Bluff Catching on the River – How Thin Should We Go?

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Upendra Nath

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Hey CardsChat crew,

One area I’ve been trying to sharpen lately is river bluff catching. We all know folding too much makes us exploitable, but calling too light can torch a stack. Finding that balance seems like one of the hardest skills in poker.

Here’s a recent example:

$1/$2 cash game, 6-max.
I’m on the button with K♣ Q♠, $280 effective.
CO opens to $7, I flat.
Flop: Q♥ 7♣ 4♦ – CO bets $10, I call.
Turn: 2♠ – check/check.
River: A♦ – CO fires $35 into $36.

Now, top pair turned into a marginal bluff-catcher. Villain can absolutely have value (AQ, sets, maybe even AA slowplayed), but that ace is also a card they love to bluff.

I ended up calling and villain showed J♠ T♠ for a busted straight draw.

This hand worked out, but here’s my question for discussion:
👉 How do you decide when to make these thin river calls versus letting it go?
Do you rely more on:

  • Population reads (e.g., most low-stakes players under-bluff this spot),
  • Bet sizing (polarized vs block bet),
  • Player history, or
  • Your own blockers (like holding K♣ Q♠ removing some bluffs)?
Would love to hear how you all calibrate your river defense ranges.
 
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skkz1997

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A point of attention for making good calls with a bluffcatcher is to pay attention to the missed draws with a bet on a non-continuous line.
 
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fundiver199

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Do you rely more on:
  • Population reads (e.g., most low-stakes players under-bluff this spot),
  • Bet sizing (polarized vs block bet),
  • Player history, or
  • Your own blockers (like holding K♣ Q♠ removing some bluffs)?
Well pretty much all of that and also, if the story makes sense, and if there are hands in the opponents range, that can not win at showdown and might therefore potentially bluff. Here the opponent is essentially saying, he rivered top pair, and that can absolutely be true, since a lot of AX might play like this until the river. However the question is, if top pair would bet almost pot, because if that is not the case, then he is not really representing anything at all. Like maybe A7s or A4s, but thats pretty much it.

And since he has not faced any pressure, he can have a lot of different hands, that lack showdown value, including the one he actually had. Which by the way was not a busted draw but just some random J high, that tried to take it down with a C-bet on the flop, and gave up on the turn. But then decided to go for it, when you showed weakness by checking back the turn, and the perfect bluffing card then appeared on the river.

So as played I think, you made the correct decision by calling on the river. But personally I would have bet the turn for value when checked to. We are going to float quite a bit on the flop in position and then stab when checked to, and to balance that out we should also bet, when we have something strong like top pair second kicker. In the context of a single raised pot CO vs. BTN this is a quite strong hand, that is good enough for 3 streets of value.
 
Brigistul

Brigistul

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Deci, așa cum a fost jucat, cred că ai făcut corect.
I would have tried a raise! have you already played some money up to the Turn and he is trying to bluff or does he even have an Ace? Try to see if he has an ace. You make Raise. If it has As x maybe a small kicker does not call or fold you and you have a 66% chance of winning without reaching the showdown... You checked the turn! Why? raise is played there to see if it answers and raise 80% of the pot! If you call then River may have an Ace or a pair or even a set!
 
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