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Lesson: 11
Don't Play a Big Pot Unless You Have a Big Hand
John Juanda
May 30, 2005
I'm at Foxwoods playing the $2,000 No Limit Hold 'em event. We
all started with $3,000 and now I've got $15,000. At my table is
Richard Tatalovitch, a player whom I've competed against many times.
I raise pre-flop from middle position with K-J offsuit and Richard
calls from the big blind. The flop comes 9-6-4 with two diamonds
on the board.
Richard hesitates for a moment before checking, and I put in a
pot-sized bet. Richard thinks for a while and calls. All of a sudden,
I don't like my hand -- so much.
Imagine my relief when a non-diamond J hits the turn. Now I have
top pair and a pretty good kicker. Then Richard comes out betting.
Uh-oh.
Now, let me back up a moment and mention that when someone hesitates
before checking, it's usually a huge tell. But Richard is the king
of delayed action, so I ignored his tell and bet the flop anyway.
And his bet on the turn just screams, "Raise me! I dare you!"
I go into the tank and my thoughts go something like this:
1. He flopped a set. That explains the smooth call on the flop
- he's trying to trap me into staying, hoping I'll bet the turn,
too.
2. No. If he had a set, he'd have checked the turn and waited for
me to hang myself right then and there, or let me catch something
on the river. He can't have a set.
3. The jack helped him. I don't have the jack of diamonds. Maybe
he does, and he called the flop with a jack-high flush draw. If
so, I like my kicker and my hand.
4. He's betting on the come with a flush or straight draw and is
hoping to buy the pot right there.
I run through these possibilities and reach no conclusion.
Normally, I would just call here. We both have a lot of chips,
and I don't want to put them all in with nothing but top pair. Then,
I have the misfortune to remember a hand from a month earlier at
Bellagio:
Richard had been running bad and was complaining about a string
of horrific beats. I saw him check and call with top boat because
he was afraid of quads! A guy that afraid of monsters under the
bed isn't going to check-call top set on the flop with a flush draw
out there.
"All in!" I declared.
Oops. This is now a Big Pot. And rest assured, top pair doesn't
even resemble a Big Hand.
In the four years I've been playing with him, I've never seen him
call so fast. I am drawing dead to his perfectly-played 9-9.
Sometimes, we all forget that big cards don't always equal a big
hand and that the smart move can be to play conservatively instead
of going for the quick kill. As for Richard - he had the good sense
to be in a Big Pot with a Big Hand, and the patience to make it
pay off.
John Juanda

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