Sign Up For Card Player's Newsletter And Free Bi-Monthly Online Magazine

BEST DAILY FANTASY SPORTS BONUSES

Poker Training

Newsletter and Magazine

Sign Up

Find Your Local

Card Room

 
Thumb_piper_cropped_2

Pot-Limit Omaha Continuation Betting Part II

by Michael Piper |  Published: Dec 19, '10

Print-icon
 

As discussed in the first part of this piece, a good c-betting strategy involves tailoring your sizing and frequency according to your opponent’s tendencies, your own image, and board texture. To refine your strategy, let’s look at each individual factor in more detail and see how it should affect your thinking.

For now, let’s forget playing against call-stations. They’re very profitable to have at your table, and for the most part, easy to play – but you won’t learn much. Instead, we’ll focus on the regulars. Some regs will seem to outplay you whatever you do, but they are few and far between. Especially online, most regs love to ‘float’ – call with a weak hand with the intention of bluffing later on in the hand – particularly if you c-bet too often. Once you identify your opponent as a floater, you need to make two adjustments. Firstly, tighten up, both pre and post-flop. Until your opponent catches on, he will be calling your c-bets with awful equity against your range, and attempting to bluff you on turns and rivers where your range is much stronger than he thinks.

Secondly, think about backdoor equity. You might have no pair on the flop, but with two backdoor flush draws and more key wrap turns, a c-bet will be profitable against a chronic floater – you can now semibluff the turn a lot of the time or check-raise when he bets. With no backdoor draws or pairs, against an opponent who doesn’t like to give up, you generally have an easy check-to-fold.

Against someone who c-bets the flop and gives up on the turn very often, floating in position with a wide range will be very profitable. The natural results of above adjustments is that you will c-bet the flop with a lower frequency, but follow it up on the turn – floating wide against such a strategy now becomes a heavily losing play. Your image – whether your opponents think you c-bet too often and give up, or rarely – should play a large part in your decision-making process, so be aware of how your opponents perceive you.

In general, be more aggressive out of position – in position, you can think about taking lines that control the pot size, especially against tricky, aggressive opponents who check-raise often as well as float. As part of your balanced strategy, consider your turn and river plans after you check. Will you call down on turns and rivers that don’t improve your weak showdown hand?

When sizing your c-bets, don’t just think about frequency and the strength of your hand; look at remaining stacks. A bet that uses ‘leverage’ – the threat of being able to go all-in on the turn, or expecting to pay more to see the river – is more powerful than one that allows your opponent to expect to see the river cheaply as well. If your plan is to bet most turns, give yourself room to manoeuvre.

So now we have a solid, functional c-betting strategy, let’s examine some hands:

Game: 6-max PLO
Blinds: $5-10

Stacks:
UTG: $2,340
HJ: $855
CO (you): $2,120
BTN: $3,330
SB: $990
BB: $1,035

Your hand: AHeart Suit 8Spade Suit 7Spade Suit 5Heart Suit

Action: two folds, you open to $30, SB calls, BB folds.

Pot: $70

Flop: KHeart Suit 7Diamond Suit 4Diamond Suit

SB is a casual player, bad at hand-reading, and loose-passive, but does take the occasional stab. He checks. Check or bet, and how much?

Bet. He can call with flush draws, fold better pairs that have no draws, and if you are behind, your ace, 7, and backdoor flush draw are all probably live, not to mention your gutshot. As your opponent is loose-passive, he is unlikely to raise without a great hand; you might even have the best hand, in which case you’re protecting yourself from being outdrawn on the turn, and from his occasional turn bluff. You need not have a plan for the turn, but there is some value in deciding which diamonds, if any, you will barrel. $40 is a good size to bet, as it does not inflate the pot massively, and gives you a good price to hit your equity; also, there aren’t many hands he will call for $40 but fold for $70 – if you had a value hand, such as a set, two pairs, or a combo draw, you would bet bigger, exploiting his lack of hand-reading ability.

Game: 9-max PLO
Blinds: $10-20

Stacks:

UTG: $1,970
UTG+1: $970
UTG+2: $8,770
HJ: $3,530
CO: $6,620
BTN (you): $12,240
SB: $1,980
BB: $2,275

Your hand: JDiamond Suit TDiamond Suit 9Spade Suit 7Spade Suit

Action: two folds, UTG+2 opens to $70, HJ calls, CO folds. You 3-bet squeeze to $300, folds to UTG+2 who calls, as does CO.

Pot: $930

Flop: QHeart Suit 9Heart Suit 6Spade Suit

Both your opponents are regularss, reasonably aggressive, and they check to you. Check or bet, and how much?

Easy check. You will get check-raised very often on this board, as there are a lot of made hands and big draws in your opponents ranges; you suspect one or both of your opponents may check-raise with hands as weak as bottom pair and a flush draw, as you’re representing high pairs by 3betting preflop. Checking allows you to see a free turn, preserving your direct six outs to make the nuts, two outs to make trips, lots of two pair outs, and your backdoor flush draw. By checking, you also balance nicely – your c-bets will get more respect in future spots.

Michael Piper has been playing PLO for a living both online and live for five years. He posts online under the screenname “wazz".
 
Any views or opinions expressed in this blog are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of the ownership or management of CardPlayer.com.
 
Newsletterbanner Twitterbanner Fbbanner
 

Most Viewed Blogs
 

1 Five Star Poker