![]() ![]() 99 for example was a large 60/40 favorite against the wider 30% range but is a slight underdog vs 10%.Ī way to deal with such decisions is to first estimate the minimum equity needed to call. You can also see against a much tighter player, hands that had an edge against 30% are now losing vs a 10% range. As you can see no hand is even 90% pre flop so even with AA you wont win them all. ![]() It's ultimately up to you how much of an edge you want to gamble with your stack. If you're playing cash, even waiting for 77 vs 30% gives you at least a 10% edge (55/45). If you're playing 10 BB in a tournament though and there are blinds and antes in the pot you'll have to take the flip sometimes. Basically flipping a coin for stacks or even a 1-2% underdog depending on which sim you use. Repeating this against a top 10% range instead:Īs you can see, you're not giving yourself any edge with 55 vs 30%. For your example and for fun here are a few equities for comparison. You can use free sites or tools to get the equities. I would suggest memorizing 77, and TT+ against a 30%, 20%, 10%, and 5% range. But for cash games where stacks are usually deeper I don't think it's that important to know each hands equity against each range. If you're a tournament player it's more useful to know ranges down to 55. I think this comes down to off table study. I don't think there's any easy way to estimate this math in your head. ![]()
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