Made Hands, Monsters to Mice
After the flop, much of the strength of your hand depends on the
character of the flop. Obviously, if you start with a pair, and
make trips, a full house or four of a kind, you have a big hand,
these are the Monsters. What is not so obvious is how the
strength of your hand changes when you hit a fair hand, but get
a flop that may have helped one, or more, of your opponents.
In the rare situation where you have a monster, hope that
someone either bets, or catches a card on the turn so they can
call your bet. You have an almost unbeatable hand, and the other
players are going to be scared off by the flop. Your goal in
this situation should be to keep as many players around as
possible, and to get as much money in the pot as possible.
With your biggest hands, you may want to slow play and entice
someone else into betting. But, in those rare cases when you
have the best hand and other players are betting and raising,
join in and help to build the pot. After all, it is almost
certainly going to be yours. If the board later pairs, and there
us any betting, you may be facing a full house.
Two Pair
Flopping top 2 pair when you have 2 different cards in your
hand, is a very strong hand. Top and bottom pair is also a very
strong hand. Since you will usually be playing premium cards,
top 2 pair will often give someone else a straight draw, and/or
a flush draw.
As a result, you should not slow play these hands. Your goal is
to force players out of the hand, and charge those that stay.
While this hand warrants raises and re-raises, lots of action
could mean they have a set. If so, or a straight or flush is
possible, you could be drawing to only 4 outs.
If the pot has already gotten large, you should call it down. If
the pot is not large, or you are positive that the other player
has you beaten, with 4 outs you need pot odds of 11:1 to make
the call profitable.
When you have 2 pair, and 1 is on the board, your hand is not as
strong as the split 2 pair. Another player may already have
trips, or a higher 2 pair. If a card higher than your pair hits
the board, it could make someone a higher 2 pair. There could
also be other draws out that may beat your 2 pair.
This is another situation to play aggressively, to chase players
out, win the pot immediately, or at least make it expensive for
players to draw. If you are raised, or check raised, on the
turn, you may be up against trips. But, by now, the pot has
gotten big. You may want to back off and call, but you shouldn't
fold unless you are sure you are beaten, or you are facing 3
bets cold.
Top Pair
Top pair, good kicker is a very strong hand. This is 1 reason to
treat Big Slick, Ace and King, as a strong hand. With a flop of
King, Eight, Three, and 3 different suits you have an excellent
hand. The only card higher than the flop pairs your Ace, giving
you top 2 pair. There are no flush or straight draws, so you are
only worried about Ace, Ace, King, King, or a pair of Eights or
Threes in the hole.
You have a strong hand with top pair in the hole when the flop
is 3 cards lower than yours and is un-coordinated. If you are
the only one who raised with your pair of Kings before the flop,
and the flop is Queen, Eight, Three, 3 different suits, you have
a very strong hand. There are no straight or flush draws, it is
unlikely that someone has a pair of Queens, so you are worried
only about an Ace, or another Queen falling, a pair of Eights or
Threes.
With hands, and flops like this, you want to get as much money
in the pot as possible, since you are a favorite to win.
If you have Jacks, Queens, Kings or Aces in the hole, and get a
flop such as Eight, Nine, Ten, or 2 of 1 suit, or the board is
paired, your hand is not as strong. Your hand is vulnerable to
many cards that can come on the turn or river. Now, instead of a
limited number of hands that may beat you, you may be facing a
flush draw, a straight draw, or both. With a pair on board, you
may be facing trips a full house, or a draw to a full house.
In these situations, you want to eliminate players, and try to
win the hand immediately. If you think that someone after you
will bet, you should check and raise, to face several players
with calling 2 bets. If you are not sure that someone else will
bet, you bet. You can not afford to give players a free draw.
When you start with Ace, Queen, Ace, Jack or Ace, Ten, and pair
your Queen, Jack or Ten, you have a hand that is mediocre to
somewhat strong, depending on the flop. If your pair is the top
pair on board, and the flop has no draws, you have a fairly
strong hand. But, it is vulnerable to over cards on the turn or
river. Ace, Queen, with a flop of Queen , Six, two, or Ace,
Jack, with a flop of Jack, Six, Two, the further down you go
with this, the more hands that can beat you. With an Ace, Queen,
and an Ace on the flop, you are beaten by someone with Ace,
King. With an Ace, Queen, and a Queen on the flop, you are
beaten by anybody holding a King if a King falls. With Ace,
Jack, and a Jack on the flop, you are beaten by any King, or
queen, that pairs someone.
Once again, you want to eliminate players, or win the hand
immediately. If you think that someone after you will bet, check
and raise. If you are not sure that someone will bet, bet out.
You can not afford to give players a free, or cheap, draw in
this situation.
If you make top pair, such as a pair of Eights, or Sixes, with
your second card when you have an Ace, you have one of the mice.
There are many cards that can fall on the turn and river that
will give one of your opponents a higher pair. In addition, if
all 3 cards on the flop are lower than a Ten you are often
facing straight and/or flush draws.
Another mistake made by low limit players is to treat a pair of
Aces, with a bad kicker, as a strong hand. It is one of the
mice. You have an Ace and Five of hearts in the blinds and get
in the pot cheaply hoping for a flush draw on the flop. Instead,
you pair the Ace, and there are no hearts. You have top pair,
but the more opponents you have, the more likely it is that
someone has an Ace with a higher kicker.
With these hands, if someone bets, fold and save some money. You
have 5 outs that will improve your hand, the 3 Aces, and 2 of
your pair, or the 3 remaining of your kicker, and the 2
remaining Aces. In order to call a bet in this situation, you
need to be getting pot odds of at least 8.5:1. Since you could
improve your hand and still lose, you probably want odds of at
least 10:1. If there are players to act after you, you need
higher odds, to make up for the times that a player to your left
raises.
With a pair of Tens or lower, you will usually only have a
strong hand after the flop if you hit the third card for your
set. Occasionally, the flop will all be lower than your pair,
and be un-coordinated. Also, occasionally, you will hit a
straight draw with your pair. Most often however, you will hit a
card higher than your pair, face some betting, and should fold.
If you do hit your set, you have a very strong hand. You should
bet out, or raise if someone else bets. In low limit games,
players will often not believe you have a set if you bet, or
raise, on the flop. They will expect you to slow play such a
strong hand, and not raise until the turn. They will therefore
often call all the way with as little as one small pair.
Second or Bottom Pair
These are more mice. In low limit games, someone who bets,
normally has at least top pair. If you have 2 different cards in
the hole and paired 1 of them, you have 5 outs to improve, 2
more cards of the rank you paired, and 3 of your second card.
With a small pair in the hole, you only have 2 outs to improve.
Even if you include implied odds, it is unlikely that you will
have the odds you need. To make matters worse, you really need
better odds to make up for the times you hit 1 of your outs and
still lose. You also need higher odds from the pot if there are
players still to act after you.
The only time you should call a bet with second or bottom pair
is when the pot is big, your second card is higher than any of
the cards on board, and you also have a backdoor draw, 3 to a
straight or flush.