Poker Video: No Limit Hold'Em by BalugaWhale (Mid Stakes)

DC Shorts: BalugaWhale (#1) - 200NL

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DC Shorts: BalugaWhale (#1) - 200NL by BalugaWhale

BalugaWhale reviews a forum post in the mid-stakes NLHE forum concerning a 200NL hand. Hand is Here

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DC shorts are short content bursts brought to you by DC Labs. Roughly 1/4 the length of standard videos, these shorts are designed to review single hands, concepts or ideas. You'll receive the most up to date content available and stay in touch with the latest and greatest here at DC and the poker community at large.  The more you post in the forums the more likely it is your post will be the inspiration for a future DC short!

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Video Details

  • Game: nlhe
  • Stakes: Mid Stakes
  • 19 minutes long
  • Posted over 1 year ago

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Comments for DC Shorts: BalugaWhale (#1) - 200NL

baf509

Avatar for baf509

29 posts
Joined 02/2008

If your line is to bet thin for value on the turn and then bluff the river - doesn't that imply that you expect to be beat when called on the turn? And doesn't that mean that you are in fact simply two-barrel bluffing and not betting for value?

I play 100nl and I would c/f 88,99,TT on the turn because I don't really see people fold much of anything there. Are regs good enough to fold KK or AA to a 3barrel in 200nl?

Posted over 1 year ago

TheGeek

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1476 posts
Joined 01/2009

Excellent idea for a video, should really encourage people to use the forums more. Great content too, DC shorts is a fantastic idea.

Posted over 1 year ago

halvadron

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255 posts
Joined 06/2009

yea, DC coaches should participate in forums a bit more as well imo, that would be cool if in every thread there was at least one answer (as a rule or something) from DC coach at every micro SSNL MSNL HSNL forums/threads

Posted over 1 year ago

1BYONE

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5169 posts
Joined 05/2009

Time Link to 00:13:05

Thanks BalugaWhale for reviewing this HH. I can sleep better now Wink

Posted over 1 year ago

ceegee

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637 posts
Joined 05/2008

Time Link to 00:06:43

i really feel like 1/2 players will continue to bet 88-JJ for sure here as most don't understand when Hero flats two streets that he is likely very strong, but they think the opposite, like oh maybe he is weak and picked up a diamond draw etc...

Posted over 1 year ago

Prologion

Avatar for Prologion

1985 posts
Joined 03/2010

Yeah horny - the 2nd NL6max-DC-Short and I am already inside - that is somewhat sexyWink

@Beluga:
This format is awesome and your explanations have been all great.
In fact I think now that I did just give him too less Credit to make another thin val.bet on the turn.
In reality it is reasonable for him to val.bet here thin b/c he can expect me to have worse hands in my Flopcallrange (7 for example).
Even when I fold these hands vs. another bet, it is not too bad for his pocket 99/88 b/c he capitalize on hte deadmoney and mekes me some PotEQ to fold. Just haven`t notice this aspects while posting this hand.

Your thoughts about turning 88/99 on the river into a bluff , are imo also greatWink

Thank you very much, I rly appreciate itSmile

Posted over 1 year ago

bosko

Avatar for bosko

332 posts
Joined 05/2010

My mind boggles at the idea of valuebetting a street when one's hand will never get to showdown without bluffing. Taking the villain's person, for ease of language:

If we bet the turn, and get called by worse (value), and he always folds the river with any worse hand he called the turn with (I take it from the video that we do always bluff the river?), then our holding doesn't matter: we could just as well have had air.

Because we could just as well have had air on the turn, there is surely no sense in which we can think of ourselves as having "got value" on the turn: we were simply getting dead money in on the turn to be taken away on the river.

Is this essentially what was meant in the video, and just a matter of the language used, or am I missing something?

Posted over 1 year ago

Squishee

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1374 posts
Joined 01/2008

I really like this kind of video format ! Short, sweet , instructive and not too long... and if we want more, then just watch an other one.

I think DC should make more of thoses

Posted over 1 year ago

Zen179

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6 posts
Joined 07/2009

Prologion

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1985 posts
Joined 03/2010

My mind boggles at the idea of valuebetting a street when one's hand will never get to showdown without bluffing. Taking the villain's person, for ease of language:

If we bet the turn, and get called by worse (value), and he always folds the river with any worse hand he called the turn with (I take it from the video that we do always bluff the river?), then our holding doesn't matter: we could just as well have had air.

Because we could just as well have had air on the turn, there is surely no sense in which we can think of ourselves as having "got value" on the turn: we were simply getting dead money in on the turn to be taken away on the river.

Is this essentially what was meant in the video, and just a matter of the language used, or am I missing something?




It still matters a little bit if you have air or 88 here.
For exapmle you have with 88 on the turn 80% EQ, vs. something likev Ac7c.
So 80% are your PotEQ and it makes sense
1.) to realize your PotEQ
2.) making Villain`s EQ-share of 20% folding.

Posted over 1 year ago

bosko

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332 posts
Joined 05/2010

It still matters a little bit if you have air or 88 here.
For exapmle you have with 88 on the turn 80% EQ, vs. something likev Ac7c.
So 80% are your PotEQ and it makes sense
1.) to realize your PotEQ
2.) making Villain`s EQ-share of 20% folding.



Are your points 1) and 2) equivalent: ie we: Realise our pot equity (1) by getting him to fold out his equity share (2)? Otherwise, I'm not sure I know what you mean. Certainly, if he folds the turn with something like Ac7c, it doesn't matter that we have 88 vs that part of his range. However, if I've misunderstood you and and you were discussing some sort of turn valuebet:

If there are cards which come on the river that lead us to take a line in which we may see a showdown that we will win, then it obviously does matter that we have 88 (eg., we check, villain checks behind with worse).

If, however, (as I said in my fist post) we always bluff him off the worse hands he called the turn with on the river (along with some better hands), it clearly doesn't matter that we have 88 on the turn.

To be clear, I'm not suggesting the turn bet is bad, simply that the logic behind it is flawed.

Posted over 1 year ago

Prologion

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1985 posts
Joined 03/2010

Are your points 1) and 2) equivalent: ie we: Realise our pot equity (1) by getting him to fold out his equity share (2)? Otherwise, I'm not sure I know what you mean. Certainly, if he folds the turn with something like Ac7c, it doesn't matter that we have 88 vs that part of his range.




When the turn goes check/check and Villain is drawing you out on the river, then you miised to realize your 80%-PoTEQ-Share on the turn.

Posted over 1 year ago

bosko

Avatar for bosko

332 posts
Joined 05/2010

When the turn goes check/check and Villain is drawing you out on the river, then you miised to realize your 80%-PoTEQ-Share on the turn.



As I said, I agree with betting the turn, but BW calls it a "valuebet", and I don't think we can consider it a valuebet if we never see a showdown that we win.

I believe the correct logic behind the turn bet is to get dead money in that we can take away on the river - and this does not depend on us having 88.

Edit: the protection you're discussing is certainly a bonus that we get from the turn bet, but I don't think it's the primary reason we should be doing it.

Posted over 1 year ago

StnBuddha70

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694 posts
Joined 05/2008

Love the short format. I think a coach providing constructive criticism, correcting flawed logic, and pointing out misapplied principles will be extremely helpful..

Keep um comin.

Posted over 1 year ago

Prologion

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1985 posts
Joined 03/2010

As I said, I agree with betting the turn, but BW calls it a "valuebet", and I don't think we can consider it a valuebet if we never see a showdown that we win.

I believe the correct logic behind the turn bet is to get dead money in that we can take away on the river - and this does not depend on us having 88.

Edit: the protection you're discussing is certainly a bonus that we get from the turn bet, but I don't think it's the primary reason we should be doing it.



yeah, I actually aggree with you.
I think also it is on the turn a bet, not for Value, but to capitalize the deadmoney with the bonus of making him some possible PotEQ to fold.

Posted over 1 year ago

poolsweeper

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395 posts
Joined 12/2008

As I said, I agree with betting the turn, but BW calls it a "valuebet", and I don't think we can consider it a valuebet if we never see a showdown that we win.

I believe the correct logic behind the turn bet is to get dead money in that we can take away on the river - and this does not depend on us having 88.

Edit: the protection you're discussing is certainly a bonus that we get from the turn bet, but I don't think it's the primary reason we should be doing it.



Totally with you here.

Posted over 1 year ago

StueysKid

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763 posts
Joined 11/2009

Great idea... DC Shorts, 20 minute in depth look at an interesting hand. That will get it done! TY Baluga

Posted over 1 year ago

BalugaWhale

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894 posts
Joined 01/2008

My mind boggles at the idea of valuebetting a street when one's hand will never get to showdown without bluffing. Taking the villain's person, for ease of language:

If we bet the turn, and get called by worse (value), and he always folds the river with any worse hand he called the turn with (I take it from the video that we do always bluff the river?), then our holding doesn't matter: we could just as well have had air.

Because we could just as well have had air on the turn, there is surely no sense in which we can think of ourselves as having "got value" on the turn: we were simply getting dead money in on the turn to be taken away on the river.

Is this essentially what was meant in the video, and just a matter of the language used, or am I missing something?



this is a really interesting post.

whether or not we get to showdown without bluffing doesnt affect whether or not you can v-bet a street. I.E. i might v-bet AA on a KQ4 board and see a J on the turn and not be able to get to showdown without bluffing, doesnt mean my v-bet with AA on KQ4 board is bad. In that sense, I'm left with the same basic choice-- do I turn AA into a bluff on a KQ4J board, or am I v-betting it, or what am I doing if I'm not c/f or something?

I think the lack of clarity in the language is because of the way equity works, which I believe I'll be discussing in an upcoming short. Basically, it would be possible to bluff against KK on the turn here AND to v-bet agaisnt Ad2d at the SAME TIME. whoaaah crazy.

hopefully that helps a lil

Posted over 1 year ago

mchu1026

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968 posts
Joined 12/2008

Hey Baluga,

I'm not really following the line of vbetting the turn and bluffing the river on brick cards. I understand if you're vbetting one street, but the following street changes board texture significantly where you can rep a draw that got there or something like that.

If we vbet a street, we want worse hands to call us. Then on the river, what makes us think that he'll have enough better hands that he might fold? If he has that many better hands that need to fold by the river, why were we betting for value on the turn? If you just said, "we're gonna set up a multi-street bluff with 88 and get this guy off an overpair because our line looks so strong on this board" that would make more sense.

Can you clarify a little bit? (btw, I read the previous posts about other people being confused on this topic but I'm still a bit lost on this concept)

Thanks so much Baluga

Posted over 1 year ago

BalugaWhale

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894 posts
Joined 01/2008

understood that this is a particularly nasty/difficult topic

1) thinly v-betting means we expect him to have both worse AND better hands that will call us.
2) if we thinly v-bet the turn, its because we expect all hands like 7x are still going to call us. We also expect JJ+ to call us as well (obv).
3) we might be able to thinly v-bet the turn with TT here, but then on the river, we can't get value from anything worse BUT we might be able to fold out better hands. So now we'd bluff.

hopefully that clarifies!

(Quick note- one of my students crunched some numbers and found that it probably is too thin to v-bet TT on this turn. But, in his analysis, he concluded that its actually still possibly an ok bluff on the turn, provided that we can move him off things on 3 streets)

One last thing-- We need to consider hands both 1 street at a time AND in the context of 3 streets. So, I don't love the idea of making a bad turn bluff (or v-bet) with the intention of making a good river bluff. However, it's also bad to ignore the added value that making a good river bluff adds to our hand. Basically, I'd like to have some kind of equity/value on the turn to go into a 3-barrel bluff type situation.

Andrew

Posted over 1 year ago

bigboy1337

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1 posts
Joined 09/2010

Maybe my logic is flawed but lets say I'm the villain and donkbet the flop. im going to have sets, and overpairs and my likely range is QQ-77 and 33-22 on this board ONLY because im burning money if I bet anything else. Likewise, when I get a call by the preflop raiser, I have to believe that he has a hand like 22-33 and 77-AA on the flop because he wouldn't raise preflop with anything less than 22 - AA, maaaybe a7x .

So villain bets barrels the turn! his range is still the same as it was on the flop but it can and should change because you called him so you have to have at least 88+ and sets. but since the hero has kings, that trumps the villains range by a LOT as shown in poker stove.

Board: 2c 3d 7h 5d
Dead:

equity win tie pots won pots tied
Hand 0: 74.476% 74.48% 00.00% 1278 0.00 { KdKs }
Hand 1: 25.524% 25.52% 00.00% 438 0.00 { QQ-77, 33-22 }


Now, if I was the villain, i'd bet TT+ because if I bet 88-99 then I'm essentially bluffing and im going to get called by better so often that I'm burning money. At least with TT+ , you can bet for value on the turn. with 88-99 on the turn, you should just c/f because the hero has your range SMOKED.


but back to the hero here, if I was the hero in this hand, I'd call the turn and usually call the river but I can't say for certain because in this hand, we didn't see the river.

conclusion: call the turn because we beat sooo much of his range.

Posted over 1 year ago

Peesocake

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948 posts
Joined 02/2007

If we decide to bet the turn and river vs the reg, once we donked out for value, we'd be risking our stack by the turn (200-9-20=171$) to win a final pot of 68+42=110$, so it needs to work 61% of the time.

Say the BTN's calling range on the flop is: sets, overpairs, A7s,K7s, 87s, 76s,97s, A2s-A5s (that's 9+ 7*6+ 5*3 3+3+4+4= 80 combo's. So he may only go to showdown with 32 combos: 9 sets and 4pp's, so he has to fold TT and worse by the river.

What would be a reasonable cutoff for him considering our range?
Our range is tighter than his, since we're trying to get value from the fish in the first place. Our range could look like: sets (9),88-JJ (24 or less if 3bet JJ-TT, say 18), our 7x is more restricted that his (say 12) (K7s may or not be in there), and there's probably no A2s-A5s. So we have a range of about 45 combo's. So if we're barreling that whole range, he actually needs to call TT, since on the flop, he's facing the situation where he has to call down his stack to win ours + the pot (TT has 55% equity vs our range, but 99 has only 41%.

Calling down TT is not easy at that point, unless BTN is completely immune to A/K scare cards (which he should be since they're not in our range). Also he's assuming we donk and barrel that whole range. In reality he'll put us on a tighter range, as OP did here, not feeling comfortable even with KK.

So it looks like a good spot to bluff.

As for 88, it's basically a bluff, unless the turn card gives us a value bet by providing equity to villain's 7x (gutshot or FD). Checking 88 puts us in the spot where we now have villain.

Posted over 1 year ago

bosko

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332 posts
Joined 05/2010

understood that this is a particularly nasty/difficult topic

1) thinly v-betting means we expect him to have both worse AND better hands that will call us.
2) if we thinly v-bet the turn, its because we expect all hands like 7x are still going to call us. We also expect JJ+ to call us as well (obv).
3) we might be able to thinly v-bet the turn with TT here, but then on the river, we can't get value from anything worse BUT we might be able to fold out better hands. So now we'd bluff.

hopefully that clarifies!

(Quick note- one of my students crunched some numbers and found that it probably is too thin to v-bet TT on this turn. But, in his analysis, he concluded that its actually still possibly an ok bluff on the turn, provided that we can move him off things on 3 streets)

One last thing-- We need to consider hands both 1 street at a time AND in the context of 3 streets. So, I don't love the idea of making a bad turn bluff (or v-bet) with the intention of making a good river bluff. However, it's also bad to ignore the added value that making a good river bluff adds to our hand. Basically, I'd like to have some kind of equity/value on the turn to go into a 3-barrel bluff type situation.

Andrew



That works a bit better, but I'm still a little uncomfortable with a particular aspect, specifically the turn "thin value" even if we have, for example, TT or JJ.

I believe that the idea of assessing streets independently doesn't really work. The standard way of analysing multi-street action is via a tree-diagram based EV calculation, summing all paths to give a final result. Here are basically the four possible paths in this hand, from the turn, where we bet the turn with the intention of shoving the river:

1) We bet the turn, he folds, we win $X

2) We bet the turn, he shoves (we fold), we loose $(X + our turn bet)

3) We bet the turn, he calls. We shove the river, he folds. We win $Y.

4)We bet the turn, he calls. We shove the river, he calls. We win $(Y+ our riverbet) 5% of the time (when we hit our set), and loose $(Y + our riverbet) 95% of the time.

Each of the scenarios 1), 2), 3) and 4), have an EV: EV1, EV2, EV3, EV4. and they each occur a particular fraction of the time: %1, %2, %3, %4., where

(%1) + (%2) + (%3) + (%4) = 100%

Our Total EV = (EV1)*(%1) + (EV2)*(%2) + (EV3)*(%3) + (EV4)*(%4) = The weighted sum of the EV of all paths

The important thing to take away from this is that we only see a river in scenario 4), when our river shove is called. We only win when we hit our set.

So my point is really that value is about showdown. If we only win when we hit our set at showdown, it doesn't matter if his range was behind us OTT: Our river line negates the "turn value", and it won't make a difference to the EV of the play if we have 88 or JJ.


For me, the example hand you posted, where we have AA on KQ4, is different to the video hand in this critical way: we will often see a showdown that we will win vs a large number of hands in villain's flop calling range that are behind us on the flop, making the valuebet valid, and showdown-oriented. The Jack is a crappy card OTT, and we may have to re-evaluate our line, but most turn/rivers don't force us to do this. In the video hand, however, we never see a showdown against a hand we were ahead of on the turn.

Thanks for taking such an interest in this point, I've been brought up on your vids, so it was great to have a response from you :-)

Posted over 1 year ago

BalugaWhale

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894 posts
Joined 01/2008

I'd stress that value is NOT necessarily about what we see at showdown and that things like value and bluff have to be evaluated in two elements-- static on a given street and dynamically throughout the hand. your flow chart above is great but it's also limited. I.E. it's based on some assumptions (we assume its good to bluff every river card, for example). Let's say that we think he has a lot of cards with A's in them, so we decide not to bluff a river A. Or perhaps, we decide that an A increases our FE vs this villain, so we decide we would. It's late and I'm tired so this could v well just be a ramble.
I would say, though, that we v-bet MANY times in spots where we find we can't get to showdown later.

Andrew

Posted over 1 year ago

rrumsey

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4394 posts
Joined 06/2010

@ baluga, and DC producers for these in general: could we get links to the forum threads in these? it would make it easy to go back and see if i was right. i remember this hand . would make it nice to let people see where people where.

Posted over 1 year ago

Steppin Razor

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Section 9
1998 posts
Joined 12/2009

@ baluga, and DC producers for these in general: could we get links to the forum threads in these? it would make it easy to go back and see if i was right. i remember this hand . would make it nice to let people see where people where.


http://www.deucescracked.com/forums/34-Small-Stakes-Shorthanded-NL/topics/237131-NL200-6max-how-to-treat-h







I understand the crossing the bridge when we get there, but shouldn't we also be thinking about what our opponent will do on the next street? If we're villain, with our theoretical 88, would hero ever be bluffing/going for an even thinner value bet w/A7 on the turn when we check? I would think hero would bet everything better and check back everything worse. And how often would he then bet river with worse or as a bluff? Pretty much never I would think.

Posted over 1 year ago

RetartedApe

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9 posts
Joined 07/2010

great video, hope to see a lot of more videos like this one

Posted over 1 year ago



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