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Some players three-bet way too wide a range and some way too tight a range. Both extremes can be very ♣ exploitable and understanding the underlying reasons behind three-betting will help you do it much more effectively. There are essentially two ♣ types of three-bets: The Value 3-Bet The Light 3-Bet The Value Three-Bet The value three-bet is the “traditional” three-bet and is the same as ♣ any other value bet. You believe you have the best hand, and you’d like to get more money into the ♣ pot while you have the advantage. Which hands deserve to be value three-bet is up for discussion. It really depends ♣ on a variety of factors – the table dynamics, your table image, your opponent’s image/playing tendencies, etc. The key ingredient is ♣ that you have a hand that figures to be best against your opponent’s range. Against a standard tight-aggressive player your three-bet ♣ for value might be fairly tight – something like AA-JJ and A-K. If instead you’re up against a loose-aggressive player or ♣ a fish who you know likes to call reraises light, your range might be much wider – something like AA-99, ♣ AK-AQ. The problem with three-betting too tight a range is that you risk becoming predictable. If you play with the same ♣ opponents they’ll catch on that when you three-bet you have a monster hand. If they can accurately put you on four ♣ to five hands every time you re-raise they’ll be able to make perfect decisions against you. The “Light” Three-Bet The “light” three-bet ♣ is when you reraise a pre-flop raiser with a hand that does not rate as the best at the moment ♣ but that still has value for a variety of reasons. A light three-bet is a semi-bluff. Basically your first goal is ♣ to win the pot immediately. You would like your opponent to fold to your reraise. Thus, your ideal opponent to three-bet ♣ light is a player who is loose with their opening raises. You know that they raise light and thus you can ♣ reraise them light, because you know that for the most part they are going to have to fold. This will ♣ win you the pot without even seeing a flop. How 3-Betting Light Helps Your Image If you have the image of a ♣ super tight player, you’ll have a hard time getting paid off on your big hands. That’s because they know you’re ♣ tight and that if you’re coming out firing, you must have a hand. When you start three-betting light your image of ♣ being a nit will be thrown out the window. Let’s say you three-bet a guy with 8♠ 7♠ and end up ♣ showing down two pair. Now your opponents will start to look at you in an all-new light. They’ll be thinking, “Man, ♣ this guy isn’t a nit after all. He just three-bet me with eight-high. I am going to call that guy ♣ down more often. He’s clearly FOS.” Three-betting counters whatever tight image you might have established and allows you to play a ♣ more rounded game. If your opponents believe you’re full of it then you’re going to make thin value bets all ♣ day long until they readjust. How to Balance Your Range with 3-Bets Three-betting light is essential to making sure your re-raises are ♣ more balanced. If you only three-bet a tight range – say AA-QQ and A-K – your opponents know that when ♣ you three-bet you can only have one of four hands. Obviously, that’s not a balanced range. When your re-raising range is ♣ so narrow your opponents can always make the right decisions. When you add the light three-bet to your arsenal your opponent ♣ can’t be as certain what you hold. You could have Aces or you could have 4♠ 3♠. They’re left guessing. ♣ And when they’re left guessing you leave the door open for them to make mistakes. They’ll end up calling you when ♣ you have the goods and folding when you have nothing. What’s a Good Hand to Three-Bet Light With? There is no one ♣ “good hand” for three-betting but there are certain types of hands better than others. When you understand that the light ♣ three-bet is basically a semi-bluff it makes it easy to determine which is which. Your goal is to win the hand ♣ without showdown but obviously that isn’t always going to work. So when you’re called you want to have a hand ♣ that can play poker on the flop. Suited connectors are great light three-bet hands because those times you do get called ♣ you can flop a strong draw and potentially stack a guy. This just isn’t going to happen if you’re three-betting ♣ T♥ 4♣. Another way to look at it: The best hands to three-bet light with are at the very top of ♣ your folding range. Say, for example, that a good player in the cut-off raises and the worst possible hand you ♣ could profitably call with is A9o. Your best possible three-bet light hand would then be A8o. But if I can’t call ♣ with A8o, why can I three-bet with it? Your Goal is to Make Your Opponent Fold It’s different because when you call ♣ with it you’re playing post-flop poker. You either have to hit and somehow extract money from a worse hand or ♣ you have to make him fold after the flop. When you 3-bet instead your goal is to make your aggressive opponent ♣ fold. But if he doesn’t you still have your hand strength to fall back on. Which is why we choose ♣ the very top of our folding range to three-bet. It’s our back-up plan. If we think about our opponent’s likely calling ♣ range it makes perfect sense. Our opponent is going to four-bet AK and AA-JJ and he’s going to call with ♣ AQ and some smaller pocket pairs. Everything else he’ll fold. When we three-bet the best portion of the range we would ♣ normally fold we have that back-up. If our opponent is going to call with TT we can still flop an ♣ ace and win. If we choose to three-bet a hand like 56o we’d have to hit both our cards to ♣ beat TT. So we pick the hand with the best possible equity should we be called. How often does our opponent ♣ have to fold to make our three-bet profitable? If your re-raise is 3x the original raise your opponent only needs ♣ to fold 66% of the time to make your re-raise profitable. That means instantly profitable with no more streets. If your ♣ opponent folds to more than 66% of your 3-bets then the second you 3-bet him it’s a profitable play. That ♣ doesn’t even take into account those times he calls and you either out play him on the flop or you ♣ hit your hand and win. So take a look at your opponent’s “fold to three-bet” stats before three-betting. Don’t 3-Bet Too Much! Remember, ♣ most of the value from the light three-bet stems from the fact that it’s a semi-bluff. You’re relying on your ♣ opponent to fold the majority of the time. If you start three-betting too often, your opponents will stop giving respect to ♣ your three-bets and start looking you up more often. When that happens your fold equity is gone and there is less ♣ value in three-betting light. Now would be a good time to switch gears and benefit from your confused opponents paying ♣ you off light. 3-Bet = Value The primary reason to three-bet is for value. Everything else is just a product of that. ♣ You want to get value out of your good hands. But if your three-betting range is too tight your opponent will ♣ adapt and just fold every time. Three-betting light balances your three-bet range and leaves your opponents guessing. When they’re left ♣ guessing, they make mistakes. And those mistakes are numbers added to your bankroll at the end of the night. How to ♣ Size Your 3-Bets Properly As mentioned above there are two reasons to three-bet: 1) for value, i.e. you have a good hand ♣ (AA, KK etc.) and would like to get value from worse hands, or for value, i.e. you have a good hand ♣ (AA, KK etc.) and would like to get value from worse hands, or 2) as a bluff/semi-bluff – in which ♣ case it’s known as a light three-bet When you three-bet light you’re making a semi-bluff at the pot. You know that ♣ your opponent is raising light, you can three-bet him light and have him fold, winning you the pot immediately. This leads ♣ to you winning more pots without showdown as well as getting action on your real, three-bet-for-value-type hands. Bet Sizing Not Equal ♣ to Hand Strength But although the practice of three-betting light is commonplace these days, many players still routinely size their three-bets ♣ incorrectly. Some players size their re-raises on the strength of their own hand. They bet a bigger amount when they have ♣ a weak hand and want their opponent to fold and bet less when they are betting for value. This is incorrect ♣ thinking. A skilled opponent will pick up on this and exploit you. Your bet sizing should not be determined by ♣ the strength of your hand. Position Dictates Everything So if hand strength isn’t the deciding factor, what is? The answer is position. ♣ You hear it over and over again – position dictates everything in poker. For determining the size of your three-bet it’s ♣ no different. When you’re in position you can get away with a smaller three-bet size. This is because you will be ♣ last to act for the entirety of the hand. Since acting last is such a huge advantage, you can punish ♣ the out-of-position player often, regardless of your hand strength. When you are in position a good re-raise size would be around ♣ 3x to 3.5x the original raise. It’s big enough that your opponent does not have an automatic call, yet it ♣ doesn’t risk an unnecessary amount of chips. An example: Six-maxR$1/$2 No-Limit game; effective stacksR$200. You’re on the button with A♥ Q♥. Action ♣ is folded to the cut-off, who makes itR$6. You re-raise toR$18. Your opponent calls and you see a flop of J♥ ♣ T♠ 3♦. Your opponent checks and you betR$24. He folds. Since you’re in position you gain information with him acting before ♣ you. This is such a massive advantage that you do not have to raise as much as if you were ♣ out of position. Up Your 3-Bets Out of Position When you’re out of position, life is always tough. Your decisions need to ♣ be made without the advantage of knowing your opponent’s action. Since he always has the last say he’s in control and ♣ you’re at a disadvantage. To make up for this you always want to reraise more from out of position. Whereas 3x ♣ the original raise was fine in position, out of position you want to make it 4x or more. You essentially ♣ would like to charge him for the privilege of playing in position against you. When you’re in position, you don’t mind ♣ seeing a flop and letting your edge manifest itself. When you’re out of position, you want to discourage him from ♣ calling as you will often be left guessing post-flop. Giving your opponent good odds and position is a mistake so let ♣ them know you mean business with larger out-of-position raises. The larger raise helps negate your positional disadvantage. Another example: Six-maxR$1/$2 No-Limit game; ♣ effective stacksR$200. You have Q♥ Q♣ in the big blind. Action is folded to the button, who makes itR$6. You ♣ make itR$26. TheR$26 bet is going to get the job done a lot more effectively than theR$18 bet is. You want ♣ to minimize your time playing out of position, so with the bigger re-raise you’re saying, “Fine, if you want to ♣ play this pot in position, you’re going to have to pay.” 3-Bets in Multiway Pots If you’re re-raising a raise and a ♣ call, you have to make your re-raises even larger. That’s because your re-raise will have to make it through two ♣ players instead of just one. You don’t want to size your 3-bet so that the original raiser calls and then the ♣ other caller overcalls. In that case you would have to play the hand versus two opponents – seldom a good ♣ idea. When you’re in position versus a raise and a call you should add 1x the original raise for every caller ♣ in the pot. So if one player calls the first raise, go 4x; if two, then 5x; etc. If you’re out ♣ of position and against multiple players add 1x for every caller and then at least another 1-2x the original raise ♣ for being out of position. Remember: In today’s games you’ll be 3-betting fairly frequently. If you routinely make mistakes with your ♣ 3-bet bet sizing you make it more difficult to win. Keep your 3-bets sized properly to your position and to ♣ the number of players left in the hand and you’ll make it easier on yourself in the long run. How to ♣ Play 3-Bet Pots With the Lead There’s a ton of money to be made in three-bet pots by exploiting some very ♣ obvious weaknesses in your opponents. If you’ve played six-max No-Limit Hold’em online you know how aggressive the games are. There’s very ♣ little limping and every pot is typically raised or even re-raised. With so much three-betting going on you’d think everybody ♣ had mastered play in three-bet pots. Far from it. As we’ve discussed above the idea behind three-betting is to counter-balance an ♣ opponent raising a very high percentage of his opening hands. Of those hands only a small percentage can continue on ♣ to more action. Meaning he’ll be raise/folding a ton of his range before the flop. That alone creates enough dead money ♣ to make three-betting profitable. But that’s not the only reason. Three-betting also balances your range. Take the Initiative with a 3-Bet When ♣ you three-bet preflop and get called you have the initiative. You have the lead in the hand and with it ♣ comes the advantage. You’re the one with the perceived strong hand. You chose to re-raise and he chose to just call. ♣ Now what happens if you miss the flop completely? Use that initiative. Look at the situation and think about his likely ♣ holdings. Know your opponent. If you know (or have a good idea) what his three-bet calling range is, then you’ll ♣ know exactly how much heat his hand range can take. Your opponent’s breaking point is the most important factor in three-bet ♣ pots when you have nothing. You have to know your opponent and how he plays. Get a feel for what ♣ kinds of hands he will felt in three-bet pots and which ones he won’t. In three-bet pots with the lead, ♣ you play your opponent’s cards more than your own. An Example $1/$2 six-max online;R$250 effective stacks. Your opponent raises toR$6. You three-bet ♣ toR$18 with T♠ 8♣. He calls and everyone else folds. Your read on your opponent is that he is a thinking, ♣ but not great, regular. He tends to over-estimate his implied odds and plays too ABC. The flop comes J♦ 3♥ 5♠. ♣ He checks. You fireR$28. He thinks and calls. The turn comes 2♦. He checks. A mistake a lot of players make ♣ here is checking back. Checking back in this spot is lighting money on fire. If you c-bet that flop you have ♣ to bet almost 100% of turns. Why? Because your opponent will be peeling with an extremely wide one-pair range. Think about ♣ it. Say you raise 99 before the flop and your opponent re-raises you. If you decide to call, are you ♣ ever going to fold on a jack-high board for one bet? No. The “standard” play is to peel one street and ♣ hope your opponent shuts down. But when you’re the opponent, don’t slow down. Fire that second barrel. Most of his ♣ flop-peeling range is not strong enough to call a second bet. Players like this are a dime a dozen. They call ♣ out of position, hoping to flop a set, and when they don’t they resign themselves to calling one street and ♣ folding to further action. These players are free money and are going to donate 25bb to you every single time in ♣ this spot. When you three-bet pre-flop and bet two streets, your opponent is regularly going to be putting you on ♣ a big hand. So exploit it and fire more second barrels. Think about your opponent’s range and his playing tendencies. You ♣ want to put him outside his comfort zone. Well-Timed Aggression in the Right Spots Like everything in poker, this is situation and ♣ player dependant. You can’t just fire every street on every board and hope your opponent folds. That just doesn’t work. You ♣ need well-timed aggression in the correct spots. For example, if your opponent is on the tighter side and only flat-calls three-bets ♣ with JJ+, you probably shouldn’t bother trying to barrel them off on a seven-high board. It’s just not going to ♣ happen. By all means though, if the turn brings an absolutely perfect second-barrel card like a king or an ace, then ♣ fire a second barrel. But if it keeps coming off bricks you should probably stop firing without a very specific ♣ read. Your edge manifests itself in three-bet pots when you multi-barrel these multi-tabling, ABC TAGs who are just hoping you’ll shut ♣ down after you fire a c-bet. They’re easy to spot too. Watch how players act in three-bet pots even when you’re ♣ not in the hand. Chances are there are a few at every table you play it. Put them on a range ♣ and find the breaking point for their hand. Then bring them to it. it’s that simple. 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