Continuation bets

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Slippery69

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Continuation bets.
Why do a continuation bet ?
When is the best time to do a continuation bet ?
What table position should you be in to do a continuation bet.
When the flop comes and it's of no interest to you do you still do a continuation bet ???
TIA.
 
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fundiver199

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Welcome to the forum. I recommend watching this video, which is part of our free 30 day course. It basically answer all your questions with several hand examples.

 
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hajaehyun

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I think c betting is trying to recognize the opponent's hand and assert that one's hand is strong
 
Marshmalo1994

Marshmalo1994

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Continuation bets.
Why do a continuation bet ?
When is the best time to do a continuation bet ?
What table position should you be in to do a continuation bet.
When the flop comes and it's of no interest to you do you still do a continuation bet ???
TIA.
There's a lot of different situations, and it may be a little bit complex, but to me, first basic step to understand it is:
-bet if you have some value, if you have good equity, or if there's not a very coordinated flop that may be helping the villain.
Also, if there's more players involved, the cbet may be less effective if you are trying everyone fold.
 
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drogus

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> Why do a continuation bet ?

Continuation bets are a standard practice because, statistically, your opponent would have to defend way too often if they wanted to call all your continuation bets. Let's consider a continuation bet size of 25% of the pot with zero equity (like, 72o on a board AT3 rainbow). Your pot odds are then 0.25/1.25 = 0.2, so you have to succeed in bluffing only 20% of the time in order to be profitable. So even if you don't connect, it might be still profitable to continuation bet.

> When is the best time to do a continuation bet ?

That's probably the hardest part to figure out. When deciding whether to c-bet you have to mainly consider three things: how does your range stacks up against your opponent, how strong is your made hand, what position are you in, and whether the flop connects well with your range. Typically a preflop first to raise will have range advantage, especially when called by later positions (like UTG vs BTN or UTG vs BB), which is why the pre-flop aggressor will c-bet more often. That said, when the range difference is not that big (like UTG+1 calling UTG raise), the player in position should c-bet more frequently. Then, you need to consider how strong is your hand. With premium hands and draws you can pretty much c-bet your entire range. With marginal hands and junk it depends on your range. If your range is stronger, c-bet more often. If your range is weaker, c-bet less frequently.

> What table position should you be in to do a continuation bet.

Your position alone does not matter. What matters is what is your position in relation to your opponent.

> When the flop comes and it's of no interest to you do you still do a continuation bet ???

I covered it in the earlier response, but to summarize: if your hand hasn't connected with the flop at all you should bet if you either have range advantage or position.
 
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