The bet before the flop is one of the most crucial moments in a poker
game. This is where players with hopeless hands, timid natures or lack of poker
skill get quickly separated from the true players in a given hand. The bet
before the flop often sets the tone for the entire hand.
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When to Call
There are two good reasons to call–you believe you have the best hand
and don’t want to scare off your victims or your hand has at least the basic
potential to be a winner and the bet is low enough to make it worth the
investment to see the next card. As a general rule, any pair of face cards is
good enough to warrant a call against just about anything except an all-in, and
a high pair of aces is good enough to call an all-in. Lower pairs and unmatched
high cards are trickier–you need to evaluate your competition and the amount of
the bet to see if it’s worth your while. Suited or sequential high cards
increase your odds of winning a bit and should be considered a little more
strongly for a call. If the only bet is the blind and you have a
proportionately large collection of chips, it’s perfectly acceptable to go
along for the ride with a lesser hand, too–there is luck involved in this game,
after all.
When to Raise
The raise is sometimes seen as an aggressive move, and it certainly can
be, but in some cases it is almost a public service, clearing out the
bystanders with bad cards who might get struck by pure dumb luck and win a hand
that should have gone to a more skilled player. The two times to do a raise are
when you think you have winning hand (or the framework for a winning hand) and
when you’re bluffing. Potential winning hands, again, are often high pairs or
suited and/or sequential high cards. Bluffing is a nice strategy that gets used
way too often. A bluff is most effective if you almost never do it, so you
truly catch your opponent off guard and make him believe you have a winning
hand. A bluff is generally more effective after the flop than before, because
before the flop, everyone knows the best hand you can possibly have is a high
pair.
How Much to Raise
If you are the first one to raise pre-flop, the standard is to bet three
times the big blind (BB). For more aggressive play, you can add one more
multiple of the big blind for each person who calls ahead of you. For instance,
if the BB is 200 and you’ve got one person ahead of you who calls, the normal
play for a good hand would be to raise to 600. If you want to be aggressive,
you could go to 800 (adding the 200 for the person who called ahead of you).
This is generally the right amount to drop the weakest hands but still keep a
few players in to give you a chance to make some money.
Overcoming the “All-in
Idiot”
Just about every online poker table will feature the one guy who goes
all-in before every flop. Once you recognize this tactic, your best bet is to
fold and let somebody else fleece the fool or lose to his dumb luck, unless you
have a high pair. With a high pair, you have a pretty good chance of doing the
fleecing, and you can benefit from this person’s reckless play.

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