Sunday, March 15, 2009

A good article on balance

I spent over an hour trying to come up with a good answer to this question from Jim on balance:

"1.) At what point does balancing your play cause your play to become "poor"? i.e. How often do you give up some pre-flop equity for future consideration."

I was trying to construct an example of balancing your flop/turn play on a paired board when defending from the big blind and it got way too complicated.

And then I found this article today and didn't feel so bad.

http://www.twoplustwo.com/magazine/issue51/Jordan-Cairns-Balancing-Your-Call-Down-Ranges-against-Tough-Players.php

I think this illustrates how complicated balancing can be and finding that exact point of perfect balance is extremely difficult.

3 comments:

  1. I think this is a good article on how to balance against "thinking" players but what about "non-thinking" players (i.e. players that don't know what they hold much less think about what you hold, players who are multi-tabling a large amount of tables and aren't spending too much time analyzing your play, or maniacs that are just going to bet/raise without trying to put you on a hand)

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  2. Against those players it's more important to exploit their weaknesses than be concerned about whether you're balanced.

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  3. In other words, you can leave yourself vulnerable in areas for the sake of exploiting your opponent's weaknesses because it's unlikely they'll take advantage of you.

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