Quote:
Originally Posted by Ramblinman15
If your range is polarised the theory says you should choose your bet sizing such that you are betting an equal fraction of the pot on each street and are all in on the river. This maximises EV.
Depending on the SPR your equal fractions of the pot can make for very large bets relative to the pot or very small.
So to answer your question(s) I'm guessing you need to split your betting range using different bet sizes:
- Bet your nut hands (balanced with bluffs) using the above theoretical bet sizing.
- Bet your non-nut hands using a smaller bet size (or check).
In both cases you will keep your strategic options if you get raised.
Yeah, that sounds about right.
So, what if we get to some spot where we have maybe $90 behind and an $80 pot on the flop.
We would obv want some hands that just jam for value, and we would obv balance with the correct number of bluffs/semi bluffs.
But do we think it makes sense, then, w some ranges on some flops, to have a range of hands that bets the flop for value planning to fold to a raise with a sizing of maybe $25 into $80?
We'd have to have some nutted value hands or at least hands that are happy to call a jam within this range and we would also need to have bluffs so..
firstly, Am I understanding this correctly?
and a side question would be this;
If we are going to have multiple value bet sizings then we should, theoretically have bluffs in both sizes.
In practice does it make more sense to generally bluff with the sizing where we would have the most number of value hands?
If we are truly going to have two different bluff sizings how do we select what hands we bluff with in each sizing?
This seems somewhere between super hard and outright impossible and I'm not sure how pragmatic it would be to chose the bluff sizing that represents the value range that has the fewest hands in it and especially if that range is the smaller sizing and has hands that will bet and fold plus outright bluffs.
THoughts on that?