Muckin Psychology
What’s up guys,
Been a while since I offered a poker article to you guys, but I have a thought that’s been kickin around in my head so I thought I’d share it with you. It’s probably most relevant in HU matches but is definitely still applicable in a 6m setting (possibly even full ring, but individual relationships are way more hard to develop when you’re playing with 8 others instead of 5 or 1).
If you’ve ever played HU, think about how tilting it is when your opponent is running hot. You raise, he 3-bets, you 4-bet bluff, he shoves. You fold. You bet the flop, 2-barrel the turn, and then he bets the river. You fold. You thinly value bet the turn and he raises. You fold. Let’s be honest here, you’re still playing great. But you’re kinda pissed off. More so than if he had checked that river and won, more so than if he had just called that turn instead of raised. In short, not seeing your opponents cards does two things– it keeps us from knowing how they play (this is common knowledge), but it also keeps us from satisfying one of our most instinctual, natural psychological necessities– knowing the intangible answer or conclusion to the hand. Let me put it this way: every good joke has a punchline. If we hear a joke and then not the punchline, it frustrates us. Every good story has an ending. If you get left on a cliffhanger without a resolution, you get frustrated (and thusly tricked into watching LOST again the next week, but that show is so good that its okay).
The same thing happens over the course of a poker hand.
The simple idea is this– not allowing your opponent to see your cards does more than simply deprive them of valuable information they could use against you. It is tilting. There is a psychological edge in making your opponent muck that will manifest itself later in the match.
This means that when you have close choices (do I bet for thin-value or check? do I make this bold, thin-bluff raise or not? 4-bet bluff or flat call?) you should be inclined to take the more aggressive option. Even if its slightly wrong, it won’t be too wrong, and it does wonders for game flow.
Now i’ll try to think of a few examples that might elucidate:
in a HU match, you raise Q8 OTB and get a call from the blinds. The flop is Q43 w/ a FD. He checks, you bet, and he c/r. You don’t really think he’s good enough to c/r a top pair hand here (maybe AQ, but he’d probably 3-bet). So his range is either monster stuff (sets or slowplayed big stuff), but more likely draws or air. You call. The turn is a 9, and he fires again. Let’s say that you know he probably only fires the turn with some kind of equity, and you think he probably c/f the river some percentage of the time when he misses. Its a close call– raise or fold? This is a spot where I would raise. Call it capitalization of dead money, value, both, or whatever. Either way, if he had the nut flush draw, or 56 for a straight draw, it is tilting to muck there. That’s the basic idea.
Anyway, try it out, get aggressive, and check out the Aussie Millions Academy presented by DeucesCracked!
Andrew
Posted: January 8th, 2010 under Poker Articles.
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January 9th, 2010 at 11:56 pm
Hi, I wanted to let you know that I just sent an message on balugapoker regarding buying your book. This is the third time I’m writing a message on there. The two previous times I’ve gotten no answer – hopefully I’ll getting answer this time.
January 11th, 2010 at 4:59 am
Hey Rojo,
Where did you send your message to? I checked through our accounts and couldn’t seem to find your messages. Probably a problem on our end. BalugaPoker.com is currently in hibernation as we prepare something a little bit better. If you want to contact me it’s best to do it here, or via PM on 2p2 (username BalugaWhale), or via PM on Deucescracked (username BalugaWhale)
Thanks,
Andrew