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- Andy Bloch
In No-Limit Hold'em, it can be difficult
to know what the right play is on the river when you're out of position
with a marginal hand. In my experience, if you think your hand is good
enough to call with, you should consider betting the river if you don't
think your opponent will try to bluff.
Say you're playing in a tournament and
raise in late position with K-10. You know K-10 isn't a great hand, but
from late position, it's strong enough to pressure the blinds. The
player on the button calls and both blinds fold.
Now the flop comes 10d-7c-3d. This is a
nice flop for you and you lead out at the pot. The button calls. What
are you to make of the call? Well, he's probably got something – maybe a
flush draw or another ten – but it's hard to pinpoint an exact hand.
The turn brings the 2c. This wouldn't
appear to have helped your opponent, but you don't really know where you
stand and you're trying to avoid playing a big pot at this point in the
tournament, so you check. Your opponent bets about half the pot and you
call.
The river brings an interesting card:
the 4c, making the board, 10d-7c-3d-2c-4c. What's your best play? It's
tempting to check again, because of the completed flush draw. But
betting here has a few advantages over checking and then having to make
a decision if your opponent fires at the pot.
Since the flush cards came backdoor (on
the turn and river), your opponent probably doesn't have the flush, and
he may doubt that you have it, too. Thus, he will suspect that you're
bluffing, having missed the diamond flush draw. So if you bet here, he
may call with a hand weaker than yours, like J-10, Q-10, or even 9-9 or
A-7. However, there's still the possibility that you have the club
flush, so your opponent probably won't raise with a hand like A-10, J-J,
or maybe even a set. On the other hand, if you check, your opponent
might bet on the river with those hands and you may pay him off, because
you think he might be making a thin value bet with a weaker hand like
Q-10.
The trick here is to bet a little less
than your opponent would have, had you checked to him when he had the
best hand. By putting out a somewhat smaller bet, you get to show down
your hand cheaply against a better ten or a set, and you will also get
your opponent to call with weaker hands that he would have otherwise
checked with. Your bet here serves a purpose whether you're ahead or
behind in the hand.
If your opponent raises, you can be
pretty sure he has you beat and you can fold (unless he's a tricky
opponent who may bluff in this spot), having gotten some very good
information on the strength of his hand at minimal cost.
Note that this is the kind of bet you
want to make when you're pretty sure that your opponent has some sort of
hand that you have a decent chance to beat, and that he won't bluff if
you check. In spots where your opponent might hold a busted draw and
bluff, it's often more profitable to check and then pick off the bluff
with a call. For example, you might check and call in this same
situation with 10-9 or 9-9 against an opponent who bluffs a lot.
There aren't too many worse hands (if
any) that your opponent will call you with if you are beat, and your
opponent may check some of the marginal better hands like J-10 or Q-10.
The idea in this situation is to lose fewer bets against better hands
while you get some value from your opponent's bluffs.
Do that often enough and you're sure to
have a good poker career.
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