| One of the tougher situations youll
find yourself in at the poker table is facing a raise with a smaller pocket pair. Until
the raise your hand was strong, but against a raise it becomes very vulnerable. How you
play in this situation will depend on the setting of the hand. Some situations will
require that you fold. Others will call for a re-raise, and on a rare occasion, a call.
Knowing which decisions work best in each situation will make this difficult position
easier to manage. When the raise comes from a middle
positioned player, or from a player at the table who has shown a tight style, your small
pocket pair is likely getting the worst of it. Even if your opponent made the raise with
A-K or A-Q, youre in a race at best. If they have a bigger pair than you youre
a huge dog. Youll need to hit trips on the flop to be confident with your hand, and
any big card on the flop could have you behind if the raise came from two big cards.
Folding your pair in this situation would the best play, unless numerous players call it.
A raise from a player on the button, or from an aggressive
player near the button, is often just a real estate raise. A re-raise will tell you if
that player is only trying to steal the blinds, and you will often pick up the pot right
there. If the raiser calls your re-raise, making a continuation bet should tell the story
for the rest of the hand.
Calling a raise with a pocket pair should be done
sparingly. If the raise isnt too big, and other players have entered the pot,
calling to trip hunt potentially could win you a big hand. |