Poker Newsletter
Main Menu Home Poker Articles Poker Directory RSS Feeds Contact Us Advertise With Us FAQs Site Map Poker Information FullTilt Promotions Poker Wallpapers Poker Classifieds Poker Tournament Poker Player Profiles General Poker Info Poker Rules Online Poker Texas Holdem Omaha Poker No Limit Poker Limit Poker Events Calendar General Gambling Online Poker Rooms Full Tilt Poker PokerStars Bodog Poker UltimateBet Poker Absolute Poker Titan Poker See All Poker Rooms Poker Products Shopping Home Page Top Poker Products Poker DVDs Poker Books Poker PC Video Games Poker Software Poker Magazines Poker Videos Poker Apparel Poker VHS Poker Food Poker Electronics Poker Cards Poker Chips Poker Tables Poker Card Guards Poker Signs Poker Chip Sets
|
Don't Play a Big Pot Unless You Have a Big HandArticle by John Juanda I'm at Foxwoods playing the $2,000 No Limit Hold 'em event. We all started with $3,000 and now I've got $15,000. At my table is Richard Tatalovitch, a player whom I've competed against many times. I raise pre-flop from middle position with K-J offsuit and Richard calls from the big blind. The flop comes 9-6-4 with two diamonds on the board. Richard hesitates for a moment before checking, and I put in a pot-sized bet. Richard thinks for a while and calls. All of a sudden, I don't like my hand -- so much. Imagine my relief when a non-diamond J hits the turn. Now I have top pair and a pretty good kicker. Then Richard comes out betting. Uh-oh. Now, let me back up a moment and mention that when someone hesitates before checking, it's usually a huge tell. But Richard is the king of delayed action, so I ignored his tell and bet the flop anyway. And his bet on the turn just screams, "Raise me! I dare you!" I go into the tank and my thoughts go something like this:
I run through these possibilities and reach no conclusion. Normally, I would just call here. We both have a lot of chips, and I don't want to put them all in with nothing but top pair. Then, I have the misfortune to remember a hand from a month earlier at Bellagio: Richard had been running bad and was complaining about a string of horrific beats. I saw him check and call with top boat because he was afraid of quads! A guy that afraid of monsters under the bed isn't going to check-call top set on the flop with a flush draw out there. "All in!" I declared. Oops. This is now a Big Pot. And rest assured, top pair doesn't even resemble a Big Hand. In the four years I've been playing with him, I've never seen him call so fast. I am drawing dead to his perfectly-played 9-9. Sometimes, we all forget that big cards don't always equal a big hand and that the smart move can be to play conservatively instead of going for the quick kill. As for Richard - he had the good sense to be in a Big Pot with a Big Hand, and the patience to make it pay off.
John Juanda
|
|
|
||
| Copyright 2007 - PokerPressBox.com - It's About The Game | ||