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#1
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Ive thought about this for some time, forgot about it, and then it occured to me again when just reading a post on the high stakes forum. It involved a C/R on the river to someone who was betting the whole way and the poster folded an overpair to the villains C/R.
My thought i think the poster was beat most of the time in this situation but also think that the pot was to big to fold for one more bet as did most of the replies to the OP. I think that there is a small chance that the villain may have bluff raised the river hoping to fold UI overcards. My question is that if Hero knew how many tables villain was currently playing at the time, i think that it could tell him how likely that villain could be pulling this move. As i would guess the more tables someone is playing the more ABC they are probably playing and less likely that villain would pull a move like this. I think the more tables villain has open the more chance villain is raising for value here and the less likely that he is putting a play on hero. I dont know if anyones ever posed this before but i think it could be compelling to see how many tables ur opponents are playing while there at ur table as it would give u another insight to what an action they take means. If this has already been discussed, forget i ever posted it and please provide a link. Thanks |
#2
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when i played on Stars, i used to use this strategy in NL games. When i was in a pot with a multi tabler i was always very aggresive knowing he would fold anything but top pair. A Multi tabler's pre-flop raise is ALWAYS a big hand. They tend to not bet draws, just call with them. And they almost never bluff. If you know they are multi tabling it gives you a very strong advantage IMO.
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#3
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[ QUOTE ]
When i was in a pot with a multi tabler i was always very aggresive knowing he would fold anything but top pair. A Multi tabler's pre-flop raise is ALWAYS a big hand. They tend to not bet draws, just call with them. And they almost never bluff. If you know they are multi tabling it gives you a very strong advantage IMO. [/ QUOTE ] Well done. You just stated four consecutive things as certain truth when in reality, none of them are true. At all. |
#4
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] When i was in a pot with a multi tabler i was always very aggresive knowing he would fold anything but top pair. A Multi tabler's pre-flop raise is ALWAYS a big hand. They tend to not bet draws, just call with them. And they almost never bluff. If you know they are multi tabling it gives you a very strong advantage IMO. [/ QUOTE ] Well done. You just stated four consecutive things as certain truth when in reality, none of them are true. At all. [/ QUOTE ] Not only are they not true, they are in fact the opposite of how a multi-tabling TAG plays. "Only calls the river with top pair." Are you kidding me? Do you have any conception of pot odds? You think most Tags will fold everything under top pair when the pot is laying them 6:1 or greater? "Only raises big hands preflop." Umm Blind stealing... Reraising laggy aggressors... "They don't bet draws." Yes they do, if the situation is correct. |
#5
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[ QUOTE ]
Not only are they not true, they are in fact the opposite of how a multi-tabling TAG plays. [/ QUOTE ] Only TAGs multitable? He didn't mention that at all in his post that I saw. Many dopes multitable also. ABC players are very predictable, especially when they're multi-tabling. ABC doesn't always equate to TAG. It more equates with predictability. He does have a point in his post. Many who multi table do not follow each table that well and you 'can' put a move on them easier, in general. 1 form of proof on this forum, look at many hand posts on this forum where they can't even put a read on even the table. "I'm on my 40th hand, no reads..." Even if someone is a TAG, they usually aren't playing 4-8 tables the same way, with the same attention to detail as they will 1-2 tables. b |
#6
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[ QUOTE ]
When i was in a pot with a multi tabler i was always very aggresive knowing he would fold anything but top pair. A Multi tabler's pre-flop raise is ALWAYS a big hand. They tend to not bet draws, just call with them. And they almost never bluff. If you know they are multi tabling it gives you a very strong advantage IMO. [/ QUOTE ] I see 5 "non-truths", do you? |
#7
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] When i was in a pot with a multi tabler i was always very aggresive knowing he would fold anything but top pair. A Multi tabler's pre-flop raise is ALWAYS a big hand. They tend to not bet draws, just call with them. And they almost never bluff. If you know they are multi tabling it gives you a very strong advantage IMO. [/ QUOTE ] Well done. You just stated four consecutive things as certain truth when in reality, none of them are true. At all. [/ QUOTE ] shhhhhhhh |
#8
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i gotta disagree with this, but a lot of the time ur right
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#9
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[ QUOTE ]
As i would guess the more tables someone is playing the more ABC they are probably playing and less likely that villain would pull a move like this. [/ QUOTE ] What makes you think that the correct (as you call it) "ABC" move wouldn't be to check-raise the river. Certainly this is a correct play a decent percentage of the time. |
#10
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How would you know that they are multi-tabling?
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