by Aisthesis » Fri Jul 15, 2005 4:37 am
Droq, this is a pretty interesting situation that in one form or another comes up pretty often and has definitely got me thinking.
My real opinion on these river situations is that you need a lot of control over your opponent to make this bet. If you do have such control, then you can gain enormous EV by making it.
What you're obviously looking for is an opponent inclined to bluff the river on a busted draw. Then you want to give him every chance imaginable to make that bluff. That's the simple version of this read.
What you obviously DON'T want to run into are AQ or Q9 here. Against a player who likes to slowplay monsters basically, you never want to bet on such a hand. Similarly if he plays sets this way, although I view that as less likely here in all actuality. Admittedly, I can hardly imagine YOUR bets signifying some kind of straight, so a set could be hoping to nail you on the river there if he's really on top of you.
I guess I should still qualify the latter part a bit: Even if he is slowplaying, why on earth would he check to you yet again on the river? The only reasonable explanation would be if he thinks you'll bet it one more time.
I don't know, the more I think about this, the more I like your play here. I wouldn't do it against Stu Unger, but he's dead...
The only thing that would really worry me is letting people get some kind of read like "Bets the river consistently." But I'm assuming you don't do it on something like TPTK (?). Top 2 has a lot going for it for that kind of bet. The main thing is that you're not going to get side-swiped by someone who hit a kicker somewhere along the line (like: they call your flop bet with A6 when you have AQ, then hit their kicker, nonsense like that).
And, even against players who don't bluff the river like that, by betting you gain what one might call "curiosity equity." I do think that every pot you win uncontested gains you some value on the next pot you're in. Eventually, they just HAVE to find out what it is you're betting.
I may have to revise my river bet criteria to include top 2 pair--less gets rather risky, I think, but might also be doable if you have a lot of control over your opponent. The move is certainly MORE attractive against river bluffers and LESS attractive against tricky players. I have indeed seen some players I'd consider capable of playing sets or straights this way, but it's certainly pretty bizarre. Actually, the one player I'm really thinking of would probably just flat call your river bet with either of those winning hands--really more passive than tricky.