I thought the "Squeeze Play" thread was really useful & informative, many thanks to all those who contributed. I was playing a session last night & many of the players mentioned it, or typed "Squeeze play" when someone tried it, so it's clear many players read the thread.
So today, we'll see if we can get some explanations & examples of the Stop & Go.
At it's simplest, in "level one, ABC thinking" it means we call a raise (usually from the blinds) with the sole intention of jamming any flop. (UNLESS we happen to hit it hard).
It tends to work well when we are relatively short stacked, & is quite a potent weapon as, generally, most of the time the villain will miss the flop. Of course, if he has a monster, he'll call anyway, but if he has, say, A-K, & we jam on a flop of 7-8-9, it's not an easy call for him.
It works much better in NLH than PLO8, as in the latter, with balanced hands, they can call the majority of flops unless they are on the low & the flop comes High High High. It works, too, in PLO, but again, not as well as in NLH. Also, in PLO & PLO8 they are both Pot Limit, so we can't jam, & they generally have the odds to call.
OK, over to you, contributions welcome from everyone.
If this one goes as well as yesterday, we'll so some more later this week.
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Comments
Hasn't the Stop n Go been more or less discredited? I used to quite like it but it's pretty old-school now isn't it?
If I have 10bbs in the bb and someone has raised and I shove a hand like Q10 I would really like hands like QJ, K9 and up to fold and they won't. I might get things like K8, Q9 and below to fold but most of those I'm good against. However if I stop go on 862 I might get A9 and above or K10 and above or QJ to fold. I might just miss out on getting the reluctant pre-flop call from a hand I'm dominating though. Isn't it pretty much swings and roundabouts?
How does the maths work to know whether it's better to do a SnG or just shove and which kind of hands work better for each in the bb with 10bbs and after a late position raiser who has you covered has opened?