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  #1  
Old 05-12-2004, 08:26 PM
Soggy Salmon Soggy Salmon is offline
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Default I can\'t play against LAGs

LAGs are the worst for me. I can never beat them. I have taken to just leaving a table when there is one there. But at Party 2/4 it seems there are a bunch. I can't avoid them all the time.

At this table, the LAG was running everyone over, playing over 60% his hands and if he got anything at all on the flop he played like he had a full house until the river. He also would just bluff on pure nothing every few hands. A lot of people at the table were trying to take shots at him, making them all play like LAGs, too. I decided that since I was directly to his left, I was in the best spot and figured I needed to learn how to play against them. I didn't do so well.

UTG in this hand was one of the people at the table trying to take the LAG's money by playing and betting to the hilt anything slightly better than gabage against him.

Party Poker 2/4 Hold'em (9 handed) converter

Preflop: Hero is MP1 with K[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img], K[img]/images/graemlins/club.gif[/img]. CO posts a blind of $2.
UTG calls, <font color="CC3333">UTG+1 <font color="purple">(LAG)</font> raises</font>, <font color="CC3333">Hero 3-bets</font>, MP2 folds, MP3 folds, CO (poster) folds, Button folds, SB calls, BB folds, UTG calls, <font color="CC3333">UTG+1 <font color="purple">(LAG)</font> caps</font>, Hero calls, SB calls, UTG calls.

Flop: (18 SB) 3[img]/images/graemlins/club.gif[/img], 8[img]/images/graemlins/diamond.gif[/img], J[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img] <font color="blue">(4 players) </font>
SB checks, UTG checks, <font color="CC3333">LAG bets</font>, <font color="CC3333">Hero raises</font>, SB folds, <font color="CC3333">UTG 3-bets</font>, <font color="CC3333">LAG caps</font>, Hero calls, UTG calls.

Turn: (15 BB) A[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] <font color="blue">(3 players) </font>
UTG checks, <font color="CC3333">LAG bets</font>, Hero calls, <font color="CC3333">UTG raises</font>, <font color="CC3333">LAG 3-bets</font>, Hero calls, <font color="CC3333">UTG caps</font>, LAG calls, Hero calls.

River: (27 BB) Q[img]/images/graemlins/diamond.gif[/img] <font color="blue">(3 players) </font>
UTG checks, <font color="CC3333">LAG bets</font>, Hero calls, UTG calls.

Final Pot: 30 BB
<font color="#990066">Main Pot: 30 BB, between UTG, LAG and Hero.</font>

Comments on this one hand here are great, but what general advice is there for playing against these guys? I play tight and 3-bet him to try to get headsup against him but what if the other players are all trying to do the same thing and you can't often get headsup?
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  #2  
Old 05-12-2004, 08:42 PM
Nate tha' Great Nate tha' Great is offline
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Default Re: I can\'t play against LAGs

You can fold the hand on the turn when UTG check-raises. I know the pot is ridonkulous, but lay down those Cowboys.

LAGs are the worst for me. I can never beat them. I have taken to just leaving a table when there is one there. But at Party 2/4 it seems there are a bunch. I can't avoid them all the time.

That's not a good attitude for your bottom line. I'd guess that something like a 1/4 of my win rate is the direct result of seating to the left of LAG players.

Comments on this one hand here are great, but what general advice is there for playing against these guys? I play tight and 3-bet him to try to get headsup against him but what if the other players are all trying to do the same thing and you can't often get headsup?

- If the other players are letting you, then you should play *looser* rather than tighter, since the average strength of LAG's hands will be much less than you're used to. If they're not letting you isolate, that's when you should default to a tighter preflop strategy.

- It's important to remember that you should still be considering your position relative to the Button in making preflop decisions, and not just your position relative to the LAG.

- You can also consider cold calling with a hand like Q [img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] J [img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] that plays well multiway.

- It's also worth remembering that isolation doesn't only have to come before the flop; you can often leverage the maniac to fold out hands that you don't want to call by forcing them to face two bets.

- Finally, even if you're playing correctly in these situations, your variance will be very high.
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  #3  
Old 05-12-2004, 09:28 PM
Little Fishy Little Fishy is offline
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Default Re: I can\'t play against LAGs

I find the seat to the left of a lag isn't the best, I'd rather be to his right. It's good to be to the left of tight agressive players because you can determine what they have, or whether your draws are worth it by seeing if they bet, check, call or raise. I find you can often anticipate LAG's moves anyways, and so by sitting to their right you can put a play on more players. For instance if you have a flopped drawing hand then check, let the LAG bet and then see how many callers you have to figure out if it's worth playing. If you have a good hand but want people out, then bet, let the LAG raise and force potential callers to call two bets.

I find that in a loose over agressive game drawing hands often go up in value while pat hands such as preflop high pairs go down.

-Little Fishy
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  #4  
Old 05-12-2004, 09:31 PM
Little Fishy Little Fishy is offline
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Default Re: I can\'t play against LAGs

Sorry, just posted but I forgot one part...

In limit games I would rather be to the right of LAGs, but in NL games I would much rather be to there left because It's much harder to tell whether some one will bet than it is to tell how much they will bet. also it's harder to get trapped between raises on the righht of a LAG than it is on the left.

-Little Fishy
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  #5  
Old 05-13-2004, 12:00 PM
BugsBunny BugsBunny is offline
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Default Re: I can\'t play against LAGs

I'm the other way around. I rather be to the left of a LAG and to the right of a TAG.

By being to the left of a LAG I can reraise to isolate much easier. By being to the right of a TAG I can raise to cause him to fold much easier. Even if he knows I may be raising a little light a true TAG doesn't have many hands he's willing to 3 bet with (against reasonable players), and will rarely cold-call - so he'll usually fold to your raise. And when he does cold-call or 3 bet he usually has some sort of hand, so you can adjust and play accordingly (depending on what you actually had).
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  #6  
Old 05-13-2004, 12:59 PM
tripdad tripdad is offline
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Location: east central indiana
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Default Re: I can\'t play against LAGs

in general, if you can get the LAG to yourself, he is much easier to play. i'm convinced that the proper strategy is to play extra tight and aggressive. you did exactly everything correct here until the turn, where you should have folded to the check/raise. if you are heads up with the LAG, you must call him down when you can beat a bluff. in this case, the real action was coming from elsewhere. with any other card but the ace, you can call this down.

my LAG strategy in a nutshell:

rule 1: play only premium hands.

rule 2: get him isolated whenever possible.

rule 3: when you have a premium hand after the flop, shovel in the chips.

rule 4: if you can beat a bluff(this can mean Ace high), call(no raising) to the river(assuming you are heads up). if you are not heads up, ignore the LAG and put the other opponent on a range of hands and act accordingly.

rule 5: prepare to stay at this table until LAG leaves, even if it is much longer than you had planned to play.

rule 6: after the LAG leaves, stay one more orbit and play LAG poker for a few hands. your table image is phenomenal right now...take advantage of it.

cheers!
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  #7  
Old 05-13-2004, 01:29 PM
Louie Landale Louie Landale is offline
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Default Re: I can\'t play against LAGs

Preamble: lets pretend there is a player that never looks and always bets. If this player is on your LEFT then YOU are "utg" on all betting rounds. If this player is on your RIGHT then YOU are last on all betting rounds. And I mean "last" regardless of the actual position of the button.

I've been reading these forums for years and the following is a minority opinion. However I'm sure I'm correct.

The only time you should put the LAG on your right (figuring to face the field with a 3-bet when he 2-bets) is when [1] you WILL definately control the field when you do so, AND [2] you WILL definately outplay the LAG heads-up. [1] means you don't fear someone else jumping the 3-bet then raising with a hand worse then yours. I doubt either of these situations applies to you. [1] From what you described of the field they are going to jump your raises [2] from what you described about your feelings you aren't going to outplay the LAG.

Put the LAG in your LEFT. Routinely check it to him. This puts you in last position. You get to find out if you should fold, call, or raise with the weaker hands that you would normally be forced to 3-bet the LAG with if he's on your right.

There is a LOT more money to be made when you trap the loose callers with your reasonably strong hand than there is in making the loose callers FOLD the hands that they SHOULD call you with.

Put the predictable folks on your left.

- Louie
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  #8  
Old 05-13-2004, 02:09 PM
brick brick is offline
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Default Re: I can\'t play against LAGs

I think there may be a new term for this. “Drafting”
I'm hoping to get Dynasty’s opinion.

...see thread
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  #9  
Old 05-13-2004, 02:25 PM
Little Fishy Little Fishy is offline
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Default Re: I can\'t play against LAGs

what I've often found against LAGs, unless it's an unusualy tight game, is that it isn't always that easy to isolate them. I've noticed that profitable LAGs often induce normaly tight players to loosen up out of frustration or tactic, and unless you have a table image of being a tight player, you'll often get calls on your raises and reraises.
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  #10  
Old 05-13-2004, 03:25 PM
Dynasty Dynasty is offline
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Location: Las Vegas
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Default Re: I can\'t play against LAGs

[ QUOTE ]
It's good to be to the left of tight agressive players because you can determine what they have, or whether your draws are worth it by seeing if they bet, check, call or raise.

[/ QUOTE ]

This is definitely wrong.

There is an axiom in poker- chips move clockwise around the table. Basically, this means it is expected that players will be winning chips from opponents they have position on.

You should be choosing a seat based on this. You want to have position on opponents who you will be contesting the majority of your pots against. Those opponents are loose players, whether aggessive or passive. Put them on your right.

You and other TAGs will rarely be contesting pots against each other. So, it's not at all important to have position on this opponent. Put them on your left.

Take this basic approach and you'll find you have position on your opponents substantially more often than you are out of position.
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