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Lesson: 21
Chip Sandwich
Phil Gordon
August 8, 2005
Let's say an early position opponent - preferably a loose opponent
- raises and gets called by one or more players. Now there's a lot
of money in the pot. More importantly, the players who simply called
are unlikely to have a hand that would merit calling a big re-raise.
If they had such a hand, they probably would have raised instead
of flat calling in the first place. Now it gets to me.
I "sandwich" the callers with a big raise.
If my raise gets the initial raiser to fold, the meat of the chips
will very often be coming my way.
I prefer to make this play from the blinds than from the button;
if one of the blinds happens to wake up with a great hand, it really
doesn't matter what the initial raiser was betting with - my goose
is cooked.
I get maximum value from the sandwich raise when I am down to about
15 big blinds. For instance: I'm in the small blind. A loose player
brings it in from early position for three times the big blind.
Two players call. There are now 10.5 blinds in the pot. I look down
and find 8-7 suited.
I raise all-in.
The initial raiser now has to make the tough decision as to whether
to call a significant raise. Even if my timing is off and he has
a big hand - let's say A-K - and decides to call the bet, I'm still
in pretty good shape. My 8-7 suited will beat his A-K about 41%
of the time. I've invested 15 big blinds and stand to win 37 big
blinds. I'm getting exactly the right odds on my money here.
I won't make this play with a hand that can easily be dominated,
like a small ace or king. I don't want to be 25% (or less) to win
if I can help it.
And by making the play all-in, I completely negate my positional
disadvantage, and make the most of my short stack. With all of my
money in the pot, I can't be outplayed after the flop.
If it's chips you're hungry for, try the sandwich. You might just
find that it hits the spot.
Phil Gordon

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