Open limping with Suited Aces and low pocket pairs?
Can i open limp these 2 hands? I prefer limp/calling over raising with these types of hands.
Also open limps tend to set off a chain reaction of limps, at 1/2, and these hands play very well multi-way.
Also the 1/2 game I play is uncapped, so the stacks are usually deep, giving me great implied odds when i hit my sets and nut flushes.
I think I should limp these hands in EP/MP. LP Just raise them.
Open limp > Open raise? (At least in early position)
Also side question, why is open limping seen as terrible, but limping behind is seen as okay? Whats the difference?
13 Replies
Its not a terrible idea to do it occasionally as a way to keep your hand undefined.
I know conventional wisdom is to raise, but ive found that deception is a great tool in poker.
But ive also been told i don't play "right" as im raking in a pot.
For some reason it pisses people off not to raise a good hand preflop.
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My thinking on it is it's almost always preferable to play vs fewer players (especially fish) post flop, so open limping reduces chance of this+removes chance of winning pot uncontested. The reason limping behind isn't as bad I would think is more to do with better odds you have+position.
FYP
What does limping achieve that raising does not, besides giving you a smaller piece of the pie?
Well my thinking is that if I manage to hit my set or nut flush , I will be more likely to cooler someone if there is 5+ people in the pot, as opposed to 2-3.
How would that happen?
Say you flop your flush (less than 1% chance IF you get to see a flop and dont get raised off your hand, which is pretty likely if you do it from EP, not to mention that your opponents will notice the limping and know what you have). There are 18 bucks in the pot and 9 players. What are you getting paid with and for how much? Someone will have a lower flush whopping 0.185% of the time (not sure if i calculated it correctly but it matches with what i found on google) if everyone limps behind, they play any two suited and its a full ring. We get a single stack 1/540 times, if they pay you off every time and you never get raised off your hand pre. Lotsa ifs here, but getting paid off by a lower flush is at least plausible. How do you make anything else pay you off if you limp and then blast for 3 streets on a monotone flop?
If you dont flop your flush, you have about 35% to hit it if you flop the draw, and about 5% if you flop a backdoor (that is, if you get to the river in both cases). How are you achieving that? Hoping that 8 players let you see the river for cheap? Trying to bluff into 8 players? Whats the plan? The more likely your opponents are to pay you off (aka they are loose), the less likely you could do either, and if you can see the river for cheap or bluff 8 players (they are nits), then you arent getting paid off when you hit it. Dont forget that you also have to get the pot from 18 bucks to whatever size your stack is to realize your implied odds.
That was only talking about the nut flush, which can be the nuts some of the time. If you flop an ace or a low set, you can also have a player have a better ace or a better set and you are the one getting stacked.
You could probably calculate the required stack depth and the frequency of getting to the flop (aka nobody has a playable hand) and the frequency of paid off that you would need to make this play profitable, but i dont think it is.
Regarding limp calling vs raising - you need a stronger hand to call (someone got a playable hand and raised) than you would need to open (non-zero chance that nobody has a playable hand and you take it down pre).
Missing the opportunities to have worse post flop hands put lots of money in the pot when they mildly hit the flop.
It depends upon the type of game you are playing in. Most posters here play in games where their opponents are better than average, so open limping early can be exploited.
However in a $1/$2 game (especially deep stacked), where opponents play absurdly less than optiomal, open limping is just fine. You need to adjust the level of advice versus the skill of the game.
Advising someone to play one way in a $10/$20 NL game against very good players is very different that advising player how to play in $1/$2 game. They are ridiculously different games and play very differently.
In lower limit games (or more precisely lkwer skill games), open limping is much more acceptable. It is much less likely to be exploited and the rewards are much greater.
You are on the right track of figuring out which hands play well multi-way (especially against bad players) versus hands that are better against a lower number of players (like one) in order to be continuation bet.
Yes that's exactly my line of thinking
You do realize that the OP is a passive-playing newbie?
? Nice assumption? What is your reply supposed to mean exactly?
It means that you likely don't have the experience or skill level to play in a deep-stacked game and make on-the-fly adjustments against good players.
It wasn't an insult.
I initially read this as "missing the opportunities to have worse post flop hands and put lots of money in the pot when you mildly hit the flop" and i think its closer to the truth haha.
I mean, if your opponents will put their stacks into a limped pot with marginal hands that are worse than your marginal hand, but wont do it in a raised pot somehow (and also wont raise you pre often enough and also wont adapt to you limping only those hands and yada yada), i guess it could be profitable with deep enough stacks. You could approximate if its profitable depending on OP's game (stack depth, types of players, what ranges are they calling and raising pre, what will they put in their stacks with etc), but im pretty sure that this game would have to be super soft (maybe unrealistically soft, although i dont play live so i have no idea) for it to be good.