Omaha Hi Lo is a fun and potentially profitable poker
variation.
We discuss check raising strategy in more detail in our post over on unfeltedpoker.com. Tip 10: Develop A Good 3betting Strategy. Whilst 3 betting aggressively is a strategy many players employ, especially in online poker circles, failure to apply optimal 3 betting strategies has certainly led to a lot of spewy poker. Following a very popular run in PokerStars live events the 'Win the Button' format is coming to the online MTT schedule from today. The format is a hit in live events The format is simply that the player who wins the pot will be awarded with the Dealer Button for the next hand. If you are good, and you win that $240 even 7% of the time, you win $16.80, turning a $15 loss into a $1.80 win. Total EV for semi-bluff = – $15 Value bet that wins 7% of the time: 7% of $240. A lot of Texas Hold 'Em strategy is based on the cards in your hand. You must be willing to suffer through a series of poor hands (e.g. 5-8, 2-6, 4-9) without getting impatient. You must be willing to suffer through a series of poor hands (e.g. 5-8, 2-6, 4-9) without getting impatient.
It offers a nice change of pace for Texas holdem players and
when you learn the best way to play can be more profitable.
This page includes sections on how to play and strategy. If
you’re sure you already know how to play you can skip to the
strategy section, but if you have any questions at all about the
exact rules it’ll only take a couple minutes to read through the
how to play section.
Did you know you have to use exactly two of your hole cards
and exactly three of the board cards to form a hand? In Texas
holdem you can use any number of hole cards and up to and
including five community cards.
If you didn’t know the difference read the rules section
before moving on.
One player is designated as the dealer position, usually
shown with a white button with the word dealer on it. The player
to the immediate left of the dealer position is the small blind
and the player to the immediate left of the small blind is the
big blind.
The dealer button is passed one player to the left after each
hand is completed.
The big blind places a forced wager set by the table limits
and the small blind places a bet usually half the size of the
big blind. In limit games the small blind is half the big blind,
but in pot limit and no limit games it can be different.
In a 10 / 20 limit game, the big blind is 10 and the small
blind is 5.
Starting with the player in the small blind, each player
receives four cards face down, dealt one at a time to the left
around the table.
After each player receives four hole cards the player to the
left of the big blind may choose from one of the following
options.
Play moves to the next player to the left who either folds,
calls the largest previous wager, or raises. After each player
has the opportunity to act the play moves on to the left. When
play reaches the small blind she either calls the remaining part
of the largest bet above her blind amount, folds or raises. Then
the big blind can check if the hand hasn’t been raised, fold if
the hand has been raised, call a raise, or raise.
Play continues to the left until every player has folded or
called the highest wager.
The next step is the three card flop. The flop is the
beginning of the community card area.
Community cards are used by all the players remaining in the
hand to form a five card high hand and a five card low hand when
possible.
After the three cards on the flop are turned face up the
first player to the left of the dealer button remaining in the
hand is the first to act. This player has the following two
options.
Play continues to the left with each remaining player having
the option to check if a bet hasn’t been made, or to call a bet,
fold, or raise.
Play continues to the left until each player remaining in the
hand has called the highest bet amount.
The fourth community card, called the turn, is then dealt and
another betting round structured the same way as the one after
the flop is conducted.
In a limit game all bets are a set amount. Using the same 10
/ 20 example from above, all bets before and on the flop would
be 10. All bets on the turn and river are 20.
After betting is completed on the turn the fifth and final
community card, called the river, is dealt face up. A final
betting round, identical to the one following the turn, is
conducted. After this round of betting the remaining players
show their cards and the winner or winners are paid from the
pot.
Each player must use exactly two cards from her hand and
three of the community cards to form their best five card high
hand and best five card low hand if a low is possible. You don’t
have to use the same two cards to form a high and low hand.
Here are a couple of examples.
Your Hand:
.Community Cards:
You’d use your
and
with the
and
to form a low and your
and
with the
and
for a high hand.
Your Hand:
Community Cards:
On this occasion you’d use your
and
with the
and
for both your high and low hand.
The only time a low hand is possible is when at least three
unpaired cards eight and below are on the board.
The biggest mistake Omaha Hi Lo players make is
forgetting they have to use exactly two hole cards and three
board cards to form a hand.
If no low hand is possible the entire pot is awarded to the
player with the best high hand. If two or more players tie for
the best high hand they split the pot.
When a low hand qualifies, the pot is split between the best
high hand and the best low hand. If more than one person ties
for the best high or best low hand the half of the pot that is
tied is split between the players who tied.
Most players don’t struggle much when it comes to determining
their best high hand, but figuring out the best low hand can be
tricky until you get used to how to read the board.
The easiest way to read low hands and figure out which hand
is lowest is to take each players five lowest unpaired cards and
read them backwards like a number.
Here’s an example.
Once you get used to reading low hands it’s pretty easy, but
don’t hesitate to ask the dealer to wait at the end of a hand
until you clearly see the value of each hand.
The two most popular variations of Omaha Hi Lo are limit and
pot limit. It can be played for no limit stakes, but most online
poker rooms only offer pot limit and limit.
Even the few that have no limit capabilities rarely have
players at the tables.
If player interest is high enough most land based poker rooms
will spread a no limit Omaha Hi Lo game, but you’re more likely
to find a pot limit game.
Though most dealers don’t have any problems with pot limit
games, it’s more difficult than no limit games and it can be
slower. Poker rooms don’t like anything that slows down the
games because the fewer hands per hour they run the lower the
rake they make from each table.
Most poker players started playing Texas holdem. In holdem,
you receive a two card starting hand so at the beginning of the
first round of betting you don’t know where any of the other 50
cards are located.
As players make bets, calls, and raises you can get an idea
of a range of starting hands they may hold. When the flop is
dealt you know the value of the two cards in your hand and the
three cards on the flop, for a total of 5 known cards and 47
unknown cards.
You know one more card value on the turn and another on the
river. After the river card is dealt you know the value of 7
cards and you don’t know the value of 45 cards.
In Omaha Hi Lo you know the value of two more cards on each
round of betting. While this may not seem like much, it’s
actually a considerable advantage.
Here’s a chart comparing the percentage of known cards at
each level of a hand in Texas holdem and Omaha.
Texas Holdem | Omaha Hi Lo | |
---|---|---|
Before the flop | 3.8% | 7.7% |
After the flop | 9.6% | 13.5% |
After the turn | 11.5% | 15.4% |
After the river | 13.5% | 15.4% |
Notice that in Omaha you have twice as much information
before the flop as you do in Texas holdem and after the river
you know almost 5% more. These higher percentages make Omaha Hi
Lo a more predictable and mathematical straight forward game.
Smart players use this extra information to make better
decisions and make more money than average players.
If you’re asking why this makes a difference, because
everyone has the same amount of information, you need to
consider this a different way.
Everyone has access to the same amount of information, but
most players don’t know what to do with the information.
Because you have more information by knowing a higher
percentage of card values than in holdem, you can determine the
mathematically correct play more often playing Omaha Hi Lo.
The same basic strategies used in most forms of poker are the
ones you should use while playing Omaha Hi Lo.
The Omaha Hi Lo specific strategies that you need to combine
with common poker tactics are covered in the sections below.
The most important thing to remember when deciding what to do
in Omaha Hi Lo is that you need to put yourself into position to
scoop pots. While you can make a little money winning half the
pot, the real money is in scooping and winning three quarters of
the pot.
You have two ways to scoop pots. You can win both the high
and low part of a split pot or have the best high hand in a pot
that doesn’t have a low possibility.
Every decision you make needs to be made with an eye on
scooping possibilities.
Of course most hands don’t play out in a way where you have a
choice, but if you had to pick having a best high hand or a best
low hand you want the best high hand. High hands are rarely
split while low hands are split often.
To give yourself the best chance to scoop a pot you need to
play high only hands and two way hands.
A high only hand has high pairs, face cards, large suited
cards, and other combinations that give you a strong chance to
have the nut high hand on a high only board.
Two way hands almost always have an ace in combination with
one or two low cards and one or two high cards. If the ace is
suited to one of the other cards it makes the hand stronger.
Examples of high only hands include:
Examples of two way hands include:
Most Omaha Hi Lo players enter any pot where they hold an ace
and a two, so low hands that don’t have an ace and two on the
board are often split between two or more players. In this case
the player with the best high hand gets half the pot and the two
players with the tied low hand each receive a quarter of the
pot.
Sometimes a player will tie for low and have the best high
hand, receiving three quarters of the pot.
You want to avoid only winning a quarter of the pot, called
being quartered, as often as possible. Unless a great deal of
money is in the pot from early in the hand from players who
don’t win part of the pot, it’s difficult to come out ahead in a
hand where you’ve been quartered.
If three players tie for the best low hand it’s even worse.
This is the main reason when you consider starting hands it’s
important to have some chance at a high hand when you have a
strong low starting hand. You need to win the high half of the
pot in combination with the low half, or part of the low half,
in order to turn a consistent profit in the long run.
Texas holdem players often see top pair top kicker hands hold
up and usually win with a flush, even if it’s only jack or ten
high or when the board pairs.
In Omaha Hi Lo you rarely win with hands like these.
While the nuts aren’t always required to win a hand, the
average value of winning hands is higher than in Texas holdem.
Anything below a set is unlikely to win a high hand.
Straights and flushes are closer to the average high hands and
if a full house is possible try not to bank on winning the
high half unless being the one with the full house.
A full house is only possible when the board pairs because
you have to use two hole cards to form a hand.
The rule of thumb is if you’re drawing you need to be drawing
to either the nuts or a strong enough hand that you’re a huge
favorite to win when you hit.
When the board is paired the nuts is four of a kind, but the
top possible full house is good enough to draw to if the pot is
offering the correct odds.
The next rule of thumb is never draw to a low that isn’t the
nut low. You end up getting quartered with low hands too often
to take the chance to draw to a second or third best low hand.
If you have a two way hand it can be profitable to draw to a
second or third best low, but only if the high half of your hand
is strong.
Drawing to a second best low and a second best high can be
marginally profitable in some games, but it can cost you a great
deal of money at times.
After the flop we had a set of kings and a draw to the second
best low with two other players in the pot. It was a limit Omaha
Hi Lo game and we bet and raised a few times before the turn.
The turn added a draw to a straight and bets continued being
made. The turn completed the low, so we had the second best low
and the second best high hand. The betting was capped on the
river and we ended up losing both sides of the pot.
We got stuck in the hand because by the time the river card
was dealt the pot held enough that in the long run we had to
stay in the hand. The only thing we could have done differently
was minimize our exposure early in the hand, but at the time we
had the best high and a draw to the second best low.
In other words, we lost a big pot but will play the hand the
same way in the future.
If the board had paired on the river instead of completing
the low we’d have scooped a big pot. The board will pair enough
times for the play to be profitable. We’ll also win either the
low or high enough times for the play to be profitable in the
game we was playing.
The secret is to know the best way to play a hand and then
play it that way no matter what the outcome. We lost a big hand
but won’t let that change how we play in the future.
Starting hands need to have four cards that work together in
some way.
Hands with three strong cards and an unrelated fourth card
can sometimes be played, but overall they’re much weaker than
cards with four cards that support each other.
The hands listed above in the scooping section are all good
starting hands. If you skipped that section go back to see
examples of strong high only hands and good two way hands.
The player entering the hand with the best Omaha 8 starting
hand is going to win more often than the players with the weaker
hand. This means that you need to start concentrating on playing
better hands than your opponents. The only way to do this is to
play fewer hands.
You need to play fewer hands than most Texas holdem players
play, not more. Just because you have twice as many starting
cards doesn’t mean you can play twice as many hands.
We’ve played in many pot limit games profitably while seeing
close to 15% of the flops. 20% is a good percentage to shoot for
in a full ring game, but at the lower levels you should be able
to play profitably as long as you stay at 25% or lower. As you
start facing better competition you’ll probably need to get
tighter unless your post flop play is very strong.
Some players can play more starting hands profitably, but as
you’re learning to play you’re not one of them. Until you get
really good at making the correct plays almost every time after
the flop you need to concentrate on entering pots with better
hands than your opponents.
Here are some examples of starting hands that work together.
You have three great cards to a low, two different high flush
possibilities and an ace and king for an outside shot at a high
straight. When you start playing you get excited when you see
starting hands like this but then half the time the flop doesn’t
help. It’s ok to get excited, but the hand still needs to
improve to win.
A double suited pair of aces with a 2 and a 3 is the best
possible starting hand in Omaha Hi Lo. But don’t get attached to
it after the flop. A flop with a high pair and nothing to help
you with four opponents is bad news.
This hand needs help to win in the form of a 2 on the board
for a low hand and / or a queen for a high set. It’s still a
nice two way hand and worth seeing the flop with, especially in
a heads up situation.
Here are some examples of starting hands that have a small
problem but can still be played from late position.
This hand doesn’t have a flush possibility but does offer a
chance at the nut low and has two high cards in the ace and
king. The 8 is almost worthless, but in a heads up hand it can
offer a small amount of counterfeit protection. The ace and king
will rarely combine for a winning high hand so this hand is one
of the weaker ace two hands. You can play most ace two hands in
most low limit games, but we’ve been in games where this hand
should be folded from early position or when facing a raise or
two.
The seven is worthless except it’s suited with the ace. If
the flop doesn’t have a two helping you on your way to a
possible nut low or at least two spades you probably need to get
out of the hand quickly. This hand should only be played from
late position in most games.
You don’t want to play the second set of hands from early
position unless you’re able to play a strong game after the flop
and get paid off when you hit. If you have any questions about
whether or not to play a hand you should fold.
If you’re an above average Texas holdem player you probably
understand how important position is when playing poker.
Position is not as important in Omaha as it is while playing
Texas holdem, but it’s still important.
The simple fact is if your opponents have to act before you
have to act you have more information than they do when you have
to make a decision.
Omaha is a game of information. The player with the most
information has the best chance to win in the long run.
When you consider your position at the table in every
decision you make your Omaha profits will start climbing.
Combining proper starting hands with positions awareness
creates the first steps in profitable Omaha Hi Lo play.
As a player trying to learn beginning strategy, you’ve
already learned about most of the important things to
concentrate on.
At the lower limits if you play 20% of your starting hands,
learn how important position is, and concentrate on finding
opportunities to scoop pots you can quickly become a break even
or winning player.
In most low limit games you can break even by just playing
fewer hands and playing straight forward poker. Much of the low
level competition is so bad that you just need to follow the
directions on this page and pay attention.
Track every hand you play and pay attention to the other
players. Know exactly how many flops you see and which opponents
have poor playing habits.
If you learn an opponent always calls down with second and
third best hands you know he’ll pay you off in scooping
situations. If you learn an opponent only plays ace two hands in
low pots from early position you’ll know to avoid second best
low hands when facing her.
You can find a million things about your opponents that are
helpful if you just start paying attention.
Intermediate Omaha Hi Lo play is when you’re able to break
even or start playing for a small profit. You understand
position, have a solid starting hand understanding, and can
recognize scoop situations and when you need to get out of a
hand most of the time.
At this point you’re starting to understand Omaha Hi Lo
better and feel like you can beat most of the games filled with
poor players.
We’ve listed four different areas intermediate players need
to understand to advance to the next level. They aren’t the only
intermediate strategy ideas in the world, but each of them is
important if you want to win in the long run.
One of the big turning points for most Omaha Hi Lo players is
when they realize how much it’s worth to know when to fold after
the flop instead of chasing long shots and second and third best
hands. In many pot limit games you can win a few big pots that
can make a session profitable even if you don’t win any small
pots.
Just because you have a pair of aces before the flop doesn’t
mean the pair of kings on the flop didn’t give your opponent a
set. The less money you put in the pot after a bad flop the more
you’ll have to play pots that have scoop possibilities later.
We almost included this in the beginning section, but almost
every beginner ignores advice about table selection so we’ve
included it here where we hope you’ll learn from it. Take a few
minutes to consider the competition at the table before you
start playing. If most of the players at the table are worse
players than you it’s bound to increase your chances to win.
We’d rather play with eight players who weren’t as good as us
than eight players who’re better than us. Even if it takes extra
time, find games that offer the best chance to win.
When you have a low hand and one of the low cards in your
hand lands on the board it’s called getting counterfeited.
Here’s an example.
You have and the board is so you have
the nut low. The turn is the so you still have a low but it’s no longer the nut low.
If you had a 5 instead of the jack it would have offered
counterfeit protection.
You don’t have to only play hands with counterfeit
protection, but if you get involved in a big pot with only a low
possibility you need protection. Beginning players don’t tend to
think ahead too far in the hand, but at this level you need to
start seeing things like this and planning for the possibility
of getting counterfeited.
Heads up hands are closer in value than in Texas holdem. In
holdem a pair of aces is dominant over a hand with a 9 and a 5.
The pair of aces will win a high percentage of the time.
In Omaha Hi Lo, the best hand isn’t nearly as dominant
against the weaker hands in heads up play. This is especially
true if the weaker hands have any possibility of low. Even a
hand with 5 and 8 or 6 and 7 can make a low if the opponents
hand doesn’t have a low possibility or gets counterfeited.
As three or more players enter most hands at low and medium
levels, you can’t play your poor hands, but you need to
understand the possibilities when hands get heads up.
If the hand gets heads up on the turn or river, your fourth
best low with your second best high is probably enough to call a
bet.
When poker players get to an advanced strategy stage the game
has gone beyond simple steps and discussions. In order to get to
an advanced level of Omaha Hi Lo play you have to move to a
state of mental awareness about the game and your opponents.
Advanced players enter every hand with a plan for every
possibility. You need to consider what you’re going to do if an
opponent raises and what you’ll do when you miss the flop, when
you hit the flop, or when you flop a good draw.
You want to get to a point where everything you do at the
Omaha Hi Lo table is because it’s the best play in the long run.
You won’t always know exactly what your opponent holds but
you’ll be able to narrow her possible holdings down to a few
possible hands.
Every decision has a most profitable or least costly way to
play. Some decisions lose money in the long run, so in these
situations you need to find the least costly way to play.
Here’s an example of a situation that loses money in the long
run.
Any time you’re in the small blind with a terrible hand
you’ll lose money no matter what you do over the long run. In
order to lose as little money as possible, the correct play is
to fold in the small blind with poor hands.
Amateur players look at the money in the small blind as a
commitment to the pot. They think it’s only a half bet to see
the flop and anything can happen on the flop, especially since
they have four cards instead of two.
As players advance beyond the beginning stage and start
learning more about the game they often still end up playing
hands from the small blind that cost them money in the long run.
They play hands that aren’t terrible, but because they have to
play the rest of the hand out of position are unprofitable
Once you understand that you should fold almost any hand from
the small blind that you would fold from early position you’ve
started moving into advanced play. The money you put in the pot
in the blinds is just a small fee required to have the
opportunity to scoop huge pots at other times. Once the money is
in the pot it’s no longer yours.
The same thought process is needed in the big blind. If an
opponent raises and you have a poor hand simply fold. Don’t
defend your blinds with weak hands unless you’re a top player
and know your opponents very well.
When you’re in the big blind and the pre flop play is checked
to you with a weak hand you’ll see the flop, but don’t invest
another dollar in the pot without a monster flop for you.
The blinds are just two examples of how your thought process
needs to be in order to play Omaha Hi Lo at an advanced level.
As you advance from the low limits to the medium limits your
opponents get a little better, but the game and correct
strategies are much the same.
But when you start playing at the highest limits the game
changes quite a bit.
Before going on, you should know that plenty of really good
players stay at the medium levels and make good money. You don’t
have to play at the highest levels to be a pro and be
profitable.
At the highest levels most pots are contested heads up or at
the most with three players seeing the flop. Almost all hands
are played with at least one raise pre flop.
Think about some of the ways this changes the game. When
you’re playing heads up the second best high and the second best
low will almost always win at least half the pot and will have a
good shot at a scoop.
It’s difficult to cover advanced Omaha Hi Lo strategy in
print because you either have enough experience to understand it
or you don’t.
The good news is if you’re a beginning or intermediate player
you can work toward advanced play. Concentrate on the other
things covered on this page including starting hand selection,
position; always trying to make the best possible play in every
situation, and develop a plan in your mind for every decision
and you’ll be well on your way toward winning play.
You can find entire books written about Omaha Hi Lo, but if
you start using everything you’ve learned on this page you
should be able to break even or start turning a small profit at
the lower levels. As you gain experience you’ll get better and
start being able to move up to higher levels.
If you’re an experienced tournament player, then you’re probably accustomed to the dynamics of attacking and defending blinds. Late in a tournament, the big blind usually represents a large percentage of anyone’s stack. If you can spot a player who folds his big blind liberally, then you’ve got a golden opportunity to accumulate chips with very little risk simply by raising whenever that player is in the big blind.
Conversely, you don’t want to get a reputation as someone who won’t defend his blinds, because then everyone will be trying to steal from you. Fighting back vigorously against attempts to steal your blinds is known as defending your blinds, and it’s something that tough players do to deter steal attempts and face less competition for their blinds.
A less understood but equally important concept is defending your button when stacks are deep. At this stage of a tournament, the blinds are relatively trivial, and profit comes primarily from playing in position, not from stealing blinds. This article will explain the importance of defending your button and provide some examples of how and why to do it.
The Importance of the Button
If you play or used to play online and use tracking software such as Poker Tracker or Hold ‘Em Manager, take a moment to look at your data by position. Your win rate should increase as your position improves, with a disproportionate amount of your profit coming from the button. Though this should be true regardless of stack sizes, the effect should be more dramatic if you filter for hands where everyone’s stack is large relative to the blinds. In my case, after filtering for hands where there are no antes and my stack size at the start of the hand is greater than 50 times the big blind, my win rate in the cutoff is 32 BB/100 (big blinds per 100 hands), whereas on the button it is 54 BB/100.
Imagine how much greater your win rate would be if you could play the button twice per orbit. This is essentially what happens if the player on your left folds almost always to your cutoff raises. You can take advantage of this by raising more hands from the cutoff and realizing the benefits of the best position at the table twice every orbit. For me, that would be the equivalent of increasing my win rate in the cutoff by 22 BB/100. Of course I’ll only be in that position once out of every nine hands, but that still increases my overall win rate by 2.5 BB/100, which is quite significant.
Poker is a zero-sum game, so those additional 22 BB/100 have to be coming from somewhere. Perhaps you guessed it: that’s mostly profit that could belong to the player on the button. If only he played his position more vigorously, he could do from the button whatever it is that I’m doing from the cutoff to win that additional 22 BB/100. By effectively yielding his button to me when he doesn’t have a premium hand, he is missing out on a lot of potential profit!
I look at the button as a gold mine that you have to share with eight other prospectors. When it’s your turn to reap the gold, you can’t let the others beat you to it. An aggressive player on your right who regularly raises the pot ahead of you needs to be discouraged with frequent calls and re-raises. After a while, he will either stop trying to steal your button or routinely lose money trying to play out of position against you. Either way, you win!
Three-Betting
When it comes to deterring a frequent raiser, nothing is more effective than aggressive three-betting. Although calling and playing in position can be profitable as well, it isn’t nearly as punishing since it enables your nettlesome opponent to see the flop with whatever junk he raised. By re-raising your button against a wide opening range, you force your opponent either to fold immediately and give away all of his equity in the pot or put more money into the pot from out of position.
It’s important to realize that if your opponent chooses to call your re-raise, this is not a particularly bad outcome for you, even if you were bluffing. He is still faced with the prospect of playing out of position against you on three streets, and even if you don’t actually have a big hand, you can represent one, meaning that you should have a lot of good bluffing opportunities.
Consequently, your three-bet does not need to be so large that it forces your opponent to fold all but his strongest hands. Something like two and a half times the original raise is sufficient to put pressure on an aggressive opener without risking too much of your own stack or compromising your ability to maneuver and use your position post-flop. Risking fewer chips will enable you to three-bet more often and with weaker hands, which is a great tool to have at your disposal.
Because you are offering your opponent enticing odds, you should three-bet with hands like suited connectors that have the potential to make both strong hands and strong draws, for semi-bluffing, if called. You can also re-raise hands that are well ahead of the opener’s range but easy to draw out on, such as A-J offsuit and 2-2. Think of this as a thin value bet.
Of course you’ll make this same re-raise with legitimately strong hands such as A-K and A-A as well. In fact, you’ll find that aggressively re-raising your button will help to get you more action when you re-raise really big hands, as long as you play them the same way you would your bluffs.
Calling
Although three-betting is generally a superior option for defending your button, there are times when calling is better. Some hands are simply undesirable for three-betting. Medium pairs like 7-7 are a good example. Re-raising generally causes your opponent to fold hands that you dominate and call with pairs that dominate you or with two overcards that are essentially a coin flip against you. Worst of all, they open you up to a four-bet from hands like A-A that just might lose a big pot to you if you flop a set. Unlike smaller pairs, medium pairs are resilient enough to sometimes call a bet or two post-flop when you know your opponent’s range is wide, so I generally prefer calling to three-betting with them.
Broadway hands like K-J and A-T, especially when suited, also tend to play better in single-raised pots. They are too good to fold to a player with a wide opening range, which probably includes lots of hands you dominate such as K-T, Q-J, J-T suited, etcetera. Unless the original raiser is very loose, he will presumably fold most of the hands you dominate to a re-raise but continue with hands that dominate you. Rather than manipulate his range in this way, it’s generally better just to call the raise and leave open the possibility of flopping top pair with a better kicker, which is of course a very profitable situation.
One possible drawback of just calling your button against a late position raise is that it may entice a player in the blinds to re-raise you both on a squeeze play. If you believe one or both of the players in the blinds is capable of such a play, you should call slightly less often with your weaker hands but occasionally flat call with really big hands like A-A and A-Ks in the hopes of inducing such a move.
Conclusion
Whether you re-raise or call, the important thing is not to fold when you have the benefits of a good hand and superior position. Even if you aren’t confident you’re a better player than the original opener, you should be willing to get involved rather than yield your button without a fight. It’s a valuable piece of real estate, and you need to play it – and protect it – accordingly. ♠
Andrew Brokos is a professional poker player, writer and coach. He’s a member of Poker Stars Team Online and blogs about poker strategy on ThinkingPoker.net. Andrew is also interested in education reform and founded an after-school debate program for urban youth.