Middle and Small Pairs
Lately, I’ve been misplaying these middle and small pairs. So I went back to review how Negreanu would play these hands using his small ball tournament strategy. This information is taken from his latest book Power Hold’em Strategy.
Middle Pairs: Pocket 7’s to 10’s
Don’t overplay these hands. They are good hands because of their implied value rather than their preflop strength.
Pre-flop: If first in the pot, a raise of 2.5 times the big blind.
Flop: If you hit your set, play to win big. If you miss, don’t auto-fold unless the action indicates a lot of strength.
Small Pairs: Pocket 2’s to 6’s
Play these pairs like the middle pairs.
Pre-flop: Do not re-raise your opponents.
Example #1:
You have 10s-10d.
A tight player under the gun raises before the flop. You call from the button.
Important note: Please don’t re-raise a tight player who raises under the gun with pocket 10’s. I see this happen too often and the only reason I can think someone is doing this is because they are not paying attention.
The flop: 8h-4h-3c.
The tight player checks. What should you do?
Bet because 1) Your opponent checked and it will define your opponent’s hand 2) If you check, your opponent will have a chance to hit his most likely hand, A-K and 3) A flush draw is present and you can lose if he hits his hand and/or picks up a flush draw on the turn.
If he check raises you here, just fold. Tight players won’t make a play in this situation.
If he calls your bet, proceed with caution. He may be setting a trap with pocket Aces.
Example #2:
You have 9h-9c.
Blinds $25/$50 and a player raises to $150 from middle position. You call on the small blind.
Flop: Qh-7d-2s. You check and your opponent bets $300. This opponent is aggressive and tends to c-bet, so you call.
Turn: 7c. You check and your opponent bets $600. What should you do?
Check raise to $1200 or $1500. If he re-raises you, you can fold. If he calls, check the river. If he bets the river, you are beat.
Example #3:
You have 4d-4s.
You raise the $50/$100 blinds to $250 in late position. The small blind calls.
Flop: 8h-9s-9h. The small blind check calls your $400 bet.
Turn: Kc. The small blind check calls your $600 bet.
River: 8d. Your opponent checks. What should you do?
Don’t check even though the board counterfeited your small pair. Bet $800 into the $2700 pot. It looks like a legitimate value bet. If you are wrong, that small a bet will not hurt your stack if you are beat.
Here’s the Simple Secret to Winning at Online Poker
Mitchell Cogert is the author of “Tournament Poker: 101 Winning Moves.” It is the only reference book to reveal the plays the Pros use to win a poker tournament. These plays are based on reviewing 20 years worth of tournament poker strategies and by actual play against Daniel Negreanu, Erick Lindgren, David Pham and other top pros. The book is highly rated with 4.5 out of 5 stars on amazon and an amazon #1 best seller in it’s category.
For more information go to Win at Poker.
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