
One of the best times to bluff is when an opponent is staring you down, reaching for his chips, or otherwise threatening to call. While opponents who are trying to discourage your bet by threatening to call might actually call, they don’t have hands powerful enough to raise.
So, what remains are usually hands that they will be reluctant to call with. They will either call reluctantly or fold.
Taking a chance
Many times in no-limit poker games — and most times in limit poker games, where the size of the pot dwarfs the size of the bet — an opponent acting in this matter will fold often enough to give your bluff attempt an expectation of profit. It’s worth taking a chance.
Simply: When an opponent is conspicuously threatening to call, it’s an act. That act is intended to prevent your bet. You won’t be raised, except very rarely by sophisticated opponents who think you’re likely to try taking advantage of their faked tell — and that reverse bit of acting almost never happens.
Win
So, if you hold a medium-strong hand in such situations, you obviously should bet. You won’t be raised and you’ll usually win if you’re called.
If you hold a garbage hand, consider attempting a bluff. If you’re called, you’ll lose. But opponents threatening to call probably will fold often enough to make most bluffs profitable. — MC
Everything is everywhere
Any Poker1 page takes you anyplace you want to go!
↓ Search Poker1 ↓
♠ Poker1 Megadex tools ♠
— main navigation departments —
Collections
Related groups of Poker1 content
↓ Major collections ↓
↓ Tip collections ↓
↓ Contributor collections ↓
↓ More collections ↓
* Any collection followed by an asterisk ( * ) has no entries yet.
Poker1 everything
Browse alphabetically
[a-z-listing display=”posts” post-type=”post”]
Poker1 library
Content in categories
- ALL (newest first)
- Exclude ads
- Private
- SPECIAL INFO
- SPOTLIGHT
≡ Content above: Poker1 Phase2a specification ≡

Collections
Poker1 library