by Aisthesis » Wed Jul 27, 2005 9:59 am
First, as to what it is. Harrington says it is "where you were not the leader." I'm interpreting this as not the raiser. Hence, it only has to do with raised pots, where I'm not around with QJ anyway.
For me personally, I'm really only making weak bets like that in raised pots and then only sometimes. I think it would be a very bad move with QJ (or AQ for that matter) on a QXX flop if we're talking about a paired X.
I really think this is a move to make very rarely and, at least without "other circumstances," only on monsters.
For the moment, I'm making it only with sets (at least that's all I can think of--or I guess something like a 772 flop where you have 76s) in raised pots, and then only against loose raisers. If there's a strong chance they have an overpair, I think it's better to bet full pot into them, since it forces them to raise and you can stack them more easily with the bigger bet.
Once you've established that pattern, I think it can be used with weak hands (weak continuation bet on AK, for example). But for initial use, a bet like that just cries out for a raise, which is presumably what you're going to get if anyone has any semblance of a hand.
Harrington actually uses it as well with something like 88, as I recall, on a board of J52--basically testing for unimproved AK. Well, if it's me, I'm PROBABLY going to just go ahead and make a continuation raise on that board with my unimproved AK (no reason why I shouldn't have JJ-AA there). But it would slow me down a lot if I'd seen my opponent making that bet on sets.
In any case, as I am understanding him, it does only apply to raised pots. And one does have to bear in mind that the book is a tournament book. The early play I think does also apply to cash games for the most part, but there are still some differences.