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Texas Hold'em No Limit Advanced

Improving your Red Line in Poker - Part 2

12,780 Views on 10/10/14

In Part 2 we look at 10 situations to improve our red-line, and also situations when you should NOT try to improve it.

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Contents:

 - How NOT to increase the red-line
- 10 situations where we can increase our red-line

How NOT to increase the Red-Line

badredline

As discussed in part 1 of the series, many players manage to achieve a positive/break-even red line through employing bad strategies. Here is how they do it:

1. Calling too much. Any losses through calling down too wide are not going to be reflected in the red line, the blue-line will take a hit however.

2. Bluffing with the best hand. Imagine a situation on the river where we know a huge chunk of our opponents range is busted draws and he loves to bluff. We are first to act OOP. If we bet, we will nearly always take the pot down and win what's in the middle, increasing our red-line. Assuming we check and let our opponent buff, we'll win what's in the middle plus an additional bet. In the second scenario the profits will be represented in our blue-line. We'd rather take the increase to our blue-line in this case since it results in a larger increase to our overall green-line.

3. Bluffing in bad spots. Bluffing in spots where our opponents range is very strong or simply trying to bluff opponents who rarely fold. We will lose money overall trying to do this, but since we are not folding ourselves, the losses are going to be represented in the blue-line. If we'd correctly check/folded our losses would have been represented in the red line, which is preferable since the losses will be significantly smaller in this case.

Each of these three pointers is a negative trait. In order to improve overall winrate it is necessary to first remove each of these problems from our game. The initial impact of such an adjustment is that our red-line will become worse than it was before. The improvement in our blue line should more than compensate however โ€“ this will then leave us free to improve our red-line using correct strategies.

How to Increase the Red-Line

One thing to keep in mind is that each of these situations can be double-edged. For example we might drastically increase our stealing frequency but then start to lose money in situations where we are getting 3bet. It's not always so black-and-white as โ€œdo X and then your red line will increaseโ€, but here are some of the factors that can have a significant affect on red-line when used correctly.

improveredline

Stealing โ€“ Many players are not defending as often as they should be vs raises in late-position and we can capitalise on this by opening wider than is theoretically optimal. The catch is, not to spew postflop when we open-raise 82o and get called, since this can totally negate any additional profits we make with our aggressive steals.

3Betting โ€“ This is similar to stealing. There is a pretty reasonable correlation between how often someone 3bets and how high their red-line is. The wider we 3bet the more postflop skill is required โ€“ so there is a limit. We don't want to increase our red-line and end up donating a ton of money with our blue-line. Preflop aggression when used correctly is a great way to increase red-line earnings.

Cbetting โ€“ Many players are not defending as much as they should vs cbets which we can exploit. A cbet of 2/3rds pot needs to work around 40% of the time in order to show an instant profit. If players are folding too much to cbets we can exploit this by cbetting wider than is theoreticaly optimal. We should use this in conjunction with other strategies. For example 3betting wide in itself may not do that much for our red line, but follow it up with the appropriate amount of cbets and doube/triple barrels then we really start to print red-line dollars.

Blinds defence โ€“ It doesn't take a lot of work with tracking software to determine that the vast majority of our red-line losses come from the blinds. The way we counter-act this is to defend more frequently. For many years it was considered correct to defend tight from the blinds. The best players now understand that is necessary to defend aggressively from these positions at the table. Doing so correct can have a huge impact on red-line.

Flop check-raise โ€“
This specifically should be used in conjunction with defending the blinds more aggressively. It would be a mistake simply to call more hands in the blinds and then play a passive fit-or-fold strategy. Since we now have a wider range to defend in the blinds it's necessary to check-raise the flop very aggressively especially in late position battles where the range of the opener is also wide.

Floating โ€“ Another trick that can be used after defending the blinds aggressively. This will usually be used on dry textures whereas we can tend towards x/r the drawy textures. After we call the flop it's generally with the intention of donking turn or going for a delayed bet on the river.

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2 or 3 barreling โ€“ This is especially effective when we can identify that our opponent's range is capped. For example we x/r them in a spot where we expect them to 3bet their sets nearly always because the texture is drawy. On blank runouts we can play very aggressively since we know they likely just have weak-pairs and draws.

Orphan pots โ€“ Those pots that just get checked down and no-one really seems that interested. Making small bets on the river and picking this up will increase our red-line in the long-term.

Multi-way Aggression โ€“ Players have a tendency to play very straight-fowardly in multi-way pots. For this reason they can be excellent pots to bluff at. We also represent a stronger range when betting multi-way. One aspect missing from many players game is mixing in multi-way donk-bets. Leading at multi-way pots is very frequently more effective than hoping the original raiser decides to cbet.

Playing vs missed cbet IP/OOP โ€“ One of the most profitable situations when cold-calling preflop IP is when the original raiser checks and we are in position. Many players do not defend frequently enough when they check as the pre-flop-raiser. We can exploit this by betting frequently and making auto-profit.

One of the most profitable situations when defending from the blinds OOP vs an open is when the raiser checks back rather than cbet. Good players can define opponents range clearly in these situations and know whether2barreling, betting-once, or overbetting is the strongest option. Overbets are completely missing from most players games in this situation and can be a great source of red-line profit.

Author

w34z3l

I am of British nationality and go by the online alias w34z3l. I am considered one of the top consultants in the field for technical analysis (i.e. database work) and application of game theory concepts to various card games. I make a ... Read More

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