Well said - thank you.Think about their pre-flop range, then look at possible hands that will go and do the actions that they do on the flop. Also HUD stats come in handy here.
If someone has a 71% VPIP and 100% Cbet range - call light
Playing against a NIT? Be careful of check raises, 4-bets and 3-bets (especially on lower stakes)
Statistically speaking, more than 60-70% of the hands gets decided before the showdown bro. 🤥Pay attention to what hands they are playing when their hands get shown down, that’s the most important thing you can do.
Agreed.. I had the possibility to check HUD on the platform I used to pay before, there it was VPIP rating that shows how tight or the loose player is. Unfortunately due to recent ban on cash games in india, I was forced to switch WPT which does not HUD.The % of the hands played is more easy to follow so if you played 58 total hands and he played 50% it's hard to believe that he is not a loose player. That means he plays all one big card, 2 colors any 2draws and so on..
So when it does get shown down it becomes a gold mine of information which was my point.Statistically speaking, more than 60-70% of the hands gets decided before the showdown bro. 🤥
Gotchu bro… I understand what you said and I agree.So when it does get shown down it becomes a gold mine of information which was my point.
Thanks for your valuable points and you are the second person recommending the 30 day course on Cardschat and I am sure I will complete the course soon. Once again, thank you.Assigning a range to the opponent is a process you get better at over time. Partly as you gain experience (at constructing ranges), but also partly as you learn more information about those specific opponent(s). The cardschat 30 day course (it's free!) shares how to put someone on a range and much more:
https://www.cardschat.com/forum/learning-poker-57/cardschat-30-day-poker-training-course-455641/
The gist of what you do is make an educated guess at your opponent's likely hand combinations based on what position at the table they are in (they'll play more hands in the blinds as well as on the BTN, but play less hands in earlier positions like UTG). Then you'll narrow down the likely options based on how they played the hand. Once you learn what they actually have, then you recalibrate for future hands based on how they played that one.