For this column, I decided to find a hand that I played in a completely bizarre and unconventional manner. On the river, I both bet as a bluff and called for value. Didn't think that was possible? Well, do not worry, I am not sure it is, either – as I was beat.
| Game | Four-handed $10-$20 no-limit hold'em on PokerStars |
| Opponent | A $10-$20 regular in the small blind |
| Stacks | $2,600 (me) vs. $2,600 |
| My Cards | 7 |
| My Position | Button |
I was playing four-handed $10-$20 no-limit hold'em on PokerStars, when I raised from the button to $60 with the 7
6
. The small blind, with a similar stack to mine of around $2,600, reraised to $220. He was a regular in these games, and frequently reraised players in late position, as he should. With stacks at around 130 big blinds, I decided to take a flop with my suited connectors. The flop came down Q
6
3
. My opponent bet $280, as I would expect him to do with a majority of his range, either for value or as a bluff. I called, with middle pair having a decent chance of being the best hand, as well as with two backdoor possibilities. The turn was the J
. My opponent checked, and I checked behind, figuring to have a lot of showdown value with my pair of sixes here.
The river card was the 10
. Before my opponent did anything, I thought that he would be fairly likely to have a lot of marginal showdown hands, such as A-J, A-10, K-10, or any similar hands. With these hands, he would likely check and hope that I checked behind, but if I bet, he would possibly fold them. There was of course the chance that he had a monster, such as Q-Q, J-J, or A-K, or even just total air.
He checked, and I decided that I should try to bluff at the pot, hoping to get him off a pocket pair lower than 10-10, or any sort of second or third pair. I bet $720 into the pot of $1,020. After some thought, my opponent moved all in for more than $2,100. Surely, I had to fold now, as I had only fourth pair and my opponent check-raised all in. Any queen, jack, 10, pocket pair higher than sixes, K-9, 9-8, or A-K beat me! There was no way that I had the best hand.
But wait, I thought. Think about it from his perspective; I cannot have a big hand. He knows there is pretty much only one way that I can have two pair (I checked back the turn, so that rules out Q-J; Q-10 is possible). If he checked the river with A-2 suited, for example, and I made that river bet, as a thinking player, he would surely realize the bluffing opportunity he had. How could I even call, though; from a combination point of view, there were so few hands that I beat that would reraise preflop. I started counting up the possible hands; A-2 suited to A-9 suited, maybe suited kings, and maybe other suited connectors. With all the possible bluffing hands, I decided to try to make the greatest call of my life. I clicked the call button! I knew it, he didn't have a straight! Unfortunately for me, he had three queens. Oops, I thought to myself, I sure over-thought that one.
While this hand was really a collection of bad assumptions and mistakes, it still opened my mind up to possible future situations. There actually can be a spot in which you bet as a bluff, and your opponent will have a stronger range when he calls you than when he raises. This assumes that anytime he calls, he obviously has a hand of reasonable strength, and anytime he shoves, he can have either a bluff or the nuts, and if it is skewed enough toward bluffs, it can possibly warrant a heroic call. It probably will happen exceptionally rarely, but the possibility exists. ![]()
To watch Dani Stern comment on and play this hand, point your browser to Card Player Pro, the complete online poker training site, at www.CardPlayer.com/link/ansky-8.