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June 19, 2006
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Poker Lessons)
Poker Lesson: Seventh Street Decisions
in Seven-Stud
Author: Keith Sexton
A few weeks ago, I offered some pointers for playing
fourth steet in Limit Seven-Card
Stud. For this tip, I'm going and show how you might improve
your play on seventh street.
My first suggestion for playing on seventh street
is that you need to look at your pot odds when facing a final
bet. When playing $5-$10 Stud, for example, you'll often need
to call a $10 river bet while looking at a pot of $70. In this
spot, where you're getting 7:1, if you have any suspicion that
your hand is good, you really ought to call. The odds are so favorable
that throwing away a lot of marginal hands would be a mistake.
This is very different from no-limit poker, where you'll need
to make some big laydowns late in a hand. If you're making the
transition from No-Limit
Hold 'em to Limit Stud, keep this very important point in
mind.
Some of the tougher decisions on seventh street
arise when you're holding one pair. Let's say you start with a
pair of 6s and your opponent open-raises with a King as his door
card. He bet all the way, representing a pair of Kings, and you
called. Neither of you seemed to improve on fourth, fifth or sixth
streets, and he bet out on the river.
At this point, you can be fairly certain that he
doesn't have a pair of Kings. Most people don't have the heart
to bet one pair on the river. So, in this case, you're likely
up against something like Kings up, some sort of hidden hand,
or a total bluff. Given this range of hands - and knowing that
a bluff is a possibility - you should make the final call. You'll
pick off a bluff enough of the time to make the call profitable.
I want to point out here that, since it's proper
to call with a lot of marginal hands, betting with one solid pair
on the river is often a good idea. If you start with something
like a pair of Kings and your opponent doesn't seem to catch anything,
don't be timid on the river. Oftentimes, you should bet, knowing
that a lesser hand is likely to call.
Now, let's look at another river situation. Let's
say that after the river has been dealt, you have Q 10 9 8 with
three clubs showing. You made a straight on the river after your
opponent has been aggressively betting his hand the entire way,
showing Ad Kd 9s 6h.
After betting into your hand on sixth street, he
again bets into your hand on seveth street. In this situation,
you have to think about what your opponent is betting into. Most
players will not bet into such a scary board with one pair or
even two pair.
We have to assume that our opponent is either bluffing
with a weak hand and is unconcerned with our hand, or has a huge
hidden hand and is hoping to get three bets on the river. This
could be a situation where you might just call, especially if
there is a third hand behind you who might over-call with a marginal
hand that he would fold if you had raised.
When playing Limit Stud, be sure that you're making
enough value bets and crying calls on the river. Keep the pot
odds in mind and you're likely to make the right play.
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