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本帖最后由 estelle0807 于 2013-11-1 00:57 编辑
youngtercel 发表于 2013-10-31 21:24
easy game也专门把这种情况拿出来说,认为3bet锅翻出Q high会极大损伤AK的价值
原文对这个问题只是顺带一提,但是却提得十分笃定,跟宣布结论一样。所以我才疑惑:难道这是个Common sense?
如下:
One of the most common misunderstandings of hand categorization comes when a player raises AK on the button and is 3-bet from the blinds by a good regular. The inclination is to push our hand into the premium value category and raise. This is almost certainly the correct play if we think he’s capable of continuing with worse hands after a 4-bet (5-bet shoving AQ, for example, or spazzing out and shoving a random bluff). However, if he’s not, AK actually usually rests in the top of our medium value range. It becomes a great time to call. Then, on almost any A or K high flop, our hand becomes premium and we can raise for value. Or, on any low flop, our hand finds itself often in the medium value category and we can call. One of the reasons that AK still has medium value, even when it misses the flop, is the value of its equity. Not only would turning an A or K almost certainly be enough to win the pot, but against an aggressive opponent, a turned A or K almost always earns us another big bet. Whether our opponent holds a hand like AJ and is value-owning himself, or whether he holds a hand like QJ and is bluffing it off, turning an A or K is incredibly profitable. This keeps us high in the medium value category even when we completely miss the flop. In 3-bet pots, the only types of flops where AK isn’t in either the medium or high value categories are usually Queen-high. The Q often reduces our equity just enough to put us into the low value category.
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