Tips on Bluffing
Listed below you'll find some of Dave Colcloughs tips on bluffing. We have found Dave to be a rathrer sharp poker player so thought you may enjoy this article. Enjoy! Using your Position to Bluff
Well, apparently some of you actually understood last weeks
article. Common sense, wasnt it
Well heres a
few swerve balls
Again, it may be common sense but you can also use your position
to bluff. Personally, when playing live, I only bluff if I think
I can pick up some sort of tell as well. Maybe a quick check, a
sigh, a look of disgust as an ace hits the flop. This isnt
quite so easy to spot while playing on the internet against an opponent
4,000 miles away. Apparently there are books available on internet
tells nowadays, but Im a little sceptical myself. I
havent read them myself but maybe I should.
Ok lets assume that you have progressed and the game is 2$/$4
Limit Holdem. Everyone passes to you on the blind. You raise
your pair of 8s because there are only 2 hands behind you. But the
small blind re-raises and you should call. The flop comes A K 2
off suit. The small blind checks. Well either he is playing sneaky
or maybe he raised you with a pair of 9s, 10s, Js, Qs, or even a
smaller pair than yours in the first place, or he is a suited connectors
raiser. In all these cases he has assumed you called him with an
Ace. So make a bet. You might win a $13 pot with a $2 bluff. If
he raises, give it up. The clever git trap checked you, hes
probably got AK or AQ and you lost an extra $2 in the pot. If he
smooth calls then maybe hes got it maybe he hasnt, and
maybe you hit an 8 on Fourth Street. If he checks again, well you
have to make a judgement on how sneaky he is. If hes an honest
Joe, make another bet. You may pick up a $17 pot for a $4 bluff
Ok, although the moral of todays story is that you can use
your position to bluff, I must unfortunately add a warning
most bluffers get carried away, do it too much and lose in the long
run. So dont get carried away. Patience is probably the most
important Poker virtue. I just wish I had some !
Oh and for those of you who were a little worried about my fridge
being empty, fortunately my luck improved in February. The European
Omaha Championship was held in Paris, and the deck hit me in the
face for 2 days. I outlasted some of the worlds best Omaha
players like Rob Hollink (Holland) and Robert Williamson (USA) to
pick up a cool 71,000 euros. Unbelievably, the following week I
was second to fellow Stokie, Paul Maxfield, in the main Holdem
event and collected another 41,000 euros. And Sian got to see Peter
Pan 5 times !
Dave
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