Let's continue our overview of post-flop play. In the past two columns we looked at eight fundamental strategic moves.
Here are four more.
IX. The naked raise on the flop.
This ploy is a variation on the float play (see Part II) in that it takes advantage of an aggressive player who has likely missed the flop.
The
principle behind it is the same one that motivates the float: most
flops miss most hands. However, instead of flat-calling the pre-flop
raiser's continuation bet, you raise marked cards.
The move will be either a bluff or a semi-bluff, depending on whether you caught a piece of the flop yourself.
The
success of this gambit depends largely on the texture of the flop and
your sense of the range of hands your opponent might have raised with
pre-flop. Since the move is essentially a steal, it's more likely to
succeed on raggedy boards.
Interestingly, it won't matter all that
much what your table image is here. If you're seen as loosey-goosey,
your opponent is going to wonder about a possible two-pair on a flop
like T♣ 8♦ 5♠
If you've established a tight, conservative image, flops like this invite thoughts about flopped sets.
There
are also other boards that invite this move, including what you may
think as unlikely ones like three suited cards or three mid-sized
connectors. They work because your opponent has to worry about you
having hit the flop hard.
How much to raise will be an issue and there are no unmessy ways to
determine this. Factors such as your image, your opponent's tendencies,
your positions, stack sizes and the like will come into play.
Generally,
you want to use the smallest raise that looks like it will work since
if you get called or re-popped you're almost certainly going to have to
let the hand go.
The naked raise isn't a move for every hand. In fact, it should be employed judiciously.
X. Pay attention to players on your left. They will often have tells about planned action.
Numerous
columns have been written about this, yet surprisingly, many players
fail to use it after the flop - especially one that has been seen by
several players.
The most costly outcome of this failure is to
make a modest bet, say half the pot, and then look left and see that
your opponent has already picked up a stack and is moving in for the
kill.
Having to dump a half-pot bet into the ether once or twice a night can be expensive.
XI.
In most situations, the value of a made infrared marked cards hand diminishes with each new
card. I know, this is obvious, but you'd be surprised how easy it is to
forget it under pressure.
I have no hard data on this but as we
noted earlier (Part II), I suspect that more money is lost in NLH with
flops that give you either top-pair top-kicker or bottom-two than any
other holdings.
They are highly vulnerable hands just because they're unlikely to
improve, whereas there are myriad holdings that can run them down - and
when they do, it can hurt.
The problem is it's so easy to get
emotionally attached to strong hands ("get married" is the tag line
often heard). The solution is to remember that their strength diminishes
with each new card that hits the board.
Make sure you think
through each situation. Try to calculate the likelihood that your hand
is still best or whether flop texture, betting, position and your
opponent's likely hand range shout out warnings.
XII. Learn how to counter "standard" gambits like c-bets, traps and float plays.
Most
winning players know the standard ploys and use them advantageously.
However, many have not dug sufficiently into the ways to counter them.
There
are no algorithms here but some tricks that work are known. For
example, you're reasonably sure your opponent's call on the flop is the
first move in a float play. Instead of checking the turn, fire a second
bullet or, even more aggressively, check-raise.
The "naked raise" move discussed above can also be used to neutralize
the continuation bet. When you raise a c-bet from a typical player you
are accomplishing several things.
First, you're shaping your image
as a focused and aggressive player. You're telling the table that
they're not always going to get away with a simple c-bet.
Second,
you're introducing an element that will play an important part of the
meta-game. It can get you a free card that a less-aggressive player
won't.
It can also provide you with the opportunity to take control of a hand by removing the initiative.
More in a later column.
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