Check
Raise If You Flop Two
Pair
Be very careful. What you
are looking for is to flop the set. If the flopped pair is
higher than your pocket pairs get set to drop your cards
like hot rocks. You are not married to them and there is
another hand coming right up. Chasing pocket pairs all the
way to the river can cost you lots of money and damage your
average winnings per hour.
Making The Set With Your
Pocket Pair
If you flop the set with
your pocket pair you are in very good shape. If you have
picked a seat carefully you will have a loose aggressive
player on your right. He will do your betting for you if you
want to slow play the hand. Just be wary of any straights or
flushes that can beat your three of a kind. pay very close
attention to the board and run the possible hands through
your mind. You should be playing at a set slow steady pace,
no matter your hand. It is only when it has come down to you
and the loose aggressive player that you begin to reraise
him.
Alternately you can slam the
raises and reraises into everybody right from the get go. If
you reputation is not set in stone as a tight aggressive
player this may be the better strategy.
Pocket Pairs Look Better
Than They Are
Especially after a long
bought of garbage cards. It is tiring not to be able to play
in lots of hands in a row and pocket pairs may tempt you to
play in a hand that you shouldn't.
Pocket Kings are
almost the same as Pocket Aces. You have only one overcard
that can beat you and it will come about 22 percent of the
time on the flop. It is best to eliminate as many players as
you can before the flop. Someone holding Ace/Six can be
convinced to drop. But someone holding pocket aces is sure
to raise you back. Start limping and stay to see the flop as
cheaply as you can. If an Ace flops, drop. If a King flops
you have improved your hand.
If you have Pocket
Jacks be very careful. About 45 per cent of the time, an
Ace, King, or Queen will flop and no Jack. Limp into the pot
as cheaply as you can but be prepared to throw the Jacks
away if you see an overcard on the flop. If you are in late
position and no one has raised yet then you do so and try
and steal the blinds.
Pocket Tens is a very
difficult hand to play. It is just so damn, well, middle
ground. One the one hand you can beat lots of other pocket
pairs, but on the other lots can beat you. Be extra special
very careful when playing Pocket Tens.
All the other pocket pairs
from Pocket Nines on down will have an overcard
flopped more often and not without flopping a set. Be
prepared to fold these cards pre flop if faced with any kind
of raise. If you can limp in and see the flop with, pocket
sixes, do so. Make no mistake about it, when you call this
bet you are gambling, for sure.
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