This may tie in more with the first video in this series where you talked about limping more often when short, but I played 2 events at the wsop this year that had plo in them and there was substantial limping preflop from deep and short stacks.
Is this standard to see so much limping?
I maintained a normal iso range. That is to say if I had a hand I would normally open raise with I went ahead and isoed it even with multiple limpers.
Is this proper?
Should limping behind with a wider range be avoided?
16:50 against a deeper opponent are you firing turn and potentially river?
19:55 are these somewhat dry high pairs always a standard call on the btn? I have started folding them or semibluff 3betting them vs wide ranges.
If you are in earlier position facing an earlier position open do you prefer folding them?
ill respond to the timestamps now and track back to the other stuff later
16.50 - possibly, but my ingame read as mentioned was that he'd be stickier than baseline. if i dont have that read then yes, more SPR to work with=more bluffing, and this might make it in there occasionally, although prob mostly still stick to better equity bluffs.
19.55 - relatively standard esp the bigger pairs/higher suited combos, think 3b maybe ok under some explo conditions but in theory they function quite poorly relative to coldcall, better to use linear Axxx than equity heavy disconnected !A hands i think.
re limping question - idk if its exactly standard, i know of some good pros who incorporate limps as a matter of course, some more who do it on occasion, and some more who never limp (exc BvB obv). I personally didnt see a whole lot of it, but prob saw it at least once in each event I played.
assuming no heavy ICM your approach seems fine, my overlimp freq was determined by too many variables to be helpful to you - stack size, stage of event, toughness of limper/players behind, level of boredom, to name a few.
tbh im not sure any of that is all that much help to you but its rly about as much as I can think to usefully provide.
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great video , learned and gained so much from it. Thanks Richard
This may tie in more with the first video in this series where you talked about limping more often when short, but I played 2 events at the wsop this year that had plo in them and there was substantial limping preflop from deep and short stacks.
Is this standard to see so much limping?
I maintained a normal iso range. That is to say if I had a hand I would normally open raise with I went ahead and isoed it even with multiple limpers.
Is this proper?
Should limping behind with a wider range be avoided?
16:50 against a deeper opponent are you firing turn and potentially river?
19:55 are these somewhat dry high pairs always a standard call on the btn? I have started folding them or semibluff 3betting them vs wide ranges.
If you are in earlier position facing an earlier position open do you prefer folding them?
Thank you.
ill respond to the timestamps now and track back to the other stuff later
16.50 - possibly, but my ingame read as mentioned was that he'd be stickier than baseline. if i dont have that read then yes, more SPR to work with=more bluffing, and this might make it in there occasionally, although prob mostly still stick to better equity bluffs.
19.55 - relatively standard esp the bigger pairs/higher suited combos, think 3b maybe ok under some explo conditions but in theory they function quite poorly relative to coldcall, better to use linear Axxx than equity heavy disconnected !A hands i think.
re limping question - idk if its exactly standard, i know of some good pros who incorporate limps as a matter of course, some more who do it on occasion, and some more who never limp (exc BvB obv). I personally didnt see a whole lot of it, but prob saw it at least once in each event I played.
assuming no heavy ICM your approach seems fine, my overlimp freq was determined by too many variables to be helpful to you - stack size, stage of event, toughness of limper/players behind, level of boredom, to name a few.
tbh im not sure any of that is all that much help to you but its rly about as much as I can think to usefully provide.
I love every video of yours as I learn at least 5 new plo mechanics. Easily best instructor on site. Plo is a beautiful game.
Hi, thanks very much, thats great to hear, and yes, I think so too :)
Vnice video ty so much!
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