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-   -   describe ATo (http://archives2.twoplustwo.com/showthread.php?t=355354)

blaze666 10-11-2005 02:20 PM

describe ATo
 
never heard uch about what to do with this hand. so what should i do with it? how should i play it? what should i be expecting. im looking for an answer primarily for a full ring game with fish, but other places would be helpful. is this an instant fold? currently for me it is.

W. Deranged 10-11-2005 02:26 PM

Re: describe ATo
 
For me, ATo is:

EP: A fold, pretty much regardless of any other criteria.

MP: I'll start open raising this in like MP2, maybe MP1 depending on the texture of the game. If there are fish behind me who I figure will call with worse hands I'm happy to get my money in. I'm never open-limping with this hand.

LP: Easy open-raise. Also I like to raise this behind 1 or 2 limpers, particularly in the hijack or cutoff, with an eye toward keeping the hand short-handed and buying position.

Blinds: I never call a legitimate raise with this hand out of the small blind. I'll call in the big blind if I have many opponents and am thus getting very good odds on a call (five-handed is the idea). This is an excellent hand with which to reraise a loose stealer opening from the button and the cutoff when I'm in the small blind.

Other thoughts: This hand plays well against very loose players and lags. I'm willing to three-bet lags with this to get the pot heads-up.

Fat Nicky 10-11-2005 03:11 PM

Re: describe ATo
 
[ QUOTE ]
For me, ATo is:

EP: A fold, pretty much regardless of any other criteria.

MP: I'll start open raising this in like MP2, maybe MP1 depending on the texture of the game. If there are fish behind me who I figure will call with worse hands I'm happy to get my money in. I'm never open-limping with this hand.

LP: Easy open-raise. Also I like to raise this behind 1 or 2 limpers, particularly in the hijack or cutoff, with an eye toward keeping the hand short-handed and buying position.

Blinds: I never call a legitimate raise with this hand out of the small blind. I'll call in the big blind if I have many opponents and am thus getting very good odds on a call (five-handed is the idea). This is an excellent hand with which to reraise a loose stealer opening from the button and the cutoff when I'm in the small blind.

Other thoughts: This hand plays well against very loose players and lags. I'm willing to three-bet lags with this to get the pot heads-up.

[/ QUOTE ]

This is the perfect analysis, IMO. I have nothing to add.

SmileyEH 10-11-2005 03:21 PM

Re: describe ATo
 
Good with initiative and position, decent with initiave but out of position, bad with neither.

-SmileyEH


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