2.50$ 180man turbo question
Join Date: Jan 2017
Posts: 39
Sup people, should we be shoving strictly following nash push fold charts? is there any justification for playing a bit tighter as people are making mistakes and there are more profitable spots in future possibly? would like to know off a reg that play these thanks
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 843
No you don't really want to be shoving Nash ranges. You want to figure what ranges villains are going to be calling with on average then adjust your shoving range accordingly. Nash ranges are unexploitable but that's not really what we care about, we want to adjust our ranges based on what the specific villain or player pool are doing. i.e villain x calls us too wide then we need to tighten our range. You have to have a good understanding of player pool ranges and then toy around with a tool like icmizer
Join Date: Jan 2017
Posts: 39
Thanks for your response,
I understand what you are saying and i do this for most part. However, I have been using these nash charts occasionally when multi-tabling (probably more tables than i can handle) meaning i dont have time to think about ranges properly. I do stress however that i only use these charts as a basic guideline in the most dire of situations (<3/4bbs deep) where i feel these plays cant be terrible mistakes (At this stage does it matter if villian is calling too wide for example? if we dont take a spot soon with our small fold equity and possible reasonable equity in a pot we just get blinded out?)
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 216
Quote:
Originally Posted by oldskool87
No you don't really want to be shoving Nash ranges. You want to figure what ranges villains are going to be calling with on average then adjust your shoving range accordingly. Nash ranges are unexploitable but that's not really what we care about, we want to adjust our ranges based on what the specific villain or player pool are doing. i.e villain x calls us too wide then we need to tighten our range. You have to have a good understanding of player pool ranges and then toy around with a tool like icmizer
Totally agree with that