h*****e 发帖数: 215 | 1 1.
I think the three most important areas of intelligence in regards to poker
are logic, probability, psychology. They actually are pretty close in order
of importance, and change depending on game structure.
2.
You should look at every hand individually. Sure you should think about your
range, but only what you opponent thinks of it. Not your true range. You
should think about what kind of hands your opponent might have and how
likely he is to fold them.
3.
You should question yourself a lot,then you can improve your game and don't
go on autopilot very much.
4
The best thing is keep asking yourself why and figure out why he(villain)
made that move.
The reasoning process is really important. Also you need keep kind of
standard bet size. From the show hand of your opponent you can have a good
read of those process. Play with your opponent.
All past hand Reasoning process->poker personality-> this new hand
reassessment the reasoning process
5.
Max your value however do not over represent your hand.
Hand selection and position. Pot size and stack size.
Think positive and be confident. Think the right way. | c****1 发帖数: 457 | 2 why should think each hand individually?
should consider the flow of the game and the history between villian and us,
right?
order
your
【在 h*****e 的大作中提到】 : 1. : I think the three most important areas of intelligence in regards to poker : are logic, probability, psychology. They actually are pretty close in order : of importance, and change depending on game structure. : 2. : You should look at every hand individually. Sure you should think about your : range, but only what you opponent thinks of it. Not your true range. You : should think about what kind of hands your opponent might have and how : likely he is to fold them. : 3.
| c******q 发帖数: 456 | 3 +1
I also want to add another point, assess your hand strength relatively
rather than absolutely.
I show two examples to illustrate my point,
(1) LP raised to $20, SB called and a MP limper (an old guy) called. Flop
came JcTc7h. SB led out with $25, MP raised to $75, PFR made it $220 total,
SB folded. MP thought for 10 secs and shoved with $900ish total, PFR called
with 77 of flopped bottom set. The old guy showed 89s and won the pot.
A set on flop is certainly a strong made hand. And a lot of players are
willing to put the whole stack in no matter what. However if you go back to
look at the board texture and the actions, it is such a clear fold to me.
Based on the action and the player's style, the old guy can only have 89s,
TT, JJ, and probably some kind of huge combo draws (mainly KQc / AQc).
Against this range, the bottom set is not much stronger than one pair hand.
Plus you would be in a very bad shape if he has TT/JJ. If I had to call the
shove, I'd rather to hold a nut flush draw than a bottom set.
(2) a 5-way limped pot. Flop is KsJs8h, all checked around. The turn is 4s.
MP bets $15, I have 89o with the third pair and make the call. We heads up
to the river. The river is a offsuit T. MP bets $30 again. Let's look at his
range. On the turn, I put him on two type of hands, made flush or flush
draw. I don't put him on a K because he usually bets the top pair on the
flop. and he won't bet the turn with any other one pair hand either. Turned
two pair is possible but unlikely. The river T doesn't help him much except
Qs9x. Even my hand gets weaker on the river, but actually doesn't change the
relative strength that much against opponent's range. So I make the call
and won the pot.
when you assess your hand, do not just look at the two hole cards and the
board. You have to evaluate your opponent' hand first based on board texture
, table action, table image, and hand history. And then define your hand
strength from there.
Just my 2cents. | c****1 发帖数: 457 | 4 good examples
,
called
are
to
【在 c******q 的大作中提到】 : +1 : I also want to add another point, assess your hand strength relatively : rather than absolutely. : I show two examples to illustrate my point, : (1) LP raised to $20, SB called and a MP limper (an old guy) called. Flop : came JcTc7h. SB led out with $25, MP raised to $75, PFR made it $220 total, : SB folded. MP thought for 10 secs and shoved with $900ish total, PFR called : with 77 of flopped bottom set. The old guy showed 89s and won the pot. : A set on flop is certainly a strong made hand. And a lot of players are : willing to put the whole stack in no matter what. However if you go back to
| n**m 发帖数: 113 | | H****r 发帖数: 2801 | 6 Nice examples!
Actually I did run into some situations like the 1st example, only folded
set on the flop once in my life. Still remember those small sets run into
desperately hopeless tragedy...
2nd example would depend alot on opponent knowledge and read it seems. A
area I'd need to learn lol...
,
called
are
to
【在 c******q 的大作中提到】 : +1 : I also want to add another point, assess your hand strength relatively : rather than absolutely. : I show two examples to illustrate my point, : (1) LP raised to $20, SB called and a MP limper (an old guy) called. Flop : came JcTc7h. SB led out with $25, MP raised to $75, PFR made it $220 total, : SB folded. MP thought for 10 secs and shoved with $900ish total, PFR called : with 77 of flopped bottom set. The old guy showed 89s and won the pot. : A set on flop is certainly a strong made hand. And a lot of players are : willing to put the whole stack in no matter what. However if you go back to
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