Implied Odds
Hi,
I have a hard time understanding how you can give bad implied odds or good implied odds to your opponent. I know how to give bad pot odds or good pot odds, but I don't know about implied odds. Its hard because you don't know how much your opponents think how much you will pay them, so you don't know on what you have to base yourself other then your opponents table image.
I have a hard time understanding how you can give bad implied odds or good implied odds to your opponent. I know how to give bad pot odds or good pot odds, but I don't know about implied odds. Its hard because you don't know how much your opponents think how much you will pay them, so you don't know on what you have to base yourself other then your opponents table image.
Comments
Guy beside me the other night folded an open ended straight draw on the flop because the guy bet $20 into a $16 pot. He tells me he isn't getting the right odds to call...eventhough they were both 400BB deep.
Having an idea of the overall skill level of your opponent is extremely helpful - poor players are essentially always offering better implied odds than good ones.
So I guess to answer your question, in order to not offer good implied odds, be a good hand reader and good at poker in general. Or play a short stack, as pokerJAH said.
This is generally correct. Early in tournaments I'll flat all kinds of nonsense hands against incompetent (usually older white guys), who's opening ranges are very thin and whos 1 pair stack off potential is very high.
You have to know your opponents and whether they will fall in love w TPTK if you hit your draw. Also, how obvious is your draw (one card straight, etc).
Maybe you can give us some example hands that you are confused about?