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Opportunity in its most
elemental form in Hold'em is utilizing your
position. If you are on the button and no one has
yet entered the pot how often should you raise
regardless of what cards you hold? If your answer
wasn't 85 to 90% it shouldn't be too much lower.
This, of course, is recognizing an opportunity An
opportunity to pressure two random hands that, when
faced with reacting to a raise, may well fold.
This is such a common
play that the next level of "Opportunity
Recognizers", such as the savvy small blind, may
well three bet it in an attempt to re-steal and get
both you and the big blind to fold. This is another
example of knowing your opponents' tendencies and
identifying on what plateau their thinking lies. So,
let me re-ask the question with that qualifier in
mind. If you know both blinds to be weak/tight
players and you are first to act on the button, how
often should you raise regardless of your hand's
value? Now, your answer should be 90%. If you raise
100% of the time you're in this position, even your
weak/tight opponents will figure out you're a thief
and play back at you. You do need to mix up your
play but you can raise with some very marginal hands
when faced with this opportunity.
Opportunity also knocks
in the form of "Orphan Pots". We've all seen hands
in which post flop no one seems willing to invest a
bet. The first player to bet many times picks up the
pot. Recognize and act on these opportunities to
pick up small pots. These small victories can pay
for your blinds and help mitigate the power of the
rake to enhance your bottom line.
Our goal for this session
is twofold. First, always be alert to evolving
opportunities which can be attacked by playing hands
much differently than you normally would. Secondly,
when these opportunities arise don't become one of
those weak/tight players whom you profess to abhor
who actually need strong hands to raise Be
aggressive and take advantage of the opportunity.
After all, good cards come and go but opportunities
arise constantly. |