Quote:
Originally Posted by jasonhau
Hey Matt, in your book on 217 pages: Denying your opponent’s equity while realizing ours, in a short stack situation you say:
In fact we should keep betting smaller and smaller until we force him to have a check calling range.
1. Does that mean if we give our opponent 3 options is better for 2 option since they should developers a more complex range to defend? (call+raise+fold VS raise+fold)
Does it still work in deep stack? so I have the second question.
2. in a more deep stack like 100bb, SRP BTN vs BB, we are IP. Suppose our opponent is weak, don’t raise us very often unless very strong hands and strong draw, if we continue bet smaller like 25%, I find my opponent raise frequecy became lots more, now they have 3 options on flop, but I think we bet smaller give our opponent a wider raise range can include more bluff, does that a bad situation for us since we range looks more condensed?
Actually I find my opponent often over bluff on river since I use small size on flop face they raise, (some of my opponent don’t know how to bluff, some of them don’t konw how to stop to bluff).
But if our opponent is balance on later streets, Does a good strategy for us to exploit a raise range for our opponent?and if we use this strategy what’s our bet range looks like?
Sorry for so long and bad English : ), hope your response in free time.
Always take what you think is the most +EV line. This is basic exploitative poker and you always want to be doing this regardless of what poker theory, PioSOLVER, PokerSnowie, etc tell you is the most GTO line. So, if you think betting bigger than is GTO gets a disproportional amount of folds, then you've found a valuable exploitative bet sizing and you should abuse it.
That said, if your opponent will play a"push or fold" game against your $30 bet, then it doesn't make much sense to bet $50 since by betting $50 you risk more money and effectively increase the amount of dead money in the pot.
In general, the smaller you bet the less polarized your betting range should be and the higher your opponent's raising frequency should be. So finding out that if you bet smaller on the flop villain raises more does not suggest either you or your opponent is doing something wrong. You both may just be playing well.