Poker Math question
Hello all it has been awhile!
Quick question on some poker math. How do I calculate what cards I should be calling with in the Small or Big Blind. Ie. when I'm typically getting a discount to call.
Here's the scenario I'm referring too.
6 max table 5/10 cent level.
Utg raises to 3BB's, CO calls, BTN calls, SB calls Hero is BB. Is this a scenario I can call with any two? And could someone help me out with the math here so I know when I'm actually making a profitable call in spots like these? There must be some quick way to factor in the equity of my cards vs. the pot odds.
Thanks!
Quick question on some poker math. How do I calculate what cards I should be calling with in the Small or Big Blind. Ie. when I'm typically getting a discount to call.
Here's the scenario I'm referring too.
6 max table 5/10 cent level.
Utg raises to 3BB's, CO calls, BTN calls, SB calls Hero is BB. Is this a scenario I can call with any two? And could someone help me out with the math here so I know when I'm actually making a profitable call in spots like these? There must be some quick way to factor in the equity of my cards vs. the pot odds.
Thanks!
Comments
This is very accurate - particularly talking about NL vs. FL.
NL is more about implied rather than pot odds. Alot of people look at Pot Odds in this situation in NL and leak money long term - which is compounded because you are OOP the whole way.
Assuming 6max NL - You should not be calling ATC in the situation you described in the OP.
I was reading harrington's on cash games vol.2. Pick it up. They have a brief but valuable section on multi-way pots and odds. Also, run some sims on Pokerstove.
Anyway, you have a raiser and 2 callers. Say the raiser has AA, the 2 callers have hands like 44, 89s. AA has about 60% equity while the other 2 have about 20% each preflop.
If you called with a hand like K7 you only have about 6% equity. Although it may seem like you're getting good odds, you're actually a 12:1 underdog. More importantly, if you hit your hand softly most times you hate it.
Harrington implies that in this spot you want your 2 cards to be connected in some way. eg Axs, T7, even 25 would have better value in this spot. You got the right price, but play a hand that actually can compete. Otherwise you're just wasting money.
This.
If we're deep, especially in tournaments against bad players I'll call with many hands that hava potential and hope to spike two pair or a set on the flop, then I lead into them for 3/4 of the pot and often get at least one taker. I then just keep firing a bit over half the pot for as long as they'll keep calling me.