Real Money Casinos
Fastest Payout Casinos
Mobile Casino Apps
New Online Casinos
Casino Payment Methods
Sweepstakes
Sweepstakes apps
No deposit bonus
Daily login bonus
Sweepstakes games
Crown Coins
Funrize
Hello Millions
High 5 Casino
Jackpota Casino
Mcluck
MegaBonanza
PlayFame
Pulsz
RealPrize
Stake.us
Sweepstakes coins
Awards
Search forums
Free Games
Free Blackjack
Free Online Roulette
Free Slots
US States
NJ Online Casinos
WV Online Casinos
PA Online Casinos
Michigan Online Casinos
Online Casino California
Online Casino Arizona
Online Casino NY
Bonuses
No Deposit Bonus
Crown Coins Promo Code
Funrize Primo Code
Hello Millions Promo Code
High 5 Casino Promo Code
Jackpota Promo Code
McLuck Promo Code
MegaBonanza Promo Code
Pulsz Promo Code
RealPrize Promo Code
Stake.us Promo Code
Games
Online Slots
Blackjack
Roulette
Poker
CardsChat Freerolls
How to Play Poker
Poker Hands
Poker Strategy
Free Online Poker Game
Poker Bonuses
Poker Tools
Poker Podcast
Poker School
Forum
News
Log in
Join
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
Log in
Register
Search
Install the app
Install
Forum
Poker Strategy
Learning Poker
Blind vs Blind Poker Strategy: Mastering the Most Awkward Spot at the Table
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
[QUOTE="CRStals, post: 7125066, member: 161937"] [B]CardsChat Learning Series | Part 1 of 6 – Position Play & Tournament Game Stages[/B] Mastering position in poker is key to long-term success — especially in tournaments. This six-part strategy series covers blind battles, bubble play, short-handed action, and final table dynamics. That’s exactly what this new CardsChat Learning Series is here to unpack — one strategic spot at a time. Over the next six installments, we’ll explore how position affects your decisions in bubble play, when to expand your range, how to tackle short-handed games, and how to close strong at the final table. To kick it off, we’re diving into a common — and commonly misplayed — situation: [B]blind vs blind.[/B] [HR][/HR] [B]Blind vs Blind: The Ultimate Standoff?[/B] The rest of the table folds. It’s just you and the other blind. It’s a small pot… but a big opportunity. The problem? This spot is weird. You’re either out of position with no information or trying to defend against someone who knows that. Let’s break it down by position, with the goal of giving you a clear game plan whether you’re first to act or last to speak. [HR][/HR] [B]Small Blind Strategy: When (and How) to Get Aggressive[/B] As the small blind, you’re out of position — but first to strike. When everyone else folds, this is your chance to pick up the pot. And yes — you should be playing a [B]very wide[/B] range here. [B]🗝️Core Concepts:[/B] [LIST] [*][B]Raise over 50%[/B] of hands — don’t get passive when you’re only facing one opponent [*][B]Polarized range[/B]: Raise with the [B]middle[/B] (e.g. K♥-8♦, 10♠-6♠), and mix limps and raises with [B]top and bottom[/B] of your range (e.g. A♠-A♥, 5♣-4♣) [*][B]Vary your raise sizes[/B] to disguise strength. Don’t always min-raise or always go 3x. [*][B]Fold the trash[/B]: offsuit, unconnected hands with low kickers (e.g. 9♣-3♠, 8♦-2♥) should hit the muck. [/LIST] [B]Why the Polarized Approach Works:[/B] If you raise [I]only[/I] strong hands, you’re predictable. If you raise [I]everything[/I], you get called by better. But if you raise the hands in the middle — the ones that benefit most from fold equity — you make life hard for the big blind. Mix in limps with premium hands occasionally to trap, or raise bottom-of-range hands to keep your overall profile unbalanced and harder to exploit. [B]Stack Depth Tips:[/B] [LIST] [*][B]Deep Stacked (40bb+)[/B]: You can be more creative with raise sizes, limps, traps, and post-flop pressure. [*][B]Mid Stacked (20–35bb)[/B]: Stick to strong open-raising ranges and avoid awkward hands that can’t continue to a 3-bet. [*][B]Short Stacked (<20bb)[/B]: Consider shove-or-fold strategy and reduce limps altogether. [/LIST] [HR][/HR] [B]Big Blind Defense: Why You Should Rarely Fold[/B] Now let’s flip the table. You’re in the big blind, and the small blind opens. Do you defend? [B]Most of the time — yes. Why You Should Defend Wide:[/B] [LIST] [*]You’ve already invested a blind [*]You’re [B]closing the action pre-flop[/B] [*]You have [B]position post-flop[/B], which is huge [*]Their opening range is extremely wide — often more than 50% of hands — which means even hands like 9♠-5♣ have value [/LIST] [B]So… Call or Raise?[/B] You can mix in calls and 3-bets depending on: [LIST] [*]Your hand strength [*]How often the small blind raises [*]Whether they fold to 3-bets [*]How deep your stack is [*]Their post-flop tendencies [/LIST] [B]Calling[/B] gives you the chance to play a small pot in position — great with speculative hands or when you’re not sure you’re ahead. [B]3-betting[/B] lets you take initiative and force them to fold their weakest opens — but if you do it too often, a smart small blind will 4-bet you light or trap. 🧠 [B]Pro Tip[/B]: Against aggressive small blinds, start 3-betting hands like A♣-5♠, 9♠-8♠, and K♥-10♥. Against tighter ones, defend more with calls and punish their lack of aggression post-flop. [HR][/HR] [B]Post-Flop Strategy: Where It Gets Tricky[/B] Here’s the truth: [B]you both miss the flop a lot[/B]. But who wins the pot often comes down to: [LIST] [*]Who has position [*]Who was the aggressor pre-flop [*]Whose range the flop hits harder [/LIST] [B]Small Blind Post-Flop Notes:[/B] [LIST] [*][B]Stay aggressive[/B] on high-card, coordinated boards (e.g. K♦-Q♠-10♣) [*][B]C-bet regularly[/B] if you raised pre and the flop fits your range [*]On [B]low, disconnected flops[/B] (e.g. 8♠-3♣-2♦), slow down — big blind may have connected [*]If you limp pre, be ready to [B]check-raise bluff[/B] against light stab bets [/LIST] [B]Big Blind Post-Flop Notes:[/B] [LIST] [*]If you [B]called pre-flop[/B], use your [B]position[/B] to gather info [*]Float with backdoor equity or over-cards and prepare to [B]steal later streets[/B] [*]If SB checks flop after raising pre, you can often bet small to take it down [*]Watch for [B]pattern changes[/B] — if a normally aggressive SB checks turn, they may have given up or are trapping [/LIST] [B]Example Flops:[/B] [LIST] [*][B]:ks4: :10d4: :5h4: --> favours the small blind's raising range[/B] [*][B]:7c4: :4s4: :2d4: --> hits the big blind's call range more often[/B] [*][B]:9s4: :9d4: :6c4: -->neutral, play the player here[/B] [/LIST] [HR][/HR] [B]Recap: Your Blind vs Blind Checklist[/B] [TABLE] [TR] [TH]Action[/TH] [TH]Small Blind[/TH] [TH]Big Blind[/TH] [/TR] [TR] [TD][B]Pre-Flop[/B][/TD] [TD]Raise 50%+, polarized range, mix sizes[/TD] [TD]Call wide, 3-bet selectively, defend ~80%+[/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD][B]Post-Flop[/B][/TD] [TD]Stay aggressive on strong boards[/TD] [TD]Float and bluff on low or neutral boards[/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD][B]Stack Sizes[/B][/TD] [TD]Adjust aggression and raise sizes accordingly[/TD] [TD]Be mindful of SPR (stack-to-pot ratio) when 3-betting[/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD][B]Overall Goal[/B][/TD] [TD]Put pressure on the BB and steal often[/TD] [TD]Leverage position to outmaneuver the SB[/TD] [/TR] [/TABLE] [HR][/HR] [B]💬 Community Question: How do YOU play blind vs blind?[/B] Are you the one applying pressure, or the one waiting for the trap? Drop a reply below and share your approach — or post a hand history where things got spicy, [B]OR [/B]a blind vs. blind hand that you want some feedback on. 🎯 Don’t forget — [B]turn on notifications[/B] and [B]subscribe to[/B] the [URL='https://www.cardschat.com/forum/learning-poker-57/cardschat-learning-poker-thread-series-guide-543900/'][B]CardsChat Learning Series[/B][/URL] to catch the next installment of this series: [B]Part 2 – Big Blind Defense [IMG width="672px" alt="e0fa4fe2a2e7a327cc9f36c6134dbc6e.png"]https://i.gyazo.com/e0fa4fe2a2e7a327cc9f36c6134dbc6e.png[/IMG][/B] [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Forum
Poker Strategy
Learning Poker
Blind vs Blind Poker Strategy: Mastering the Most Awkward Spot at the Table
Top