
The
single biggest mistake made by most poker players is that
they call when they should have folded.
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FOLDING, PART 1
by: Lou Krieger©
So where was I when I was interrupted nearly a year ago? Oh
yes, I remember. I was writing about the monkey who stole
my hat down in the jungles of Costa Rica. Well, it took me
11 months, but I finally found my hat, spanked the monkey,
ended my sabbatical from Card Player, and here I am æ
back again. And for those readers who never noticed I was
gone, all of the above is superfluous. Note: I left Card Player
to write for Poker Digest, but returned when Poker Digest
ceased publishing.
In the past Ive written columns about folding and raising,
but neglected the most common action players take at any poker
table. Its not glamorous. Its not memorable, but
it is our basic bread and butter play, and we do it more often
than we do anything else. We fold.
Thats what we do most of the time. Even loose players
probably fold more than they call, and even the most unrepentant
maniacs might fold more often than they raise. Face it; good,
solid, selective-and-aggressive players fold most of the time.
But it doesnt come across in the literature that way.
While were used to reading about those big confrontations
upon which reputations are made and myths are created, theres
generally a lot of down time between watershed events. And
most of that downtime is the result of looking at your cards,
deciding they are plug ugly and not worth a plug nickels
investment, so you throw them away.
Its high time we created a better appreciation for the
unglamorous act of laying your hand down, avoiding the fray
for the time being, and saving your money for a better situation.
Do You Fold Often Enough?
The single biggest mistake made by most poker players is that
they call when they should have folded. After all, most recreational
players come to play æ not to lay down their hands æ
and many get involved in pots with weak, unplayable starting
hands. There are holdem players who will see the flop
with any ace in their hand, regardless of their position in
the betting order, with no consideration for the number of
opponents in the pot, or the amount of betting and raising
that has taken place before it is their turn to act.
Folding In Split-Pot Games
The problem with calling far too often, when folding would
be the better course of action, is not limited to holdem
either. It is an epidemic in Omaha/8. With four cards in their
hand, many players just cant resist seeing the flop.
The sad truth is that the more potential starting hand combinations
youre dealt æ and with four cards dealt to you
in Omaha you have six unique two-card combinations, compared
to just one in holdem æ the more selective you
should be.
Those Omaha/8 cards need to be coordinated and work well together
to give you a reasonably good shot at winning. A hand like
AsAd2s3d is an incredibly well coordinated hand, with two
potential nut flush draws, a low draw with counterfeit protection,
and a big pair that might get better. Compare that hand to
something like KsJc5d5h. Two big cards and a small pair is
a treacherous hand. Make a set of fives and youve put
at least one low card on board to give anyone with a low draw
hope of chopping your pot in half. Your two high cards are
not suited, and while you could make a straight with those
them, straight possibilities look a lot better when the cards
all work together.
I see 7-stud/8 players who enter pots with an eight as their
door card, even when their opponents show lower cards. Lets
face it, in a split pot game like 7-stud/8, if someone has
an ace showing, you have no idea whether hes hoping
to make a high hand, a low one, or is hoping to scoop. Suffice
to say that if youve got an eight as your door card
and an opponent is showing an ace, he probably has a better
high and a better low hand than yours, assuming he has two
other low cards snuggled in under that ace.
Most of the time you should be drawing to the best possible
low hand, otherwise the cost of making the second best hand
can become prohibitively expensive. While there are exceptional
situations, where you dont have to have the best low
draw to keep playing, they come up infrequently.
If you have a low draw along with a flush draw, you certainly
dont need the best low draw to keep playing. Two-way
hands æ and that includes two-way draws æ have
a lot of playability because of the possibilities of scooping.
After all, you might catch a low card of the suit youre
chasing and make a flushy-low. Most of the time a flush is
good enough to win the high side, and whenever thats
the case, your quest for a low hand amounts to a freeroll.
But you usually wont have that potent a draw, and if
youre uncertain whether youll wind up with the
best hand if you catch the cards you need, think about folding
instead of calling.
Calling, in fact, is often the worst of the three alternatives
of folding, raising, or calling. After all, if youve
got a winning low hand, but its one that looks like
it might be a high hand too æ perhaps your board is
scary enough to suggest a straight or flush, but all you really
have is a good low with one pair æ you ought to be raising.
If you can drop a better high hand, you just might scoop the
pot instead of splitting it. So dont lose sight of your
objective in all split pot games: Scoop the pot whenever possible.
This was a digression, to be sure, but far too many players
call as their default action. Instead, they ought to think
first of folding or raising, and call as a last resort rather
than a first option.
Stay tuned. Next installment talks about folding in holdem,
folding on later betting rounds, and a discussion of what
makes poker a game you can beat.
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