#1
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Who am I to question Jennifer Harmon?
I've been reading the limit holdem section of SSII. I think there will be a lot of discussion about it when the book is more widely available. There is mostly solid advice even if some of it is a little vague.
This is the first thing I have found that is very misleading. This is in the section about when to fold on the turn. She give a few examples of when you are potentially drawing dead, including this one: [ QUOTE ] Let's say you have the 5-6 of hearts and find yourself in a multiway pot with multiple bets in it. The flop comes K[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] J[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] 4[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img], followed by the 9[img]/images/graemlins/diamond.gif[/img] on the turn. If there are four players in this pot, there is a very good chance someone has a bigger flush draw than yours, leaving you drawing dead. So, even if the pot is laying you the right price to draw to the flush, you'd still want to muck this hand if there is a reasonable chance that you are drawing dead. [/ QUOTE ] This is a very vague example as it is not clear when the multiple bets went into the pot and exactly what the pot size is. She doesn't mention that in most cases your pot odds will be large enough to cover those times that you are drawing dead. |
#2
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Re: Who am I to question Jennifer Harmon?
yet another example of terrible advice from pros. to be fair, I think there is something in HPFAP that sounds very similar to this (or it could be a different 2+2) but as we all know HPFAP has lots of bad advice for todays games.
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#3
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Re: Who am I to question Jennifer Harmon?
while clearly wrong for small stakes games, this advice may not be as bad as it appears if she is referring to very tight/tough games. multiway pots in tight games are a very different animal as mason/ others have pointed out. presuming there is a raise on the turn in such a game, and one or more players have played in a way suggesting draw, mucking this hand could certainly be correct. depending of course on the precise pot odds/ situation.
that she would waste time/space on such a vague and debatable yet unimportant example doesn't get me excited about the chapter though. [img]/images/graemlins/frown.gif[/img] perhaps you could give a short review? |
#4
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Re: Who am I to question Jennifer Harmon?
All views expressed in the following post are those of the author.
1-multiway pots are different in loose and tight games. However, the hands which lose value are hands like KJ unsuited in a tight game. In a loose game one can play the hand for profit. The reason is inexperienced or bad loose game players limp utg with hands like KT or JQ. In a tight game this is not the case they usually need something like AJ or KQ. hands which dominate KJ. 2-Suited cards if anything gain value in a tight game which has a multiway pot. For instance in a tight game a good player holding 76 suited will fold utg since he knows in general there wont be enough limpers and the players play aggessive on the flop. In a loose game that 76 suited will almost surely be played in the same situation and again generally correct to do so. Now in the tight game when a player limped on the puck after 6 people called with lets say 45 hearts he is less likely to be up against a flush than he is in a tight game since players do not play any 2 suited especially in early position. summing up folding on the turn has to be more wrong in a tight game as opposed to a loose game with a flush draw. I would also like to add if you take the name harmon off the hand and post it just as a hand that u played and folded on the turn no one will defend it as being right. |
#5
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Re: Who am I to question Jennifer Harmon?
That's an interesting example, because I would think with that flop there would be many hands that it would hit with made hands and straight draws. Whereas if the flop was K[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] 8[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] 4[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img] and four people were hanging around I'd be much more worried about other flush draws.
But then I'm playing 10-20 and not 1k-2k so what do I know? |
#6
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Re: Who am I to question Jennifer Harmon?
You are right Rob, but I think fold would be the exception rather than the rule. I could certainly put a player on a larger flush draw if I knew his pre-flop standards, he was playing his hand like a draw, and there were no other draws on the board. If the pot odds were close a fold could be correct, but that is not standard. Most of the time in a multiway pot (even in a tight game), the pot should be offering you much more than 4:1 on the turn.
I think this example has the potential to be confuse a lot of people (fine with me). |
#7
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Re: Who am I to question Jennifer Harmon?
No expert here but, when you are calculating your odds here, shouldn't you be calculating based on the probability that you will end up with the best hand--not that you will end up with a flush? All she is saying (to me) is that with these cards and 4 players it is highly likely that someone else is looking for the flush and that their flush, if made, is likely to be better than yours--they would need 2 of the 3 low hearts under yours to lose to you. Start with the chance of you making a flush, and reduce it by the chance that one of your opponent's will not make a higher flush, and then consider folding. Or not.
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#8
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Re: Who am I to question Jennifer Harmon?
to quote Joe Tall, "I just threw up in my mouth"
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#9
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Re: Who am I to question Jennifer Harmon?
I believe SSHE addresses this question in saying that sometimes you should continue drawing to your hand even if you suspect that you are drawing dead when the pot is big enough (e.g drawing to a flush when the board is paired)
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#10
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Re: Who am I to question Jennifer Harmon?
You play the suited connector in a hand when you expect there will be many players in to pay you off when it hits. Now you get the type of board you are looking for and you look to fold because there are lots of players in which means it is likely someone has a better flush draw?
That board would hit lots of hands, and make lots of non-flush draws. Why assume there is such a strong chance you are drawing dead? |
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