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#1
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Re: Cold calling preflop
[ QUOTE ]
AA-QQ is good no matter how many callers. [/ QUOTE ] more callers lowers your equity and raises your variance. If you can stand a ton of variance (not tilt one bit), then you should try and play AA multiway every time. |
#2
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Re: Cold calling preflop
any time you have more callers you have less equity, so should i not prefer to have any hands multiway?
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#3
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Re: Cold calling preflop
[ QUOTE ]
any time you have more callers you have less equity, so should i not prefer to have any hands multiway? [/ QUOTE ] no |
#4
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Re: Cold calling preflop
then what exactly was your point?
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#5
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Re: Cold calling preflop
you want the most equity possible, there are hands that play better multi way and others that don't. So, no, you don't want to play every hand shorthanded, and you don't want to play every hand multiway.
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#6
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Re: Cold calling preflop
but every hand has more equity the less callers. so why would you prefer anything multiway?
i think we had a communication breakdown here. |
#7
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Re: Cold calling preflop
Yes, but that isn't the only factor. For example, say you have a hand that is a 60/40 dog HU. Say the BB entering would drop your equity to 35%. Your equity has dropped but now you have 35% 3-way which is far superior to 40% HU.
To come up with a more specific example, say you have 76s or 55 and suspect that an opponent who raises has an overpair. You now want more players, since your equity drops very little no matter how many people enter the pot. You only win with two pair or better, hands that will often hold up even against a large field. |
#8
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Re: Cold calling preflop
i think the concept you're not getting all the way is that multiway hands proportionally retain more equity than HU type hands.
for instance, JQs has more equity vs a field of 8 limpers than A9o has, because it can make the type of hands that can beat large crowds, and because the pot is already big enough to draw on a good flop. If you're just up against one or two opponents, you'd rather have A9o than JQs though, because you can win by just pairing up or even without improving at all. As you add opponents, the prospects of this hand holding up becomre proportionally more remote, and this hand can only improve so much. |
#9
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Re: Cold calling preflop
It's pretty basic stuff. Look over SSHE for a better explanation than I can give you.
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