A unique approach is required to avoid spewing away your chips in multi-way pots.
This is simply because as more players are in the hand, the raw equity of your range decreases. Just look at how much Ace-king’s equity suffers as more random players are added to the pot:
That’s nearly a 26 percentage point decrease in raw equity against three opponents holding random hands. As you can see, it’s tough to have more than 50% equity in a multi-way pot.
Navigating these low equity situations requires caution and good hand selection. In this article, I’ll break down how to effectively do just that.
Let’s get to it.
Tightening your bet range is the first adjustment you need to make in multi-way pots.
The likelihood of running into a strong hand is increased with more players in the pot. As a result, you need to approach multi-way pots with caution– adjusting your betting range to consist primarily of strong value hands and good semi-bluffs.
It’s very easy to over-bluff in multi-way pots, so you should be extra selective when choosing semi-bluffs. The best candidates are usually high equity bluffs, like flush draws and open ended straight draws. These hands can profitably barrel later streets, even when they miss, by forcing marginal hands to fold.
If you were to bet and barrel every time you flopped a strong draw, however, you would be over-bluffing. So, how do you decide exactly which draws to bet and which to check?
Here’s a few tips for betting draws in multi-way pots:
Example: 7♦6♦ on 9♦3♠2♦
Remember, getting a missed hand like Q♠J♠ to fold when we have a low flush draw is a nice win for us.
Example: A♠ Q♠ on J♠T♥5♠
Example: 5♣4♣, J♣T♣ and maybe even K♣J♥ on A♠Q♥3♠
We don’t have a lot of effective bluffing hands on such a dry board. As a result, we need to bluff with the few draws we actually can have in order to balance our range (even if they are just weak gutshots).
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In multi-way pots, it can be correct to bet with marginal value hands in order to force folds and deny our opponent’s their equity.
There will be many flop textures where your hand is likely to be best, but your opponents still have significant equity against you. Betting in these spots is a good way to prevent your opponents from freely realizing their equity.
Playing your bet range this way will throw it off balance, especially when you check, but it is unlikely that all of your opponents will be exploiting this value/bluff imbalance.
Let’s run through an example to illustrate the upside of protecting the equity of value hands in multi-way pots.
$1/$2 6-max NLHE
Hero is in the CO with J♥T♥
Hero raises to $4.50. BTN calls with 9♣8♣. SB calls with K♦Q♠. BB calls with A♦T♣.
Flop (Pot: $18) is J♠9♥5♠
SB checks. BB checks. Hero bets $12. BTN calls. SB calls. BB folds.
On this flop, our J♥T♥ is expected to win the hand only 43.5% of the time. BTN (9♣8♣) has 16.5% equity, the SB (K♦Q♠) has 29%, and the BB (A♦T♣) has 11%. Despite being under 50%, our hand functions well as a bet for a few reasons:
We likely have the best hand, but our relatively low equity leaves us vulnerable to turns and rivers. By betting, we prevent our opponents from freely realizing their equity and fold out some hands that may bluff us on later streets.
Forcing folds from our opponents’ nothing hands is a big win for us as well. Even though our bet only forced a fold from one hand (A♦T♣), our equity increased to 52% making us a statistical favorite.
Medium-strength top pairs like J♥T♥ can’t comfortably bet three streets for value, especially on scary board runouts. Because of this, it is important to bet on the flop when your hand is still likely to be ahead and get called by worse.
If at all possible, we would like to force the button out of the pot so that we can play later streets in position.
One last note: to ensure that your checking range is not too weak, you can take a passive line in this spot with weaker jacks (like J♣8♣) and most nines. This prevents your opponents from exploitatively betting whenever you check to them.
Betting the flop into multiple players is almost always perceived as strength (as it should be). You can take advantage of this perception in later positions when your opponents have checked to you.
We can turn up our bluff frequency in these instances as our opponents are more likely to give us credit in a multi-way pot. Even when called, using hands which draw to or block the nuts allows us to continue betting on later streets.
We can learn a lot about the ranges of our opponents from the way they respond to our bets. This is especially useful in multi-way pots where we can be up against a broad range of hands.
Let’s consider some of the information we can acquire by betting into multiple opponents on a J♠9♥5♠ board:
We can’t acquire this information by checking, and less information makes our decisions on later streets more difficult. This isn’t to say you should “bet for information” with all of your marginal value hands (see: article). Remember, you only want to value bet with hands that can be called by worse.
Betting for information shouldn’t be the goal of your bet, just an upside of it.
Remember these key points when deciding whether or not to bet the flop in a multi-way pot:
There’s one last thing I haven’t mentioned that will improve your results in multi-way pots: experience. Multi-way pots have many nuances, far more than I can outline in this article. One of the best ways to hone your approach is to play and study poker.
Got any questions about multi-way pots? Comment below and I’ll do my best to answer.
(Note: Become a master of multi-way pots and more with The Poker Lab training course.
Click here or below to learn more.)
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