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#1
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I'm pretty amazed at the number of people whose responses to this thread seem to be "Ha, he said AK isn't as great as everbody thinks it is! What a tard!" [/ QUOTE ] I'm amazed that your post actually has less content than the people you are accusing. |
#2
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I'm amazed that your post actually has less content than the people you are accusing. [/ QUOTE ] Fair enough, but you did notice that I posted an actual reply earlier in the thread, right? |
#3
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It's actually a pretty good article. At no point does he say to stop playing AK or that AK is unprofitable, so anybody who got that out of it should probably read it again.
The truth is, AK suffers pretty badly from reverse implied odds with deep stacks, and until the blinds go up, it's a fairly modest playing hand. This doesn't mean you stop raising with it. |
#4
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It's actually a pretty good article. At no point does he say to stop playing AK or that AK is unprofitable, so anybody who got that out of it should probably read it again. The truth is, AK suffers pretty badly from reverse implied odds with deep stacks, and until the blinds go up, it's a fairly modest playing hand. This doesn't mean you stop raising with it. [/ QUOTE ] Thanks for saying what i wanted to say Cielo. Everyone treats AK like the nuts (which it tends to be when playing with 10-20xBB, but when you truly get deep it becomes a much tougher hand to play. |
#5
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What Sossman said. In addition, wrt cash games, Ciaffone says essentially the same thing in his book Pot Limit & No Limit Poker.
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#6
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I thought the article was pretty good. AK probably changes in value more than any other hand from shallow stacked to deep stacked. Deep stacked AK is exceedingly meh, especially out of position.
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#7
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AK has two really valuable traits that he ignores. 1) It makes AA and KK much less likely (half as likely if HU). 2) It's a flip or better against all hands. These two things together make AK preflop a sort of kamikaze semi-bluffing hand because it's very rarely that bad if you get called, and FE rocks.
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#8
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[ QUOTE ]
AK has two really valuable traits that he ignores. 1) It makes AA and KK much less likely (half as likely if HU). 2) It's a flip or better against all hands. These two things together make AK preflop a sort of kamikaze semi-bluffing hand because it's very rarely that bad if you get called, and FE rocks. [/ QUOTE ] Preflop kamikaze semi-bluffing for your entire stack doesn't really happen when you're deep-stacked against competent opposition. Deep stacks is the key. It's the whole point of the article. |
#9
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[ QUOTE ] AK has two really valuable traits that he ignores. 1) It makes AA and KK much less likely (half as likely if HU). 2) It's a flip or better against all hands. These two things together make AK preflop a sort of kamikaze semi-bluffing hand because it's very rarely that bad if you get called, and FE rocks. [/ QUOTE ] Preflop kamikaze semi-bluffing for your entire stack doesn't really happen when you're deep-stacked against competent opposition. Deep stacks is the key. It's the whole point of the article. [/ QUOTE ] You added "for your entire stack" for my statement. Take that out, and it holds. Essentially all I'm saying is that AK is a great reraising hand because it's not too scared of a call, so it can look for EV where other hands that are dominated by more hands (like medium pairs) can't. |
#10
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You added "for your entire stack" for my statement. Take that out, and it holds. [/ QUOTE ] Take it out, and [ QUOTE ] 2) It's a flip or better against all hands. [/ QUOTE ] is nonsensical. |
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