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  #1  
Old 11-23-2005, 09:18 AM
Jdanz Jdanz is offline
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Default worsdt mistake in poker

is folding to a river raise (in terms of magnitude of mistake).

I find myself calling A LOT on the river because folding too much is soooo easily exploitable.

This leads me to calling where i'd normally fold (via EV calc) because i don't want people trying to bluff raise me on the river.

How far do most people take this concept.

I feel like it's leading me to call way to many river's but i'm incredibly wary of giving anyone reason to exploit my play
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  #2  
Old 11-23-2005, 09:44 AM
Spicymoose Spicymoose is offline
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Default Re: worsdt mistake in poker

Definetly not the worst mistake in poker. Many times it should be apparant whether or not a fold or call (or raise) is needed after you get raised on the river. The times where you are unsure, usually the EV only swings a bit one way or the other, and the situation doesn´t come up that often.

The big mistakes in poker are those situations that come up fairly often, yet on its own doesn´t seem that big. Not raising K8s from the CO seems like a fairly big mistake to me.
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  #3  
Old 11-23-2005, 11:04 AM
Jdanz Jdanz is offline
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Default Re: worsdt mistake in poker

it most certainly is the worst mistake (i specifically said magnitude) though just as certainly not the most common. Folding a winner on the end is real bad, folding a winner on the end after aggressively putting money in on the river is the worst single mistake you can make. This can be discounted as the worst mistake as it is fairly uncommon, but it is also incredibly costly.

Simply speaking it's a pretty dangerous move to fold for one bet on the river, and therefore to do it you have to be pretty confident. My question is how confident, specificially do you also have to add a little bit more to the calling % to prevent exploitablity.

Point: if you commonly bet fold, because their calling range is larger then their betting range, and you're very willing to fold to the raise, a good player is going to start raising you A LOT, and force you into incredibly difficult situations.
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  #4  
Old 11-23-2005, 11:08 AM
ArturiusX ArturiusX is offline
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Default Re: worsdt mistake in poker

Thinking players that adjust at the table are rare, so I don't think its a huge leak until you hit the high levels.
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  #5  
Old 11-23-2005, 11:24 AM
sthief09 sthief09 is offline
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Default Re: worsdt mistake in poker

[ QUOTE ]
Thinking players that adjust at the table are rare, so I don't think its a huge leak until you hit the high levels.

[/ QUOTE ]


i would think calling to not be too exploitable is mainly an excuse for being curious and hating to get bluffed/fold a winner
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  #6  
Old 11-23-2005, 11:27 AM
wheelz wheelz is offline
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Default Re: worsdt mistake in poker

[ QUOTE ]
calling to not be too exploitable is mainly an excuse for being curious and hating to get bluffed/fold a winner

[/ QUOTE ]
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  #7  
Old 11-23-2005, 11:31 AM
Monty Cantsin Monty Cantsin is offline
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Default Re: worsdt mistake in poker

Yeah, I tend to be suspicious of any strategy that just happens to coincide very nicely with my psychological desires.

/mc
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  #8  
Old 11-23-2005, 11:24 AM
colgin colgin is offline
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Default Re: worsdt mistake in poker

[ QUOTE ]
it most certainly is the worst mistake (i specifically said magnitude) though just as certainly not the most common. Folding a winner on the end is real bad, folding a winner on the end after aggressively putting money in on the river is the worst single mistake you can make.

[/ QUOTE ]

Folding a winner to a river raise is a HUGE mistake only if you have grossly misestimated how often your hand is good given the board, your opponent's hand range and his bluffing frequency, etc. For example, if you fold to the river raise getting 8:1 because you correctly evaluate that your hand isn't good even 10% of the time then your fold is a good one. (And that is regardless of results; if your evaluation was correct but your opponent were to show you his worse hand (one of the few wrose hands you thought he could have had) after you folded then your fold would still have been good.)

However, if your assumptions and judgments are way off and your hand is good 30+% of the time then you have made a sizable mistake by folding. I think it is fine when in doubt to lean towards calling; but don't assume that your fold, if it is a mistake at all, is necessarily huge one. It may, in fact, be very close EV-wise one way or the other.
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  #9  
Old 11-23-2005, 11:33 AM
Jdanz Jdanz is offline
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Default Re: worsdt mistake in poker

i really should have made it more clear that i understand it's not a mistake if you call and are wrong, or fold when you would have won, supposing your EV calc was correct, and your decision correct, but unlucky.

What i'm saying is, if you folding here, makes your opponents bluff more, therefore making you make more mistakes later in the session, then it is possible that you should be calling more often.

I know many will say if they start bluffing more they're throwing away money, but in reality it is very diffiuclt to get a quick bead on how one decision effects their bluffing frequency. All things considered i'd generally prefer to be bluff raised less as it makes the river very difficult to play, and makes it even harder for me to fold marginal hands and i usually end up mpaying off too many value raises afterwards.

If i'm against an opponent that clearly bluffs too much on the river, i'm all for making him bluff more, but vs your average opponent an increase in river bluff raising is going to put me in a pretty difficult position.
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  #10  
Old 11-23-2005, 01:50 PM
LearnedfromTV LearnedfromTV is offline
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Default Re: worsdt mistake in poker

Someone else pointed this out, but it's worth emphasizing. The problem with calling to prevent future bluffs is that you have to fold later to take advantage of the fact that you've discouraged bluffs, which, if you do it too often, will encourage bluffs.

This is a game theory problem; both never folding to a river raise and always folding to a river raise are easily exploitable. The goal has to be to fold with a frequency that isn't exploitable, given the frequency of your opponents river raises and the ranges of hands you and he hold in those situations.
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