Strategy with Kristy: Andrew Seidman Discusses His Book, Easy Game

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Andrew Seidman

Andrew "Balugawhale" Seidman was the premiere guest on the Strategy with Kristy podcast and has come back to discuss topics in his updated, re-released book Easy Game.

Here is a snippet from the interview:

The first thing that we have to realize at any given time is that our hand is always going to fit in one of these three categories: low value, medium value, or premium value. Premium just means that it��s good enough to raise for value. We don��t need to raise, but it��s good enough to. So, obviously aces are always good enough to raise for value preflop.

A hand like jacks, whether or not it��s a good hand to reraise for value preflop would depend on a lot of things. Against a really tight player who only opens the nuts preflop, then we probably don��t want to reraise jacks, but against a crazy maniac person we do.

We can actually see the beginning of how these value categories might change depending on a whole bunch of different circumstances like our stack sizes, our opponents, everything. What we find is that, if we��re not in premium value, and we can��t raise for value, then do we have enough value to play our hand? That would put us in the medium value.

So let��s say we��re up against a huge nit, we have jacks, and he opens. We think, ��OK, we��re not in premium because I can��t raise for value, but do I have value to play my hand? Yes, I can flop a set, so I��m in medium value.�� Now, if we go one step further, we might say, ��My hand is not quite good enough to be in medium value because I don��t think it has enough value to call.��

Let��s say I have a hand like eight-five suited and a regular raises. It��s sort of on the borderline between medium value and low value. If we decide it��s low value then we can��t continue by calling because we don��t have enough value to capitalize on and we can��t raise for value ourselves. So, we have to either fold our hand, or we could bluff with it. We don��t lose any value if we have to fold our hand at some point in the hand because we were planning on folding it anyway.

I��m going to tie this back now to polarized and strong ranges (depolarized ranges). When we want to create a strong range, we don��t raise any of our low value hands, we just fold all of them, and the premium range becomes very wide. So now, jacks is clearly premium, king-queen is premium, ace-nine is premium half the time. The medium-strength hand ranges become a little bit more narrow and a little bit weaker because most of the higher end of the medium-value range is now considered premium value because we��re choosing to adopt a strong range.

On the other hand, if we want to create a polarized range, our medium-value range gets very big. Now, our premium range is very small and there are only a few hands we��re going to raise for value, and we have as many low value hands as we do want to raise.

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