your poker lifetime. I hope this article that I've written helps at least someone and that it hasn't taken up too much time of those on or past this level of play.
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"Most of the money you'll win at poker comes not from the brilliance of your own play, but from the ineptitude of your opponents." Last edited by Zybomb; 11-23-07 at 03:44 PM. |
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