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#1
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Re: Betting patterns as tells.
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splashpot: I'm really *not* thinking about a specific hand or hands; I'm trying to think about a situation. In general, these happen early in the tournament (level 1 or 2) so that the river bet is a definite overbet to the pot. I could try and find an example if you think it would help illustrate the point, but I'd rather not be specific, since I'd rather think about the broader question of reading betting patterns rather than analyzing a specific hand. [/ QUOTE ] In a broader sense, the information that you get on the end is usually correct. In other words, when he has shown weakness on every street and then suddenly shows a lot of strength on the end, he has a hand most of the time. If I don't have a specific read, I'm folding. Most of the players at the 11s have no idea what size bets they should be making. |
#2
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Re: Betting patterns as tells.
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Most of the players at the 11s have no idea what size bets they should be making. [/ QUOTE ] Not understanding that single fact has caused me a lot of frustration in the past. The flip of that: They don't understand the size of bets YOU make is also important. I guess I side with Paul Phillips on this one - he talks about defaulting overbets to very strong hands without reads. For sure a large bet into a small pot is MOST OFTEN a really good made hand that wants more money. |
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