kicker and get paid off by an opponent with a
worse kicker. For this reason, it is important to raise before the flop to hopefully
thin the field. If you are playing AK against three or four other players, it
is likely that the flop will hit at least one of them. The worst that happens
is you hit your Ace but someone else with an Ace also hits his or her kicker for
two pair. In addition, AK will win some pots without improving against one opponent.
On the other hand, hands like JTs are drawing hands. When you have a drawing hand,
you want as many players in the pot as possible because you wont hit your
hand very often, but when you do you want to be paid off well. You want to limp
in with drawing hands to encourage others to enter the pot. This also increases
your pot odds after the flop to often make it correct to call a bet to see the
turn on a good draw.
Another reason
to consider raising pre-flop is to steal the button. If you are in
late or middle position and think a raise may get everyone to fold between you
and the blinds, you should almost always raise. This effectively gives you the
button and an advantage on later rounds.
Here is a list of hands I recommend raising with pre-flop with a percentage, which
designates what percentage of the time you should raise. Notice that nothing is
100% or 0%. This is because it is important to vary your play to keep your opponents
guessing.
95% AA KK QQ JJ AKs AK
75% AQs AQ AJs
50% AJ ATs KQs
25% TT AT KQ KJs
5% Everything else.
Use your own judgment with this list. So much of correct play at the poker table
is recognizing situations and taking advantage of them. If you find yourself in
a game with only two players taking most flops, you may be more inclined to limp
in with KK or QQ to try inducing a raise behind you. Almost every decision will
be based on the current situation.
The
last discussion is about what hands to call a raise with or re-raise. If the player
who raised has been raising many pots with less than superior cards, you should
probably follow normal starting hand requirements. However, if the raise is from
a player who hasnt played a pot for an hour, only call with your very best
hands. I would even throw away hands as good as AJ in certain situations. The
reason for this is, what are you going to do if there is an Ace on the flop and
the pre-flop raiser bets into you. If you have AJ then you must re-raise to try
to figure out where you are in the hand, but a good player will just re-raise
you, even with only a pair of Queens or something similar and you still wont
know where you are. In addition, what if the pre-flop raiser has AQ or AK. You
stand to lose a lot of money.
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