depends on how the hand happened, but when betting river it's either value or bluff right? and you want to make it expensive to your opponent in both situations.In a cash game.....equal stacks....villain isolated preflop....he overbets the pot on the river.
Most times....
Is this value from a strong hand?
Or is it a bluff to steal the pot?
I understand your answer.All these things matter, and its really much better to share an actual hand history instead of asking such a generic question.
This is a legitimate analysis.whats your read onthe plyer themselves....are they given to bluffs...are they trying to scare you out of htepot...how many hand combinations are you beating.
Right.depends on how the hand happened, but when betting river it's either value or bluff right?
This analysis would help. But several times I have been bluffed on the river with my AA. The villain was hoping I would just fold. They would only call on every street in position looking to connect strongly with the board and then hoping I would fold to a pot-sized bet on the river.Good reading on position, range, the other guy's profile counts for you to decide how to act.
Actually what you really want to know is, if a spot is underbluffed or overbluffed. Obviously if an overbet is 80% value, its underbluffed. But again I dont think, you can make such general statements. In online micro and low stakes games river overbets are probably underbluffed in general. But in high stakes games and some live games they might be overbluffed. Ultimately when we are deciding about weather or not to call with a bluff catcher, the river bet sizing is only one piece of the puzzle. We also want to look at all the other pieces like, if the Villains story makes sense, if there are busted draws, if we have shown weakness, if we have relevant blockers and so on and so forth.Personally I am a fan of the 80/20 rule. 80% of the time the player is doing this for value - they think they have you beat and are looking for more chips. 20% of the time they are bluffing to steal the pot.
The theory of over betting on rivers is that it is more often value than bluffs but it is of course dependent on the Villain typeIn a cash game.....equal stacks....villain isolated preflop....he overbets the pot on the river.
Most times....
Is this value from a strong hand?
Or is it a bluff to steal the pot?
It's a polar range, either he has it all or nothing.
Most of them seem to have strong hands
Let the weak player think it’s a bluff to steal the pot, when in fact it’s a juicy value bet.
I think an over bet on the river is mostly a bluff.